Category Archives: About Chennai(Madras) / TamilNadu
Leader who shaped Tamil Nadu politics turns 90
Chennai :
As a 14-year-old during the anti-Hindi agitation, he walked alongside Periyar as E V Ramasamy was called, with a spring in his step and vigour in his heart. Breaking away from a traditional family of temple musicians, he made politics his domain.
His fledgling party formed as a breakaway faction from the original DK in 1949, soon went on to shape national politics in the post-emergency era. Today, 10 years short of his centenary, Muthuvel Karunanidhi is the oldest surviving active political leader of stature hi n the country with lakhs of party functionaries under his command for the past 44 years. Only his party general secretary K Anbazhagan is older than him. Karunanidhi enters his 90th year on Monday.
Facing a succession war, 2G scam charges and political isolation after the recent pullout from the UPA II regime, the DMK veteran is still a fighter strategizing at party conclaves. A five-time chief minister of Tamil Nadu taking over the reins of CM at a relatively young age of 44 years succeeding C N Annadurai, and 12- time MLA, Karunanidhi has been meeting party cadres and writing for them in the party organ almost every day.
Karunanidhi is the first Dravidian leader to set his sight on national politics, say analysts. “Till his mentor Anna’s period, the DMK had focussed on state politics. But Karunanidhi adopted a different strategy. He has been concentrating on national politics since 1971. He was planning to get more projects and funds for the state with the support of the Centre. Though, there was a strong anti-Congress mood in the party, he aligned with the Indira Gandhi-led Congress in the 1971 Lok Sabha elections,” Dravidian writer and historian ‘Sangoli’ K Thirunavukkarasu told TOI.
The DMK was the first party to pass a strong resolution against the Emergency. The Karunanidhi-led government was dissolved in 1976 following the Emergency. “He played a vital role in the formation of the National Front in 1988. He had organised a big event for the National Front and leaders like V P Singh, N T Rama Rao and others participated. DMK became a constituent of the Union government for the first time when V P Singh formed the government in 1989. The DMK has had a strong hold at the Centre for the past 15 years with its representatives a part of the Centre,” he said.
Commentators say that Karunanidhi never gave up his basic ideologies like justice and the interest of Tamil language. “Karunanidhi has been following his ideologies from the time of the Justice Party,” Thirunavukkarasu said.
Though Karunanidhi dropped out of schools unlike his colleagues in the party, R Nedunchezhian and EVK Sampath, he managed to succeed Anna. “Others acted like leaders. But, Karunanidhi acted as a party worker. When he was a treasurer of the party during the Anna years, he had travelled across the state and consolidated his support base,” party seniors recalled.
Karunanidhi not only attracted the cadres but also impressed his mentors Anna and Periyar. “The other leaders in the party only knew about me, but Karunanidhi was the only one who knew the real me,” Anna once said. In fact, it was Periyar who proposed Karunanidhi’s name for DMK’s top post.
Political observers say that Karunanidhi’s hard work is the key factor for his consistent success. “He is still reacting to all the important issues. He has been writing letters and statements on a daily basis. Once he had said he would feel bad if he was not writing anything on any given day,” writer and politician D Ravikumar said. The Karunanidhi government had initiated many schemes and projects for the marginalised people like beggars, transgenders and the disabled.
The big challenge for the patriarch is to regain power in the state and and his ‘World Tamil Leader’ title. “Pulling out from the UPA government after enjoying nine years of power at the Centre, DMK has no allies now except the VCK. With not in power in the state, the party has been facing a serious crisis,” said a senior leader.
But, they are confident that their leader can come back to power with his commitment. “We were not in power for 13 years during the MGR period. We got only two seats in the 1991 assembly elections in the wake of Rajiv Gandhi’s assassination. But we bounced back with Kalaignar’s efforts and strategies,” said another leader.
source: http://www.articles.timesofindia.indiatimes.com / The Times of India / Home> India / by Karthick S, TNN / June 03rd, 2013
A tale of grit and hardwork
The history of Parsis in Chennai dates back to 1795 | N Vajiravelu
Though they have always been a small number, from the time the first group of Parsis came to the city from Coorg in 1795, the community has had a major role in shaping the history of the city from the time it was known as Madras.
As per records shared by Zarin Mistry in her series for Madras Musings, Heerjibhai Maneckji Kharas was accompanied by five other Parsis and two priests. It is likely that their decision to settle in Madras was not pre-planned but taken after arrival. They bought a plot in Royapuram, opposite the Catholic Church.’
It was in 1876 that they formed a Parsi Panchayat that comprised 11 members. Donning an important role, in 1893, Cawasji Panday was the first Parsi to be appointed Sheriff of Madras.
