Photos: Curator Nikhil Chopra; the theme of the Biennale; Assamese artist Dhiraj Rabha with his work; Kerala artist KB Shajith's 'WipingOut'; ‘The Parliament of Ghosts’ by Ibrahim Mahama of Ghana
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Sunday, January 18, 2026
Art That Changes You from Within (A Journey Through the 6th Kochi-Muziris Biennale)
Photos: Curator Nikhil Chopra; the theme of the Biennale; Assamese artist Dhiraj Rabha with his work; Kerala artist KB Shajith's 'WipingOut'; ‘The Parliament of Ghosts’ by Ibrahim Mahama of Ghana
Wednesday, January 14, 2026
Many thanks to South First for their coverage of the Thajudheen case
Sunday, January 11, 2026
A book, 'The Stolen Necklace', that played a role in a landmark court judgement
Caption: V. K Thajudheen (left) and Shevlin Sebastian
These are some of the conclusions:
The court ordered the State Government to pay a total of ₹14 lakh
in compensation.
- ₹10
lakh for V.K. Thajudheen for his illegal arrest, loss of job, and mental
agony.
- ₹1
lakh each for his wife and three children (total ₹4
lakh) for the defamation and harassment they endured.
The court explicitly stated that the state is free to recover
this compensation amount from the specific police officers responsible (SI P.
Biju and ASIs Yogesh and T. Unnikrishnan).
The court noted that this award does not prevent Thajudheen
from pursuing further civil lawsuits against the officers for larger damages.
On May 2023, my book, in collaboration with Thajudheen,
called ‘The Stolen Necklace’ was published by HarperCollins detailing the
trauma that he and his family went through.
Asaf Ali told me recently that he had submitted the book to
the judge among many other materials.
He feels the book played a role in this judgement. So, I am
happy I was able to play a role.
Here’s what chief sub editor and senior reporter Ronnie
Kuriakose wrote in The New Indian Express:
A 2023 book, The Stolen Necklace by former TNIE staffer
Shevlin Sebastian, depicting the travails of Thajudheen, played its part in the
case. “The book was submitted in court to make the point that the incident was
no ordinary arrest, but one that gained national media attention.
It presented the telltale circumstances of the incident. And
from my understanding, the court did appreciate what it conveyed,” Asaf Ali
said.
On this, Thajudheen said, "I’m glad that the book, which
tells my story, has helped." He also recalled sitting down with Shevlin to
write. “We met every day for six months. He used to come with a flask of hot
tea, and we’d sit for hours poring over the notes in discussions. Recalling
some memories even brought tears to my eyes,” Thajudheen said.
Later, in 2022, the book was pitched to publishers and
received positive responses. “It did well, but I did not imagine it would make
its way to my defence in court as well,” he added.
The book, in addition to narrating the incident, also charts
Thajudheen life, his aspirations, and how it was all derailed because of a
single day. “It’s my life story. My past, present, and a robbed future,”
Thajudheen concluded.
Speaking to TNIE on the development, the writer Shevlin said,
“I’m so happy. Thajudheen’s whole life had come to a juddering halt because of
the incident. This verdict is the first ray of light in his life after so long.
I also think it will be a deterrent to police offices and put a stop to their
excesses. I’m happy the book played a small role.”
May thanks to the Kerala media for extensive coverage of this
ruling in print, online, radio and TV.
Wednesday, January 07, 2026
From the Centre to the Margins (Life in an Upscale Retirement Home)
“60 is so young,” said the shocked visitor.
“Yes, but she couldn't handle her husband’s sudden death.”
At the upscale retirement home I visited recently, in Kochi, each door represents a life story. Some never expected to be here. Others opted for it. But with monthly rents of five and six figures, they are all well-to-do.
Many had lived abroad and had been successful doctors, engineers, architects, professors, and entrepreneurs. For long they had been in the centre of their universe. But everybody had to succumb to tempus fugit (‘time flies’ in Latin).
From the centre they have been gently pushed to the margins. Because of old age, and mostly, physical frailty. A plaque for long years of service. Handshakes and hugs. Cakes and wine. Loud laughter. And then silence. Which stretches into decades.
You can see some being pushed on wheelchairs. Others lean on walking sticks. An attender held the hand of a stiff-backed person taking tentative steps.
One couple is from California. “I wouldn’t say my husband is happy, but it’s better than being there. We had nobody to talk to. The problem in America is isolation.”
