Border Towns Don’t Follow Politics, They Follow People


Hosur has always fascinated me.

Politically, it is part of . But culturally, it feels like a beautiful mix of Tamil Nadu, , and all living together in one place.

Recently, I visited an branch in Hosur, and that is where I saw this reality in action.

The staff members were speaking Telugu among themselves very casually. A customer before me was spoken to in Kannada fluently. When my turn came, they immediately switched to Tamil and continued the conversation naturally.

No hesitation. No language politics. No “Which state are you from?” moment.

Just communication.

That small incident made me realize something important about border towns in India.

Maps may divide states, but people don’t live their lives based on political borders.

Historically, Hosur, Denkanikottai, Royakottai, and nearby regions were always culturally mixed zones. These places saw Tamil, Kannada, and Telugu influence for centuries through kingdoms, migration, trade, and later through British administration under the old Madras Presidency.

When states were reorganized in 1956 based on language, these regions became part of Tamil Nadu. But culture does not change overnight just because a line was drawn on a map.

Even today, Hosur carries:

  • Tamil political identity
  • Kannada cultural influence
  • Telugu community presence
  • Bengaluru’s economic energy

all at the same time.

In fact, Hosur today behaves like a Bengaluru extension economically, while emotionally and politically remaining Tamil Nadu.

That is what makes places like Hosur special.

In many cities, people struggle with language barriers. But in border towns, multilingualism becomes survival, habit, and eventually culture itself.

A bank employee switching between Telugu, Kannada, and Tamil within minutes may look normal there. But if you observe carefully, it actually tells the story of South India itself — connected, blended, adaptive, and practical.

Sometimes, history is not visible in monuments or textbooks.

Sometimes, history is visible in a simple conversation inside a bank.

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