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A Himalayan professor and savant - I

V SUNDARAM

        I had the unique privilege and good fortune of coming into a close and intimate touch with Prof K Swaminathan (1896-1994) in the last decade of his life in Chennai. It is given to God's chosen few to lead several lives which are distinguished by many dimensions of fullness.

        Prof Swaminathan lived a full life of creative endeavour and fulfillment, not only in terms of years but also in its multifarious facets. Starting his long career as a student and teacher of literature, for nearly three decades, he entered the world of journalism for a few years as political commentator and journalist and crowned it all with his historically celebrated term as Chief Editor of the Collected Works of Mahatma Gandhi (CWMG).
Prof Swaminathan
I am relying upon the brilliant memoir of S Guhan, a consummate scholar in his own right and a nephew of Prof K Swaminathan, popularly known as Prof KS. He was born on 3 December, 1896 in Pudukkottai. His parents - P S Krishnaswany Iyer and his wife Dharmambal - were blessed with four children. The first born was daughter Veda, followed by three sons - Swaminathan, Venkatraman and Sreenivasa Sanjeevi. Like Prof KS, his brothers enjoyed long lives marked by useful activity and creative achievement. Dr K Venkatraman (1901-1981) rose to the level of the Director of the National Chemical Laboratory. Dr K S Sanjeevi (1903- 1994), retired as Professor of Medicine in the Madras Medical College. He was overlooked for the highest post of Director of Medical Services by the Congress government only on the ethnic ground of his belonging to the Brahmin community. Undeterred by this unjust disappointment, he founded the Voluntary Health Services, Madras, converting it into an efficient instrument of medical relief and service to the poor and the promotion of community health. All three brothers were honoured with Padma Bhushan, an exceptionally rare event to occur in a single family in a large country like India with a population of more than one billion.

        KS went through his primary classes in the Lutheran Mission School in Purasawalkam in Madras. It is interesting to note that eminent novelist R K Narayan also went through the same school a decade later which he has vividly recapture in his autobiography My Days.

        KS has left behind a vivid description of Madras at the turn of the 20th century. It was a string of villages with paddy fields, stretching all the way between Purasawalkam and Mylapore, interspersed with beautiful tanks in between. Trams had not come into operation at that time and popular modes of transport were Jutka, Rickshaw and bullock cart. Electricity had not come into existence. To quote the words of KS: 'On return from school, we used to clean the kerosene lamps, fill them up with oil and replace the wicks. The street lights used to be lit every day by the Corporation staff. I saw electric lights and fans for the first time in Bangalore during a vacation and was astonished how a switch could make light and air.'

        In 1908, his family moved to Pelathope (literally, orchard of jackfruit trees) in Mylapore, a street off the road that connects Luz Corner with the Square around the Kapaleeswarar temple and tank. KS was enrolled in the PS High School, Mylapore and studied there from 1909 to 1912, completing his schooling. KS has left behind interesting reminiscences relating to his teachers and fellow students in his school days. Referring to P N Srinivasachari, one of his teachers who was an authority on Vaishnavism, KS has said 'that his regular lessons on Sanathana Dharma sowed the seed which had yielded the flower and fruit of many long years' happiness.' It was P N Srinivasachari who made KS read William James's Varieties of Religious Experience. The second teacher who left a lasting influence on KS was his Tamil teacher, B V Anantharama Iyer, who introduced to him to the glory of Sangam Poetry. Anantharama Iyer was a student of the Grand Old Man of Tamil Dr U V Swaminatha Iyer (UVS) and who later succeeded UVS years later on the staff of Presidency College. The third teacher, also a student of UVS was the famous Judge and playwright of later years, P Sambanda Mudaliar. He introduced the boys into amateur dramatics and theatre and personally supervised the rehearsals. Among his memorable contemporaries in school, KS counted M Bhaktavatsalam, future Chief Minister of Madras, Nityanandha, younger brother of Jiddu Krishnamoorthy and V C Gopalaratnam, who later became an eminent advocate in Madras.