To combat loneliness, numerous activities are planned during the day. Card games. Knitting. Yoga. Music. Brain Gym. Physical gym. Swimming pool. Men and women gather. They talk with each other. They smile. But there are a few who remain isolated.
Deaths create havoc steadily. The husband might die; the wife now lives alone. Or the wife might die. “It’s very difficult for a man to live alone,” said a resident.
And when visitors visit the seriously elderly, in their nineties, the question is the same: do you know who I am?
The bedridden man or woman will stare at the visitor.
Sometimes, he blurts out the right name. There is wonder all around. How great was that?
One woman said, “My husband cannot tolerate any medicines.”
“You can put it in the food,” said a resident.
“I tried, but the moment he senses a change in the taste he spits the food out.”
People are left wondering about a possible solution.
I move around.
Another woman said, “Before I left for the US, I was docile and submissive. But when I went there, I was able to develop my talents. I became confident and outgoing. My husband just could not accept the new me.”
These are people of an older generation. Divorce was not an option. So, they chugged on. It probably makes sense.
One resident said, “When we are young, we feel we can live without our spouse. Divorce seems easy then. But at this stage, we cling to each other. There is nobody else.”
Another woman said, “Mothers today should teach their sons to cook, clean, and respect boundaries. Otherwise, there will be too many divorces. Young women are so evolved now.”
The women easily exchange notes about their life with each other. They get mental and psychological relief. But the men remain silent.
One resident worries about her daughter who is going to give birth in a few weeks. “Oh, how I wish I could be there. But I cannot leave my husband alone.” She said she had asked her daughter-in-law whether she could be there for a few days after the birth. But she has got a promotion and is finding it difficult to get leave.
Another woman remarked, “I saw her photo on Instagram. She’s got a big stomach.”
“Yes,” the mother said, with a glowing smile.
One resident said, “I take part in a group prayer on Zoom. Once a week, I have to give a commentary. I prepare but the speech I give is an inspired one. A spirit enters me and I speak. It’s magical.”
Her eyes are suffused with wonder.
The listener thinks, “This could be divine energy, or the unconscious mind.”
Several live in the past – dwelling on achievements, career highs, their busyness. In all this, the children are missing. Many are abroad, busy building careers the way their parents did. They have children, a mortgage, and career ambitions. The arc will remain the same. One day, they will also reach the retirement home and their children will carry on the cycle of life.
It’s an immaculate place. The floors are swept often. The washrooms are scented. The lawns are mowed. The tiled pathways have been cleared of falling leaves. There are large trees all around. The sky is blue. The leaves rustle in an afternoon breeze. The food is tasty. The staff move with a smile on their faces.
But most residents have a look in their eyes which states, “Too many years have passed. We are closer to the exit.”
For younger visitors, it’s an unsettling preview of what lies ahead. But to live like this, it may be better to have a chest full of currency. Preferably dollars or euros. Otherwise, it’s going to be an agonising time.
Sunday, December 28, 2025
Meet Zeenath PA, the Kochi Social Worker Whose Handmade Wigs Are Helping Cancer Survivors Reclaim Their Identity
By Shevlin Sebastian
Reshma Nair (name changed) woke up one morning and felt a lump in her
breast. When the doctor examined her, he confirmed her worst fears. She had
breast cancer. She embarked on a course of chemotherapy. Finally, it was
decided to remove her breasts. When her husband came to know, he split up with
her and moved on to another woman. The couple had two small children.
Reshma recovered, but when her hair grew back, it turned out to be grey.
At 29 years of age, this came as a shock. When Reshma returned to the hospital
where she worked as a nurse, her superior said, “We like our nurses to be
beautiful young women.”
A shocked Reshma resigned and fell into a deep depression. She did not
know what to do. At her lowest point, Reshma heard about Zeenath PA, a social
worker who provided wigs for women who went bald because of chemotherapy.
When Zeenath came to Reshma’s house, with her wigs, she realised she
needed to shave off all the grey hair. After using a trimmer, when the wig was
placed on Reshma’s head, she looked beautiful. “A big smile broke out on
Reshma’s face when she looked at herself in the mirror,” said Zeenath.
She looked at Zeenath and said, “Now I am back to normal.”
Within a few weeks, Reshma got a job at another hospital and the
household was humming again, despite the absence of her husband.
