Category Archives: Leaders

Justice John D’Cunha: The no-nonsense judge who convicted Jayalalithaa

Bangalore:

Special Judge John Michael D’Cunha, who convicted Tamil Nadu Chief Minister Jayalalithaa in the disproportionate assets case on Saturday, has a reputation of being a no-nonsense judge who gave an indication of his stern approach while dealing with the politically volatile case.

D’Cunha, who has grabbed attention for delivering the historic verdict and is the man of the moment, is the fifth judge to deal with the 18-year-old case after it was transferred to Bangalore by the Supreme Court in November 2003.

File photo of Justice D'Cunha
File photo of Justice D’Cunha

The DA case against the AIADMK supremo that took nearly 11 years at the Special Court in Bangalore to reach the stage of final verdict, witnessed four full-time judges before it landed in the hands of D’Cunha.

AS Pachhapure, the first judge of the Special Court, assumed the post in December 2003 but he could not conduct proceedings from August 2005 as the Supreme Court had stayed the order passed by him by clubbing the two cases into one case of disproportionate assets. The post fell vacant in July 2007 when Pachhapure was elevated as a judge of the Karnataka High Court.

Later A T Munoli took charge as the judge but no effective proceedings were held during his tenure due to Supreme Court’s stay order. After his retirement, B M Mallikarjunaiah was appointed to the post.

The trial had made substantial progress as crucial proceedings like re-examination of some of the witnesses by the prosecution, recording the statements of Jayalalithaa in person, etc were conducted during the tenure of Mallikarjunaiah, who retired in August 2012.

MS Balakrishna took over the position in November 2013 and he completed the process of recording statements of three other accused and had almost completed the recording of final arguments when the controversy arose about the certain procedure adopted by him and the new Special Public Prosecutor G Bhavani Singh.

Though Supreme Court upheld the procedure and permitted to continue the service of Balakrishna beyond his retirement for completing the trial, he refused to continue after his retirement on September 30, 2013.

Following this, D’Cunha was appointed to the post in October 2013 and he heard the final arguments afresh. He had passed strictures against the accused and their counsel.

During the course of hearing of the final arguments, he gave an indication of his stern approach by rebuking the defence for what what he called attempts at “protracting the trial and suppressing the facts from the Court.”

Cunha, hailing from Mangalore, had started practise as a lawyer in 1985 and was selected to the post of district judge in 2002. He served in Dharward, Bellary and Bangalore in various positions, including as Secretary to the Chief Justices and as Registrar (Vigilance) of the High Court prior to his present posting.

PTI

source: http://www.firstpost.com / FirstPost / Home> F.Post> Latest News> India News / Banglaore – September 29th, 2014

Justice H L Dattu Sworn-in as Chief Justice of India

New Delhi :

Justice H.L. Dattu was Sunday sworn-in as the Chief Justice of India. He was administered the oath of office by President Pranab Mukherjee.

He is the 42nd Chief Justice of India and will be at the helms of the Indian judiciary till December 2, 2015. He succeeds Chief Justice R.M. Lodha who demitted office Sep 27.

H.L. Dattu (PTI Photo)
H.L. Dattu (PTI Photo)

The oath ceremony held in Darbar Hall of Rashtrapati Bhavan was attended by Vice President Hamid Ansari, former deputy prime minister L.K. Advani, Home Minister Rajnath Singh, Urban Development Minister Venkaiah Naidu, outgoing Chief Justice R.M. Lodha and Justice A.S. Anand as well as other seating and retired judges.

Before being elevated as the judge of the apex court Dec 17, 2008, Chief Justice Dattu was the Chief Justice of the Kerala High Court.

He was appointed a judge of the Karnataka High Court Dec 18, 1995. Thereafter, he was elevated as Chief Justice of Chhattisgarh High Court Feb 12, 2007. Three months later May 18, 2007, he was transferred to head the Kerala High Court.

