*From & To Sathish* - Thread 4 - Page 62

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Posted: 6 years ago

Good morning. I wish you a beautiful day.

Two Mondays, Two Mothers, and Two beautiful songs

Death is momentary. A short story, a poem and maybe a song. But, Living and dying are the true mega serials. For some of us living and dying are the same.

“People need stories. Stories of love, hope, survival, wisdom and sometimes pain. Maybe you don’t tell them the full truth; maybe you tell them lies. But what is this world? A lie in itself.” ― Savi Sharma, Everyone Has A Story

The first mother left early in a Monday morning and the second mother late in the afternoon, on another Monday, exactly a week later. Just for the record, I was born on a Monday and early in the morning. See, even my birth was early and I was meant to rise early and torture others, then with my cries and bawls and now with my moans and groans and with my Mokka blade.

One a Brahmin Iyer, and the other a Catholic with a mix of Chinese and Anglo-Indian blood in her veins and both such beautiful souls and both departed in the hospital.

Pratibha and Jean Mani and I saw both them in the cold arms of the freezer box although one was taken in by mother earth and the other was taken by father fire.

But, both went back to the elements and both left me empty of answers and full of questions.

How do you console your friend when they have lost someone dear?

What are the right words that one can say that will lessen the pain, sorrow of the one who has lost someone close?

From my childhood, I have stood and watched people throng quietly around a dead body and have tried to make sense of the silence that is rightly and aptly called deathly silence.

Now, in my adulthood, I still watch, listen, absorb and try to make sense of people who come and go and grieve for the one who came and is now gone, permanently.

The coward in me, the dummy piece that I am, I try to make fun of the situation and imagine and conjure up all kinds of situations and scenarios at funerals.

One very familiar drama is God sitting at the auction table and screaming ' Going, Going, going and gone. Sold to hell' and the next object is put up for auction and again, God yells, ' Going, Going, sold to heaven.'

Obviously, he is selling us, you and me and our souls.

Jean Mani is the mother of my very dear friend Sheela and she like Kunti had five children and unlike Kunti had five daughters instead of sons.

Like Kunti, Jean mani too was without her husband, who flew the nest early in the children's lives.

I sat at her frozen, still, feet that looked so pretty with anklets and polished nails and with my eyes big like that of an owl, and my gob wide open like a hippo in total amazement and remarked ' God, Sheela, five of you, and she looked after all of you singlehandedly.'

Wonder woman, I say and declare.

But, generally, women are truly the wonders of this world, and I think if the women had been, physically bigger, stronger then it would have been a totally different story for us men.

It is changing now and for the better.

Thaikku pin thaaram. Mother, and the wife. One carries you in her womb for ten months and then carries you in her soul throughout her life and until her soul departs. The other carries you, bears you and all your passions, lusts, anger, good, bad on her body and in her soul and is both wife and mother.

For at some point in time in life, every man stops and thinks that and that is when he really sees his wife, partner, love. not for her body, her breasts or looks but her soul and her true essence.

Do you see what I see? Please do see for it is easy to see. All you have to do is open your eyes, eyes of your soul.

In the end, there is no marriage but just an unspoken holy bond.

In the end, there is no love but responsibility and trust.

In the end, there are only the angels by our side with their love and wings around you, while you blindly stared at the heavens for God when God is already by your side and he has been there, always there and in you and around you.

Shiva, Vishnu, Allah, Christ, Buddha, and the common factor among all of them is love and they all meant and mean only love and peace.

I wish you a beautiful Sunday. God bless all of us.

“If two points are destined to touch, the universe will always find a way to make the connection- even when all hope seems to be lost. Certain bonds cannot be broken. They define who we are and who we become. Across space, across time, among paths, we cannot predict- nature will always find a way.”

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Posted: 6 years ago

Jannal Oram 318

“Refugees didn’t just escape a place. They had to escape a thousand memories until they’d put enough time and distance between them and their misery to wake to a better day.” — Nadia Hashimi

We might all be divided as citizens from different nations, some gigantic and some tiny. But, we are all members of the same species and live as citizens of one planet, that important fact now totally forgotten.

If, there is one image I will take to my grave, one image that has been branded literally onto my brain matter, an image that constantly evokes guilt, revulsion and evokes a prayer in my soul calling for absolution and redemption, then that image is of that little boy lying face down near the shores of the Turkish sea,dead after drowning and being separated from his family which was fleeing the ISIS invasion.

The partition of India and Pakistan was also the source for lakhs of tragic stories as millions fled their homes and crossed over from India into Pakistan and from Pakistan into India.

But, the tragedy that took place in the year 1971 in our very own backyard, in North-west India, in what was formerly East-Pakistan and now called Bangladesh is equal to what happened to the Jews under Hitler's Nazi regime.

The genocide in Bangladesh began on 26 March 1971 with the launch of Operation Searchlight, as West Pakistan began a military crackdown on the Eastern wing of the nation to suppress Bengali calls for self-determination rights. During, the nine-month-long Bangladesh War for Liberation, members of the Pakistani military and supporting Islamist militias from Jamaat-e-Islami killed between 300,000 and 3,000,000 people and raped between 200,000 and 400,000 Bangladeshi women, according to Bangladeshi and Indian sources, in a systematic campaign of genocidal rape. In December 2011, a BBC News report cited unnamed "independent researchers" as claiming that between 300,000 and 500,000 people were killed. The actions against women were supported by Jamaat-e-Islami religious leaders, who declared that Bengali women were gonimoter maal (Bengali for "public property"). As a result of the conflict, a further eight to ten million people, mostly Hindus, fled the country at the time to seek refuge in neighbouring India. It is estimated that up to 30 million civilians became internally displaced. During the war, there was also ethnic violence between Bengalis and Urdu-speaking Biharis. Biharis faced reprisals from Bengali mobs and militias and from 1,000to 150,000 were killed. Other sources claim it was up to 500,000.

Malik was born to a Hindu father and to a Muslim mother. Malik's dad Lakshmi Kant Pandey was in his early twenties when he and his family fled East-Pakistan and took refuge in West Bengal. It was here that he made his new life and it was here that he met Khadijah and fell in love. Secretly, and on the sly, they got married and began to live as husband and wife and soon Khadijah became pregnant and that is when problems started coming at the young couple and they came in a steady stream.

With both the 1947 and 1971 partitions still fresh in people's minds, this marriage between a brahmin and a Muslim was looked down upon and both were ostracised by their own families.

Khadijah was branded as an outcast by her community and Lakshmi Kant was chucked out by his orthodox brahmin family. But, somehow both managed to survive and their son was born.