The idea of providing wigs came to Zeenath by accident. She would
counsel patients at the cancer ward at the Government General Hospital in
Kochi. The women told her that they didn’t have a problem with having cancer,
but because of chemotherapy they had lost all their hair.
One woman said, “When we go home, our neighbours and our family members
look at us with a little bit of fear. Many of them don't know how to react to
us, especially the grandchildren who are very scared to come close to us.
Husbands also feel disappointed that we have lost all our hair.”
That was how Zeenath got the idea to provide wigs. When she did a few
inquiries, she came to know that there was a wig-making unit at the Amala
Institute of Medical Sciences (AIMS) in Thrissur. She met with the Joint
Director, Fr. Jaison Mundanmani, who agreed to provide wigs. On her own accord,
she decided to collect hair to help in the cause.
So, Zeenath embarked on a campaign. She spoke at schools, colleges, and
places of worship. She said, “See, you are taking your hair for granted, but if
you can share a part of it, somebody's life will be completely changed.”
And over time, people began to respond.
To her surprise, most of the contributors were young men. Many of them
had long hair, because during COVID-19, there were no barbers around. They
allowed their hair to grow long.
Once she met Arjun, a 22-year-old who lived in Fort Kochi. “When I saw
that he had long hair, I said, ‘Don't go to the barber and get the hair cut and
just throw it away’. Instead, you can give it to me. I can make good use of
it.”
Arjun immediately said, “Chechi, I will give it to you.”
So Zeenath herself cut the hair, took a photo and used it as her
WhatsApp status. “This had a lot of impact,” she said.
Another reason was that many contributors had someone in their family
who had been afflicted with cancer. “So they know the pain of losing one’s
hair,” said Zeenath. One physically challenged man told Zeenath, “I cannot give
my eyes, lungs or heart or money since I am poor. But it costs nothing to give
my hair. I know it will grow again.”
Zeenath needs a minimum of 30 cm of length. Three batches of hair are
needed to make one wig. “Not everybody has thick hair,” she said. Zeenath is
looking for natural black hair. The problem with coloured hair is that when it
is washed, it turns white. And no woman wants a wig with white hair.
Every night, Zeenath washes the hair with shampoo and hangs it out in
the courtyard to dry. A couple of weeks ago, Zeenath held a camp in
Cheranalloor, where twenty men volunteered to donate their hair.
As Zeenath has become better known, she gets calls from
Thiruvananthapuram, Kannur, Kollam and Kottayam districts informing her that
they would want to contribute. A day before I met her, a lady dentist from
Aluva donated a portion of her hair.
But women are not easy contributors. “Those who are unmarried are
reluctant to give because they are still in the marriage market and want to
look beautiful with lustrous long hair,” said Zeenath. “Those who give are
usually married women with children. But sometimes, they need the permission of
their husbands. Many of their husbands like their wives to have long hair. So
they are unwilling to give their hair unless the husband gives his consent.”
Sometimes, a donation can backfire on the contributor. Priya, 35, had
very long hair. Her husband admired it. Tragically, he died of late-stage
cancer. A dejected Priya lost the incentive to keep her hair long. She donated
it to Zeenath. But in the conservative neighbourhood that she lived in, people
began gossiping. They said, “It seems she was waiting for her husband to die
before she could cut her hair and style herself like a model.”
That was very painful for Priya to hear.
Like Priya, Zeenath has also experienced painful moments. She has
provided wigs for terminal patients. “Many of them wore wigs for a few months
before they passed away,” she said. “But they told me they were happy that for
a while, they could pretend their lives had returned to normal.”
But there were many joyful moments, too. She said her thrill was to see
the look of ecstasy on the face of the woman when she placed the wig on her
head for the first time. Until then, many of the women would not go out at all.
They would become recluses.
Zeenath remembered the case of Saraswati. Her husband was run over by a
truck and died instantly. For the next twenty years, Saraswati struggled so
that she could provide an education for her daughter, Annapurna. When Annapurna
grew up and was about to get married, Saraswati got cancer. She was cured but
she ended up becoming bald. Saraswati told Annapurna she would not be able to
attend the marriage.
Annapurna was shocked.
“What are you saying Amma?”
Saraswati said, “I cannot show my bald head in public.”
“You are the most important person to me,” said Annapurna.
Despite the daughter’s entreaties, Saraswati was adamant.
But through a close friend, Annapurna heard about Zeenath.
