Thirukkural—this two-line wonder—has been an integral part of our lives in various forms since childhood. Yet, I hadn't picked up that small book in a long time, except when my husband asked for the meaning of a Kural quoted by a politician in a speech or recited by finance ministers during Budget presentations. (I’ve always wondered why quoting Thirukkural has become a ritual, even for finance ministers with no connection to Tamil Nadu!)
That aside, my interest in this seven-word marvel was
recently rekindled by The Times of India initiative, where famous
personalities share their favorite Thirukkural. As I listened to their
experiences, I was surprised at how many Kurals I could recall
effortlessly, despite never having consciously studied them.
In school, I was a Sanskrit and Hindi student, so my Tamil
lessons never came from textbooks. Yet, my love for Tamil never faded—thanks to
my father. He always had a Kural ready for every situation, and perhaps that’s
how I picked up quite a few over the years.
One of his most frequently quoted Kurals was:
இன்னாசெய்
தாரை ஒறுத்தல் அவர்நாண
நன்னயஞ் செய்து விடல்.
Meaning: When someone does anything bad to you, in return, do something good to them. Don’t get into tit-for-tats.
As an irritable teenager (as most teens are), I would take offence
at the smallest disagreements—with my brother, friends, or relatives. My
father’s way of calming me down was always this Kural. Back then, it only made
me angrier! But now, I see the wisdom in his words.
Interestingly, The Times of India initiative also
sparked a conversation with a friend from my resident community. She, too, had similar
memories of her mother quoting various Kurals in everyday life, their
meanings unfolding through real-life experiences. That got me thinking: our
parents had a natural, practical way of instilling values through these simple
yet profound verses. By seamlessly weaving Thirukkural into daily
conversations, they not only taught moral values but also nurtured a love for
literature.
But how many millennial parents can do that today? I wonder
how many young parents can recall even five or ten Kurals from memory,
let alone their meanings. In our rush to emulate the Western world, we seem to
have overlooked the richness of our traditions and the wisdom of our elders.
Back then, school curriculums included recitation and
memorization competitions where students learned Kurals by heart. These
contests, driven by a healthy spirit of learning, developed clear and fluent
speech and sharpened our memory—an ability that proved useful across subjects.
Today, the focus has narrowed to appearing for Olympiad exams.
As a teacher, it saddens me to see students struggling with
Tamil, often calling it the hardest subject. How did we reach this point?
Perhaps it’s time to revive some of those old practices—not just for the sake
of tradition, but for the invaluable lessons they carry.
(Do you have a Kural to quote? Please share.)
எப்பொருள் யார்யார் வாய்கேட்பினும் அப்பொருள்
மெய்ப்பொருள் காண்ப தறிவு.
"Whatever you hear, from whomever you hear it, true
wisdom lies in discerning its deeper meaning and true essence."
Comments
அன்பிற்கும் உண்டோ அடைக்குந்தாழ் ஆர்வலர்
புன்கணீர் பூசல் தரும்.
Even then our folks couldn't. Tears of the affectionate. Related to this every now and then. 🙂
My mom used to say:
இடிப்பாரை இல்லாத ஏமரா மன்னன்
கெடுப்பா ரிலானுங் கெடும்.
மன்னனே ஆனாலும் ஆன் செய்யும் தவறுகளை சூட்டிக்காட்டி எடுத்துரைத்து திருத்த ஆள் இல்லென்றால் அவரை கெடுக்க வேறு யாரும் வேண்டாம் அவர் தானே கெடுவார்.
இத்தனை நுட்பொருள் அமைந்த குறளை,அறிவுரையாக போகிற போக்கில் கூறும் பெரியவர்கள் வாக்கு இனி வரும் தலைமுறையினருக்கு கிட்டுமா என்பது சந்தேகமே.
Reading your blog felt like a nostalgic walk through time, where every Kural whispered wisdom and every memory carried the warmth of tradition. You have a rare gift—turning words into experiences, making the profound feel personal, and reminding us of the quiet power our heritage holds. In a world racing ahead, your reflections gently pull us back to the roots we should never forget. Thank you for rekindling a love for Thirukkural and for inspiring us to see its relevance in every chapter of our lives.
One of my favourite Kurral:
தெய்வத்தான் ஆகா தெனினும் முயற்சிதன் மெய்வருத்தக் கூலி தரும்.
With admiration,
Sangeetha
இழுக்கா இயன்றது அறம்.
Envy, greed, wrath and harsh words: These four avoids virtue.
உன் குரலில் திருக்குறள் அருமை.
Time to implement 3 language policy in Tamilnadu. Tamil,
English and one more of student choice in all boards
ஈன்ற பொழுதிற் பெரிதுவக்கும் தன்மகனை
சான்றோன் எனக்கேட்ட தாய்
மகன்தந்தைக் காற்றும் உதவி இவன்தந்தை
என்நோற்றான் கொல்எனுஞ் சொல்
Your article on Thirukkural is a treasure trove of wisdom. It reminded me of my school days, where I enthusiastically participated in Thirukkural recitation competitions and morning tests that challenged us to write Kurals with precision.
Your writing also brought back fond memories of my mother's guidance, who would often quote Thirukkural to teach me valuable life lessons. One Kural that she would frequently recite is:
இன்சொலன் ஆற்றின் இன்மை கொள்ளற்க
மாசொலன் ஆற்றின் மாணப் பெரிது.
This Kural highlights the importance of gratitude and using kind words in our interactions.
Your writing not only showcases the timelessness of Thirukkural but also inspires us to embody its principles in our daily life.
Thank you for sharing your insights, mam. I offer my heartfelt respects and gratitude for this enlightening piece.
Bharathi Tamilarasu.
முகநக நட்பது நட்பன்று நெஞ்சத்து அகநக நட்பது நட்பு.
போகாறு அகலாக் கடை... You reminded me of one my favourite kurals . Ir itmeans even if your income is less there is no cause of worry until you exceed your spending more than your earnings. So prudent and practical finance management in just two lines relevant even today. Thanks to you for taking us back to school days where we really learnt something useful.. nags MMC choir