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G. Subramania Iyer

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Indian journalist, social reformer and freedom fighter
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Ganapathy Dikshitar Subramania Iyer
Born(1855-01-19)19 January 1855
Died18 April 1916(1916-04-18) (aged 61)
Occupations
  • Lecturer
  • Journalist
  • Entrepreneur

Ganapathy Dikshitar Subramania Iyer (Tamil:கணபதி தீக்ஷிதர் சுப்பிரமணிய ஐயர்) (19 January 1855 – 18 April 1916) was a leading Indian journalist,social reformer andfreedom fighter who led theTriplicane Six in launchingThe Hindu, an English newspaper on 20 September 1878. He wasproprietor, editor and managing director ofThe Hindu from 20 September 1878 to October 1898. TheTamil language newspaper 'Swadesamitran' was also founded by him in 1891.

Early life

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Subramania Iyer was born in January 1855 in Tiruvadi in the thenTanjore district. He was the fourth of seven sons of Ganapathi Dikshitar, a pleader in the Munsiff's Court of Tiruvadi. Subramania Iyer had his early schooling in Tiruvadi and matriculated from St. Peter's College,Tanjore in 1871. In 1873, he passed his arts examinations in merit and attended a teacher's training course at Madras from 1874 to 1875.

Subramania Iyer taught at the Church of Scotland Mission School at Madras from 1875 to 1877 and at Pachaiyappa's High School in 1877. In 1877, he cleared his B. A. examinations as a private candidate and was appointed headmaster of the Anglo-Vernacular school,Triplicane in 1879.

Founding ofThe Hindu

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To voice their support forSir T. Muthuswamy Iyer to be appointed to the bench of theMadras High Court, Subramania Iyer foundedThe Hindu along withM. Veeraraghavachariar, T. T. Rangachariar, P. V. Rangachariar, D. Kesava Rao Pantulu andN. Subba Rao Pantulu, on 20 September 1878.[1] Initially,The Hindu was started as a weekly, but later, it was converted into a tri-weekly and then a daily.

As editor ofThe Hindu 1878–1898

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Soon, 'The Triplicane Six' broke up when the other students were called to the Bar and editor G. Subramania Iyer and Veeraraghavachariar were the only ones who remained with the newspaper.

The Hindu made its presence felt for the first time since its inception. Subramania Iyer was known for his fiery articles with plenty of sting. Subramania Iyer actively supported the cause of India's freedom and used his newspaper to protest British Imperialism. In 1897, whenBal Gangadhar Tilak was arrested by British authorities, The Hindu vehemently condemned the arrest. On 3 December 1883, the paper moved to 100 Mount Road and established its own press called 'The National Press'.

The Hindu welcomed the birth of the Indian National Congress in a 12 December 1885 editorial:

The objective of the Congress... is to bring to a focus to our scattered political energy and to give solidity and organisation to native opinion... [on such] topics in which... all parts of the country are interested...

In May 1889, at Subramania Iyer's invitation, the Anglo-Indian barristerEardley Norton began to write a regular columnOlla Podrida for the newspaper. The two later became intimate friends.

Subramania Iyer was dead against conservatism and blind superstitions and try to use his newspaper as a vehicle for reform. However, Subramania Iyer's articles landed the newspaper in many defamation suites and Subramania Iyer was reduced to dire financial straits while trying to fight them. In 1898, Subramania Iyer quit as Chief-editor and was succeeded by Veeraraghavachariar. In 1905, the newspaper was bought by prosperous barristerKasturi Ranga Iyengar.

Politics

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Subramania Iyer actively participated in the Indian Independence movement. He was one of the 72 delegates present at the Bombay Conference at Tejpal Sanskrit College on 12 December 1885, which resulted in the founding of the Indian National Congress. In the second session of the Indian National Congress, Subramania Iyer was selected member of the committee to report on the representation of Indians in the public services. In the Madras session of 1887, Subramania Iyer was appointed member of the Committee which framed the constitution of the Indian National Congress. During the 1894 Madras session, he was selected as a part of the delegation which presented the case of Indian nationalists before the Secretary of State for India in London. He was met by Gandhi in Pachaiyappa's hall when Gandhi came to Madras for spreading the information on the status of Indians in South Africa, as per the guidance of Sir Pherozeshah mehta. Gandhi mentioned himself this event in his My Experiment with truth. In 1906, he was appointed member of the Standing Committee to promote the objectives of the Indian National Congress. He was one of the founding members of Madras Mahajan Sabha (1884) which coordinated local nationalist effort in Madras Presidency.

When he conducted his widowed daughter's remarriage in 1889, Subramania Iyer was socially boycotted by his own relatives apart from the conservative Mylapore society. Subramania Iyer lost the support of conservative elements who formed a powerful lobby in the Indian National Congress. As a result, he was never elected President of the Indian National Congress nor was he ever elected to theMadras Legislative Council.

Social reforms

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Subramania Iyer campaigned vehemently for reforms in Hindu society. He supported widow remarriage and desired to abolish untouchability and child marriages. Subramania Iyer arranged for the remarriage of his eldest daughter, Sivapriyammal, who had been widowed at the age of 13, to a boy in Bombay during the 1889 Congress session.

Subramania Iyer wrote inThe Hindu that:

the degraded condition" of Dalits was "notorious and the peculiarities of The Hindu social system are such that from this system no hope whatever of their amelioration can be entertained." It seemed hopeless, he commented, for Dalits "to expect redemption from anything thatThe Hindu might do" and "no amount of admiration for our religion will bring social salvation to these poor people.

He realised the importance of speaking in the local language and addressed the masses in Tamil in his public lectures. He encouraged Subramaniya Bharathi in his early years and sheltered him in his house.

Later life and death

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In 1898, Subramania Iyer relinquished his claims over 'The Hindu' and concentrated his energies onSwadesamitran, the Tamil language newspaper which he had started in 1882. When he leftThe Hindu in 1898, he made theSwadesamitran, a tri-weekly and, in 1899, a daily, the first in Tamil.

Subramania Aiyar's pen "dipped in a paste of the extra-pungent thin green chillies" – as Subramania Bharati described his Editor's writing style – got him in trouble with the British in 1908. He suffered jail terms and persecutions which gradually broke his health.

In his later years, Subramania Iyer was diagnosed withleprosy and succumbed to the disease on 18 April 1916.

References

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  1. ^S. Ganeshram (2016).Pathways to Nationalism: Social Transformation and Nationalist Consciousness in Colonial Tamil Nadu, 1858–1918. Taylor & Francis.ISBN 9781351997379.

Biographies

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  • S. A. Govindarajan (1969).Builders of modern India. Publications Division, Ministry of Information and Broadcasting, Govt. of India.
  • G.Subramania Iyer: his life and career with an introduction. 1900.
Preceded by
None
Managing-Director ofThe Hindu
1878–1898
Succeeded by
Preceded by
None
Editor ofThe Hindu
1878–1898
Succeeded by
Kasturi & Sons (The Hindu Group)
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