Zeenath came to the house and fitted the wig. A proud Saraswati took
part in all the celebrations. Zeenath was also invited and at the reception
Saraswati held her hands and told Zeenath, “I will never forget what you have
done for me.”
Meanwhile, Zeenath has been taken aback by the varied reactions to
cancer. Some accept it as the will of God, while others react angrily.
One woman told Zeenath, “If there was a God, He would not have made me
go through so much pain and suffering. God is very cold. I have prayed so many
times to God, but He has not even cared for or looked after me.”
Another woman said, “Is there somebody called God? In my experience,
there is no God.”
Sometimes, the neighbours of the afflicted woman tell Zeenath, “She
deserves it. She has behaved very badly with us so God has punished her.”
Zeenath would say, “Please don't talk like this. Nobody knows why you
get ill. Sometimes it is because of genes. The mother might have the cancer
gene and the children are likely to get it too.”
Thus far, Zeenath has received hair from about 6000 people. The wigs
that are made are given free of cost. She bears the cost of cleaning them, and
is helped sometimes by her two sons and a daughter-in-law. For her work, she
has received numerous awards from charitable trusts, including the Aluva-based
Sahrudaya Sangeetha Karunya Vedi and AIMS.
No matter her ups and downs, Zeenath says, “I know the work I do is
going to transform lives. Every time I see a woman smile when she looks at
herself in the mirror, I feel a surge of energy inside me. It makes me feel
good.”
(Published
in rediff.com)
Sunday, December 14, 2025
PARADISE LOST!
COLUMN: Tunnel of Time
Former three-time national TT champion and international player, V.
Chandrasekhar, 36, went into Apollo Hospital for a simple knee surgery. He
returned from the hospital blind and paralysed. Thus began a life of struggle
and despair; a fierce fight to regain the use of his faculties through
physiotherapy and an 8 1⁄2-year lawsuit with Apollo Hospital for compensation.
An update on all that has happened so far…
By Shevlin Sebastian, Madras
The first sight of Chandrasekhar’s drawing room through the semi-open door was
astonishing. There were clothes strewn all over the floor – full-sleeved
shirts, trousers, and T-shirts. Another bunch of clothes was placed across the
back of a chair. Some books and papers lay on the floor. And near the entrance,
on a stool, was the Arjuna Award, placed in a glass casing. There was a patina
of dust on it.
I rang the bell.
V. Chandrasekhar (Chandra) suddenly poked his head from a nearby sofa, whose
back was towards the door. His face looked truly stunning. It was a face of
enormous sadness, bitterness, despair, and longing. It was a face that had seen
a lot of suffering. The straggly growth of beard seemed to heighten the
sadness.
Chandra got up slowly and came to the door. He shook my hand and immediately
said, “I’m sorry for the mess that the house is in. My mother had a heart
attack and is recovering in the hospital. My father is there with her. We have
no servants. And so, everything is in a mess.”
We sat down in the drawing room. He was on a chair and I on a small stool. His
voice was husky and thick. It seemed like the voice of a man who had smoked
hundreds of cigarettes over several years.
“I have a severe cold,” he said. “I hope you can understand what I am saying.”
I assured him that I could understand him clearly as I pressed the record
button of the dictaphone.
He smiled suddenly, a soft, sweet, child-like smile. It took years away from
his face. For a brief moment, he looked young and vivacious. Then his face once
again assumed that deep, melancholy gravity. And I guessed you could begin to
understand why he had such a sad face when you listened to the story of his
life. So here he went:
ON WHAT HAPPENED IN APOLLO HOSPITAL
“On September 14, 1984, I went into the hospital for a minor knee surgery. Dr.
H. Ranganathan, who was doing the operation said that I would be able to play
much better after this. He said that I would be discharged within a week. But
what happened was that I went into a 36-day coma.
After that, I spent another three weeks in a half-comatose state. When I came
back to my senses, I realised that I had become blind. I couldn't see at all. I
couldn’t move. I didn’t have any sense of balance.
At that time, I didn’t know the seriousness of it. The doctors kept assuring me
that everything would become all right. But after six months of secondary
physiotherapy, there was no improvement at all.
I finally realised that they were taking me for a long ride. I knew that
nothing was going to happen. Ultimately, the MD of Apollo Hospital, Dr. Pratap
Reddy, and the other doctors said, “It’s just bad luck. There’s nothing else
that we can do now.”
