Saturday, 16 July 2022

Hemantha Kalam - 102 'Sportive'

I was perhaps five years old when I used to accompany my dear father every day early in the morning whenever he visited the Madras Social Cultural Club (now known as Andhra Social and Cultural Association). He was a tall man with longer strides. I have been a short guy with shorter strides. So, to 'catch up with him had always been a struggle'. Inevitably I could never catch up to him in any sense. But I always loved accompanying him on these visits though. The club had mango trees and when in season, mangos used to drop down and I could pick a few that helped in my mother’s kitchen.

My father used to visit the club frequently for two reasons. He used to play ball badminton and then it was his livelihood to collect racquets which needed gutting and so he used to go there almost on every day. Another reason that he used to visit was because he was an honourary member of the club, which meant that he need not pay any subscription but it came with a responsibility. If any VIP is playing and s/he does not have a partner, the honourary members had to play with the VIPs. Thus my father used to play with some of the luminaries of the Telugu tinsel world that is now being referred to as Tollywood.

To get the guts in wholesale, he used to cycle upto Parry’s and buy the guts in bulk. He had the equipment for gutting, which we still have in our house as his memory. I too had learnt to gut the racquets and if I try once again I might be able to do it right and proper.

I used to tag along my father as many times as I could because it was so much fun watching my dad play and shout during the game. Those days ‘Narayana’ racquets were the most reliable and durable. Later similar sounding ‘Ramayana’ racquets came around in the market but it was always Narayana that real players and wannabe real players wanted to use and flaunt around with.

My father was a real sports guy. He used to play cards, carroms, and table tennis apart from ball badminton and was also a good swimmer.

But, interestingly, he never taught us swimming, ever, and so his progeny became useless in the area of swimming. There were so many occasions in my life that made me rue because of this inability. He did guide me in the case of carroms though to sharpen my acumen in the game.

Though he could play some 18 varieties of card games, he never played cards with me. He never taught me playing cards either. I had to learn one or two simple card games on my own. Even when playing other games, my father always used to take the side opposite to me if and when we played together. If not, he used to help my opponents with strategy, giving me a lot of heartburn. He never explained to me why he did this to me. I used to shout at him whenever he did this to me but he simply used to smile, which he was very good at. 

Though I did play a bit of badminton/shuttlecock, and carroms, I could never play it as well as my father. And I can’t swim for anything. But my daughter plays carroms well that my father gifted her with his striker. I not only could imbibe his sports persona but failed to be sportive too!

Now it has been five years since he left us all but day after day, we can’t help but remember him and his many facets.

Hoping that he is comfy wherever he is now, playing whatever sport he is interested in and I, waiting to meet up with him again.

Until the next, 

Krutagjnatalu (Telugu), Nanri (Tamil), Dhanyavaadagalu (Kannada), Nanni (Malayalam), Dhanyavaad (Hindi), Dhanyosmi (Sanskrit), Thanks (English), Dhonyavaad (Bangla), Dhanyabad (Oriya and Nepalese), Gracias (Spanish), Grazie (Italian), Danke Schon (Deutsche), Merci (French), Obrigado (Portuguese), Shukraan (Arabic and Sudanese), Shukriya (Urdu), Sthoothiy (Sinhalese) Aw-koon (Khmer), Kawp Jai Lhai Lhai (Laotian), Kob Kun Krab (Thai), Asante (Kiswahili), Maraming Salamat sa Lahat (Pinoy-Tagalog-Filipino), Tack (Swedish), Fa'afetai (Samoan), Terima Kasih (Bahasa Indonesian) and Tenkyu (Tok Pisin of Papua New Guinea), Malo (Tongan), Vinaka Vaka Levu (Fijian)

 

Hemantha Kumar Pamarthy

Chennai, India


{NOTE: This was to be published on 14th July the fifth anniversary of my dear father's demise. But as I was travelling and had difficulty in accessing stable internet network am forced to release it on the next immediate available opportunity}

Monday, 28 March 2022

Hemantha Kalam - 101 "Men Who Mattered More - Inspiring 'TV'"

This blog and the next two or three blogs would be in continuation to my blog Hemantha Kalam-100.

After my ‘Askhara abhyaasam’, the next step in my literacy programme was to get me enrolled into a school. Accordingly in 1961, I was enrolled into a school called ‘Sri Bala Gurukul’ in T. Nagar, Madras (now Chennai) which was nearer to my house (presently the school is extinct). This school was being run by a South African born gentleman called Duncan Greenlees [Late Thomas Richard Duncan Greenlees (1899-1966) - https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Duncan_Greenlees]. When India got independence in 1947, apparently, Duncan Greenlees was appointed to draft the country's education policy. And my mother used to converse with him with her very little faulty English but with full conviction. :-) 

                                                      Late Duncan Greenlees


                                      School Magazine of 'Sri Bala Gurukul'

He was the first foreigner I ever came into contact with in my life. Later, when I have become a global person, it became a matter of routine though.