He was given two names by his parents. Dhanraj was his father's schoolmaster and Malik was his Muslim mother's grandfather who she had loved very much and who had passed on many years ago.

When he was about four years old, Malik's house was attacked and burnt and he instantly became an orphan and an outcast. Outcast literally means that, a person who has been rejected or ostracized by their society or social group.

From the loving and comforting confines of his home and parents, the four-year-old found himself begging on the streets for food and shelter and then boarded a train. Years on the street and on trains finally brought him to Delhi where he fell in with a gang that did petty crimes such as shoplifting and pick-pocketing.

Malik soon found himself in many juvenile homes and then finally joined the Indian army where he found a place for himself and thought of it as his new home.

But, a few years later, he was forced to face the nightmares of his childhood when some of his comrades indulged in raping some tribal women and he had lost it.

Malik shot and killed all ten of his comrades with some machines guns that had just been confiscated from the tribals who were also Naxalites and also made good his escape and disappeared from society.

With the help of some of the tribals, that he had rescued, he crossed over into Burma and stayed there for a few years and then came back to India to make a living by offering his assassin services to the highest bidder.

But the Dhanraj Malik who escaped to Burma and the one who came back were two totally different persons. He had entered Burma as a seething and raging volcano and had come back as the same volcano but one that lay dormant and silent to the universe and exploded on its own timeframe.

He had gone to Burma as a refugee, a part Hindu and part Muslim but came back as Buddhist for he had converted to that religion deep in the Burmese Jungles.

The monk, the master who transformed him from an ordinary knife into a lethal sword was an unknown legend to the rest of the world but the jungle dwellers and it was he who named Malik with a new name, " DASAGRIVA".

Malik had looked at his master with reverence and asked, ' What does it mean master, this name Dasagriva?'

The 90-year-old master smiled and replied, ' It is the name of a great man, a great warrior and a great devotee of the cosmic dancer who dances to destroy and create and his name is Shiva.'

A.K. Viswanathan, Chennai's Commissioner of police was silent for a few moments and then quickly added, ' Sir, when I was posted in Delhi for a few years, I heard the rumors of a man, a demon, a monster who criminals in the underworld spoke if fear of and this mysterious man was supposedly able to change his looks and vanish from sight.'

' Yes, Commissioner. we too have heard all those tales and yes, they are all true and this mysterious man is indeed alive and is probably one of these killers who go by the names, Gulab and Jamun.'

' But sir, what is this person's real name or does he go by any other codename?'

V.K.Singh, Additional secretary, RAW replied in a tentative voice, ' I think he has another name that he has not used or has not been heard for 10 years now. I am not sure if that person who vanished 10 years ago is the same person and one of these killers.'

' what was that other name sir?' and V.K.Singh, Additional secretary, RAW answered ' Dasagriva'.

Commissioner A.K. Viswanathan repeated the name a couple of times and said, ' Sounds vaguely like a pure Sanskrit name sir. What does it mean?'

'Dasagriva is one of the other names of the mighty demon-king Ravana, Lord of Lanka who was killed by Lord Rama.'

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ygTOYYyBSAU

Edited by Raman_jeeva - 6 years ago
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Posted: 6 years ago

Good morning. I wish you a beautiful day. All the best.

Heavy hearts, like heavy clouds in the sky, are best relieved by the letting go of a little water.

They are liquid diamonds that shine in their blooming wetness and their fullness becomes too heavy and flow, fall and run as rivulets down the cheeks.

Tears are a rather strange reaction in our bodies, methinks and me has always been fascinated by things that move and most that don't move me. They come sometimes unasked, uncalled for and regardless of sympathy or empathy. They bloom in the deserted eyes like water in the oasis of souls and sometimes come too early, sometimes on time and many a time much delayed.

Reactions to actions of our own self and others.

We cry for that was once and is not more and is in the past. We cry in the present for that is no more present among us. We cry sometimes when somebody cracks a joke, narrates an incident and we cry doubled up and rolling on the floor. We cry at the movies and we cry sometimes in despair and in distress.

We cry out tears and fury, sometimes in traffic out of sheer frustration on seeing near-fatal accidents and smile out of relief when they roar on to live out another day.

Tears are this beautiful mechanism, outlet for the body to let go of the overwhelming emotions that might otherwise just literally fry the brain and shut it down leading to fatal consequences.

Some cry out without any inhibition and some cry with inhibition and emotions in check.

Few, flood, dry and wet and yet, they are there, an outlet for the inlet of emotions.

It is okay to cry for lost ones for we let go of them with every drop and send them off with every tear and thus heal our souls and repair and fill the void that they left behind.

We cry for the past, for the present and we cry even for the future filled with worry about our loved ones and their well-being.

Crying mostly works and it is a package that the human entity has evolved with over eons.

Weirdly, some laugh when others cry and some laugh and live while others die. This is the anomaly, the flaw and this is the evil that exists and pervades in every part of our modern lives.

I think that God himself cries seeing the human species and what they have been up to.

Newspapers, news channels, I avoid for they make me cry out of sheer frustration and despair. Coward, you might say but just existing I reply and saving my tears for those that really need it and when I will really need them.

The soul would have no rainbow had the eyes no tears.

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Posted: 6 years ago

Jannal Oram 319

“Many people seem to think it foolish, even superstitious, to believe that the world could still change for the better. And it is true that in winter it is sometimes so bitingly cold that one is tempted to say, ‘What do I care if there is a summer; its warmth is no help to me now.’ Yes, evil often seems to surpass good. But then, in spite of us, and without our permission, there comes,

at last, an end to the bitter frosts. One morning the wind turns, and there is a thaw. And so I must still have hope.” ― Vincent van Gogh

The room fell silent, filled with, only the breathing of the living. Only, noises made by the living filled the deadly silence. Noises such as muffled sobs, painful groans and silent and timid wails. Only, the warmth of the living now filled the cold room and they stood as apostles, guardians, pallbearers around the bed that held the body of the freshly departed Mohan, whose name would be the latest addition in the current entrants into the other side of life, death.

But the ventilator vented on for it had not been switched off, yet

Raman slowly lifted his head and then slowly threw his arms around Mohan's parents and pulled them in close to his chest and into the safety of his mighty but tender arms.

' I am sorry, and I say I am sorry for I know of no other words with which to express my grief and condolences and that of our entire family.'

Thulasi still crying looked up into his eyes, ' Ram, A mother knows and I think I can safely and with pride declare that I was a great mother to him, and so I know. From, the moment that I held him after delivering him to this world, I have been gentle, kind and a loving mother to him. With that love and with that memories, I say to all of you that I knew Mohan was gone from us, lost to us from the time of the accident.'