Born Dec 3, 1950, Chief Justice Dattu was enrolled as an advocate Oct 23, 1975. He practised at Bangalore in civil, criminal, constitutional and taxation matters.

Chief Justice Dattu appeared as government counsel in the Karnataka High court for the sales tax department from 1983 to 1990, government advocate from 1990 to 1993, standing counsel for the income tax department from 1992 to 1993 and a senior standing counsel for the IT department from 1993 to 1995.

A No-nonsense Judge

A fervent devotee of Lord Ganesha and a connoisseur of Carnatic music, Justice Dattu will have to tackle two major challenges– to bring down the pendency of cases and strike a perfect balance between the Judiciary and Executive.

He takes his case files home, and is a firm believer of completing the hearing in the cases till the last word and leaves no lacunae.

In January, Justice Dattu, while dismissing a PIL seeking to abolish the practice of addressing judges as Lordships, had said, “What we want is a respectable way of address -”sir”, “my lord”, “your lordship” or in some other manner. People address us as “sir”. We don’t have any objection. It is your outlook to address us respectfully.”

Known for his no-nonsense attitude, a tough sense of discipline in the court, who believes in giving no adjournments in the cases, Justice Dattu will be hearing the pending review petition on the legality of Section 377 (the decriminalisation of gay sex).

He will hold the post for a little over a year until his retirement on December 2, 2015-one of the longest tenures for a CJI in recent years. The previous year has seen two CJIs retiring in a year’s time. Justice S Sathasivam retired in April after serving a little over nine months as CJI, followed by Justice R M Lodha, who held the top job for only five months.

Soon after his appointment was announced earlier this month, Justice Dattu had said, “I seek the blessings of all citizens of India. May they give me the courage and confidence to take this Institution to the highest stride.”

Justice Dattu is known for his penchant for hard work and has few outings with his family and friends. He describes former CJI S Rajendra Babu as his guru and says that it was Babu, who had taught him the virtue of hard work. Justice Dattu has also contributed in the field of social work under organisations like the Rotary Club. His tenure will begin at a crucial time when the Centre is pressing ahead with its decision to introduce the new National Judicial Appointment Committee (NJAC) after formally disbanding the Collegium System for the appointment of judges to higher courts.

As CJI, Justice Dattu is scheduled to hear some of the most important cases in the Supreme Court. He will be adjudicating the fate of Delhi Assembly and black money to name a few.

source: http://www.newindianexpress.com / The New Indian Express / Home> Nation / by IANS and ENS / September 28th, 2014

Former Head Master of Hardwicke School, Sanath Kumar passes away

SanathKumarBF24sept2014

Mysore :

Former Head Master of Hardwicke High School and former Senate Member of Mysore University, S.G. Sanath Kumar, passed away at his residence on JLB Road here early this morning. He was 86.

He leaves behind his daughter Dr. Pamela Sanath, son Ranjith Sanath, Deputy Manager of KSFC in Mandya, daughter-in-law, grandchildren and a host of relatives and friends.

His wife Ann Meena had predeceased him in the year 1986.

A Rotarian since 1968, Sanath Kumar was the founder-member of Ideal Jawa Rotary Children School. He was the Mission De Chief to start Ideal Jawa Rotary High School for which he was the Secretary and Correspondent till 2004.

Rotary Mysore President Rtn. S.V. Sridhar, PP Rtn. S.K. Sanjay, Journalists Rajashekar Koti and N. Niranjan Nikam and others paid their last respects to the departed soul.

Funeral will be held today at the CSI Cemetery on Mahadevapura Road in Gandhi Nagar at 4.30 pm.

Sanath Kumar: A multifaceted personality

Born on June 26, 1928 in city, S.G. Sanath Kumar did his primary education at Karunapura School, high school at Hardwicke High School and graduated in Science from St. Philomena’s College during 1949-52.

Being a football player and an athlete, he represented Mysore and Challenge Union in both athletics and football.

