A PURPOSEFUL LIFE SPAN
Dr. C. P. Ramaswami
Aiyar: A Centenary Assessment
S. NARAYANASWAMY
To
span even the major doings and sayings of an octogenarian statesman, who
bestrode the chessboard of Indian public life for a period exceeding sixty
years, in a broadcast talk, is to put under severe strain one’s capacity for
abbreviation. When the person dwelt on, had been in telescoping succession a practising advocate, Advocate-General, Member of the State
and Viceroy’s Executive Councils, Dewan of a State,
Vice-Chancellor of three universities, Visiting Professor in a remote American
university, delegate to scores of international conferences, initiator of pioneering
projects and of intrepid measures of social reform, writer and reviewer, it is
difficult to choose any facet of such a life for special emphasis.
He
was the product of a well-ordered and affluent home–minus its suffocation and
smug self-satisfaction. Indeed the world over, an environment of sustained
affluence breeds the escapist notion that all must be well with the world:
because all is well within the quadrangle of one’s own elegant mansion. This
usually smothers initiative and rarely generates either the determination or
the energy in any person, to break out of the cocoon of physical comfort and
economic security–and fight the world’s battles and confront its grim
challenges.
In
the case of Dr C. P. Ramaswami Aiyar, he had those precious personal endowments–the
will, the moral earnestness and intrinsic capability needed to surmount the psychological
disadvantages of a well-advantaged home. These constituted the ingredients of
his fighting spirit–or rather the tools that enabled him to carry out the innumerable
projects which constitute the substance of today’s infra-structure–in the
contiguous States of Tamil Nadu and Kerala. The
secret of Dr Ramaswami Aiyar’s eminence was his basic
magnanimity, his robust vision and his multiple mindedness.
Many
do not know that Dr C. P. was a Mathematics graduate and medalist of the
Dr
C. P. made a promising start as a lawyer, his father Sri Pattabhirama
Aiyar having adorned that profession before him, setting a sublime example of
professional probity. Dr C. P. handled his cases with the confidence that stems
from capacity for concentration, ahead for detail and basic clarity of
thinking. We talk often of dialectical skill and forensic abilities, which
brought success to many distinguished lawyers in recent history, down from Sir
John Simon, Sir Edward Garson and the Earl of Birkenhead at the British bar to
people nearer home, like late M. A. Jinnah, M. C. Setalvad,
Bulabhai Desai, S. Srinivasa Aiyangar
and Dr Alladi Krishnaswami Aiyar. Dr C. P. brought logic and felicity of
presentation to his legal work and was professionally pitted against
practically and his distinguished contemporaries at one time or another. His
skilled handling of the Jiddu Narayanaih
case way back in 1911, for a wonder, captivated the loser in that case, Dr.
Annie Besant, who later chose to harness Dr. C. P.’s exceptional gifts in
conducting the Home Rule campaign. The friendship between the two became a
life-long one–till Dr. Besant passed away in 1933. This was a function of Dr. C.
P.’s great genius for friendship.
It
is not often that a leading lawyer is tempted to give up his bulging practice
at the bar, to become an administrator, at all times a less lucrative
profession. But in his case, his eminence at the bar brought him while still
young, to the position of Advocate-General. This position was at the time
regarded as the bottom of the escalator that took people either to High Court
judgeship or to purposeful political office. Little wonder Dr. C. P. preferred
to accept the office of Law Member to the
It
was at a later stage that his unique talents as top administrator began to
unfold–in the State of
On
the social justice front, he advised an enlightened Maharajah Sir Rama Varma Padmanabha Dasa to throw open Sri Padmanabhaswami
Temple to Harijans through a Proclamation and thus Harijan Temple Entry made its beginning in an obscure
South-West corner of India, that induced late Mahadev
Desai write his book “The Epic of Travancore” with a
foreword by Mahatma Gandhi. During his Dewanship, he
appointed the first woman District judge and the first woman Surgeon General,
which made Travancore a trail-blazer in the placement
of women in the hierarchy of civil servants. He was the first to abolish
capital punishment–which again as a criminal law reform measure was an All-India
first. He also toned up the general State administration. He improved the
revenues of the State in a spectacular manner and all wings of governance got
shots in the arm, The administration of a State by a Dewan however contained the inevitable in-built elements of
autarchy and provoked the predictable criticisms of such a form of
administration. He took them all in the stride – as men of action tend to do.
However, 32 years after he left that State and 13 years after his passing, the
many enduring monuments to his far-sightedness and economic insight are
functioning as large employers of labour, generators
of revenue, instruments of import substitution and producers of much-needed
goods and are appreciated.
Dr
C. P’s interest in education is an important facet of his achievement-filled
life. As Dewan of Travancore,
he piloted the Travancore University Bill and
established the first university in the State. He was Vice-Chancellor of the
Late
in life, he took up a Visiting Professor’s assignment in the
His
last assignment was a project to write the history of his times. In that
context, he was on a visit to
He
was one of the handsomest men of his time–and age did little to furrow his
countenance or dim the lustre in his eyes, any more
than it whittled down his springy and youthful gait. The number of people he
helped in numerous ways over a half century of undiminished generosity is
legion.
There
were assorted slips and errors in his life. These are far outweighed by his
major acts of public policy and the projects he sponsored have been proved in
perspective, as being of immense benefit to posterity. What he said and wrote
will prove to be equally cherished treasures of a scholar-statesman for the
newer generation, that could not have seen him in
person. It is good, arrangements are under way to
publish the more important of his utterances, his letters and writings during
the Centenary Year. His alcove in the corridor of Indian history as a man of letters
no less as a man of action is secure.
Those
of us who came under his magnetic spell ask for no more than that his
footprints in the sands of time impart a sense of direction to the doings of a
new generation of economic leaders and administrators.
–By Courtesy: All
Sir C. P.
and Sir Tej
“Comparisons
are invidious, yet they alone enable us to assess correctly multi-faceted
diamond like C. P. Intellectually not less alert, yet the “C. P. finish” is
different from “Gandhian angularity.” More apposite
is it to compare him with dignified Sir Tej. If Sir Tej excelled in Urdu, C. P. is at home in Sanskrit; 19,
–K. R. R. SASTRY