Think of the situation. I had gone into the hospital a fit, young man and I
came out with 90 percent blindness and an inability to move my limbs at all. It
was the most horrific time of my life.
I sank into a deep depression because I felt so hopeless. I wanted to commit
suicide because I felt that there was no point in living any more.
I thought to myself: now I am 27. If I live to a normal age of 70, then I would
have to live another 43 years in this vegetable-like state. This possibility
was difficult to digest. But, by the grace of God, the thought of suicide was
never really translated into action.
In those months of despair, there also arose within me the first signs of a
determination to fight back. I felt that I had to come back, so to speak, from
the grave.
In this, I was urged on by a large group of friends, relatives, players, other
doctors, and my parents.
They all suggested therapy of some sort or the other. They said that come what
may, I must make an attempt at recovery.”
Chandra took the first step when he applied to get the case history from Apollo
Hospital. And immediately, he hit a snag. The hospital was reluctant to part
with it. It was only after some top-level pressure was applied that the case
history was given to Chandra.
After that, he went for treatment to the Institute of Naturopathy and Yogic
Sciences, near Bangalore. And it was here that he met one associate of Dr. Paul
Cutler, who was one of the leading doctors of Toronto. The associate told
Chandra that Dr. Cutler would be of help.
So Chandra started corresponding with Dr. Cutler, and the latter agreed to take
up the case. But the total cost of the treatment was calculated at a whopping
Rs. 10 lakhs. This included the airfare for a nurse and Chandra. Since he was
still partially blind, it was not possible for him to travel alone. Now, the
quest for the money began.
Chandra approached newspapers and they published his appeal free of cost. It
had the desired effect. Within days, the money started to come in.
“I was very lucky,” Chandra said. “I got the money fairly easily.”
From whom did the money actually come from?
If I give certain names, then I will be leaving out other names. That will be
unfair. But I can generalise by saying: many Hindi and Tamil film stars;
sportsmen; industrialists and well-wishers. Within three months, I collected a
sum of Rs. 10 lakhs. I left for Toronto in February 1986.
How was the treatment in Toronto?
Initially, I improved a lot. They gave me medicines that were not available in
India. The process of regaining my faculties was quicker. My eyesight improved
a lot. The doctor explained to me that it was not my eyesight which had been
damaged, but my brain. So once the brain began to improve, then all the other
faculties would come back automatically.
Of course, you can never fully recover since the central nervous system has
been damaged. But you can get some faculties back, depending on luck, your
physical condition, and hard work. For this specific type of treatment, after
the course is over, there has to be a break.
After that, the treatment has to start all over again. In all, I must have gone
back about four times, with gaps of six months or a year between trips. The
last trip was made in September 1988.
What therapy do you do nowadays?
I do physiotherapy, yoga and speech therapy. (It was difficult to listen to
Chandra later on the tape. His voice slurred time and time again. The voice
seemed to suggest enormous tiredness and fatigue.)
What was wrong?
The breathing space between speaking is not all right. I still have to learn to
control my tone – the loudness, the softness. There are also other
disabilities. I still cannot board a moving train. It’s embarrassing but I
can’t ride a scooter. My night vision is bad. I still do not have peripheral
vision.
If I look at the opposite wall, it’s difficult for me to see the floor at the
same time. I doubt whether I will regain my peripheral vision.
—-
It was while we were talking intently that the doorbell rang. Chandra got up
and went to the door. I switched off the dictaphone. Chandra returned with a
packet. He opened it and saw that it contained a video cassette of Newstrack.
And there was a letter in it for him.
It was written by correspondent Minnie Vaid, who had done an extensive
interview with him for the Eyewitness programme. She had written to apologise:
she said that for ‘technical reasons’, they could not air the interview.
Minnie wrote by hand, and you could sense that beneath her sentences was her
disappointment at what had happened. She said that the matter was in the hands
‘of my bosses.’
Chandra looked disappointed. “They took me all over the place. Shooting here
and there. You know, TV has maximum impact. It could have helped my case if
they had aired it.”
“What could be the reason for them not airing it?” I asked.
“Pressure,” he replied succinctly. “Or alleged pressure by interested parties.
I can’t say anything more because I can be sued. Or it could be a genuine
technical reason.”
He looked to the floor, his entwined fingers placed on his lap, and was lost in
thought. After a while, he looked up and said with a grin, “I hope Sportsworld
does not have any technical problems.”
