There are
just three left now. Out of a brood of 11. And what a brood – bright, strong, temperamental, tempestuous,
best of friends, best of enemies, innocuous conversations leading to massive
fights where some wouldn’t talk to each
other for months, years. The VK family fights and politics were legendary. And if
any of us cousins railed against this or ribbed them about it, the combined
put down was swift – we may have our fights,
but in times of trouble we will always be with each other. And as one aunt married into the family
said today – look, they always used to say they would be together despite all
the squabbles and so Babu and Sukumaran went within days of each other and
Mythili (my aunt, sitting) and Ranga (my mother, standing) within less than 24 hours.
I often used
to say the oddballs of the VK family
need to be chronicled, but today I will forget about their eccentricities and
celebrate them.
The VK
referred to V. Krishnamachari, my grandfather. He trained as a lawyer but
refused to practice after a point because he didn’t want to wear trousers – his
way of opposing British rule. So he became a journalist in The Hindu. He retired as assistant news editor and was a
legend there. G. Kasturi particularly held him in high regard. My mother and her
elder brothers have read proofs of pages carrying news of World War II that
used to come home for checking. But journalism was such a badly paying job that
he didn’t want any of his children to become one. Many years later, his
youngest son (who was just four when he died) became one – in The Hindu. And then
two granddaughters also did, one me and the other in The Hindu again.
Then there
was his wife Chellama. Daughter of a railway
official, my mother is not sure if she went to school but she was a
voracious reader in Tamil and English and apparently even wrote short stories in a little
notebook. So broad-minded was she that when
my mother nervously told her that my eldest sister wants to marry a baniya from Uttar Pradesh, she said, if they are
decided then just fix
the earliest auspicious date. And when
my second sister took her Kerala Christian husband to meet her, she immediately
took my sister to buy her utensils. Not once did she come in the way of her
daughters’ education.
Between VK
and Chellama, they raised a remarkable brood, particularly the four daughters.
My grandfather was insistent that all his daughters would be at least
graduates. My mother, Rangamani (sibling number 3, daughter number 1) was married straight after school,
but when searching for a groom, my grandfather insisted that she should be allowed
to go to college and become a graduate. She
went on to do her BA (she was pregnant with my eldest sister while giving her
third year exam), MA, B.Ed and PhD (she was pregnant with my youngest sister
then).
After her
was Mythili (sibling number 4, sister number 2), who became a doctor. When VK died of a heart attack a
few months after my birth, his youngest son was only four years old. Mythili shouldered the burden of educating all
her younger siblings, deciding to remain unmarried.
Sister
number 3 (sibling number 6) Shakuntala Chellappa (the second of the siblings to
die) was a school teacher as well as a gifted singer who was a staff artiste on
All India Radio, Hyderabad. She passed on her musical genes to her daughter, Nandini Srikar. Daughter number 4 (sibling number 8) Vatsala Mani is an
economics PhD from the precursor of JNU - School of International Studies. By the way, all the daughters had to learn
music.
The sons were
qualified and highly respected professionals – from a telecommunications engineer
(V. K. Aravamudhan, a crack solver of cryptic crossword puzzles); a veterinary doctor
(V. K. Seshadri, a voracious reader who could quote passages out of books he had read years earlier); a mining engineer (V. K. Raghavan); IAS (V.K. Srinivasan);
IPS (V.K. Rajagopalan); journalist (V.K. Raghunathan). V.K. Soundarajan was the
only one who lagged behind, thanks to an overdose of anasthaesia when he broke
his arm as a child. The reputation of Srinivasan and Rajagopalan for being non
corruptible bureaucrats and sticklers for rules was legendary in IAS and IPS circles. Raghu
too got drawn to music – rock music - in college and continued his interest
through his career. He had his own band at one point.
All the siblings had a ear for music. With Tata Sky, Srinivasan, Mythili and my mother would often be tuned to Carnatic music programmes on various channels and would be constantly calling each other almost every evening to listen to this new singer on this channel or an established singer on another channel.
All the siblings had a ear for music. With Tata Sky, Srinivasan, Mythili and my mother would often be tuned to Carnatic music programmes on various channels and would be constantly calling each other almost every evening to listen to this new singer on this channel or an established singer on another channel.
I’ve just read
this again and it reads flat. That’s because the eccentricities of the VK
family don’t figure. But that’s for another day.
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