Tamil Thai
Tamil Thai, known in English as Mother Tamil, refers to the allegorical and sometimes anthropomorphic personification of the Tamil language as a mother. There is a temple located in Karaikudi. This allegory of the Tamil language in the persona of a mother was established during the Tamil renaissance movement of the latter half of the nineteenth century. The concept became popular in the Tamil-speaking world after the publication of a song invoking and praising Tamil mother in a play titled, "Manonmaniyam", written by Manonmaniam Sundaram Pillai and published in 1891. Under the auspices of the DMK, the Tamil Thai Valthu, with music composed by M.S. Viswanathan, has since been adopted as the state song of the Government of Tamil Nadu.
Temple
Tamil Thai Kovil is a temple in which the presiding deity is Tamil Thai, representing the Tamil language. This temple, located in Karaikudi in Sivaganga district in Tamil Nadu, is the only temple in the world for worshipping a language as a goddess. The temple is situated inside the Kamban Mani Mandabam, and the street in which the temple is located has been named Tamil Thai Kovil Street.The idea of establishing such a temple was conceived by Kamban Adippodi Saw Ganesan the founder of Kamban Kazhagam. The Tamil Thai temple was declared open in 1993, by Karunanidhi. The main shrine is for Tamil Thai. On either side of the idol of Tamil Thai, there are smaller idols of Agathiyar and Tolkappiyar. Outside the main shrine are icons of Oli Thai and Vari Thai. There are separate enclosures for Kamban, Ilango Adigal, and Thiruvalluvar. V. Ganapati Sthapati, temple architect and builder from Karaikudi, designed, constructed, and did the sculpturing work of the temple.
The idol of Tamil Thai installed in the temple is not worshipped in the same way as the idols installed in other temples. The Tamil Thai temple remains closed except during the Kamban Vila which happens during the month of April every year.
Statue
In 1981, the then Tamil Nadu Government under M. G. Ramachandran had declared open a Tamil Thai statue in Madurai on the occasion of the Fifth World Tamil Conference, in January 1981.On 14 May, 2013, J. Jayalalithaa, Chief Minister of Tamil Nadu, announced in the State Legislative Assembly that an over 300-feet high statue of Tamil Thai would be installed in Madurai at an approximate cost of Rs.100 crore. She also announced that the statue would be on the lines of the Statue of Liberty in New York City, but it was never built. The image of the proposed statue has also attracted some criticism for the likely implications of the underlying iconographic presuppositions.