Pointing to the ventilator, Mohan's mum, Thulasi looked at all of them, ' In case any of you are wondering why the ventilator has not been turned off as yet, it is because my son is an organ donor and they need to be harvested.'

Mohan's dad Venu gently took Thulasi's right arm and then whispered, ' we are going out for the doctors have to take him away for the organ harvesting. You have just a couple of moments to say goodbye to Mohan and Suja although I still cannot understand or fathom what is going on or what we felt in our hearts.'

Not wasting any more time, Raman, Jeeva, and the others slowly followed Mohan's parent's footsteps and came out of the room and into the presence of V.K.Singh and Brigadier Sooryanarayanan and other Police officers and all stood in a sort of a funny Mexican standoff.

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Posted: 6 years ago

“Many people seem to think it foolish, even superstitious, to believe that the world could still change for the better. And it is true that in winter it is sometimes so bitingly cold that one is tempted to say, ‘What do I care if there is a summer; its warmth is no help to me now.’ Yes, evil often seems to surpass good. But then, in spite of us, and without our permission, there comes, at last, an end to the bitter frosts. One morning the wind turns, and there is a thaw. And so I must still have hope.” ― Vincent van Gogh

Simply and more beautifully put and sung in Tamil

Ovvoru pookalumae solkiradhae

Vaazhvendral poraadum porkalamae

Ovvoru vidiyalumae solgiradhae

Iravanaal pagal ondru vanthidumae

Nambikai enbathu vendum nam vaazhvil

Latchiyam nichayam vellum oru naalil

Manamae oh manamae nee maarividu

Malaiyo adhu paniyo nee mothividu

Like all of you, I too have asked this one question again and again and which is, " God, Why do you remain silent and immune to all the bad things that happen on this planet? You are the almighty and you can change all that in a second and yet you either remain still or move at a snail's pace. It is obvious that you have not heard of the saying, 'Justice delayed is justice denied'.

Well, as expected, and true to form and character, God kept silent. Trying to make sense of why and the what's of why some die young and some truly bad souls die old and surrounded by wealth and power, I read, debated and heard peers and wise souls speak and they all spoke in one language and which is called " Bull shit" and I surmised in one word all that they said and all that had been written and which is " Crap".

Hope, of a better time, a better tomorrow. Faith, in that hope of things changing for the better, is what it all boils down to.

Or, maybe God, alien from some other universe has started this experiment called life on this planet and has deserted us and left us orphaned and to our own means and ends.

Or, maybe he wants us to fight it out, work it out ourselves and finally come to the conclusion that peace, harmony, happiness is in our reach and all it takes is for every soul to realize that and come to terms with that ultimate goal.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=V3x9OT9HUCQ

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Posted: 6 years ago

Jannal Oram 320

Raman hid his surprise pretty well, although his voice could not mask or disguise the irritation that he felt on his and his family's privacy being invaded upon and greeted both men casually, ' Good morning gentlemen and I wonder what the reason is that you both are here personally, in flesh and blood'.

But, before he could get a reply, Assistant Commissioner Damodaran requested in a very polite tone if he could spend a few minutes with them at the station answering their questions regarding what had just happened in the corridor.

Raman nodded tiredly knowing pretty well that he would not be able to avoid the questioning for it was not only a formality but the rule and he for one always was diligent in following the letter of the law as stated.

V.K.Singh, Additional secretary, RAW glanced sharply at the Assistant Commissioner for jumping in so crudely and his eyes and expression told AC Damodaran that maybe he should have waited for a better opportunity and specifically when Raman had been alone and away from his family.

Venu Srinivasan not knowing the full extent of Raman's involvement in the matters concerning national and state affairs jumped into the mix, ' those two men were out to get my son. Instead of finding out who they were and what they were doing here, you are trying to arrest this gentleman who is doing the job that your department must be doing'.

Assistant Commissioner in a patient voice, ' sir, I am sorry if my words conveyed the wrong intention on our part. But, I only requested Mr.Raman for his assistance for apart from these two men, one of our ex-police officer, a former DSP has been murdered in the security room. We just want to know if Raman saw anything, anybody that could be of help to us in tracing the criminal behind that murder'.

Raman looked at Venu Srinivasan, ' Sir, please don't bother yourself with my affairs for they are very complicated and dangerous. Please, Sir, let me handle this while you begin to make the funeral arrangements for Mohan'.

Venu nodded and then looked at Raman, ' Will you all try to make it for his funeral, please. Not for our sakes but for his sake and for his peace of mind.'

Shaking his head sadly, ' Your name and Suja's name were his last words and only words for the past few days and I guess that means that goes to show how important both of you were to him that even lying at death's doorstep, he called out for you and for the poor child who is no more'.

Thulasi Srinivasan looked at Jeeva and her parents, ' We are really sorry for your loss and it does not matter that they were not married for she is still our child, our daughter-in-law and the wife of our son, Mohan.'

Before any more words could be spoken, Raman's mobile phone rang and he answered it and Kavita spoke,' Raman, where are you?'

' Kavita, Is everything okay?'

' Okay, I guess for that word has no meaning for me and will not for a long, long time to come'.

Raman in a very kind voice, ' I am sorry for not being there right now with you and your family.'

It did not even occur to Raman to tell Kavita what had just taken place in the hospital for he did not want to add any more stress and burden on her already over-burdened shoulders and instead said, ' I will join you directly at the party headquarters' and pausing for a meaningful look at Assistant Commissioner Damodaran who nodded,' he continued, ' Don't worry for I think the police will help me in getting through the traffic and reaching the place. I will see you there in an hour or so'.

Jeeva smiled, ' I am glad you did not tell her what just took place for the poor thing would have panicked needlessly'.

Raman looked at her with pride and with immense respect,' wow! Adhu thaan Jeeva'.

The Brigadier, V.K.Singh, AC Damodaran and the other cops all had one thought racing through their brains,' bloody hell, people are lying dead all around this hospital and this man is romancing his wife. Konjam too mucha irukku'.

Raman looked at all of them and smiled,' Compliment your wife the moment you feel like doing so and regardless of the time or place. But, if you are going to remark or comment about an action of hers that you don't like or are not comfortable with then that softly and in total privacy'.

All of them glared at him and his audacity and Raman continued, ' That is my recipe for a happy life and especially if you are married'.

Raman turned to his family, ' I need to go with these gentlemen to talk things over. I think it is better for all of you to go back home and remain there'.