Sanath Kumar started his career as a Sports Reporter in Deccan Herald and then joined the Indian Railways, which he quit to take up teaching at Hardwicke High School in 1954.

He did his Bachelor’s in Education (B.Ed) in 1955 and completed his Master’s in Education (M.Ed) in 1960 and became the Head Master in 1968.

During his tenure as the Head Master, Hardwicke School was ranked as one of the best schools in the city and was instrumental in starting the Hardwicke English Medium Primary School in 1979 and in the same year he was presented the State Award as ‘Best Head Master.’

Sanath Kumar was alsoan NCC Officer and Sports Secretary of the school during which the school got numerous awards. His love for gardening helped the school in winning awards at Dasara Flower Show and Ornamental Garden Show for a record 14 years and had also maintained a mini Zoo in the school.

He was also the Correspondent for all Church of South India (CSI) Schools in Mysore and Mandya districts and also served as the Secretary of Karnataka Southern Diocesan Education Society for 11 years and retired in the year 1984.

Even after retirement, he kept his enthusiasm and zeal to serve and revived the YMCA and was its Regional Chairman and was still serving the organisation as its Secretary.

The State Government had nominated him as a Member of the Mysore University Senate during 1983-84.

Apart from educational activities, Sanath Kumar had been actively involved in a number of Social and Cultural Clubs like Mysore Race Club, Mysore Sports Club and Jayachamaraja Wadiyar Golf Club. He served as the Secretary of Mysore Sports Club, President and Secretary of The Graduates Co-operative Bank, Member of the Mission Hospital Administrative Committee, Member of the Mysore University Football Selection Committee and was the magazine Editor of the Rotary Club.

His house on JLB road was once called as the Noah’s Ark, as it was full of birds and animals like rabbits, deer, peacock, monkey, varieties of dogs, cats, tortoise and other animals.

source: http://www.starofmysore.com / Star of Mysore / Home> General News  / September 18th,  2014

Haji Jaffer passes away

Veteran sports administrator and patron Haji Jaffer passed away here on Sunday.

He was 88.

Jaffer, an advocate by profession, was associated with cue sports and racing in a big way in Bangalore. He played a key role in the development of the Karnataka State Billiards Association and was its patron from 1991.

He also served the Bangalore Turf Club as the assistant judge and as first judge, besides making his mark as a commentator. Billiards fraternity benefitted immensely from the presence of Jaffer, who after joining the brigade of M Chenniappan, the founder of the KSBA, worked tirelessly to promote the sport.

It was Jaffer who mooted the idea of Women’s Nationals, successfully conducting the first edition in 1989. Jaffer, who was also the vice-president of the Billiards and Snooker Federation of India, also worked for the inclusion of cue sports in the Asian Games.

He leaves behind two daughters and a son. The KSBA has condoled his demise.

source: http://www.deccanherald.com / Deccan Herald / Home> Sports / DHNS – Bangalore, September 21st, 2014

Nandan Nilekani Receives ‘Legend In Leadership’ Award

Infosys co-founder Nandan Nilekani is the first Indian to receive this prestigious award from Yale University.

Yale University felicitated the chairman of India’s Unique Identification Database Authority and Infosys’ co-founder Nandan Nilekani with the ‘Legend in Leadership Award’. Nilekani is the first Indian to receive this award.

NandanBF22sept2014

The ‘Legend in Leadership Award’ was created 20 years ago to honour current and former CEOs who serve as living legends to inspire chief executives across industries, sectors and nations.

The award was presented to Nilekani by Richard C. Levin, president, Yale University, at the Yale CEO Leadership Summit of The Chief Executive Leadership Institute. The summit convened 100 business leaders in New Delhi, to discuss the theme of ‘Navigating the Global Oceans of Opportunity for Indian Business’.

Nilekani, who co-founded Infosys in 1981 and served as CEO from 2002 to 2007, holds the rank of cabinet minister as the first chairman of the Indian government’s newly created ‘Unique Identification Database Authority’. The universal ID card is expected to help ensure that most of the billions of dollars India and other organisations spend on aid reach the people for whom it was intended.