        KS joined Madras Presidency College in June 1912 and studied there for five years till 1917. He passed his intermediate examination in 1914 and took his BA (Hons) Degree in English literature in 1917. His contemporaries in college included several who later distinguished themselves in various walks of life: K Santhanam, N S Varadachari, K V Rajagopalan, S Ramanathan and Sengodayan. Sarvapillai Radhakrishnan and Dr U V Swaminatha Iyer were on the staff of the college. KS had the unique privilege of learning Tamil at the sacred feet of Dr Swaminatha Iyer. He also imbibed Dr UVM's unrivalled knowledge of families, persons and places all over Tamilnadu together with a great passion for Tamil language and literature. Many years later, KS paid a great tribute to his Tamil teacher Dr UVM in these words: 'No one, anywhere in the world, at anytime in history, has rendered to any language that kind of service that Dr U VS had done to Tamil.'

        In his honest course, KS came under the personal tutelage and remarkable intellectual and cultural influence of Mark Hunter who was a legendary Professor of English in Presidency College from 1910 to 1917 when he was transferred to Burma as Director of Public Instruction. Even as a very young student, KS was able to get a testimonial from Professor Mark Hunter to the following effect: 'Mr K Swaminathan was my pupil for five years, two in the Intermediate and three in the Honours English Language and Literature classes. Throughout his courses, he showed himself to be a young man of exceptional ability and he distinguished himself for the invariable excellence of his work. He is one of the most gifted and promising pupils I have ever had and those who compete with him are very few indeed. In the Honours course and examination, he carried everything before him in the college and the university. He has, for his years, read widely in English literature with keen and at the same time critical appreciation. His pleasant, frank and gentlemanly manners renders the relationship of teacher and taught in his case peculiarly agreeable.'

        In May 1915, even when he was an under-graduate, he was married to Visalakshi, daughter of K Swaminathan, a well known public figure and lawyer of Puthucottai State. It was a very happy marriage and they were together for the next 79 years. Another important landmark in the long life of KS was his first encounter with Mahatma Gandhi in April/May 1915. Gandhi was then staying with G A Natesan, the legendary editor of Indian Review, in George Town. KS was assigned as a young volunteer to look after Gandhi's needs. He had the good fortune of escorting Gandhi to the Catholic Archbishop's bungalow in Santhome and to the Anglican Bishop's house adjacent to St George's Cathedral. Gandhi was trying to get the support of the Christian community for his Indian struggle in South Africa. A more significant meeting between KS and Gandhi took place in1920 when Gandhi was trying to find new life-time recruits for his non-cooperation programme, Harijan welfare and adult literacy and other connected welfare activities. KS was interviewed by Gandhi who told him: 'You may not join me now, but I shall call you when I need you and when you are ready.' Perhaps Madame Destiny had already decided that KS should act as Chief Editor of the Collected Works of Mahatma Gandhi in the distant future which did happen in the early part of 1960.

        After taking his BA (Hons) Degree with distinction from Presidency College, KS went to the Madras Law College and took his BL degree in 1919. He served as a junior under the formidable S Srinivasa Iyengar who later became President of the Indian National Congress. After completing his apprenticeship, KS went to Puthucottai to practice under his father-in-law. He got embroiled in a national political agitation in Puthucottai by inviting the Congress leader Satyamurthi to address the Bar Association. The British government threatened to withdraw KS's Sanad (licence to practice Law). The government was willing to relent if only KS would offer an apology. But as a true and fearless nationalist, KS refused to do so. At this critical point of time, Rajah Sir Annamalai Chettiar came to the rescue of KS by giving him an appointment as Lecturer in the English department of Sri Meenakshi College which he had founded in Chidambaram. Rajah Sir Annamalai Chettiar also advanced money to KS to enable him to go to Oxford University in England for further studies from 1922 to 1924. He joined Christ Church College Oxford, and took his BA in English Language and Literature in 1924. During this period he came into contact with Gilbert Murray, Bertrand Russell, Hilaire Belloc and G K Chesterton. Dr Carlyle, one of his professors in Oxford, gave this testimonial to KS: 'His work for me was consistently of very high quality, and his knowledge of English literature is wide, but also precise and exact, and his critical judgement is excellent, independent and individual, but also sane and free from eccentricity. I am confident he will prove himself a first rate scholar and a most interesting and stimulating teacher.' This appraisal by Dr Carlyle in 1924 who had only confirmed the earlier assessment of Sir Mark Hunter in Presidency College Madras in 1917 indeed proved to be prophetic.

        (To be concluded)
        (The writer is a retired IAS officer)
        e-mail the writer at vsundaram@newstodaynet.com

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