Tamil Nadu: Ettayapuram Raja fights to restore ancestral legacy; calls out historical inaccuracy of 'Ettapan' slur
Chennai (Tamil Nadu) [India], September 19 (ANI): Chandra Chaitanya, the titular 42nd Raja of the Ettayapuram Samasthanam, has launched a passionate campaign to correct what he calls a "deeply painful historical inaccuracy" surrounding his ancestral name, Ettapan.
For decades, the term has carried a negative connotation--largely due to its portrayal in the iconic Tamil film Veerapandiya Kattabomman, where the character of Ettapan was depicted as a traitor who betrayed Kattabomman to the British. Raja Chandra Chaitanya insists this portrayal is far from the truth and has unfairly maligned the Ettayapuram royal family and its people.
The stigma, he notes, has gone so far as to seep into textbooks. Upon learning of this, Chandra Chaitanya personally approached Tamil Nadu's Education Minister, Anbil Mahesh Poyyamozhi, who assured him that corrective measures were being taken to prevent the recurrence of such errors in future editions.
He points out that far from betraying the freedom struggle, Ettayapuram played a pioneering role in resisting colonial power. "Our armies, led by Alagumutthu Kon, were among the first to challenge the East India Company," he said, recalling how soldiers from Ettayapuram were executed by cannon fire for their defiance. "We lost our palaces, we lived in exile, and yet we returned to reclaim our land. Our history is one of resistance, not betrayal."
The demonstration, he emphasises, is not one of anger but of awareness. "We want people to know the truth. Too often, slurs and misrepresentations slip into everyday rhetoric--by politicians, film personalities, even common speech. This must stop. It is not fair for future generations to live under the shadow of an inaccuracy."
The demonstration is set to mark a turning point in Ettayapuram's fight to reclaim its history--one where heritage and honour outweigh fiction and misrepresentation. (ANI)
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