In 2006, he was awarded the Padma Bhushan, one of the highest civilian honours awarded by the Government of India.

source: http://www.efytimes.com / EFY Times.com / Home> InfoTech> Awards and Recognition / Monday – November 09th, 2009

Nandan Nilekani to be given Legend in Leadership award by Yale

Washington :

IT Czar Nandan Nilekani  has been selected for the ‘Legend in Leadership Award’, becoming the first Indian to receive Yale University’s top honour.

Nilekani, 54, Chairman of India’s Unique Identification Database Authority will be presented with award given by the Yale University President Richard C Levin at the Yale CEO Leadership Summit of The Chief Executive Leadership Institute in New Delhi on November 6.

The summit will convene one hundred world-renowned business leaders in New Delhi on November 5 and 6 to discuss the theme of ‘Navigating the Global Oceans of Opportunity for Indian Business,’ a media release said.

The ‘Legend in Leadership Award’ was created 20 years ago to honor current and former CEOs who serve as living legends to inspire chief executives across industries, sectors, and nations.

Jamie Dimon of JPMorgan Chase; Robert Iger of The Walt Disney Company; Stephen Schwarzman of The Blackstone Group; Roger Enrico of PepsiCo; John Pepper of Proctor & Gamble and Don Keough of The Coca-Cola Co were some of the other people who received the prestigious honour.

Others who had earlier received the honour include were McKinsey founder Marvin Bower;Richard Teerlink of Harley-Davidson.; Holiday Inn founder Kemmons Wilson; financier Wilbur Ross; and Lou Gerstner of IBM.

source: http://www.timesofindia.indiatimes.com / The Times of India / Home> India / PTI / November 03rd, 2009

President Dr. S. Radhakrishnan made school prayer of DMS secular

by Dr. C.G. Nagaraja ,  Retd. Head Master,  DMS,  RIE,  Mysore

It was a very pleasant morning on 7th December 1965. The staff and the students of Demonstration Multipurpose School (DMS), attached to the Regional College of Education, Mysore (RIE), had a very important function to attend in their school premises, which is also the campus of RIE. It was the visit of the great Teacher of our country, the then President of India, Dr. S. Radhakrishnan.

The writer of this article was a Teacher in RIE at that time and was assigned to teach in DMS, a school attached to the RIE as a laboratory school for innovative practices.

On this occasion, the President planted a sapling to commemorate his visit and then we were asked to render the school prayer in front of the President of India which we deemed as a great moment for all of us. The school prayer is and was a Sanskrit shloka, that is yam shaivaha…

We the staff and the selected students chanted the shloka in front of all the dignitaries including the President of India, Dr. S. Radhakrishnan. The moment we finished the prayer, the President asked us to sing again. He listened to the rendering carefully and asked us to include one more line and to our surprise he said, ‘sing along with me.’ It was such an excitement to all the people in the open-air function of planting a sapling, we readily joined him. He told us to write down and added one line in Sanskrit to match the shloka. He added on the spot a line which included the names of Jesus and Mohammed. The shloka now reads as shown in the box below.

It is almost 50 years now since this event took place. What an intellectual he must be to add the most secular phrase to our epic shloka !

Today, Regional Institute of Education maintains the spot where our President stood and sung the shloka at the park and a gardener maintains it since the past 49 years. Every year Teachers Day is celebrated at this spot in memory of Dr. Radhakrishnan and the students of DMS sing the amended shloka as school prayer daily.

As an educator and a Principal of Schools, wherever I worked I introduced this shloka as school prayer.

Some of the old photographs show the tree that was a sapling of a few inches. It has now grown to a huge tree and stands majestically, singing the same Prayer in silence, heralding the spirit of secularism of this country.

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I am very grateful to my colleagues of RIE who assisted in getting some of the photographs from the library. I am grateful to Rekha and Sharada who were students of RIE in 1965 and a team member of the singing group, Shivakumar, a crafts teacher who carved the bust of our late President to install at the spot where the sapling has now grown into a mighty tree.