My school journey which began in 1961 went on till 1972. However, during this journey I had been influenced and inspired by many close acquaintances and friends, from school or otherwise. There is Mukkamala Sita Rajya Lakshmi with whom I had to always compete with, for better grades. Then there was G. K. Venkata Kumar who was quite friendly; Madhu Babu the ever soft-spoken fellow with an enviable perennial smile, come what may, and who was always keeping in touch with me, all these years, irrespective of  wherever I had been; Jonnavithula Radhakrishna, Prabhakar and Ramesh, the three brothers, who were always kind to me and shared with me whatever they had without hesitation; Rajarushi for his boldness and straight-forwardness; Badeti Venkataramaiah, for his gregariousness; Chundi Ravindranath for his affection towards my mother as if he was another son of hers; V. Hemachandra Chowdary; for his ingenious business ideas; T. N. Srinivas for his educational prowess, and so on, as the list is endless.

However, for sure, the two persons who had clearly inspired me in measurable ways also happened to share the same name – Venkateswara Rao. One is my father and another is my classmate, almost throughout my entire school journey.

I don’t remember how I made friendship with Tekumalla Venkateswara Rao or TV for almost all, who know him closely. But it was in Sri Bala Gurukul, I guess, sometime during 1961, that I met him in class, when we were both admitted to the same school, same class and same section.

                          TV is sitting next to Sakunthala teacher (to her right)                                Pic: Circa 1964-65

His house, my house and the school were sort of in a triangular path. I was a single child (at that time) and had no one to play with, at home. The entire compound of three families didn’t have a kid of my age and it was a privilege to be a single child at home and at neighbour’s home too. But it had many disadvantages as well.

So, often in the evenings, I used go to TV’s house (about a kilometre away), along with another classmate G. K. Venkat Kumar. We were not from a well-to-do family and were living in a sort of single-room tenement and TV’s house, even in those days, was like a colonial mansion (later when they remodelled their house it was in no way lesser than that of any top film star’s and was quite enviable). But he was quite good with us. We used to play together in the backyard of his house and sometimes went to the nearby Somasundaram Public Play ground to play cricket or watch others play cricket. Even if we played, it was TV who was arranging the cricket kits. He always used to be finely dressed, draped by the latest fashionable clothes in the market.

It was TV who introduced me to comics that today I could become a Pannapictagraphist. Otherwise, I am sure I would not have, perhaps, known even the word ‘comics’ till much late in my life. It was again TV who introduced me to airguns and I loved shooting pellets at targets in his backyard. Though today I cannot credit myself as being a marksman in the ‘grouping’ segment, I can say that I am a fairly OK guy with a real gun in ‘free shooting’ or ‘application fire’!

Even at that time, for the young age that ours was, TV used to have some fancy bicycles and he generously used to allow us ride them. The first ever bicycle I tried to ride on by myself was his. It was he who introduced the word ‘Kawasaki’ to me and explained that it was a Japanese name for a motorcycle. I was always awestruck by his wide connectivity to the outer world aspects. Mind you, at those times, there was no internet or any of the latest gizmos that the present generation has access to, for information gathering. It was amazing to know his knowledge in such matters. Later, when I purchased my motorcycle, it was a ‘Kawasaki’. TV was the guy who even introduced the word ‘auto racing’ to me. If it’s not for him, for a long time to come, I would not have known the importance of the place ‘Sholavaram’ (before Irungattukottai, Sholavaram’s unused airstrip was where auto racing used to take place in Madras - now Chennai).

When I came to know that my first boss (Mr. Rajesh Malhotra) was a friend of TV, I was proud that it is not just my boss, but even I could address him on a similar belonging/possessive way – as TV!

Without even being aware of it, I must have started working to gain things that TV introduced me to. I can say that it’s because of him that I started looking at the world differently, at my life style differently. And I am grateful to TV for all these. But still, there have been so many things that even if I aspire, I will never be able to do what TV could do. I just can’t reach his pace!

His house, most probably, was the first in Chennai (I think I can say this with fair conviction) to have a dish antenna over his house and when I say dish antenna, don’t think the type of the silly small dish antennae that we all have over our roof tops nowadays. It was a giant dish which he must have put up some 40 plus years ago. It was at a time when the word ‘Dish antenna’ was not even known to noobs or anybody in the city, for that matter even in the country except, maybe, to scientists! I could not do it. I wouldn’t have been able to do it either. He was a part of a family industry that supplied vital parts to Indian government’s space establishments. I can’t do that. Today he has established an organisation that makes parts for aircrafts and supplies across the globe. I can’t even imagine doing that, ever. In fact, even if I try, I will not be able to really reach the pace of TV.

