Tamil Heritage Month - January Learn & Explore Lesson

A smiling man stands behind a podium labelled ROM on a stage and gestures at a screen as an audience watches. The screen displays two images of a manuscript held between two ornately decorated wooden covers.

Catégorie

Onsite Lessons with ROM Educators

Durée

1 hour

Public

Educators, Schools

Âge

11-14

Classe

6-8

Sujets

Art & Culture, Language, Social Sciences & Humanities, The Arts

About this Lesson

Celebrate Tamil (தமிழ்) Heritage Month with guest speaker and poet Namitha Rathinappillai and explore objects of Tamil (தமிழ்) origin from the collections at ROM.

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Wednesday, January 21, 2026 – 12:15 PM

Grade 6-8

Did you know that Tamil (தமிழ்), about 5000 years old, is one of the oldest languages that continues to be spoken/used today? About 90 million people around the world speak Tamil. In fact, because of the Tamil’s global influence, you have probably used words that are borrowed from Tamil. If you have ever used the words cash (in Tamil காசு), mango (in Tamil மாங்காய்) or orange (in Tamil நாரம்), you are speaking Tamil. As an old language, there are also many stories, epics and poems written in Tamil.

Namitha Rathinappillai (they/she), is a Tamil poet based in Toronto, who joins us for an exploration of poetry and Tamil heritage. We’ll examine objects of Tamil origins from the collections at ROM and use them as inspiration for short poems to share with the audience (if you feel so inclined). 

Use the Learn & Explore Gallery Trail to assist students to connect this lesson to their exploration of the galleries at ROM.

 

Delivery LanguageThis lesson is offered in English only
Activities
  • Theatre session
  • Museum exploration with optional Gallery Trail
FormatTheatre Lesson
Duration1 hour
Pricing$16/person
Minimum Group15
Maximum Group35

Guest Presenter

A grinning South Asian person with long dark hair wearing a black top with tigers on it.
Namitha Rathinappillai

Namitha Rathinappillai ‍(they/she) is a queer Tamil poet and workshop facilitator. Currently based in Toronto, she was the first female and youngest director of Ottawa’s Urban Legends Poetry Collective (ULPC). They are a two-time Canadian Festival of Spoken Word (CFSW) team member with ULPC, and they published their first chapbook titled ‘Dirty Laundry’ with Battleaxe Press in November 2018. In 2019, she won the RBC Youth Ottawa Spirit of the Capital Award for Arts and Culture. They enjoy crafting, writing letters to friends, and looking at the moon.

Learning Goals

Learn about and analyze the concepts of identity, self, and sense of belonging through culturally responsive and relevant texts, belongings and objects.

Analyze cultural elements of texts by investigating the meanings of these elements, making connections to their lived experience and culture, and sharing their interpretations with others.

Use precise and descriptive word choice and a variety of sentence types and structures in producing a piece of poetry.

Communicate ideas effectively, including using and creating complex sentences that combine phrases and clauses to express relationships among ideas.

Gallery Trail

Help your students connect this lesson to their exploration of the galleries at ROM.  

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Curriculum Connections

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