With a smile, ' It will be late by the time I come back home after the funeral and so I will see you then'.

Raman slowly walked away closely followed by AC Damodaran and other police officers and behind them went Brigadier Sooryanarayanan and V.K.Singh.

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Posted: 6 years ago

Saravana Bhavan Founder, Serving Life Term, Dies In Chennai Hospital

Masala Dosa to Die For By Rollo Romig, New York Times, May 7, 2014

Saravana Bhavan doesn’t look like a house of secrets. Its dining room at the corner of Lexington Avenue and 26th Street is clean and bright and often attracts a line out front. It doesn’t advertise because it doesn’t need to; the fact that it’s one of the world’s largest chains of vegetarian restaurants — 33 in India, another 47 in a dozen other countries — is considered too obvious to its core clientele of Indian expatriates and tourists to be worth trumpeting. In a city overwhelmed with underwhelming north Indian food, Saravana Bhavan is the standard-bearer of the delicacies of the south, but it makes no effort to educate the uninitiated. If you don’t know what a dosa is or how to eat it, you’re on your own.

The man behind the chain is an elusive 66-year-old named P. Rajagopal. Among his peers in the restaurant business in Chennai, the south Indian city where Saravana Bhavan is headquartered, Rajagopal is a legend. “He brought prestige to the vegetarian business,” said a restaurateur named Manoharan, who runs a competing chain called Murugan Idli. “He made a revolution.”

Born into a low caste in a remote province, he came to rule a field that was once the sole domain of Brahmins, cleverly updating their traditional fare in a setting that was both respectable and unpretentious, thereby catering to India’s middle class at just the moment it emerged. Today he employs more than 8,000 people in Chennai alone. His workers enjoy benefits fantastic enough for Silicon Valley (pensions, TVs, education), inspiring among them fierce loyalty to Rajagopal. Every day thousands of pilgrims come to pray at the temples he built in the village of his birth, and a hundred thousand come to eat in his restaurants.

His business model is so seemingly foolproof that the company has acquired an air of invincibility, even as its founder became sullied with scandal. As Saravana Bhavan went global, Rajagopal was charged with murder, found guilty and sentenced to life in prison. Yet he served a total of only 11 months, and today he’s free to continue his expansion — next stop Hong Kong, followed by Sydney, Australia. And then, if his health holds out, building his first luxury hotel.

Saravana Bhavan specializes in the holy trinity of south Indian snacks known as tiffin: dosa, idli and vada. All are made from ground rice and lentils, with remarkably different results. Dosas are crispy golden crepes that are most deliciously served with a masala of potato and onion; vadas are deep-fried savory doughnuts; and idlis, the south’s staple food, are pure-white saucer-shaped steamed cakes. At most branches of Saravana Bhavan in Chennai, you can also find for sale a little book titled, “I Set My Heart on Victory.” First published in 1997, the book is Rajagopal’s memoir and manifesto, a curious blend of mythmaking and self-effacement.

His story begins in 1947, 10 days before India’s independence from the British, when he was born in the vast brushland in the southern state Tamil Nadu. His village, Punnaiadi, was so inconsequential that it didn’t merit a bus stop; his home was a shack with mud-and-cow-dung floors. Rajagopal writes that he quit school after seventh grade, left home alone and took a job wiping tables at a cheap restaurant in a distant resort town, where he showered in a waterfall and slept on the kitchen floor. But he was proud of his work, especially after the restaurant’s tea master inducted him into the mysteries of making a perfect chai.

When he was a teenager, he moved to Chennai, then known as Madras, and in 1968 opened the first in a series of tiny groceries on the outskirts of the city. One day in 1979, at his grocery in a neighborhood called KK Nagar, a salesman made a casual remark: He’d have to go all the way to T Nagar for lunch because KK Nagar didn’t have any restaurants.

A century ago, there were virtually no restaurants in all of Chennai. “It’s a country that was very conservative about eating out,” said Krishnendu Ray, a food-studies professor at N.Y.U. When Rajagopal was born, the restaurant scene consisted of little more than Brahmin hotels: modest affairs catering to the traveling upper caste, whose dietary rules dictated that they couldn’t eat food cooked by any caste but their own. As a member of the Nadar caste, Rajagopal wouldn’t have been allowed to eat in most Brahmin hotels, let alone run one. But by the time he came of age, entrepreneurs from other castes had begun to meet Chennai’s increasing appetite for dining out.

There was little to suggest that Rajagopal was ready to join them. When he opened his debut restaurant in KK Nagar in 1981, his struggling shops had left him deep in debt, and he knew little about food service beyond selling groceries. He made the leap, he told me, only after an astrologer recommended that he try a line of work that involved fire. A business adviser insisted that he should use cheap ingredients and pay his staff as little as possible; food workers are vagabonds, he said, and they’ll take what they can get. “I did not like his argument at all,” Rajagopal writes in his memoir. He fired the adviser, started using coconut oil and top-quality vegetables and gave his workers surprisingly high wages. The business lost 10,000 rupees a month — a big deficit for a restaurant where most items on the menu sold for a rupee apiece.

But word spread that his food was tasty and cheap, and soon Rajagopal was turning a profit and opening new branches. He expanded his workers’ benefits, all of them unprecedented in Indian restaurants: free health care, housing stipends, a marriage fund for their daughters. Saravana Bhavan workers started calling him Annachi, a Tamil term of respect that means “elder brother.”

By the ‘90s, a Saravana Bhavan could be found in neighborhoods throughout Chennai. Locals sometimes refer to the brand as their version of McDonald’s: well lit, ubiquitous and uncannily consistent. Unlike McDonald’s, the restaurants make everything from scratch. One afternoon, a trio of bright-eyed assistants from the company’s R & D department gave me a tour of the branch in Mylapore, a Chennai neighborhood. I was surprised to find that there were no freezers, just a single walk-in cooler for vegetables that had been bought at market the day before. Even the rice flour for the dosas was ground on the premises.

When the tour was over, the assistants talked to me about Rajagopal. “He is the same as the father of a family,” one said. “Any problem I have, he addresses it.” The company pays for employees to visit Rajagopal’s home village for a few days each year, he told me, driving them down in a company bus. “When I go there, I can witness all the love and affection the village people have for Annachi.”

I asked if the company had cut back on its package of benefits as it has grown. “They’ve only been increasing,” a second assistant said. The company provides them with magazine subscriptions, a cellphone and a motorbike, he said, and covers the cost of fuel. (The only benefit it discontinued was a haircut allowance.)

