Clans and family organization ;Clans of the interior Veddas Interior Veddas have
clans called
Waruge or
Variga that were named after trees, animals or places of origin. Seligman speculated that these clans were territorial, thus hunting territory was divided amongst the clan, not to be violated by members of other clans. These clans were: • Morana (after Mora tree) • Unapana (Water) • Namudana (Namuda tree) • Ura (Wild boar) • Ambilo (Ant) • Tala (Plains) • Rugam (Village name) • Kovil Vannam (Temple precincts) Among these, the Morana and Unapana clans claimed superior status to Namudana, Ambilo and Ura clans. Seligman reported that Morana and Unapana clans considered the other three as their servile groups, a classification strongly denied by the others. This also led to so-called servile groups denying such clan association when questioned and claiming Morana or Unapana clan origins. ;Retention of Clan system amongst Vedar When Seligman inquired about the Waruge divisions of the Vedar, most of them did not remember their clan origins. Of those who remembered, most self-identified as Ura Waruge. Others mentioned clans such as Ogatam, Kavatam, Umatam, Aembalaneduwe and Aembale. They also had memories of other clans such as Morana and Unapana. By the 1980s the Vedar had no knowledge of any word
Waruge, although they vaguely used the Tamil term
Vamisam (family origin) to indicate some division amongst them. Some had come up with a two-fold division of the Vedars based on the
Kuti or
matrilineal descent system popular in the East coast. These Kutis were supposed to have descended from former local chiefs called
Vanniyar, who had ruled feudal divisions called
Vannimai. But these clan divisions and related rules of
endogamy were not totally followed by all Vedar, and there no practical prohibitions from marrying from each Kuti. As with local Tamils, the preferred marriage pattern is based on
cross cousin preference.
Parallel cousins are considered brothers and sisters and are ineligible as partners. As most marriages take place between first and second cousins, clan endogamy even it is present is of no value. Within a village, most of the residents are related and this carries on over to villages that are three to five miles away as well. The longer the distance the more distantly are the villagers related to each other. who are peculiar to Vedar. The cult of Kappalpei is based on legends of foreigners coming over by ships and landing along the coast where the Vedar usually lived. They are propitiated to ward off evils and hard times. Kumara Deivam was also noted amongst the primitive Sinhalese village of
Gonagolla in the
Ampara District known as Kumara Devio. Jon Dart in the 1980s found that these deities were no longer worshipped, but were replaced by the
Periyasami cult. The worship pattern is a combination of
Devil-dancing called
Sandangu ("ceremony" in Tamil) and orthodox Hindu
Agamic rituals. The devil-dancing is unique to Vedar, but the aspect of
spirit possession as a part of devil dancing is not unique to Vedar. Locals Tamils also experience spirit procession and trance states during religious festivals. During devil-dancing ceremonies, related family groups congregate in family-owned worship centers and build platforms known as
Pandals. These Pandals may have a weapon, such a lance known as a
Vel, installed in their middle, a construction similar to the
Kirikoroha function of the interior Veddas as well. Male family members dance throughout the night and as part of the ceremony some become possessed by spirits, sometimes those of their recently diseased family members. This pattern is similar in nature to the ancestor-worshipping patterns of the interior Veddas. Most of the Sadangu locations are temporary ones without related permanent structures over them, but some have been turned into temples. In the village of Palchennai, one of these temporary structures has become a temple now identified with Hindu high god
Vishnu. Vedars also participate in Tamil folk dramas called
Kuttus that depict scenes from Hindu epics such as
Mahabharatha and
Ramayana.
Language Vedar use the
Sri Lankan Tamil dialect peculiar to the region, known as Batticaloa Tamil dialect, in their day to day conversations. Vedar children also study in that language in schools. During
Sadangu ceremonies, those who are possessed by spirits speak in a mixed language that they call
Vedar Sinkalam(Vedar Sinhala") or
Vedar Bhasai There is evidence at some point in the past that the people were
bilingual in Vedda language and Tamil, but that is no longer the case. ==Geographic distribution==