Sri Lankan Tamil in Sri Lanka

The Sri Lankan Tamil have only been reported in Sri Lanka
Population
Main Language
Largest Religion
Christian *
Evangelical
Progress
Progress Gauge
* Data can be from various sources including official census, agencies, and local research. Data from these sources can sometimes differ even by orders of magnitude. Joshua Project attempts to present a conservative, balanced estimate.

Introduction / History

Separated from southern India by the narrow Palk Strait — barely 30 kilometers at its closest point — Sri Lanka's Tamil population has inhabited the island's Northern and Eastern Provinces for at least two millennia. Archaeological and epigraphic evidence points to Tamil-speaking settlements as early as the 2nd century BCE, when merchants and fishermen crossed the strait for trade and pearls. Over centuries, waves of immigration from the Indian subcontinent, including settlers from Kerala as well as Tamil Nadu, shaped a population that, while linguistically and culturally connected to the Indian mainland, evolved in relative isolation and developed its own distinct character.

The Sri Lankan Tamils speak Tamil, one of the world's oldest living languages, belonging to the Dravidian family and carrying a literary tradition spanning more than two thousand years. The variety spoken in Sri Lanka is notably archaic — preserving vocabulary and grammatical forms that have fallen out of use on the mainland — a result of the community's long relative isolation from the great cultural centers of South India. Tamil is used alongside Portuguese, Dutch, and English influences absorbed during successive colonial periods. Today Tamil and Sinhala are both official languages of Sri Lanka.

Modern Sri Lankan Tamil identity was forged in large part through the political upheavals of the post-independence era. After Sri Lanka gained independence in 1948, the 1956 Official Language Act declared Sinhala the sole language of government, shutting Tamils out of civil service positions they had long occupied and inflaming ethnic tensions. Decades of marginalization, anti-Tamil pogroms, and the 1981 burning of the irreplaceable Jaffna Public Library radicalized a generation of Tamil youth, ultimately fueling the 26-year civil war between the Tamil Tigers (LTTE) and the government, which ended with the military defeat of the LTTE in May 2009. The war's final stages were catastrophically violent — UN estimates place the death toll at 40,000 or more in the closing months alone. Hundreds of thousands were displaced; communities in the north and east were shattered. Tamil families are still searching for answers about loved ones who disappeared, and accountability for alleged wartime atrocities remains deeply unresolved.


What Are Their Lives Like?

The heartland of Sri Lankan Tamil life is the Jaffna Peninsula and the surrounding Northern Province, along with the Eastern Province — an arid coastal landscape of palmyrah palms, rice paddies, lagoons, and fishing villages. The north is predominantly agricultural; the east has historically been more diverse in occupation, with significant communities of fishermen, traders, and farmers. Agriculture and fishing remain foundational, though decades of war disrupted land use, and many families continue to rebuild livelihoods scattered by displacement.

Family and kinship sit at the center of Tamil social life. Marriage is typically arranged within caste lines, with the ceremony conducted at a Hindu temple and presided over by a Brahman or non-Brahman priest. The bride's family bears the wedding costs and provides a dowry; the tying of the gold thali necklace around the bride's neck is the central ritual moment. Households are multigenerational, and family networks extend to diaspora members in Canada, the United Kingdom, Australia, France, and beyond — relatives who send remittances and remain emotionally and financially connected to their communities at home.

Education has been a hallmark Tamil value for generations. Beginning in the 19th century, English-language schools built by American missionaries in Jaffna — culminating in Jaffna College — gave Tamil students a competitive edge in colonial civil service examinations and professional fields. This culture of educational aspiration has persisted through the war years and into the present. Tamils in the north face real obstacles — military checkpoints, land occupied by the security forces, ongoing surveillance of activists and journalists — but the determination to see children through school and into professions is undiminished.

Jaffna cooking is distinctive and celebrated — built on the seafood-rich waters of the Bay of Bengal and the products of the palmyrah palm, coconut milk, green gram, moringa, and the generous heat of dried chillies. The food culture carries the memory of the war years within it: a dish called mithivedi (named after a landmine) entered the local lexicon during the conflict, and wartime scarcity shaped food customs in ways that persist in the north. Tamil festivals bring families and communities together throughout the year. Thai Pongal in January — a harvest celebration honoring the sun and the agricultural cycle — is one of the most beloved, marked by the communal cooking of a rice dish in clay pots.


What Are Their Beliefs?