After school, though in the same city, I hardly ever met him or spoke with him. Our meetings mostly used to be on airport tarmacs, airport buses or in flights when, by coincidence, we were travelling on the same dates or on same flights!

Yet, for all this, even today, whenever I say that we are planning for an ‘old buddies / classmates meet’, he tries to make it without fail and generously foots the bill; almost always.

As, we are all growing old and I do not know what may happen tomorrow, I wanted to acknowledge his warmth and tell TV through this blog; “dear TV, damn it, you have been an inspiration to me man, thank you!”


TV and yours faithfully

And yes, though may not be role models, there have been other gals / guys who inspired me! Like, many of my other class mates, school mates, college mates, colleagues and some relatives, who had influenced me, helped me, especially when I was down and in tight corners, and who were kind to me. I will need a book to write on each one of them; so I am saying a blanket ‘Thank You’ to all of them too!

The long and short of it is that even today I do not acknowledge anyone as my role model.

But TV and my dad, of course, have been different! They have been among the few who had shown me paths - one directly and one indirectly, without even perceiving it – and that which left lasting footprints!

Isn’t it? What do you think? Please do let me know!

Until the next, 

Krutagjnatalu (Telugu), Nanri (Tamil), Dhanyavaadagalu (Kannada), Nanni (Malayalam), Dhanyavaad (Hindi), Dhanyosmi (Sanskrit), Thanks (English), Dhonyavaad (Bangla), Dhanyabad (Oriya and Nepalese), Gracias (Spanish), Grazie (Italian), Danke Schon (Deutsche), Merci (French), Obrigado (Portuguese), Shukraan (Arabic and Sudanese), Shukriya (Urdu), Sthoothiy (Sinhalese) Aw-koon (Khmer), Kawp Jai Lhai Lhai (Laotian), Kob Kun Krab (Thai), Asante (Kiswahili), Maraming Salamat sa Lahat (Pinoy-Tagalog-Filipino), Tack (Swedish), Fa'afetai (Samoan), Terima Kasih (Bahasa Indonesian) and Tenkyu (Tok Pisin of Papua New Guinea), Malo (Tongan), Vinaka Vaka Levu (Fijian)

Hemantha Kumar Pamarthy                                                                                                  Chennai, India

Sunday, 6 March 2022

Hemantha Kalam - 100 "Men who mattered more - Uncle Sarma'

    (Most of the back dates are courtesy my mother’s rich memory! 

Dates about Sarma uncle are from his family members!)

(‘Garu’ (pronounced Gaaru) is a respectful addressing in the Telugu language – something like Sir)

It was on 21st July, 2013 that I wrote my first blog. Though I did not chalk out any time table for writing, I thought to myself that it would be nice if I could write a blog every fortnight. However, as is being seen now, that wouldn’t be the case! Either for lack of creative juices, or suffering from the writer’s block, which I do suffer a bit from, or sheer laziness, it took me almost nine years to hit a century which made it about an average of one blog a month. Nothing great really, but not bad either.

There have been faithfuls who have always responded to my earlier 99 blogs and encouraged me to keep at it. There also were some, who requested that I don't send my blogs anymore to them as they considered them as spam. And then there have been silent readers who, on occasion, said that they did not seem to be receiving my blogs anymore, which is so reassuring, indeed! So on the occasion of hitting a century of blogs, A “BIG THANK YOU” to each one of them and you, my dear reader.

But being the 100th blog, I thought I would write this for someone who really had a role in shaping up my life. That set the machine (I do think I have one alright, hunh..) working in my mind and I started thinking who could have influenced me and who could have been my role model.

As a member of the society, I know, for sure, that every person I came across in my life, for more than half an hour, had some influence on me – be it good, bad or ugly. I have certainly learnt from and influenced by every one that I came into contact in this global community. If I am not acknowledging that, yes, I am fooling myself. But, what about a role model for me? Alas I don’t seem to have a single person, in my mind, who I can call my role model, till date. I am a mostly self-made man shaped by the forces of the society.

Well, I had been a seeker all my time. If it is not knowledge, it is a job or money or fun or new places or what not! So, around the turn of the new millennium, I was seeking – a job, and a bit desperately too, as I was getting to be unemployed soon.

I had received an interview invitation from the MD of a lower-mid ranging advertising agency in Chennai, for a job, in their creative department, with a major focus on copy-writing. I was always fancying myself as an ad guy (I have been a member of the Ad Club too) and so was pleased to accept the invitation. I am also a polyglot and having airs of creativity – I have it or not, only my poor audience can vouchsafe!

The only question the MD asked me during the interview was “who is your role model?” I was zapped, as I didn’t think of any person as my role model. I still don't do! And in all truthfulness, I told him so – that I didn’t have a role model. Had the question been who inspired me, probably I would have had an answer for that, but the MD did not ask me that question.