*The Shloka before the 2 lines were added:

Yam Shaivaha Samupasathe

Shiva ethi brahmethi vedanthinaha

Bhoudhatha Buddha ethi pramanapatavaha

Karthethi Niyayikaha

Arhan Ethyatha Jaina Shasanarataha

Karmethi meemamsakaha

Soyam vo vidadhathu vaanchitha phalam

Trilokyanatho vibuhu.

The Shloka after the 2 lines were added:

Yam Shaivaha Samupasathe

Shiva ethi brahmethi vedanthinaha

Bhoudhatha Buddha ethi pramanapatavaha

Karthethi Niyayikaha

Arhan Ethyatha Jaina Shasanarataha

Karmethi meemamsakaha

Kristhaha – kristha ethi Kriyapararathaha

Allethi Mohamadaha

Soyamvo vidadhathu vanchitha phalam

Trilokya naatho vibhuhu

source: http://www.starofmysore.com / Star of Mysore / Home> Feature Articles / September 15th,  2014

Young Indian architect named ‘leader of tomorrow’ by Time magazine

AlokShettyBF20sept2014
New York :

A 28-year-old Indian architect has been named “young leader of tomorrow” by Time magazine for his pioneering work in designing affordable flood-proof houses for slum dwellers.

Alok Shetty is among “leaders of tomorrow” who are “working hard to change their worlds on Saturday,” Time said as it named six inspirational young persons in its first class of “next generation leaders”.

Time said Shetty is “building hope in India” as an architect who is “finding simple solutions to complex problems.”

Shetty, working with the Bangalore-based nonprofit Parinaam Foundation, is designing homes for hundreds of slum dwellers whose makeshift houses flood during the heavy rains and become breeding grounds for diseases like malaria.

He has been working in Bangalore’s LRDE slum, which lies next to one of the southern Indian city’s sprawling technology parks and is home to some 2,000 people.

Shetty, who studied Master’s in architecture at Columbia University, “came at the problem with an approach he brings to all of his projects – marrying smart design with a commitment to sustainability.”

He designed flood-proof houses, costing USD 300, out of discarded scaffolding, bamboo and wood. The houses are affordable and easy to set up as it takes only four hours to erect and dismantle them.

Shetty is seeking government subsidies to bring the price down further for those who cannot afford the units.

“Shetty epitomizes a growing breed of young leaders and entrepreneurs in India who are committed to finding solutions for a country undergoing rapid social and economic changes, some of which can leave India’s poorest straggling behind,” Time said.

Another venture by is a plan to boost access to healthcare and education in remote communities.

“In my travels I saw vast stretches of rural India where infrastructure for health care and education was severely underdeveloped,” he says in the Time report.

“Building facilities in these areas is not impossible but it is time-consuming. Adaptive architecture can be an extremely effective solution to help address our developmental problems,” he said, adding that “often the simplest solutions are the best solutions.”

The list also includes Israeli social entrepreneur Adi Altschuler (27), China’s Zhao Bowen (22) who is working on improving medical testing and activist Ikram Ben Said (34) who founded ‘Aswat Nissa’ in Tunisia that is dedicated to women’s rights and the first to involve Tunisian women politicians.

Online music video mogul Jamal Edwards (24) is building an online music video empire and giving other entrepreneurs a helping hand while British-Nigerian Ola Orekunrin (28) is the founder and managing director of Flying Doctors Nigeria, the first emergency air ambulance service in the country.