But, it was in the turn of the 20th century that turned out to be a glorious period in the history of the community in the city. Becoming prosperous dealers in motor cars and cycles, perfumes and dyes, the Parsis of Madras had a predominant role to play in various fields of occupation and services here, apart from being managers of banks and shops. Some established soda water and ice factories.
In 1906, when the young son of philanthropist Phiroj M Clubwala died, the shattered family built the Fire Temple in his memory. This Fire Temple in Royapuram known as the Jal Phiroj Clubwala Dar E Meher was consecrated in August 1910. In 2010, the community celebrated the 100th year of the Temple amid pomp and splendour.
source: http://www.newindianexpress.com / Home> Cities> Chennai / by Janani Sampath / ENS – Chennai / March 11th, 2013
Madras chunam and other finds
The mussoolah boats of old Madras.
Known better as the ‘Blind Traveller’, James Holman is a 19th Century writer whose travelogues offer fascinating details about southern India and Ceylon: e.g. ‘Panvarypank tank, one of the largest in the Carnatic’, ‘the dilapidated palace of Nabob of Arcot’, ‘a tour of Vollore Fort which housed the King of Kandy’, ‘the remaining relatives of Tippoo Saib, consisting of one of his wives, and several children’, ‘oranging gardens at Laulpett’, ‘detailed record of the Moharram festivities running into many pages with a bit of history outlining the origins of Moharram’, etc.
Holman was born in Exeter, England, in 1786 and volunteered to serve in the Royal Navy in 1798. Although he turned fully blind by 1811, due to an illness affecting his joints first and, later, his vision, Holman disliked leading an inactive life. He toured on the pretext of health and higher studies between 1819 and 1832. It is said that Holman’s notes inspired Charles Darwin to study the flora of the Indian Ocean region. Holman was elected a Fellow of the Royal Society. He died on July 29, 1857.
The following jottings are from one of four volumes that were intended for publication as a series. Holman’s travels to and in Madras are described in Volume III: Travels in Madras, Ceylon, Mauritius, Cormoro Islands, Zanzibar, Calcutta, etc. etc. (1840; George Routledge, London).
Holman in this volume provides “a most accurate and complete description of the whole process of making the chunam“, which Madras has been famed for. Much of what Holman has published is based on hearsay, as his vision was impaired; however, he neither permits this disability to impede his travel nor his experiences. Chunam is a mixture of burnt-lime and river sand with sufficient quantity of water. Burnt-lime is derived from sea-shells that are well washed and cleansed, after which their sulphur compounds are removed using charcoal.
Writing about the chunam production methods for single and multiple wall coatings, Holman explains it all in detail: process of preparing chunam with river sand and water, “wooden stick shod with iron” (similar to the ulakkai used in separating rice from husk) to beat this mixture, flat wooden rule to level the coating, crystal or smooth stone rubber to smoothen the surface, Bellapum powder (soapstone or steatite, the mineral lapis ollaris, popularly known as the talc) sprinkled “to increase . . . whiteness and lustre.” We come across the traditional curd [tayir], while he lists the ingredients for the three coats: a mixture of four parts of lime with one part of white sand and “white eggs, tayir, and ghee (butter)…”.
Speaking highly of the chunam produced in Madras, Dr. James Anderson, founder of the Saidapet Nopalry and Anderson’s Garden in Nungambakam, claims, in a series of letters to the Editor of Recreations in Agriculture, Natural History, Arts and Miscellaneous Literature (1799), that “… it is universally admitted the chunam of Madras is of a superior quality to any other in India.” Running to 12 pages, Dr. Anderson responds to several questions, raised by one Dr. Scott of Bombay, on Madras chunam. In one explanation, Anderson refers to talc material as “balpum of the Tamuls” – balpum or bellapum – a term very much in vogue among primary school children of rural Tamil Nadu.
No wonder Holman was so fascinated, amongst other things, with Madras chunam. Long famed for its marble-like finish, chunam plaster (made from either limestone or sea shells), preferred for its durability, was used to whitewash the house walls. With the arrival of modern paints and painting methods, this long tradition has lost many ardent supporters as the preparation of chunam, depending on the application, is a time-consuming and resource-intensive process.
Holman’s voyage to Madras recorded in Volume III starts with his setting sail from Trincomalee, Ceylon, on May 13, 1830, crossing Negapatam and Cuddalore before anchoring in Pondicherry on May 15th. On the merchandise exported, he notes: “The principal articles are … indigo and blue cotton cloth …, the latter is sent in great quantities to Bordeaux, from where it is taken to Senegal, and the West Indies islands for the use of the negroes.” He goes on to outline the “native mode of dyeing blue cloth as practised at Pondicherry,” and the “several sugar plantations,” which were laid out about three years before his visit and which “have proved very successful.”