The MD said that the interview concluded and he cannot offer a job to a person who doesn’t seem to be having a role model! He didn’t say it in so many words, but his looks conveyed to me that I was an alien to him and that he was being very wary of me. Till this day, for the heck of it, I don’t understand why I should have a role model for myself to qualify for the job of a copy-writer in an ad agency.

So, some 20 years later, I thought I shall try answering his question, still not the way he wanted though, but for whatever it is worth and for a reason. I am not getting any younger and if not now, when?

There have been several people who inspired me in my life. Apart from my parents and some of our relatives, any number of persons had inspired me. Every time I saw a picture on the cover pages of business magazines, I was inspired and sought that one day I should be written about too! I haven’t reached that spot yet, but I can certainly say that I had tried making my way in that direction and have been written about in magazines and even in foreign newspapers. I may or may not reach the wider spot, but I can die with the satisfaction that consciously I did my bit though! I was inspired by the comic hero ‘The Phantom’. I was inspired by Dara Singh, the wrestler.

But, apart from my parents and immediate family members, there have been a clutch of persons in my life who had clearly inspired me in measurable ways. This blog is the beginning of a blog series to acknowledge my association with those good persons.

So let me start at the beginning - with the first person, who helped me gain my knowledge, whatever etiquette and manners I could learn and in general, my demeanour,  Late Evani Krishna Sarma or Sarma mavayya garu (Uncle Sarma) (the surname Evani is to be pronounced as 'Eevani").

Madras (now Chennai) has been our foster city which nurtured us in its warm bosom (sometimes really hot too, but never mind that). I grew here, learnt here, imbibed its culture to a large extent and probably may also die here. But when I arrived in Madras on the 1st November, 1957 (exactly on the first anniversary of the formation of my native state Andhra Pradesh) along with my mother, my father, who was already in Madras, was living with some friends.

With the arrival of his wife and a son, it became imperative for him to shed his ‘bachelorhood’ and become a responsible family head. The first thing needed for that was a house of his (ok, ok, ours). So, on 28th November, 1957, we entered our house in Ramanujam Street in Thyagaraya Nagar (the spelling ‘Theagaraya’ came in much later with the interference of super intelligentsia in the bureaucracy) or T. Nagar of Madras. It was just a hut or a cottage if we have to add some respect to a home. As I was a toddler, and could remember only a few glimpses / scenes of the house, I guess the dimensions were some 8 (W) x 12 (L) x 10 (H) feet hut with a small porch of about 2 ½ feet in front. It was one long room which served as the living room, hall, bedroom and kitchen. Kitchen could be demarcated by a curtain. Bath and toilet were outside and common for all tenants. The rent was a princely Rs.15 per month with Rs.1 extra for the power.

The house owner Late Ranga Pillai constructed some huts in his compound and let them on rent for economically poor and ultra lower middle class people. But he always ensured strict discipline among the tenants and the cleanliness of the premises and the public utilities in the compound.

We stayed in the place till August, 1960 (a different blog on life in the hut in Ramanujam street later, perhaps). As Ranga Pillai kept pressurising us to vacate (normally landlords do not want the tenants to stay longer in the same premises) we found a house, a couple of kilometres away,  again in the same T. Nagar area, in a street called Chinnaiah Pillai Street. Late Chinnaiah Pillai was a famous advocate and as he constructed the first house in the street, it was named after him (as the system was in vogue in those days in Madras).

The premises were in an interesting neighbourhood. We had the husband and wife film playback singer duo of A. M. Rajah and Jikki (P. J. Krishnaveni) as a neighbour and living diagonally behind us was the famous film actress Shavukaru Janaki (more popularly known as ‘Sowcar’ Janaki). Living a few houses away was another film actress E. V. Saroja. I cannot swear on it but I understood that at some point of time, even the famous actress B. Saroja Devi was a resident of the street.

A few blocks away Chakravarti Rajagopalachari had his Swatantra party’s office and the other side again a few blocks away was chief minister Kamaraj’s house. I had seen the unassuming down to earth Kamaraj ji several times while going to or coming from school. He had just one or two policemen taking care of his security. With such illuminating neighbourhood and later with my father’s professional connections, it is only natural that my filmy and political knowledge gained considerably.

But, back to the original story! We arrived at our new home at No.3 Chinnaiah Pillai Street, on the 8th August, 1960 along with our frugal possessions that were carried on a bullock cart. We had occupied the backside house; what normally is referred to as ‘Out House’. Actually, this was originally constructed for the watchman and for storing the construction material, during the construction of the main building. Once the construction was over, it was to be dismantled. But then there was a big car shed adjoining the house and so it was left off. Our home was of one small hall cum living cum bed room, a kitchenette and outside, connected was a small bathroom. Here too the toilet was away from the outhouse and was in a corner portion of the main building with access from outside. Our home was covered by asbestos sheets.