He had a sense of humour. When I asked him casually during the interview
whether it was risky for him to cross the road on his own, he replied, “Well, I
can tell you, it’s not as risky as going to Apollo Hospital.”
ON WHEN HE DECIDED TO LAUNCH HIS FIGHT AGAINST APOLLO HOSPITAL
I don’t want to term it as a fight.
Okay, the idea that justice has to be done?
Yeah. Once the damage had been done and I could not function as a normal human
being, I felt that I had to be compensated. After all, my life had been
shattered. I was convinced that all this had happened due to the doctor’s
negligence. Although I knew that they had not done it deliberately, a
wrong-doer has to pay a price. And the price? To enable me to live a decent
life. That’s what I think Apollo Hospital should have done a long time back.
When did you file the suit?
Around 1985, when I left to go abroad. The court fees were very high, about Rs.
50,000. Because of this, I had to limit the amount of damages to be claimed,
since I had a limited amount of money. My initial idea was to seek a
compensation of Rs. 75 lakhs. I had to bring down the amount to about Rs. 20
lakhs. We filed the suit in September 1985. The judgement came out on May 25,
1993.
Facts: it took about 8½ years of constant fighting, relentless adjournments,
the coming and going of six judges in the Madras High Court, before Justice S.
Pratap Singh awarded a hefty compensation of Rs. 17 lakhs (Rs. 10 lakhs as
compensation and Rs. 7 lakhs for reimbursement of treatment expenses incurred
both in India and abroad).
Justice Pratap Singh stated that the doctor, H. Ranganathan, and the
anaesthetist, Monica De, were responsible for the acute disability suffered by
Chandra. Apollo Hospital was also held responsible since the doctors were
employed there.
The judge said that the evidence showed that there had not been a proper supply
of oxygen to the patient during surgery. All this demonstrated negligence on
the part of the doctor and the anaesthetist. They had failed in the discharge
of their duties, which resulted in severe complications.
He said that it was the duty of the doctor who performed the surgery to explain
what had happened. But he had not given any convincing explanation so far.
Justice Singh concluded: “I hold that the defendants were negligent in the
treatment given to the plaintiff.”
If I remember right, a Division Bench of the Madras High Court stayed the
payment of Rs. 17 lakhs.
Yes. But a two-member Division Bench of the Supreme Court announced that I
should be given relief of Rs. 7 lakhs.
So what next? Hasn’t Apollo Hospital gone on appeal against the judgement?
Yes. The appeal will be heard by a Division Bench of the Madras High Court.
Because an appeal to the Supreme Court is not a fundamental right. You have to
get permission from the Madras High Court in the form of a special leave.
So, if the Bench says no, then the case should be over?
Yes. Then legally, the case is finished. And I hope it is, since my parents and
I have already spent Rs. 2 lakh from our personal savings on the legal
expenses.
What do you feel now, after this landmark judgment?
I feel a great sense of pride. Justice and fair play have prevailed in the end.
It’s a boost for the system and the society we have here in India where the
poor and the downtrodden have no chance against powerful institutions.
Think what would have happened if such a thing had occurred to an average clerk
in a bank or an office. He will simply lie down and blame destiny and fate.
Then somebody will read out some verses from the Bhagwad Gita, and he will be
very happy.
I was lucky simply because I was famous and the media highlighted my case.
What else had you learnt during the course of this case?
The essential goodness of the people of India. They had come forward to help
me. Not only during the medical crisis, but even later, the kind of support
that I received, the kind of phone calls that came, made me feel good.
I was happy that for a less popular game like table tennis, there had been such
a response. Of course, had this happened to a cricketer, the situation would
have been completely different. Parliament itself would have been in uproar.
“Wait a minute,” he said, as he got up from his chair and went to a table at
one corner of the drawing room. He sat down on a chair and emptied a brown
packet. Then he called me over and said, “It’s time to take my medicines. Could
you just identify the tablets?” He had a doctor’s prescription in front of him
and he called out, “Crocin.” I took out the tablet and gave it to him.
“I am sorry to bother you, but I have difficulty in reading small print,” he
said softly.
Eight different tablets of different sizes and colours were collected. Then he
got up, with the tablets held in his enclosed palm, and went to the dining room
to get some water.
As I stood near the table, I saw Chandra’s horoscopes and, along with them, the
bio-data meant to be sent in response to marriage proposals. Some were already,
tragically, yellowing with age.
Chandra came back and sat down on the chair, and the interview began once
again.
