Tuesday, 6 November 2012

ANECDOTES OF MY FATHER



Undoubtedly my father is the best at whatever he did and probably knew how good he was. People say that I take after my father in personality, appearance, attitude and also inherited his sensitive digestive system.
Among many stories, I would like to share a few anecdotes which he told us in the afternoons of our holidays, while my mother served tea and her cookies.
It was on one of his weekly visits to his best friend Late Sri Sadasiva Rao garu, that my father told about his restlessness mind searching and seeking for something. And his friend’s simple yet poignant words were, ‘ let the mind do its work till it finds the TRUTH.’ My father repeatedly tells this incident and has tears in his eyes whenever he remembers his friend. Another quip of this friend which he remembers is that one should keep generating ideas because they might someday take shape under conducive environment.
Sri Someshwar Rao garu is an old friend of my father whom we hardly met in the last two decades. But of late my father and mother are visiting him after the demise of his wife. It seems they talk about so many aspects of life including spirituality. This old man was an English Teacher and a great artist. He told my father to write something about Dwaitha and Advaitha philosophy, may be, a sort of test to his spiritual quotient. And my father, known for his brevity (even in the legal fraternity) summed it up by describing them as the two sides of the same coin. Well, one can keep exploring the scope for interpretation in such complex subjects.
Yet another interesting incident my father keeps recollecting is his meeting  Sri Raghunadhacharyulu garu, a renowned Sanskrit Scholar and Retd. Principal of Sanskrit College, Warangal. On asking about the sublime relationship of a Guru and Shishya, he gave my father a book on the qualities of a sishya and told my father that one should shed ego(ahamkaaram) and totally surrender at the feet of the Sadguru.
My father once met Sadguru Sri Sivanandamurthy garu and expressed his anguish about the modern generation and generally the societal problems. Swamiji told him that we are merely onlookers/bystanders and hence reflecting upon one’s past experience is the best way to spend one’s old age to gain a better understanding of oneself and our relationship with the cosmos.
My mother told me about this note worthy tete-a-tete with one Sri.............., my grand father’s contemporary and a Vedic Scholar. When he came to my parent’s place, while narrating the story of Mandana Mishra he commented about the hospitality and the grace and poise of a woman as seen in my mother and her unstinted cooperation as a sahadharmacharini to my father in discharging the family and social obligations. I could see the gleam of appreciation in his eyes towards his wife, truly a shadow of his life.
Finally,I write this ode as my father’s daughter
“You always said that some things are better unsaid.
I never violated that norm of yours till now.
But this is what I wanted to tell you something for a long time.
You are the Best, as a Paterfamilias.
But for reasons best known, and like some serious fathers, you were inaccessible to emotionally connect with you. 
It has always been a detached intellectual observation whenever we talked about anything in life.
In retrospect, I think, had it been otherwise, I would have been a prodigal daughter.
So I love you the most Dad-da!

Saturday, 14 January 2012

simple and profound


कर्मण्येवाधिकारस्ते मा फलेषु कदाचन।
मा कर्मफलहेतुर्भूर्मा ते संगोऽस्त्वकर्मणि॥
I like sutras which are direct to the point. Bhagavadgitha, Vedas and Upanishads are now-a-days being interpreted and disproportionately distorted. I think the character of such sacred teachings is in their brevity, And any conceptual elaboration may deviate from the very essence or the truth. In fact, it is more effectivewhen things are percieved without interpretation and easily understood without unnecessary intellectual analysis.  

Saturday, 7 January 2012

My understanding of the Mullaperiyar Dam issue


Crux of the problem-
       Fear of Keralites –About the strength of the 116 years old dam.
       Apprehension of Tamilians- New dam means fresh terms and conditions of the lease and the deal might be demeaning afterall.
Facts and issues of the matter-
       Lease Deed Dt.29.10.1886 between the then governments of Travancore and Madras for lease of nearly 8000 acres of land for the building and operating  the project work of diversion of Periyar waters to the land in Madras Presidency.
       Subsequent supplemental agreements Dt. 29.5.1970 enhancing the annual lease rent, relinquishing fishing rights in favour of Kerala and payment of royalty to Kerala for the hydro-electric power generation by Tamilnadu.
        The dam and the river are owned by and located in Kerala but the dam is controlled and operated under a period lease by neighboring Tamil Nadu state.
       And the term of THE LEASE DEED IS 999 years!
       Safety concerns posed by the 116 year old dam in the event of a dam collapse, have been the focus of disputes from 2009 onward. Kerala's proposal for decommissioning the dam and construction of a new dam, has been challenged by Tamil Nadu.
       W.P ( C) No. 386 of 2001 (Mulla Periyar Environmental Protection Forum Vs Union of India and Ors)- the Supreme Court in its Judgement dated 27.2.2006, permitted the Government of Tamil Nadu to raise the water level of Mulla Periyar dam from 136 ft. to 142 ft. and take up  the remaining strengthening measures.
       The Kerala Irrigation and Water Conservation (Amendment) Act 2006 passed  on 18.3.2006 prohibiting the raising of water level beyond 136 ft. in the Mulla Periyar Dam in view of endangered safety .
        Suit No. 3 of 2006 - State of Tamil Nadu v/s State of Kerala and Union of India  for permanent injunction restraining Kerala from application and enforcing impunged legislation enforcing with or obstructing Tamil Nadu from increasing the water level to 142 feet and from carrying out the repair works as per judgment of Supreme Court dated 27th February 2006.
       The Supreme Court passed status quo orders dt.10.11.2009.
        Subsequently  an empowered Committee was constituted to study all issues relating to dam’s safety and the Full Reservoir Level (FRL)and furnish a report in pursuance of the orders dt.29.2.2010 of the Five Judge Bench of the Supreme Court.
Possible amicable Settlement-
       Security issues to be delinked from revenue aspect.
       Mutual agreement to amend the terms of old lease deed.
       Rights and liabilities to be determined based on case history.
       Further investments and allocation of water to be a joint agreement .Contemplating  the construction of new dam retaining the old dam to mitigate the damage due to water overload and pressure. So water level can be increased to 142 ft. to 152ft.
       Exploring the technical feasibility of alternative arrangements of water supply to meet the requirement of Tamilnadu. 

Wednesday, 4 January 2012


Yesterday she was preparing a PPT on Mullaperiyar dispute resolution through Mediation and Arbitration. And now she is cleaning the vessels without a demur. She sweeps and cleans the house early in the morning and arranges everything for Rudrabhishekam which her husband religiously does without fail. Prepares food while reciting Lalithasahasra naamam and Vishnu Sahasranaamam. This has been her morning routine ever since her marriage except during holidays at her mother’s place.
She wants a career, attend to her domestic duties, do her Yogabics, play veena……. she thinks she has to do it all. People think she has this super woman syndrome. But she is scared of barrenness of laid-back life.