There were two mango trees in front of our home giving us a generous supply of shade and leaves for auspicious occasions but never any mangoes. In all the years we stayed there, we never saw them yield any mangoes at all. These trees were fondly called as "Rama Lakshmanulu". During summer, we used to sleep on camp cots, under these trees. Behind the trees was a small hut where Mr. Ponnuswamy’s family lived. Ponnuswamy used to do some odd jobs and stayed for some time.

Now, this whole house belonged Sarma mavayya garu. His was a well-to-do family and never really wanted to or needed to rent the ‘Out House’. But since known persons recommend, sometimes he used to oblige by letting out the place. The previous tenants of the house used to pay Rs.25 per month as rent (interestingly, I married the niece of the earlier tenant's wife). But when he came to know of my father’s precarious work situation, he offered the house to us at Rs.20 per month all inclusive. Only condition is that we have to keep the house clean, and that the rent should positively be paid on the first of every month without the need for asking or follow-up in any way.

Once settled, we were upto ourselves. My father was either working or trying for work and it was just my mother and I, left to ourselves. So my mother took it upon herself to start teaching me. That way it is my mother who had been my first guru and she has been so till that position has been usurped by my children now. I learn all the new and hick things from them nowadays.

My mother hung a big hard-board sheet with large hand-written Telugu alphabets on it (which she prepared herself) and made me recognise them by sight and rote. So I learnt alphabets without ever writing them. This was so because I was not officially initiated into learning by the ritual called ‘Akshara abhyaasam” ('akshara' is alphabet and 'abhyaasam' is practice). I just completed four years and four years was too early to start any stratified learning, those days.

Yeah, chubby cheeks, dimple chin and that’s me!

Pic: Circa 1961-62 by late J. P. Sastry (maternal uncle)

The auspicious day of ‘Vijayadasami” (day of victory) also called as ‘Saraswati Pooja’ day, very auspicious to begin new ventures and new learning, was chosen for the occasion. On this day, the child is made to write holy letters on rice first and then on a slate (I am talking of our custom – India being a cauldron of varied customs, it might vary from place to place). Both my parents wanted their son to become illustrious (sic) and they did not want to do this initiation by themselves as they thought that their education was inadequate.

Hence they approached Sarma mavayya garu and requested him to initiate their son into literacy, if not education. He had gracefully accepted to do the same. Sarma mavayya garu was a post graduate who had done his M.Sc. Those were the days when any post graduation was revered, as not many could afford such studies nor could the normal students last upto the vagaries. Post graduation was a symbol of education, perseverance, being cultured, not to talk of the elite status it afforded.

Born on 13th September, 1927, Sarma mavayya garu did his schooling around 1942-43, in S.R.R. High School, Nuzvid, Krishna district, Madras Presidency; his ‘Intermediate Course’ from Andhra University by around 1944; his B.Sc., Honours and M.Sc., both in Chemical Technology and in the specialised subject of Sugar from Jeypore Vikrama Deo College of Science and Technology, Waltair (now Visakhapatnam, Andhra Pradesh) and came out from both, by 1949, in first division.   

He must have come to Chennai after his post graduation and he was embraced with a job in ESSO. When I grew up to move on my own, I had seen his office behind the petrol pump next to Safire theatre complex (which is now razed to the ground). His monthly salary then was estimated to be about 10-12 times more than that of my father’s, as I understood later. He had a black car, a Bug-Fiat I was told. Later he had a black coloured Fiat car with the registration MDU 7070. After a few years, he sold away the Fiat and got a larger, pistachio coloured, Ambassador with the registration MSV 3711.


Late Evani Krishna Sarma (E. K. Sarma mavayya garu)

Pic: Circa 1965-66 Courtesy – Courtesy: Family members of Late E. K. Sarma

He was a smooth and safe driver who was never tempted to speed, whatever the provocation could be. Those days the Madras Police used to recognise good driving and praised such drivers. As I remember, he gained several such accolades quite a few times.

Coming back to my story, on the Vijayadasami day (Google search puts the date as 29th September) in 1960, my parents made me take an oil bath, put Vibhuti stripes across my forehead and vermilion Bottu between both my eyes. I wore a white towel and both my parents took me to Sarma mavayya gari house which was in the main building.

Sarma mavayya garu and his wife {whom I called Attayya (aunty) garu} already prepared the place in the hall with a big Peeta (wooden seat on the floor) and a set of some new books, one new slate, slate pencils, flattened mound of rice (for me to write my first holy letters on them) and some goodies to eat. Sarma mavayya garu finished his daily prayers and came out into the hall wearing a pure white dhoti in the Andhra tradition. At the auspicious time I was made to sit in his lap and holding my right hand he made me write the holy letter “Om Sivaya namaha, Om Siddham namaha” with my index finger. Later he made me write the same onto the slate three times overlapping the first time writing. I was initiated into writing, literacy and education and till date I have not stopped doing any of the three.   