–PTI

source: http://www.siasat.com / The Siasat Daily / Home> NRI’s Corner / Saturday – September 20th, 2014

Call of the Jungle

At Saad Bin Jung’s luxury eco-tourism lodge in Kabini, Karnataka, villagers and tribals work together to conserve the forest and the big cats that inhabit it

Image: Shaaz Jung A new calling: Saad Jung believes in eco-tourism that conserves more than animals
Image: Shaaz Jung
A new calling: Saad Jung believes in eco-tourism that conserves more than animals

As the last rays of sunlight filter through the leaves, a shadow slinks out of the thick foliage with an unmistakable feline elegance. “There,” whispers 27-year-old Shaaz Jung from his perch atop a jeep. Immediately, seven pairs of eyes turn to the clearing ahead. Under the rapt gaze of the tourists, a male leopard emerges from the foliage. A flurry of clicks from SLR cameras breaks the silence of the waning dusk. But the leopard makes an indifferent model. He was aware of the jeep the moment the vehicle entered his territory, deep in the jungles of Karnataka. For the tourists, however, this sighting is a privilege. The shy animal deigned to make an appearance on the last of the five game drives organised by Bison Wildlife Resort near Kabini Lake, Karnataka. The resort, started by Shaaz’s father, 53-year-old Saad Bin Jung, lies between two national parks, Nagarhole and Bandipur, and is a two-hour drive from Mysore. It is also a labour of love, one in which villagers and tribals work with the Jungs to conserve and preserve this ecologically vibrant zone.

Though the eco-resort opened five years ago, it took over a decade to come to fruition. Consider its back story.

Like his uncle Mansur Ali Khan—the late nawab who is remembered by his moniker ‘Tiger’ Pataudi—Saad Jung started his career as a cricketer. A descendant of the royal Pataudi family of Bhopal and the Paigahs of Hyderabad, he acknowledges and accepts the popular portrayal of Indian nobility as hunters. “I now realise the mistakes we made while addressing wildlife conservation within the forests that belonged to our family,” says Jung. “The rulers, to a large extent, permitted community usage of forest produce. Locals were asked to manage forest land, but were banned from hunting. That was the sole prerogative of the royals. There was control, but there was also inclusion.”

Image: Prasad Gori for Forbes Life India The village: The resort maintains a rustic look and feel, although it houses luxurious facilities
Image: Prasad Gori for Forbes Life India
The village: The resort maintains a rustic look and feel, although it houses luxurious facilities

Saad began taking an active interest in conservation in 1986. He started with Bush Betta Resort at Bandipur and an angling camp on the Kaveri river soon after. In 1997, he acquired patta (registered) land outside the protected forest area and worked with locals to build a luxury resort, one that doesn’t intrude on or disturb the ecologically sensitive zone. The Bison Resort,  made up of African lodge-style stilted, elaborate tents and decks that overlook the forest and Kabini lake, is the result. Most of the building material for it was sourced locally. Rather than alienating tribals and villagers from the land, Saad brokered a symbiotic relationship between resort and village.

The Bison, which opened in 2009, has succeeded because it combines luxury with inclusive growth. Saad and Shaaz, who is the resort manager, create a rustic yet opulent experience. From sunken showers in bathrooms to bars that overlook the lake, the resort delivers a unique kind of grandeur—one that typically costs more than Rs 10,000 a night for Indians and Rs 24,240 ($400) a night for foreign nationals. Most employees are locals and their intimate knowledge of the land heightens a visitor’s experience.

source: http://www.forbesindia.com / Forbes India / Home> Forbes India/Live / by Shravan Bhat / August 16th, 2014

Grace and Glory of pure friendship

Last month I received two copies of a book titled “The Vanished Raj” from Prism Books Pvt. Ltd., Bangalore, with a request to review it in our newspapers. It is the English translation of “Kelavu Nenapugalu” (Some Reminiscences) in Kannada written by Navaratna Rama Rao, who was an official in the government of the Maharaja of Mysore Krishnaraja Wadiyar IV during the first decade of the last century — 1904 to 1909. The original Kannada book was translated into English by the author’s grand children Navaratna Rajaram and Rajeshwari Rao.