“And we have mechanics so that we don’t have to go outside to fix our vehicles,” the third told me.

“My friend used to joke with me, ‘The only thing you can do with your salary is put it in the bank and save it,’ ” the second assistant said. “They take care of everything.”

In 2000, Saravana Bhavan branched out for the first time beyond India, opening a franchise in Dubai, where Indian expats vastly outnumber native-born Emiratis. According to Rajagopal’s elder son, Shiva Kumaar, the opening-day crowd was like “for a newly released movie.” They’d eventually expand to Paris, Frankfurt, London, Dallas and Doha, Qatar. The strategy is simple: open one restaurant in every city with a large expat Indian population. (One exception is Manhattan, which has two.) Prey on homesickness by importing skilled chefs to ensure that the food tastes just the way it does in Chennai. Don’t bother trying to pursue non-Indian customers.

In 2002, the year that he opened franchises in Singapore and Sunnyvale, Calif., Rajagopal was charged with murdering the husband of a woman he wanted to marry. In 2003, his restaurant expanded to Canada, Oman and Malaysia, and he went to jail for the first time. In 2004, a local Chennai court sentenced him to 10 years in prison. By the end of that year, the empire had opened 29 branches worldwide.

Eight months into his prison term, the Supreme Court suspended Rajagopal’s sentence on medical grounds while awaiting appeal, citing his diabetes. In 2009, the Madras High Court not only upheld the verdict but also upgraded the conviction from culpable homicide to murder and enhanced his sentence to life in prison. After another three-month stint, he was out on bail pending a Supreme Court hearing, which no one expects to happen anytime soon. The courts won’t give him back his passport, but otherwise he’s free to go about his life. All but one of Saravana Bhavan’s 47 foreign franchises have opened in the 12 years since the murder.

“It’s amazing how he managed it,” said Sriram V., a local historian. “I mean, our legal system is not that bad.”

Chennai’s tabloids published every lurid detail of the murder allegations, but the restaurant just kept growing. “Others in that position would have totally collapsed,” said Manoharan, of the competing chain Murugan Idli. “People thought he was finished. But there was no impact.”

‘He takes boys from the street, from the villages, and he teaches them. He picks them up and molds them.’

It helped that Rajagopal has little interest in personal fame; he promotes the restaurant’s brand, not his own, which makes it easier for customers to compartmentalize. As one Saravana Bhavan loyalist told me: “Some of my friends used to say, How can you go and eat in his restaurant? You’re actually fattening the wallet of a murderer. And I used to tell them, Look, I don’t know with whom I do business in my day-to-day activity, whether he’s a drunk or beats his wife. I have no idea, but I do business. So as long as he’s giving me good-quality food, I go there.”

Saravana Bhavan employees have been especially faithful. M. Mahadevan, a consultant who has helped with the chain’s international expansion, told me a story to illustrate their devotion. “I was at the Saravana Bhavan down the road, drinking coffee with some friends,” Mahadevan said. “The old man” — that’s what Mahadevan calls Rajagopal — “was in prison at that time. These big hulky guys came in, eight of them — they were local rowdies. They wanted to eat without paying. One of them was bullying the waiter, saying: ‘Hey, mister, how’s your boss? Don’t act funny, I know he’s inside.’ There was a boy pouring water, and he told them: ‘You’re talking about my boss. You say anything against him, and I’ll put this jug of water into your mouth. Not on you — into your mouth.’ I was astonished. The boy was three-foot-nothing. And immediately all the waiters came and stood next to him.

“For him, the old man was a god. Period. He’s got that kind of loyalty. He takes boys from the street, from the villages, and he teaches them. He picks them up and molds them.”

One gloomy Wednesday evening in August, I went to meet Rajagopal at Saravana Bhavan’s headquarters, passing several of his restaurants as I inched my way through the city’s eternal gridlock. Mahadevan met me in the dining room and escorted me to the boss’s office, introducing me on the way to Rajagopal’s 39-year-old son, Saravanan, who is gradually taking over the company’s domestic operations. (His elder brother, Shiva Kumaar, runs the international business.) For a while the three of us sat and stared at the walls: Every surface was covered with blown-up images of Rajagopal’s family and favorite Hindu deities. Then suddenly Mahadevan and Saravanan rose. The office door swung open, and Rajagopal entered.

He was grayer and jowlier than he was in the photographs I’d seen. He regarded the room with mild amusement, bowed politely and walked behind his desk, where he faced a portrait of a popular guru and folded his hands for a moment of prayer. With him was Ganapathi Iyer, his oldest friend, and a personal assistant and a valet. We all sat but the valet, who stood ready with a glass of water the instant his boss coughed. Nobody relaxed.

I asked Rajagopal about his origins and business philosophy. Each question was answered with a cascade of replies: Rajagopal would answer in Tamil, then Saravanan or Mahadevan or Iyer or all three would jump in to elaborate or clarify in English, a language Rajagopal doesn’t understand. It was a dynamic that sometimes clearly frustrated the boss.

When I asked about the murder, everyone started talking at once, until Rajagopal cut impatiently through the chatter. “I’m not responsible for anyone’s death,” he said. “I used to pray to my god, why was I punished for someone else’s mistake?” There was a reason, he decided: “God wanted to give an opportunity for my son Saravanan to learn business.” Saravanan smiled faintly.

By the time we finished talking, it was nearly 11, and Rajagopal’s workday still wasn’t over. In the foyer outside his office, eight employees were standing in line waiting to speak with him. An older man with a handlebar mustache and a proud bearing told me that he was a night watchman and was there to ask Rajagopal for a promotion. Another said he hoped to be transferred to a different branch. A third said he wanted to inform Rajagopal of his coming wedding.

I went back into Rajagopal’s office. He sat at his desk, studying a spreadsheet with the aid of a magnifying glass. He consulted his assistant and then called in the first man. Rajagopal ignored him and barked into a walkie-talkie, asking the voice on the other end what had brought in this man who stood before him.

From the walkie-talkie came a surprising answer: “They keep fighting the whole night.” That was not what he told me outside. The man hung his head. Rajagopal fired him on the spot.

The next man came in, and another voice on the walkie-talkie told Rajagopal that he’d been fiddling with his cellphone in the dining room. It turned out that nearly all the employees in line had lied to me; they were there to be disciplined.

“You’ve been with us for two and a half years — don’t you know that you’re not supposed to use your phone during work hours?” Rajagopal said.

“I did it by mistake,” the man mumbled.

“Answer my question!” Rajagopal snapped.

“I forgot,” the man said.

“How can you forget? When you’re in service, you should serve.”