They didn’t have their own children yet and I had a run of both the houses. Over a period he found a job for Ponnuswamy in his office and asked Ponnuswamy and family to move out of our compound to a different house of theirs. Their hut was dismantled and we had a bit more space in front of our tiny home.

A year or so later, Sarma mavayya garu replicated the ground floor of his house onto the first floor also, with a few minor modifications and settled there. They rented out their ground floor to an architect called Ramachandra Row Sajip (late) who was teaching Architecture at Guindy Engineering college if I remember right. He had only one daughter who was doing her Pre-University Course (PUC) by that time. So in the entire compound I was the only kid and I had truly very good time. During Deepavali festival I had the crackers from all the three houses for myself nothing to mention of the various sweets which I am still so fond of. I had a free passport to go or come into any of their houses at anytime.

That was when my education began. Again, apart from the learnings from my parents, I was being gently educated by all in the compound in different ways. Both landlord and the other tenant used to take a nap in the afternoons during weekends, so I had to learn playing cricket without any noise. The crux is not just in keeping my mouth shut but also the other neighbourhood boys who used to come to our place to play with me. Chinna, the grandson of the immediate neighbour advocate Chinnaiah Pillai was a gent and never needed any further instructions. But keeping the other boys in control gave me a leadership edge! J

I was exposed to building drawings by Prof. Sajip who used to have a big drawing board in his room and I used to admiringly watch him do it with finesse. Interestingly it was he who drew the house plan for our home when my parents constructed it later.

It was in Sarma mavayya gari’s house that I first saw a dining table, a refrigerator and a big radiogram. I wasn’t much enamoured by the dining table but refrigerator and the radiogram (a radiogram was a contraption where a valve radio, a record playing turntable, space for records, and a group of speakers all are constructed into one piece like a part of a furniture) were different.

It was in his house that I was introduced to Coca Cola and Fanta and Spencer’s Soda. Again I wasn’t tickled much by the Spencer’s Soda but Coca Cola and Fanta were a different game altogether. What started on and off became an addiction and during my final years of schooling I used to win bets by continuously (without gap) drinking not less than 6 bottles of ice cold Coca Cola in pouring rains. Of course, that led me to suffer from Eosinophilia and once I almost choked to death at home. But I somehow feel that today’s quality of those drinks is not as the earlier quality, so much so that I don’t prefer to drink soft drinks anymore.

I don’t remember the brand of the radiogram (was it Bush, Murphy or Philips?) but it was a big sized chest, the size of an ice cream freezer that we see often in shops nowadays, having a long ensemble of speakers running at the bottom, a multichannel radio with a piano switch system on the left side. The right side of the cabinet was divided into two segments, one for the turntable and one for storing the stack of records. There was a melange of records all 78 rpm as at that time 45 rpm were not yet introduced or just being introduced. The choice were Instrumental, English, Telugu, Hindi and Bhajans.

Pic courtesy: https://www.junkmail.co.za/antiques-and-collectables/antique-furniture/western-cape/parow/blaupunkt-radiogram-golden-series/eb6826ff41a6404ca507aa0ee70680d7

This was not the radiogram that Sarma mavayya garu had in his house (his was more elegant and maintained well too) but this is as close a picture as I could get to the subject radiogram!

It was not the first time that I saw music records, since my grand uncle was a music director and saw records at his place, but this was the first time that I saw an automatic record changer in my life. With a record changer, you can pre-select upto eight records and place them on the axis rod of the turntable in a stack and once a record is played off, the stylus would mechanically rise and gently hit the next record in the stack to land on the turntable and start playing. I was fascinated with this and I used to regularly pester aunty (mostly) to set the player for me. I used to indicate the records I wanted to listen to on that day and enjoyed them playing the music, but never ever touched the radiogram on my own. That was the discipline I was taught both in my home and in Sarma mavayya gari’s place. My daily ritual on holidays used to be to finish breakfast at home and go up to his house, have a bottle of Coca Cola or Fanta depending on my mood and listen to music.

The collection of records used to comprise of “Billy” Vaughn’s ‘Come September’, ‘Berlin Melody’ Bhajans like ‘Thumak Thumak Ramachandra’ by Lata Mangeshkar, some songs from Telugu films and most importantly from the Hindi films “Hum Dono” and "Sangam", whose songs I used to listen almost every time. It was virtual heaven times.

Sarma mavayya garu used to take us to the airport along with aunty whenever he had to fly on official visits. He used to treat us to goodies in the small but very clean restaurant in Madras Airport. I remember being introduced to cutlets and varieties of sauces there. Today’s eateries in any of the airports cannot hold a light to the elegance of that tiny restaurant. He used to treat us once a way in Hotel Woodlands’ Restaurant, which was a to-do thing those days, and where even then a good full meal used to cost about Rs.5/= per head. During such times, he used to teach me table manners.