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I went through some pages and found both the language and the narration rather heavy for easy reading. For all his academic brilliance and post-graduate degrees, Navaratna Rama Rao could start his career in the Palace from a Junior official’s level — Amildar. Of course, he tells us how he lost a higher position at the entry point. He mentions of that illustrious Kannada litterateur, author of “Chikkaveera Rajendra” Masti Venkatesh Iyengar, who was his colleague and M.A. Srinivasan who too has written a book in English about his days in the service of the Maharaja’s government as a Minister. I had read this book many years ago. It was very readable, both language-wise and content-wise.

Having failed to proceed further with the book which indeed might interest and even benefit Revenue Officers, beginning from the Village Accountants and Gram Panchayat Members, I must credit this book for its singular article by no less a person than C. Rajagoplachari, the freedom fighter and the last Governor General of India, on his life-long friend Navaratna Rama Rao, taken from the magazine ‘Swarajya,’ December 17, 1960. It was a tribute C. Rajagopalachari paid to his friend. It is an ode to friendship of a kind I have never read or heard in my life. It set me thinking about the sense, meaning and purpose of real friendship. It indeed defines who is a real friend.

Immediately after I finished reading the article, “Rajaji on Rama Rao (1877-1960),” I reached out to the Reader’s Digest Dictionary for the meaning of the word friend. It said: A person with whom one has a bond of mutual affection, typically one exclusive of sexual or family relations.

This at individual, person-to-person level.

May be for this very reason the American Novelist John O’ Hara famously said, “You cannot buy friendship from a supermarket.” And, I am sure, as in my case so also in the case of many young persons’ case, friends are of great help in seeking out independent life, in looking out for greener pastures, promotions in jobs or venturing into enterprises. The role played by their friends would be significant and defining. This kind of role of a friend may be extended even to a person deciding to marry or finding a wife.

However, I must say with passing years friendship will wane, because of long years of separation (out of sight is out of mind) or because of the stark difference in the stature of friends; both may be distancing themselves intentionally unable to relate to each other because of the differences in wealth or position. This is understandable. But the worse is when a friend turns a foe or a fiend. A fraud. And there are friends for whom all these above mentioned differences do not matter. Rajagopalachari is one such friend of Navaratna Rama Rao.

Before I reproduce Rajaji’s article which is an ultimate tribute a friend, who was just a minion in Mysore Maharaja’s government, whom the Governor General of India Rajaji did not forget all his life, let me recall a similar friendship that lasted a lifetime between the American Oil tycoon Rockfeller and a school teacher.

Rockfeller had a friend from his school days who became a school teacher. Rockfeller became an oiler and a billionaire. But his friendship continued despite the difference in wealth and social status.

Here is how others try to encash on such friendships. Once the teacher-friend asked Rockfeller to take him to the Stock Exchange where shares of big companies are traded, as he had not visited the Stock Exchange at all in his life. Rockfeller readily agreed and took him to the Stock Exchange and showed him around.

Next day morning to the teacher’s shock and surprise, he could see dozens of people at his door wanting to see him. Can you make a guess why ?

Now the article by C. Rajagopalchari by way of a tribute to his friend Navaratna Rama Rao:

Navaratna Rama Rao and I met in 1892 when we were both in our early teens in the Central College, Bangalore. I sought him out and left a letter in his room on the top of an eating house, asking for his friendship. Eating houses were of a wretched quality in those days and students who had no home in the city hired wretched rooms to sleep in and ate poor meals in what were called hotels which were as far from the hotels we know now as a twelve anna rush mat is from a Persian Carpet. My letter must have been a very boyish document. But in the romance of adolescence it was a serious adventure. I was attracted by his brains, his brightness, his lovable exterior, and by his being better read than all the rest of us in the college and as fond of great English literature as myself. Rama Rao accepted and we were friends from then on until death parted us on 27 November 1960 after sixty-eight years of unbroken attachment. We read a lot together — Byron, Shakespeare, Scott, Robert Louis Stevenson, Thackeray, Dickens and many other classic authors’ books. He was the greater connoisseur of the two of us and his taste was superb and guided me like a mesmerist. We laughed and enjoyed humour and talked metaphysics and educated each other continuously. Our friendship was an astonishment and mystery to our college mates but they tolerated it and gathered round both of us in admiration.