ON THE EFFECT OF ALL THIS ON HIS PARENTS
For them, it had been a very big blow. As an only son, I had been their only
hope. Having risen to a position of eminence as a player… I had also been a
brilliant student.
I was a gold medallist in law from Madras University, and then such a tragedy
occurred to me. They had hoped that in their old age, I would look after them.
But now, it was a complete reversal, although my parents were not keeping in
good health at all. There had been too much stress. And all this controversy
had been too much for the conservative South Indian society in which we lived.
You had not been able to marry because of that?
Physically, there was no problem. But when the parents of a girl came, it was
difficult to convince them. How could we convince them? Should I have gone to a
doctor and got a certificate stating that I was fit for marriage? Somehow, it
was difficult for me.
ON HIS NORMAL DAY-TO-DAY LIFE
I get up very early. Then I go to the terrace and do exercises for developing
my co-ordination. For example: picking up small objects from the floor, with my
left leg forward, right leg backwards. Bend over and pick it up. Then bend sideways
and pick the object up.
After I finish my exercises, I come back, have my bath and breakfast, and then
I go by autorickshaw to the bank. I am an Administrative Officer in the Staff
Training College of the State Bank of India in Mylapore.
In the evening, I go to the YMCA in Royapettah. I do coaching there for about
three hours. I return home at 8.30 P.M.
What do you do in your spare time?
I like to watch horse racing. I don’t gamble, but I like to see horses run at
high speed. I like to watch cricket on TV. I listen to Hindi classical music.
Singers like Mohammad Rafi, Manna Dey, Hemant Kumar and Lata Mangeshkar.
What about Alka Yagnik?
Alka Yagnik? Who’s that?
She’s the latest singing sensation.
No, I have not heard of her at all. See, I don’t follow modern music at all.
At six o’clock in the evening, I went to the YMCA, Royapettah branch. Chandra
had invited me there to see him coach his students.
The YMCA TT centre is in a shed-like building. Inside, there were two tables. A
boy and a girl were playing. The boy was in shorts; the girl wore a blue
t-shirt and trackpants.
It was hot inside the hall. There was no ventilation at all. The thought arose:
how did they play in summer, especially in May when the heat was at its peak?
Chandra said, “Come on, let’s go outside. It’s so hot here.” So we went out and
sat on chairs brought out of the hall by a young girl student.
Chandra was gasping a little now. This coaching can be a little tiring. But he
said, “This is the off-season. The Nationals in Calcutta last month signified
the end of the season. Now I am training boys and girls who aspire to reach the
State level.”
Soon, photographer George Francis came on his black Kinetic Honda. He took his
camera out and started taking pictures. The sun was beginning to set. We were
silent now, and the only sound was the clicking of the shutter.
A white Tata Sierra came up and out popped one of Chandra’s students, Nikhil
Nath. He was about 12, bespectacled, chubby, clad in a white T-shirt and shorts.
In sotto voce, George said, “Chandra’s student comes in a Tata Sierra, while
poor Chandra does not have a vehicle at all. He has to be picked up by a
student on a bike and dropped back home.”
Chandra smiled enigmatically and his head drooped on to his chest. He said, “I
don’t feel good today. I’m having a severe cold.” Students came up and said
something in Tamil. He replied; then they went away. George finished taking the
photographs. There was really nothing more to talk about.
I got up and said, “Thanks very much for your co-operation.”
Chandra gave me a limp hand to shake. Then I walked away.
It was the last stages of twilight. And at a far distance, I turned around and
looked back.
Chandra was still sitting in front of the YMCA building, as the darkness
continued to grow around him. A solitary figure lost in melancholy thought.
But this tragedy-marred individual has waged a ceaseless battle against his own
inner despair at what had happened and against the powerful and influential
Apollo Hospital.
And in this battle, he seemed to have won on both fronts: the inner and the
outer. Quite simply, in our world of puny individuals,
Chandra is a hero of our times.
(Published in Sportsworld, March 23, 1994)
More details
In 1995, the Apollo Hospital made a payment of Rs 17 lakh to Chandra.
Chandra’s autobiography was titled, ‘My Fightback from Death's Door’ (2006).
He died on 12 May 2021, at the age of 63, in Chennai, due to complications from
COVID-19.
Chandra did get married to a bank employee named Mala. They had a son, Sanjay,
who was about 20 years old and a final-year engineering student at the time of
his father's death.


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