He decided to give the man another chance. Next up was the watchman.

“I heard you got drunk and abused everyone and used foul words,” Rajagopal said. “And you should shave off your mustache. These are not good habits.”

“I’m sorry, Annachi,” he said. “Forgive me.”

“How can I?” Rajagopal asked. “There’s an age to forgive. At your age, it doesn’t make sense.” The watchman stared at the floor. “Are you listening?” Rajagopal asked.

Again he decided to have mercy; the man would keep his job as long as he laid off the booze. He whispered his thanks and left without ever looking up.

The night’s work was over; Rajagopal sat back in his chair. “What to do?” he said. “Everyone makes mistakes.”

At the conclusion of Rajagopal’s appeal trial in 2009, the Madras High Court issued a 30,000-word document that served as its definitive statement on the case. “By and large, a witness cannot be expected to possess a photographic memory to recall the details of the incident and the actual words uttered,” the court warns. “It is not as if a videotape is replayed on the mental screen.” But this is the version of events that the court found most credible.

According to the document, Rajagopal — possibly on the advice of his astrologer — became determined to marry Jeevajothi, the young daughter of one of his assistant managers. That would have made her Rajagopal’s third simultaneous wife: In 1972, he married the mother of his sons, and in 1994, he married the wife of one of his employees.

Jeevajothi was not interested in Rajagopal. She was in love with her brother’s math tutor, Santhakumar. In 1999, Jeevajothi and Santhakumar eloped, but Rajagopal’s fixation persisted; he gave her jewelry, dresses and several installments of cash to help her open a travel agency. While Jeevajothi accepted the gifts, she continued to resist Rajagopal’s advances. On Sept. 28, 2001, Rajagopal came to Jeevajothi and Santhakumar’s house at midnight and warned Santhakumar that he had two days to sever their relationship. He told Jeevajothi that his second wife, too, had at first rejected him, but now she was living “a queen life.”

The young couple tried to flee to a place where they hoped Rajagopal wouldn’t find them, but five of Rajagopal’s employees, led by a restaurant manager named Daniel, intercepted them. The henchmen forced the couple into an Ambassador car and drove them to a Saravana Bhavan warehouse in KK Nagar, where Rajagopal appeared. According to the court’s narrative, Rajagopal hiked up his dhoti and gave Santhakumar a beating. Jeevajothi fell at Rajagopal’s feet and begged him to stop. Rajagopal told his men to take Santhakumar to the next room and continue beating him. Jeevajothi sat in the corner and wept.

The next day, Daniel called Jeevajothi to apologize and suggested that she go to the police.

Though Rajagopal’s men held Jeevajothi and Santhakumar under a kind of house arrest, they escaped on Oct. 12 under the pretext of going out to attend a “felicitation function” for Rajagopal. Instead, they went to the city police commissioner’s office to file a complaint. Six days later, Rajagopal’s employees kidnapped the couple again and forcibly separated them. They pushed Jeevajothi into a Mercedes with Rajagopal, who brandished a photocopy of her police complaint and asked her mockingly about its contents.

Jeevajothi didn’t know what became of Santhakumar. He reached her by phone two days later, telling her that Rajagopal had paid Daniel 500,000 rupees ($10,000) to kill him, but Daniel had instead let him escape and advised him to hide out in Mumbai. She urged Santhakumar to come home to her; together, Jeevajothi said, they’d plead with Rajagopal to leave them alone. “It is obvious,” the court wrote, “that their overwhelming love for each other persuaded them to take the risk.”

Later that night, the couple, joined by Jeevajothi’s parents and brother, went to Saravana Bhavan headquarters to meet Rajagopal. He told them to wait in a nearby room. Then he interrogated Daniel about what happened to Santhakumar. Daniel lied and said that he had tied him up on a railway track, where a train ran him over, and then he burned his clothes. With a dramatic flourish, Rajagopal then called Santhakumar into the room. Who’s this then, he asked Daniel, Santhakumar’s ghost? Daniel started beating Santhakumar there in the office, enraged that he’d revealed his betrayal of Rajagopal. Jeevajothi and her family tried to intervene. Eventually Rajagopal and his henchmen put them all into a van, which, according to the court, took them to a specialist in a faraway village “for removal of witchcraft.”

Two days later, Rajagopal’s men forced Santhakumar into a car with Daniel, and they drove north. On Oct. 31, high up in the Western Ghats mountain range near a resort town called Kodaikanal, forest officials discovered a body. An assistant surgeon at the local hospital concluded in his post-mortem that the cause of Santhakumar’s death was “asphyxia due to throttling.” The police later found the alleged murder weapon — a sarong — under the seat of Daniel’s car.

Daniel was convicted of murder along with Rajagopal and has also been released on bail, but I was never able to track him down. Jeevajothi, too, has made herself impossible to find.

Three days after I met Rajagopal in Chennai, I took a short flight to visit the village where he grew up. Rajagopal’s driver picked me up, and he beamed when I asked him what the boss was like. “He’s like a living god to us,” he said. “He understands every problem, and he resolves it.”

The village’s name has been upgraded from Punnaiadi to Punnai Nagar, because of Rajagopal’s development of the area, he told me. The bus even stops there now. In terms of population, Punnai Nagar is no bigger than it was when Rajagopal was born. Yet the village has been transformed. In the middle of the red-dirt moonscape, Rajagopal has erected a surreal monument to his success, in the form of a four-acre Saravana Bhavan campus. The centerpiece is a million-dollar Hindu temple, which is flanked by a Saravana Bhavan restaurant that employs 140 people — all for a village that has fewer than 90 homes.

A worker took me on a tour of Rajagopal’s house, which he built in 1994 on the spot where his childhood hut once stood, and where he has increasingly been spending his time. It’s a huge beige block, nearly all of it given over to dormitory rooms for his staff. The only decorations are pictures of gods. The worker led me to a black couch on the second floor, and a few minutes later, Rajagopal emerged from a back room and sat on a chair opposite me. Ganapathi Iyer was there again, as were his assistant and his valet, who pricked Rajagopal’s finger for a blood-sugar test. But this time Rajagopal was less willing to let them control the conversation.

I asked him about a rumor that while in prison he had managed to improve the food served by the prison canteen. “You can’t change anything there,” he said. “I had to spend one lakh [100,000 rupees] every month in order to get home food delivered to me.”

“Don’t tell him about this,” Iyer said to Rajagopal. “Do we have to talk about the corruption?”

“They should know how corrupt we are,” Rajagopal said. “We can’t just keep bragging that we are good all the time. The truth has to be told.”