For one of my birthdays he asked me what I wanted. I couldn’t reply as I was scared of my parents’ strictness. But every time I used to be in their house I used to sit in a small cane rattan chair. So for one birthday I was given a similar and brand new chair which we used for no less than 10-15 years till the chair lost its shape entirely.

We stayed in their compound for seven years till 30th April, 1967 when we moved to our own house that my parents constructed at the edge of the city in 1967 (now it has become the heart of the city due to rapid urbanisation and expansion of the city).

During these seven years, Sarma mavayya garu moved from ESSO and joined as the Madras head of an organisation called Synthetics and Chemicals Limited where he apparently enjoyed better benefits.

Mr. Krishnaswamy was his chauffeur and who remained faithful to him till the end.

Soon after we moved to our own home, Prof. Sajip and family also vacated the place and the ground floor remained empty. Left alone, Sarma mavayya gari couple became, apparently lonely and preferred to sell their place and move out to an apartment in Mowbray’s Road (now TTK Road). Though we never owned their place in Chinnaiah Pillai Street, we were attached to it emotionally, owned the place in our thoughts and memories and felt bad when they sold and vacated.

As time passed by, Sarma mavayya garu was blessed with a daughter and a son, both of whom are in good positions now.

Over time Sarma mavayya garu quit Synthetics and Chemicals Limited also, and became a technical consultant. He surrendered his office car and bought another Fiat 1100D model. Though other brands like Maruti-Suzuki started marketing from 1983 onwards, he apparently was more comfortable with either a Fiat or an Ambassador, perhaps as both of them used to have hand shifts than floor shifts like today’s cars. Being a careful driver, over a period he found it stressful to cope up with the unruly traffic hooliganism and drove only if it was a must. Yet, we continued to visit each other’s place occasionally.

Simultaneously he also indulged much in spirituality and did ‘nirantara naama japam’ (continuous chanting of God’s names) like a ‘Thaila Dhaara’ (A benchmark for Bhakti – literal translation is “continuous flow of oil”) (Ref: https://www.thehindu.com/features/friday-review/religion/benchmark-for-bhakti/article4079022.ece) and apparently was on the path of reaching exalted position in spirituality and realisation.

His children, who have been well educated and became gems in their own fields are also of equal spiritual inclination.

When I received news on the 24th November, 1994 that he breathed his last I was crestfallen. I left office and rushed to his place which was just on the other side of the road. I couldn’t stop myself from crying. As our customs do not permit a person, whose parents are alive, to go to a cemetery on final journeys, I could not participate in his last journey and cremation.

But as a person, who has initiated me into my education and my demeanour, Sarma mavayya garu would remain in my heart, forever, in absolute reverence. I owe that much to him. With his gentle and spiritual way of life, I am sure that he would have attained satgati.

Sarma mavayya garu in his office

Pic Courtesy: Family members of Late E. K. Sarma

Until the next, 

Krutagjnatalu (Telugu), Nanri (Tamil), Dhanyavaadagalu (Kannada), Nanni (Malayalam), Dhanyavaad (Hindi), Dhanyosmi (Sanskrit), Thanks (English), Dhonyavaad (Bangla), Dhanyabad (Oriya and Nepalese), Gracias (Spanish), Grazie (Italian), Danke Schon (Deutsche), Merci (French), Obrigado (Portuguese), Shukraan (Arabic and Sudanese), Shukriya (Urdu), Sthoothiy (Sinhalese) Aw-koon (Khmer), Kawp Jai Lhai Lhai (Laotian), Kob Kun Krab (Thai), Asante (Kiswahili), Maraming Salamat sa Lahat (Pinoy-Tagalog-Filipino), Tack (Swedish), Fa'afetai (Samoan), Terima Kasih (Bahasa Indonesian) and Tenkyu (Tok Pisin of Papua New Guinea), Malo (Tongan), Vinaka Vaka Levu (Fijian)

 

Hemantha Kumar Pamarthy

Chennai, India

Friday, 11 February 2022

Hemantha Kalam - 99 " The Happy Story of 'Sad Hill' "

What happens when you stumble upon some 5000 graves in a place which has been forgotten by the creator, and as the creator himself is not around anymore?

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You dig them in curiosity and find that not a single grave has a body interred into? You think the plot is thickening?

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To know answers to these questions we need to go to Almeria, Arlanza valley and Burgos etc., in Spain or watch the docu-film ‘Sad Hill Unearthed (2017)’ on Netflix. If you have decided to watch the film you need not waste your time in reading this blog any further.

Well, we Indians know what it is all about film ‘Hero’ worshipping. We have cases where temples have been built for the actors in India and people have mass prayers conducted when one of their favourites is sick or on death-bed. You think such acts are bizarre? Then you don’t know even half the story!

