Demographics Census operations started in Sri Lanka in 1871. The Census of 1871, 1881, 1891 and 1901 had lumped together Sri Lankan Tamils and Indian Tamils. Since 1911, Indian Tamils have been shown as a separate category. The population statistics are revealing. In 1911, Indian Tamils constituted 12.9 per cent of the population, whereas Sri Lankan Tamils formed 12.8 per cent; in 1921, 13.4 per cent and 11.5 per cent; in 1931, 15.2 and 11.3; in 1946, 11.7 and 11.0; in 1953, 12.0 and 10.9; in 1963, 10.6 and 11.0; in 1971, 11.6 and 11.2; and in 1981, 5.5 per cent and 12.7 per cent respectively.
Social structure The social structure of the
plantations resembles the South Indian rural social structure. The community is generally bound by the
caste system. In a plantation, the tea factory is the centre of activities and it stands in the central part of the plantation. The office adjoins this and these are surrounded by the quarters of the staff members such as clerks, tea makers, conductors, petty accountants or
kanakkupillais, and supervisors. The
bungalows of the planter and his assistants are in an isolated areas. These will be in close proximity to the office. The dwellings of the workers called
line rooms are situated a little further away from the factories. Those who are considered to be of higher castes occupy the first row of line rooms. They perform respectable jobs such as factory work and grinding of tea as minor labour work. Even though they belong to the labour category they are influential among conductors, tea makers,
kanganies (or supervisors) and other officials. The workers considered low caste live in the dwellings that are away from the centre and these dwellings are called
distant or
lower lines. This group consists of
Pallar,
Paraiyars,
Sakkiliar, washers and barbers. The yard sweepers and changers of clothes are in the lowest rank.
Customs These groups follow the customs, traditions, and festivities of their South Indian Tamil
ancestors. The traditional musical instruments such as
thappu and
parai are used and folk dances such as the
kavadi,
kummi and
karaga attam are performed. Folk dramas called
koothu in their various forms such as
ponnar koothu,
sangaran koothu,
arujunan thabas and
kaman koothu are still prevalent among them along with
silambadi as an important feature.
Religion near
Nuwara Eliya In general they use
Hindu beliefs to guide their day-to-day lives. There are number of temples and places of worship for
deities on estates and in villages, towns and other places within Sri Lanka to which they have migrated. When a place is decided to be settled, the settlers would institute, under a
banyan or
bo tree, a triangular shaped stone or figure of a deity, plant a weapon of a popularly worshipped god such as a spear, trident or sword and worshipped these. The main deities worshipped are, in order of popularity, the goddess
Mariamman,
Murugan and his consorts,
Valli and Theivanai,
Pillayar,
Siva,
Parvathi,
Vishnu and
Laxmi, and the goddess of wisdom
Saraswati. In 1981 about 90 percent of the Indian Tamils were Hindus. They have little contact with
Buddhism, and they worship the Hindu pantheon of gods. Their religious myths, stories of
saints, literature, and
rituals are distinct from the cultural sources of the Sinhalese. Furthermore, a minority of the Indian Tamils- 7.6 percent are converts to
Christianity, with their own places of worship and separate cultural lives. In this way, the large Tamil minority in Sri Lanka is effectively separated from the mainstream Sinhalese culture and is fragmented into two major groups with their own Christian minorities.{{cite web|url= http://lcweb2.loc.gov/frd/cs/lktoc.html The first known temple was built in Matale. It began as a stone an icon of the goddess
Mariamman. At this very location where the worship of her began in 1820, the now-famous Matale Sri Muthumariamman Temple was built in 1852. The trading community of the
Nattukotai Chettiars introduced the worship of Murugan in his form as Lord Kathiresan at Matale and was to subsequently build the Kathiresan temple at Matale. The annual festival of this temple is celebrated in the month of July. Devotees of the plantation sector walk from the tea estates and hometowns they live in to
Kathirkamam, a place considered sacred by both Buddhists and Hindus, in the South of Sri Lanka, where Murugan is worshipped in the form of Skanda.
Deepavali,
Pongal and
Tamil New Year are commonly celebrated as festivals.
Folk deities Each caste has its own deity based on caste predecessors and are worshipped as guardian angels, such as the
Kallar caste had Nallananpillai Perumal as their guardian angel to whom vows and sacrifices are made. Deities such as Madasamy,
Muniandi,
Kali,
Madurai Veeran, Sangili Karuppan, Vaalraja,
Vairavar, Veerabathran,
Sudalai Madan, and Roda Mini are also worshipped.
Temple societies There were 104 registered Hindu temples in the
Nuwara Eliya District, 153 in Kandy region and 62 in Matale in 2001. Religious schools or
araa nerri padasaligal are conducted throughout the
Central Province and registered schools of such nature are, Nuwara Eliya 22, Kandy 54 and Matale 11. A considerable number of Hindu associations and institutions have been established and are functioning actively. There is a serious effort at conversions to other religions as well. Many have converted to
Christianity and
Islam. Hindu organizations such as the
Vishva Hindu Parishad try to stem the tide of conversions. ==Labour practices==