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“We need a home,” he said, tapping a rhythm on the desk. “A place where a kid in Kodaikanal can discover the same stories my grandmother told me, where a programmer in Coimbatore can share a new open‑source Tamil keyboard, and where a poet in Jaffna can post his verses without fear of being lost in the noise.”

A forum thread titled turned into a mentorship circle. Veteran poet Kaviyarasu posted critiques, while beginners like Anjali , a software engineer in Bangalore, shared her nervous drafts. Within days, Anjali’s poem was selected for a featured post, accompanied by a short audio recording of her reciting it in a lilting voice. tamilblasters.life

Arun, now older but still passionate, looked at the latest article—a piece by a 10‑year‑old in Singapore titled . The child described a future where a voice assistant could understand the subtle sandhi (word‑joining) rules of Tamil and respond in lyrical pattukavithai (song verses). Arun smiled, realizing that the seed they planted had grown into a forest of ideas. “We need a home,” he said, tapping a rhythm on the desk

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