Trust me; sometimes the westerners, in their own way, also worship the ground the film stars walk. This is one such interesting story. If you are interested, I welcome you to join me in unravelling this interesting saga.

During the early 1960s the Italians wanted to create western (cowboy oriented etc.) films in Europe, which, over a period, came to be known as spaghetti westerns that bred stars like Clint Eastwood, Eli Wallach, Franco Nero, Lee Van Cleef, et al. There have been such good and entertaining action films like the Companeros, Django, the Dollar Trilogy {A Fistful of Dollars (1964), For a Few Dollars More (1965) and The Good, the Bad and the Ugly (1966)}. Among these, by far, the film ‘The Good, the Bad and the Ugly’ attained a cult level.

As per ScreenRant (https://screenrant.com/the-good-the-bad-and-the-ugly-ten-things-still-hold-up-today/amp/) 10 things that still hold up today about ‘The Good, the Bad and the Ugly’ are;

1. Clint Eastwood’s ice-cool turn as ‘The Man with No Name’ (“The Good”)

2. The perfectly edited finale

3. Tonino Delli Colli’s breathtaking widescreen cinematography

4. The scope of ‘The Civil War Battle’

5. Eli Wallach’s endearing performance as Tuco (“The Ugly”)

6. The satirically exaggerated violence

7. Telling a simple story ‘On An Epic Scale’

8. Lee Van Cleef’s menacing performance as ‘Angel Eyes’ (“The Bad”)

9. Ennio Morricone’s operatic score

10. The trio’s introductions

However, though ‘The Good, the Bad and the Ugly’ might be seen as a Clint Eastwood’s film, in my opinion, it was clearly Eli Wallach’s and Ennio Morricone’s! In fact, at the time, Ennio Morricone’s score was considered as the second best music score in the world in a hundred years of cinema. No wonder, the title score is a hot favourite, even today, across the world.  

These films also brought out hidden talents and there have been some very well known film directors too. One among them who became a film giant of the times was Sergio Leone (1929-1989)!   

It appears that Sergio Leone spent a lot of time, money and energy in creating the venue for the climax and it is believed that a small or large part of the Spanish Army also might have participated in the shoot.

Sometime during the year, around September or about two months after the film shoot completed, another part of the Spanish Army unearthed a huge graveyard in Mirandilla Valley, Burgos, Spain. That cemetery had over 5,000 graves ...with crosses even, but no one buried in them. They also could find many a building that included trenches, dugout mini canyons, tented city, concentration camps etc.

The place lay forgotten for almost half a century buried under some seven inches of dirt and soil, till, as Netflix announces, “an eclectic group of fans of 1966’s ‘The Good, the Bad and the Ugly’ attempted to restore the cemetery set in Spain where the movie’s climax was filmed”. The Fans grouped themselves as ‘Sad Hill Cultural Association’.

The Association, comprising of fans mostly from Spain, raised funds among themselves and also apparently via crowd-funding resources too. The members went to the spot, cleaned ‘the cemetery’ and restored the surroundings. And on the ‘D-Day’ they wore Special T Shirts and some even wore Ponchos like Clint did in the movie and took photographs! A dramatic group, from among the members, replayed the climax of show down between the three main characters. Then they had watched a special show of the movie that they arranged at ‘the cemetery’ and tried to live a day, the days of ‘The Good, the Bad and the Ugly’.

Well, what a way to pay a tribute and an ode to not only the film and the entire crew of the original film, but also to the location of the epic climax scene!?

As the film director Alex DE La Iglesia said,

“Cinema takes you to impossible places                                                               Cinema means being in places you could never be in real life!”

But the efforts of this group proved that, what has been created and forgotten can be recreated not just for the sake of nostalgia alone, but also as reverence to the art and the artistes.

Well, you can’t agree more! Do you? Do write to me, please!

Until the next, 

Krutagjnatalu (Telugu), Nanri (Tamil), Dhanyavaadagalu (Kannada), Nanni (Malayalam), Dhanyavaad (Hindi), Dhanyosmi (Sanskrit), Thanks (English), Dhonyavaad (Bangla), Dhanyabad (Oriya and Nepalese), Gracias (Spanish), Grazie (Italian), Danke Schon (Deutsche), Merci (French), Obrigado (Portuguese), Shukraan (Arabic and Sudanese), Shukriya (Urdu), Sthoothiy (Sinhalese) Aw-koon (Khmer), Kawp Jai Lhai Lhai (Laotian), Kob Kun Krab (Thai), Asante (Kiswahili), Maraming Salamat sa Lahat (Pinoy-Tagalog-Filipino), Tack (Swedish), Fa'afetai (Samoan), Terima Kasih (Bahasa Indonesian) and Tenkyu (Tok Pisin of Papua New Guinea), Malo (Tongan), Vinaka Vaka Levu (Fijian)

 

Hemantha Kumar Pamarthy

Chennai, India