Scarborough business owner donates $2 million to U of T Scarborough for Tamil studies

Ravi Gukathasan
Ravi Gukathasan, one of U of T Scarborough's earliest Tamil alumni, has given $2 million to support Tamil studies (photo by Ken Jones)

Don Campbell

One of U of T Scarborough’s earliest Tamil alumni has given the campus a historic donation of $2 million to support Tamil studies.

The gift from Ravi Gukathasan (U of T PhD, 1986; UTSC BSc, 1982), who is CEO of Digital Specialty Chemicals Ltd. in Scarborough, is the largest single cash gift from an alumnus in UTSC’s 51-year history. It will fund an annual post-doctoral fellowship in Tamil studies as well as scholarships, event programming and digital archiving. 

“I want U of T Scarborough to be a star when it comes to the Sri Lankan Tamil diaspora, its culture, its language, its perspective in the world,” says Gukathasan. “We have the biggest Tamil diaspora in the world in Scarborough. They need to be proud.”

He also sees his gift as a leadership example for other members of the Tamil community to follow. “I think $2 million is a very good nucleus to begin from,” he says.

“I applaud Dr. Gukathasan’s initiative and passionate support of UTSC and am confident that his generous example will stimulate other alumni, not just alumni from the Tamil community, to step forward with game-changing donations,” says Principal Bruce Kidd.

HEAR MORE ABOUT THIS STORY ON CBC'S METRO MORNING

The 10-year commitment will fund the $1.25 million Ethan and Leah Schweitzer Gukathasan Fellowship, named for Gukathasan’s two teenage children, as well as provide $500,000 for a programming fund, $150,000 for a digital fund, and $100,000 for scholarships, all in the children’s names as well. 

Image removed.
"I hope we can keep building this program," says Ravi Gukathasan (photo by Ken Jones)

“The gift will add hugely to our ability to expose our campus to what’s going on in Tamil worlds,” says Bhavani Raman, associate professor in the Department of Historical and Cultural Studies and chair of the tri-campus Tamil Worlds Initiative programming committee. “We will be able to support young and upcoming scholars from all over the world with the postdoctoral fellowship, as well as other visitors.” 

She notes that a previous substantial gift from Gukathasan has already allowed UTSC to sponsor a Tamil Studies Conference, hold regular public programming on Tamil subjects and work with the UTSC Library to enhance its Tamil-language collection. She expects to be able to greatly expand such initiatives, including the digitization of Sri Lankan Tamil works for global access. 

“Beyond U of T, the gift will be a big resource for Tamil studies, because there are very few post-doctoral fellowships dedicated to this field,” she says. “My guess is we’ll get many applicants from outside Canada.”

The gift is also a timely one considering Canada is celebrating its first ever Tamil Heritage Month this month. 

Gukathasan grew up outside Jaffna in Sri Lanka’s Tamil north, then left with the family for the U.K. in 1974. They later re-emigrated to Canada, settling in northern Scarborough, and in 1978 Gukathasan entered what was then Scarborough College, founded just 13 years earlier. “I was one of only two Tamils in the whole school,” he says. 

After gaining his PhD in chemistry at U of T, Gukathasan founded Digital Specialty Chemicals, a highly successful enterprise located on Coronation Drive in southeastern Scarborough, where he has also created a small park and decorated the lobby with Indigenous art. 

He’s very proud of his two children with fellow chemist and alumna Caroline Schweitzer (U of T PhD, 1993; U of T MSc., 1989; UTSC BSc, 1987) whose names are on the gift. Ethan, 18, recently entered chemical engineering at U of T, while Leah, 17 and in Grade 12, wants to study at U of T in evolutionary anthropology.

Gukathasan sees his gift as just the start. “I’m hoping others will follow suit with more money,” he says. “I hope we can keep building this program and make it very, very well-funded and well-rounded.”