The vast majority of Sri Lankan Tamils are Shaivite Hindus, with a significant Christian minority — primarily Roman Catholics and Methodists — who regard themselves as fully Tamil in culture and identity. Hindu practice among Sri Lankan Tamils is at once philosophical, devotional, and deeply practical. Shiva is the supreme deity, but within Shaiva Siddhanta — the theological tradition dominant among the educated Hindu elite — he is understood as beyond direct approach; his grace operates by drawing the soul toward eventual reunification with him. Popular worship is directed not at Shiva himself but at accessible deities: Murugan (son of Shiva and perhaps the most beloved deity in Sri Lanka), Pillaiyar (Ganesh), and the village goddesses — Mariyamman, Kannakiyamman, and others — who are petitioned for help with illness, examinations, legal problems, infertility, and family conflict. Semi-demonic spirits are also propitiated, believed to demand sacrifice if neglected.

For the educated classes, the formal theology of Saiva Siddhanta has provided intellectual scaffolding and has historically served as a bulwark against Christian conversion; 19th-century reformer Arumuka Navalar restructured Tamil Hinduism along austere textual lines specifically to resist missionary pressure while preserving the community's religious identity. At the village level, however, folk Hinduism predominates — rooted in local shrines, hereditary priests (pucar?s) sometimes chosen through spirit possession, and a thick web of astrological consultation. Astrologers are routinely sought at birth, marriage, illness, and times of crisis, operating from the conviction that a person's fate is "written on one's head" (talai viti) and that the divine must be navigated rather than simply trusted. Trust is placed in the gods of the Hindu pantheon and the guidance of the stars, not in Jesus Christ as the one living Lord and Savior.


What Are Their Needs?

Sri Lankan Tamils carry the wounds of a generational war that took tens of thousands of lives, displaced hundreds of thousands, and left a landscape of trauma, broken families, and unanswered questions. Many in the north and east still lack information about family members who forcibly disappeared.

The healthcare system in the Northern Province, severely damaged during the war, is still recovering. Mental health needs are acute and dramatically underserved — post-traumatic stress is widespread, particularly among women who lost husbands and sons and who carried families through years of siege, displacement, and violence. Economic development in the north has lagged far behind the south. Access to quality higher education and professional training, while historically a Tamil strength, has been complicated by decades of disrupted schooling and brain drain through emigration. Clean water, sanitation, and housing reconstruction remain needs in some rural areas.


Prayer Items

Pray for the Holy Spirit to work powerfully through Tamil Christians already in Sri Lanka, healing the deep wounds of war and demonstrating that the God of the Bible is the true Comforter, the one who sees and answers every cry that rises from the human heart.
Pray for genuine political reconciliation and justice — that those responsible for wartime atrocities would be held accountable, that disappeared persons' families would receive truthful answers, and that the Sri Lankan Tamils would find lasting peace grounded not in ethnic grievance but in the dignity of bearing God's image.
Pray for Tamils across Sri Lanka to discover in Jesus Christ the one who is not approached through ritual negotiation, but who draws near with grace.


Scripture Prayers for the Sri Lankan Tamil in Sri Lanka.


References

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sri_Lankan_Tamils
https://www.everyculture.com/South-Asia/Tamil-of-Sri-Lanka-Religion-and-Expressive-Culture.html
https://www.everyculture.com/South-Asia/Tamil-of-Sri-Lanka-History-and-Cultural-Relations.html
https://factsanddetails.com/south-asia/Srilanka/Ethnic_Groups_and_Minorities_Srilanka/entry-7990.html
https://minorityrights.org/communities/tamils/
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hinduism_in_Sri_Lanka


Profile Source:   Joshua Project  

People Name General Sri Lankan Tamil
People Name in Country Sri Lankan Tamil
Pronunciation TAH-mill
Alternate Names श्री लॅंकन तमिल
Population this Country 10,000
Population all Countries 10,000
Total Countries 1
Indigenous Yes
Progress Scale Progress Gauge
Unreached No
Frontier No
Pioneer Workers Needed
PeopleID3 21439
ROP3 Code 118255
Country Sri Lanka
Region Asia, South
Continent Asia
10/40 Window Yes
National Bible Society Website
Persecution Rank Not ranked
Total States on file 9
Largest States
Northern
4,000
Western
1,800
Eastern
1,500
Central
1,000
Sabaragamuwa
600
Uva
400
North Western
400
Southern
200
North Central
200
Country Sri Lanka
Region Asia, South
Continent Asia
10/40 Window Yes
National Bible Society Website
Persecution Rank Not ranked
Total States 9
  Northern 4,000
  Western 1,800
  Eastern 1,500
  Central 1,000
  Sabaragamuwa 600
  Uva 400
  North Western 400
  Southern 200
  North Central 200
Website South Asia Peoples
Primary Religion: Hinduism
Major Religion Estimated Percent *
Buddhism
0.00 %
Christianity
37.72 %
Ethnic Religions
0.00 %
Hinduism
62.28 %
Islam
0.00 %
Judaism
0.00 %
Non-Religious
0.00 %
Other / Small
0.00 %
Sikhism
0.00 %
Unknown
0.00 %
* From latest Sri Lanka census data.
Current Christian values may substantially differ.
Primary Language Tamil
Ethnologue Language Code tam
Ethnologue Language Familly Dravidian
Glottolog Language Family Dravidian
Written / Published Yes   (ScriptSource Listing)
Total Languages 2
Secondary Languages
Sinhala
Primary Language Tamil
Ethnologue Language Code tam
Ethnologue Language Familly Dravidian
Glottolog Language Family Dravidian
Written / Published Yes   (ScriptSource Listing)
Total Languages 2
Secondary Languages
  Sinhala