I asked him what he likes least about his work.

“I don’t like employees drinking and lying,” he said. “If you ask me, I don’t like that I went after Jeevajothi.”

“Sir, not that,” Iyer said, “just office work, office work.”

“There’s nothing I dislike about the work,” Rajagopal said.

After a while Rajagopal said he was getting tired. As we got up to leave, he talked about how important it was for successful villagers like him to support the places they came from. “Developing villages was Gandhi’s dream,” he said. “I believe in Gandhi.”

I asked what he admired most about Gandhi, and he laughed. “I like that he had a girl on each arm.” He turned to my translator. “Tell him that having girls around keeps a guy young forever.”

“Tell him these last comments were just a joke,” his assistant said.

Shortly before I left Chennai, I met again with Rajagopal’s son Saravanan. This time it was just the two of us, and we talked for hours in the foyer outside his father’s office. Saravanan is a large but gentle man, his husky voice rarely much louder than a whisper.

He described his father as a “keep-guessing character.” “You don’t know what he will come up wanting,” he said. “A phone call comes, and you have to be dead sure what he’s asking and what you’re answering. That fear is there for everybody.” Is he an intimidating boss to work for? I asked. “When he wants things done a certain way, he’s quite intimidating,” Saravanan said. “It has to be done at any cost.”

‘It is obvious that their overwhelming love for each other persuaded them to take the risk.’

If he’d had his choice, he said, he would have become an engineer. “My dad said, No, we come from a business community; you have to study commerce.” So he did two years of commerce, and then Rajagopal told him he had to study hotel management. From there his father assigned him to a seven-year rotation through the company’s departments: purchasing vegetables, working the graveyard shift in the kitchen, manning a Saravana sweets shop, making ice cream, working in maintenance and accounting and human resources.

It’s clear that Saravanan never gave up his dream of becoming an engineer — he just transferred his ideas to his father’s business. Rajagopal’s exacting standards were dictated by the instinct of a self-made man. Saravanan wants to translate that instinct into a science, and when he talks about the company that’s becoming his, his conversation is peppered with terms that would be foreign to his father, like “management information system” and “total dissolved solids.” In a biochemical lab Saravanan set up on the top floor of the company’s ice-cream factory, he has been trying to determine the exact chemical composition of Saravana’s dishes in their ideal form, and the lab uses this information to test daily samples from each of the company’s Chennai branches to ensure that all are supplying the same quality.

As the company continues to grow, manpower is a worry. Saravanan said he is committed to making everything from fresh ingredients — in fact, he wants to take it further, and he has been experimenting with replacing the artificial stabilizer in Saravana’s otherwise all-natural house-brand ice cream with flaxseed. But such cooking requires vast kitchen staffs, and as better education reaches more and more Indians, he said, fewer workers are interested in that kind of labor.

One solution Saravanan likes is automation. Another in-house lab is developing prototypes for everything from coffee machines to vada fryers, according to Saravana Bhavan’s very particular specifications. He recognizes, though, that the mass utility of such machines is still years away; in the meantime, personnel remains the company’s most treasured asset, so he has also systematized the hiring process. An in-house medical team records each applicant’s vital statistics using software Saravanan developed. A coffee man, he explained, should be small and quiet, while a dosa chef needs to be at least 5-foot-6.

But he was quick to note the limits of such algorithms. Just that morning, he said, the medical team alerted him to their concerns over a particular applicant: They noticed that he had cigarette burns on his forearm, apparently self-inflicted. Saravanan decided to call the man and ask him what happened. “He told me, ‘I had a love affair, it failed, she got married, I got agitated,’ ” Saravanan said. “He made a mistake that was a small part of his life.” The company is strict, but not unforgiving. He told the man he would hire him. And if the job worked out, Saravana Bhavan would pay to erase his scars.

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Posted: 6 years ago

Jannal Oram 321

What we do for ourselves dies with us. What we do for others and the world remains and is immortal. Albert Pine

As per Raman's polite request, Assistant Commissioner Damodaran, Inspector Yesudas, Sub-Inspector Anandan along with V.K.Singh and Brigadier Sooryanarayanan stood aside and waited as their object and person of interest sent his family away from the hospital, closely followed by their protection team.

Raman had already stopped to meet the manager of the hospital and had a quiet word with him, and he, in turn, had promised that Mohan's body would be prepared with the greatest care and would then be sent in one of their own vans in a freezer box.

The manager said that all expenses regarding the van and freezer box would be borne by the hospital, to which Raman had quipped with a hint of sarcasm, ' Anyway, I know and you know that it will be a speck of a dent in the bill that you will be handing over to the parents'.

The Manager did not know what to say or where to hide from this pointed and true statement and just said, ' Mr.Raman, at least we are better than the other Hospitals whose charges are much higher for they include their own marketing and ad expenditure when they bill their patients. But, Mohan was covered by Insurance and that should take care of the bill that we will be presenting to his family'.

Raman slowly walked back to the group and spoke to Assistant Commissioner Damodaran, ' Sir, I would be very grateful if you could do this quickly for I have to be somewhere else and it is very important.'

Inspector Yesudas had nearly ten years of service behind him and although he had been a decent soul when he had joined the police force, times and work had changed him greatly and had roughened his demeanour and manners and especially in trying circumstances and he spoke in a rather raised and rough tone,' sir, neenga modalla stationukku vaanga. Oru eye-witness statement write pannunga, and then we will come to the topic of you going or being someplace else'.

Sub-Inspector Anandan jumped in and voiced his thoughts and they were even ruder than his senior's words, ' Enna sir talking to this man. Waste of time sir. Let me arrest him and take him to the station and question him there and he will talk with more respect and honesty. All people coming to station change and sing songs according to our tunes. okayva lawyer'.

Assistant Commissioner Damodaran's heart nearly jumped out of his mouth and he stood frozen hearing his officers talk in this ill-mannered way and that they had chosen to do so at such an inopportune moment and began to carefully frame his apologies to Raman, but his mouth opened and closed and yet no words or sounds came out of it.

Pressing the panic button mode, he turned to his subordinates fully undestanding that they were just doing their job but without any clue as to who Raman was and the matters that he was involved in and most importantly the two men who stood quietly with an amused expression that screamed, ' God help us for how many times have we seen the police department handle things in such a crude way and thus push away the very people who come forward to help them and who are potential witnesses'.

But, it was Raman who spoke in a very calm and assuring manner but then the sea is calm but very deep and only the sea knows what swims in this dark and deep depths.