Having reached Madras by the Brigate Margaret, to get to the shore he had to take amussoolah boat that is used for landing on the beach. “These boats possess a flat bottom, sewn together with coir-yarns, and the seams are crossed with a wadding of coir.” He mentions that he was pursued by the boatmen shouting “boxis sahib” (boxis =baksheesh).
On June 2, 1830, he travels to Bangalore in a palanquin lent by Mr. Dunlop, a Madras Magistrate. On his way to Bangalore, near Conjeevaram, Holman and the Collector (of Conjeevaram?) Mr. Cotton join the “grand procession from the great pagoda in Little Conjeevaram to the resting place for the idol at the further end of Great Conjeevaram.” Greeted with a “chaplet of flowers”, Holman was permitted to “examine their musical instruments, as well as the costume of one of the young dancing girls”. A week’s sojourn in Bangalore proved a relief to Holman because of the salubrious climate: “[the climate] was so like that of our own country that with closed curtain (it was easy) to believe ourselves at home in ‘merry’ England.”
Back in Madras, Holman comes under the magical spell of “fine Mulligatawny soup for the internal coat of the stomach”, but regrets that he could not get its recipe. Holman’s itinerary is such that he finds himself in Madras in peak summer and the sweltering heat does not escape his attention either. In his journal, dated June 30, 1830, Holman states: “Weather was so hot that no one thought of going out of doors except upon urgent business… apartments were spacious and kept cool with tatties (possibly made from vetiver roots and hung along windows as curtains), so that a very comfortable temperature was maintained within doors during the heat of the day…”
He writes of the introduction of punkahs to Madras: “… said to be the invention of Mr. Speke, a Bengal civilian, about fifty years ago, and was first introduced at Madras in 1803 by two gentlemen from Calcutta.”
On Fort St.George and its neighbourhood, Holman refers to Black Town, known to the natives as ‘Motel Pettah‘ (Muthialpet), Thieving Bazaar (Holman refers to it so because“every article that is stolen in Madras being brought here for sale… any particular robbery takes place, the government peons are sent there…”), two ‘respectable hotels’ (TheReston’s on the Esplanade, and the Nirden), the three gates leading out of the Fort, the ‘delightful village’ of Ennore, public establishments, and government buildings on First Line Beach; also, the numerous churches of established religions, and pagodas. He concludes his tour of Madras with a note on how one Colonel Boardman, in 1827, with Munro’s permission, built a bazaar near Palavarum and “the subsequent event of this market and surrounding area being known after this colonel.” I wonder whether this area is still known after Boardman!
source: http://www.MadrasMusings.com / by M. Ramanathan / Vol. xx11, no.13 / October 16-31, 2012
The Bulkley tomb resurfaces
“Have you been able to locate Dr. Edward Bulkley’s tomb?” was a frequent query raised by the Chief. “In its time it was a landmark of Madras, and a point of reference for surveyors.” He had written about it in October 2004 in The Hindu, and wondered about its whereabouts. A correspondent had replied that it had vanished after Independence when the Army began construction on the western glacis of the Fort. There matters lay.
Early in August, Karthik Bhatt and I embarked on the search. Vestiges of Old Madras by Love located it opposite the Madras Medical College, in the Ordnance Lines. But we drew a blank despite repeated searches. I wrote about the same in my Hidden Histories column for The Hindu on September 25th.
Capt. Harold Barnes, Security Officer of the Department of Archaeology, then called. He took us to the tomb, which is located inside the premises of the Shaurya Army School, at the intersection of Poonamallee High and Evening Bazaar Roads. The tomb lies exactly where Love found it.
Bulkley, one of the early medical reformers of Madras, presided from the 1690s till 1708 over what was to later become General Hospital. He was buried in his own garden in 1714.
The tomb, given its size, has survived the travails of nearly 300 years. Not so its railings, which have partially vanished. Certainly, the place could do with some maintenance. But it is good to see that the good Doctor still rests in peace.
Bulkley was the doctor who issued India’s first medical certificate which cited illness as a cause for inability to work and the first injury certificate. On August 28, 1693 he performed the first medico-legal autopsy in India. He is certainly someone to be remembered as part of the medical history of not only Madras but also the country as a whole. Will the General Hospital authorities and the Army team together to maintain the site?
source: http://www.madrasmusings.com / Home / by Sriram. V / Vol.xx11, No.12, October 1-15th, 2012