Primary Language:  Tamil

Bible Translation Status  (Years)
Bible-Portions Yes  (1714-1956)
Bible-New Testament Yes  (1715-1998)
Bible-Complete Yes  (1727-2024)
FCBH NT (www.bible.is) Online
YouVersion NT (www.bible.com) Online
Possible Print Bibles
Amazon
World Bibles
Forum Bible Agencies
National Bible Societies
World Bible Finder
Virtual Storehouse
Resource Type Resource Name Source
Audio Recordings Audio Bible teaching Global Recordings Network
Audio Recordings General Ministry Resources General / Other
Audio Recordings Love letter to you from scripture Father's Love Letter
Audio Recordings Online Audio Scripture Talking Bibles
Film / Video Following Jesus video Jesus Film Project
Film / Video God's Story video God's Story
Film / Video Indigitube.tv Video / Animation Create International
Film / Video Jesus Film: view in Tamil Jesus Film Project
Film / Video LUMO film of Gospels Bible Media Group/LUMO
Film / Video Magdalena video Jesus Film Project
Film / Video My Last Day video, anime Jesus Film Project
Film / Video Rivka video Jesus Film Project
Film / Video Story of Jesus for Children Jesus Film Project
Film / Video World Christian Videos World Christian Videos
General Bible for Children Bible for Children
General Bible in text or audio or video Internet Publishing Sevice
General Bible in text or audio or video South Asia Bibles
General Biblical answers to your questions Got Questions Ministry
General Comprehensive list of Tamil Resources General / Other
General Faith Comes By Hearing - Bible in text or audio or video Faith Comes by Hearing
General Faith Comes By Hearing - Bible in text or audio or video Faith Comes by Hearing
General Faith Comes By Hearing - Bible in text or audio or video Faith Comes by Hearing
General Faith Comes By Hearing - Bible in text or audio or video Faith Comes by Hearing
General Faith Comes By Hearing - Bible in text or audio or video Faith Comes by Hearing
General Faith Comes By Hearing - Bible in text or audio or video Faith Comes by Hearing
General Faith Comes By Hearing - Bible in text or audio or video Faith Comes by Hearing
General Faith Comes By Hearing - Bible in text or audio or video Faith Comes by Hearing
General Faith Comes By Hearing - Bible in text or audio or video Faith Comes by Hearing
General Faith Comes By Hearing - Bible in text or audio or video Faith Comes by Hearing
General Faith Comes By Hearing - Bible in text or audio or video Faith Comes by Hearing
General Faith Comes By Hearing - Bible in text or audio or video Faith Comes by Hearing
General Gospel website in this language General / Other
General Scripture Earth Gospel resources links Scripture Earth
General Voice of the Martyrs resources Voice of the Martyrs
General YouVersion Bible versions in text and/or audio YouVersion Bibles
General Zume Resources Zume Project
General Zume Training Zume Project
Mobile App Android Bible app: Pastors Study Bible Tamil Grace Ministries and Dusty Sandals
Mobile App Android Bible app: Tamil YouVersion Bibles
Mobile App Android Bible App: Tamil Bible (தமிழ் பைபிள்) Indian Revised Version (IRV) Operation Agape
Mobile App Android Bible app: Tamil Study Bible Grace Ministries and Dusty Sandals
Mobile App Android Bible Radio app: Tamil Bible Radio Shalom Design S2dio
Mobile App Children's Bible app Bible4Kidz
Mobile App Download audio Bible app as APK file Faith Comes by Hearing
Mobile App Download audio Bible app as APK file Faith Comes by Hearing
Mobile App Download audio Bible app from Google Play Store Faith Comes by Hearing
Mobile App iOS Bible app: Tamil YouVersion Bibles
Mobile App iOS Bible Radio App: Tamil Bible Radio iOS Revive India
Text / Printed Matter Children and youth resources One Hope
Text / Printed Matter Literacy primer for Tamil Literacy & Evangelism International
Text / Printed Matter tools for gospel conversations Cru
Text / Printed Matter Topical Scripture booklets and Bible studies World Missionary Press
Photo Source Christophe Meneboeuf - Wikimedia  Creative Commons 
Map Source People Group data: Omid. Map geography: UNESCO / GMI. Map Design: Joshua Project  
Profile Source Joshua Project 
Data Sources Data is compiled from various sources. Learn more.