He looked at the name tags of both the Inspector and the Sub-Inspector, ' Mr Yesudas and Mr.Anandan, please, can you show me the arrest warrant from a High court Judge that has granted you powers to arrest me. Vendaam, at least a warrant from a magistrate. Okay, at least an emergency order from the collector or chief secretary'.

Both the Inspector and Sub-Inspector were stumped at this request for usually they were used to hearing people beg, cajole, make attempts to bribe them to get away and yet here this man stood calmly and was politely asking what seemed to be the right questions.

Assistant Commissioner Damodaran finally found his voice and remembering his conversation with the Commissioner of Police just a short while ago, ordered both his officers to remain calm and then apologised to Raman.

Raman accepted his apology and then looked at both Yesudas and Anandan, ' When, I said that I needed to be somewhere, I meant the funeral of Vijay, son of Minister Durai Pandi Arumugam and not anywhere else and the person who called me just now was Kavita Arumugam, the ministers daughter and AIADMK'S current women's wing secretary.

Taking his Bar council ID card, he flashed it solemnly in front of the police officers faces, ' Read it and read it carefully and before you say something, let me fist finish saying this, Don't ever talk down to any witness and particularly any advocate, Regardless of his character. For, then you will see how your cases proceed or rather the way they will crawl through the courts in future and then it will be you and your department that will be doing all the crawling'.

Inspector Yesudas now realized in full the gravity of the situation and said a meek and humble, ' sorry sir' and Raman replied, ' I am here to help not to create any troubles or cause any more problems for your department. So, please let us not waste our times and lets get down to work'.

Inspector Yesudas in a prim and proper voice asked, ' sir enna aachu' and Raman with a serious expression, ' I came to meet AC Damodaran in regards of the case that he is investigating and we agreed to meet here in the hospital for I was pressed for time since I was away in Delhi with Miss Kavita Arumugam and returned last night with the Body of Vijay Bhaskar who was murdered in our capital. He was murdered along with a lady called Poornima who happens to the former defence minister's Niece and who is now the current Finance minister'.

Both the Inspector and Sub-Inspector went numb and helplessly looked for clues from their senior, AC Damodaran who nodded, 'yes, go ahead. Kekkannu, neraya question pannrennu sonneenga ille. Kelunga'.

Inspector Yesudas feeling and gasping like a fish out of water mumbled, ' sir, enna sir, finance minister, defence minister and namma cabinet minister ellam peru varuthu. This is beyond me and out of my league sir.'

Assistant Commissioner Damodaran sighed tiredly and looked at both the Inspector and Sub-Inspector and thought to himself, ' Naane summa moddikittu silenta irunthen. Now, both of you have only managed to drag me deeper into this mess'.

Then the situation became even more serious with the arrival of a Black Toyota Corolla Altis fully laden with a blue beacon and three stars and all three police officers stood in full attention for the car belonged to their big boss and out stepped Commissioner of Police, A. K. Viswanathan IPS and he hurriedly walked towards the group and much to their surprise gave a full and proper salute to both Brigadier Sooryanarayanan and V.K.Singh and then quickly turned and held Raman by his shoulders, ' Raman, are you okay?'

Raman nodded and then the commissioner said, ' Let's go. You are coming with me to the party headquarters and I have been personally told by the Chief Minister himself to escort you in and be there till the end'.

Raman very humbly thanked him, ' Sir, why do you have to trouble yourself sir for I can manage on my own'.

Commissioner of Police, A. K. Viswanathan IPS, ' sir, please, otherwise I might get transferred to some hellish place for the remaining years of my service'.

Turning to AC Damodaran, ' I will take it from here and anything more can be worked out tomorrow'.

Raman took out his mobile phone and politely asked the commissioner, ' Sir, can I take a selfie with you please?.

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Posted: 6 years ago

Good morning,

I wish all of you a peaceful day. Well, I am off to Hyderabad for a week of work and so will not be able to post any new chapters until I get back to Chennai.

Maybe, I might just post a few lines of poetry or thoughts when they arise and if I have the time and energy.

I hope the chapters and story of Jannal Oram are making for an interesting read and time well spent on them.

Onulla arambichu ippo 321 chapter ettiyaachu.

The days, weeks, and months are flying by and we are already well into the second half of 2019 and 2020 is around the corner.

Jannal is in its third year since its Genesis and is well and truly in its final part of its journey.

As always good and bad, light and dark will face off and face deadly consequences. Death watches like the vulture it is and waits for the dead and their souls to depart and it simply does not matter whether one is good or bad and what matters is that one is dead.

This is life and this is the most humbling truth and the eternal message and which is that all of us have to face and go through fire and water and ice and pressure and it is the same for all, young and old, man and woman.

Life is like a one day match. First oversla nalla, easya fours and sixers adikkalam. Appuram slow panni singles and twos las scora build pannanum. Paathu, paathu aadanum. Then it is time for the final onslaught.

Oversu kammi, balls kammi. very vazhi ille. adichu thaan aadanum.bolda game aadanum.

Kadaisilla minjunna overslakoda lottu vecha, enna prayojanam.

I give you my best wishes to those who are my peers in age and importantly in wisdom, and I give both my wishes, and blessings for those to who I am a peer myself, but only in age and hopefully wisdom too.

Enna koduma saravana.

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Posted: 6 years ago

Good morning. I wish you a peaceful and healthy day.

I am sure that Facebook and WhatsApp cannot be termed under the category of collective consciousness. But, they can be that and more, and a platform to unify and signify one world, one earth and one life that includes everything in this beautiful place.

For me, whatsapp is my back to learning again phase, and one never stops learning, ever. Starting from, some beautiful souls who share beautiful Tamil and English thoughts to a few others who share sparingly science, politics and other important thoughts to those who share irrelevant forwards for the sake of forwarding and not checking its authenticity beforehand.

Five days away from my desktop and five days away from writing my moments and thoughts of my journey through two centuries and so I decided to brave the strain and pain of eyes and fingers and so here I am touching the touchscreen and hopefully reach and touch all of you and whisper my good morning wishes and greetings.

From the times of a portable radio with just one station and that too in time shifts to the current times in which i am interacting with my near and dear souls via a mobile instrument that speaks, hears, captures Still and moving images and plays them back. It writes, copies and backs up the same and also can be sent to an outside storage.

From my once daily shrinking pencil to daily staining ink pen i am now daily writing and torturing the rest of the world and my family of whatsapp friends. There is no escaping.Soon, and I hope sooner than later we all and all our instruments come together and make the word collective consciousness a true and meaningful word. Heal the world and make this world a better place.

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