My boyish instinct was right and I am thankful for it. Our mutual affection made us nobler and better and stronger and happier than either of us would have been without it. We were each the external life of the other as Valmiki puts it in respect of Lakshmana for Sri Rama. All life is a mystery and I realise it more and more everyday and as one after another of my friends and colleagues pass out and I am left with increasing loneliness. Life is a mystery but love is the greatest mystery of all. Dear young men and women who read this, do as we two did, Rama Rao and I. We swore to ourselves each in his own mind that we should be friends for all life. And so we were all these nearly seventy years, one soul in two bodies and two lives in each body. This kind of friendship will keep you from sin, from all kinds of meanness. It will protect you like a guardian angel, against all evil, all unhappiness, all stepping down from the ideals of romantic youth.

Rama Rao’s life and mine ran on different tracks. What if ? We were ever together, though others did not see it. Whatever each of us was doing and wherever we were, we were together in spirit. Pothen Joseph wrote last week “I know he is in deep mourning for a friend in Bangalore who had become a part of his own being.” That put it as briefly and truly as any English words can do it. Those who have not experienced true and full friendship must think it all nonsense. God bless them.

I saw my friend under Death’s black shadow on the ninth of November. The poison had gone to his head. He smiled in recognition but he was above the region of pain and away from normal expression. He was in delirium, uttering high things about the affairs of the world, about truth, and about many other things all incoherently. It was heart-rending to watch his best and most admirable intellect involved in incoherence. I asked a daughter-in-law of his who sat by his bed to sing a Purandaradasa Kirtana. She did it beautifully. My friend’s eyes glistened. He stopped speaking and weakly struggled to bring his palms together in prayer. He looked grateful and sank into worship and silence. Never did I feel so happy.

The doctors gave up all hope and it was only a matter of a couple of days according to them. But he appeared to revive and astonished the medical men for a few days. Exactly a fortnight after I left him on the thirteenth of November to go to Gujarat, Maharashtra and Karnataka, I got a message when I was in Belgaum, that all was over. I made an all-night car journey from Belgaum to Bangalore and reached at dawn. But before that, the previous evening, my friend’s body had been according to ancient custom reduced to ashes and I could only walk round that cruel heap and make three perambulations for a last physical act of love. As the Isa Upanishad rishi sings “the breath has left to join the universal air and the body has turned into Bhasma,” “O mind,” as the rishi continues, “remember that only the works remain, only the works remain.”

Om Krato smara Krtam smara

Krato smara Krtam smara.

And I returned from the cremation ground praying as the rishi did

Agne naya supathaa raaye asmaan

Visvaani, deva, vayunaani vidvaan

O, Fire, thou who knowest all the paths, lead us in the right path, cleanse us and save us from sin, we entreat you over and over.

— By C. Rajagopalachari (1878-1972), in Swarajya, December 17, 1960.

Can you imagine Rajagopalachari himself so old, cutting short his journey at Belgaum, a far away place from Bangalore and travelling all through the night on those bad roads, to Bangalore to see his friend’s body. And what did he see for his efforts ? His friend’s mortal remains — ash.

True friendship indeed transcends all barriers — it is till death do them part. As in the case of friendship between the Governor General of India C. Rajagopalachari and an officer in the government of Mysore Maharaja. What can be nobler than this, nay more divine ?

I am sure by now, you my readers may have made the guess as to why so many people gathered at the door of that teacher-friend of Rockfeller. In case you need confirmation here is the answer: They wanted to know from the teacher which company’s shares Rockfeller bought !

e-mail: kbg@starofmysore.com

source: http://www.starofmysore.com / Star of Mysore / Home> Abracadabra…Abracadabra / by K. B. Ganapathy  / September 14th,  2014