K. BALASUBRAMANIA IYER
LAST OF THE “MYLAPOREANS”
Dr. D. ANJANEYULU
[K. Balasubramania Iyer
was greatly interested in Triveni almost from its inception. So also his
brother K. Chandrasekahran who was very closely associated with Triveni as
a member of its Advisory Board until his demise in 1988. Their help was immense
for its survival. The “Ashrama” their residence gave Ashraya to Triveni. This
note whose birth centenary of Sri Iyer which was celebrated this year. –Editor]
Mylapore is, of course,
familiar today to the outsiders who don’t know it well enough, as one of the
many postal districts of South Madras. To those a little older, old enough to
have known it before the Second World War, it might be recognised as one of the
quieter, middle-class residential areas, with old style bungalows and
garden-houses, where life was leisurely and people, by and large, were known to
be cultured and courteous, their superiority complex notwithstanding.
By Mylapore is here meant
not so much a geographical area as a place representing a form of culture, a
way of life and an attitude to social, political and other problems. Festina Lente (Hasten slowly) might be its
dominant motto. C. P. Rarnaswami Aiyer, for instance, was, strictly speaking,
not a resident of Mylapore, for “The Grove” was on Eldams Road in Teynampet.
But he was, otherwise, an archetypal Mylaporean – intelligent and enterprising,
law-abiding though individualistic and none too orthodox in social life.
But, K. Balasubramania
Iyer (whose birth centenary was celebrated this year) was a Mylaporean in every
sense. Not unlike his father, V. Krishnaswami Aiyer (a friend and colleague of
Gopal Krishna Gohale), whose sprawling residence, “Ashrama” was on Luz Church
Road, close to Luz centre. It can hardly be located now, as it has long since
been broken up into numerous bits of different sizes occupied by shops, housing
tenements, petrol bunks and the like, not to speak of a popular cinema theatre.
Balasubrarnania Iyer, the
eldest son of his father, who was born on 6 May 1892, was trained for the Law, like
the latter, but did not take it as a full-time profession, though he started
with it and kept his formal links with it till the end. He died on 30 September
1970, at the age of 78, that “education is the key to progress and prosperity.”
Not only was he a scholar in Sanskrit, Tamil and English, but quite familiar
with many of the disciplines, covered by the university curriculum.
He was, for many years,
associated with the University of Madras, as a member of the Senate, Syndicate,
Academic Council and various other bodies connected with its administration. He
thought it was the Government’s primary duty to provide free and compulsory
elementary education, employing part-time teachers and social workers, if
necessary. He was a source of great strength to Dr. A. L. Mudaliar, who was
Vice-Chancellor for a record number of years, with whom he was able to see eye
to eye on most matters.
Dr. Mudaliar was, in fact,
his chief in another field as well. That was in the Legislative Council, in
which Mudaliar was the Leader and Iyer was the Deputy Leader. Their speeches on
all subjects of public interest were heard with respect by the leaders of
different parties, including the D.M.K. Balasubrahmania Iyer was a member of the
Council from 1952 to 1968, when he declined to contest, even at the importunity
of the then Chief Minister, C.N. Annadurai.
Balasubramania Iyer was a
great devotee of His Holiness Sri Chandra sekharendra Saraswati, Paramacharya
of Kanchi Kamakoti Peetham. The Swamiji conferred the title of “Dharmarakshamani”
on Balasubramania Iyer. The Government of India honoured him by awarding “Padmabhushan”.
No sketch of
Balasubramania Iyer, however brief, can be complete without a reference to his
close association and that of his family with this periodical, Triveni, almost
from its inception in 1928. His sister, K. Savitri Ammal, and brother K.
Chandrasekharan, both contributors to it, were on the Advisory Board, ever
interested in its fortunes and progress. Balasubramania Iyer also presided over
its Silver Jubilee Celebrations in Bangalore in 1953, though he didn’t live to
see its Golden Jubilee in Madras in 1979.
Balasubramania Iyer
belonged to a group of cultured and affluent men, who contributed their best to
our public life, without being caught in the rough and tumble of party
politics. Circumstances might have favoured him, but he worked hard to make the
best use of them. His might be a vanishing tribe, but his memory will be
cherished by those who knew the value of his work for our society.
During his fairly long
span of life, he did many things, making himself useful to society, without
affecting the fortunes of his own family, by taking a plunge in the agitational
politics of the Congress, with which he had close sympathies in his early days.
It is mentioned that he was the treasurer of the Madras session of the Congress
in 1927.
Like a loyal and dutiful
son (of a distinguished father who died in 1911, before he was fifty), he not
only took care of the family, whose responsibilities automatically devolved on
him, but chose to look after all the educational, charitable and medical
institutions founded by his father. They included: the Madras Sanskrit College,
the SSV Pathasala, the Venkataramana Ayurvedic Dispensary and College and many
others. He was on the Board of Directors of the Indian Bank, founded by his
father and others, after the liquidation of the Arbuthnott Bank. In fact,
there was no cause dear to the heart of his father, which he did not try his
level best to promote and perpetuate.
Two of them stand out from
the rest. One was his ardent love of Sanskrit. The other was his serious
commitment to and deep involvement in the cause of education at all stages,
university education in particular. In his case, these two were complementary
to each other.
Not only was he an erudite
scholar in Sanskrit, but a fluent speaker in that language, not easy to master.
It was a pleasant experience for the present writer to have heard him speak in
lucid and simple Sanskrit on a wide variety of subjects from Kalidasa’s Sakuntalam
to Adi Sankara’s Viveka Choodamani. On one of such occasions, the
veteran orator in Tamil, Maposi, wondered whether Balasubramania Iyer was
speaking, singing or chanting.
Balasubramania Iyer was
one of the founder-Secretaries of the Kuppuswami Sastri Research Institute and
was responsible for transferring the Journal of Oriental Research, managed
by him to the Institute. It was also, thanks to his untiring efforts, that the
Golden Jubilee of the Madras Sanskrit College was celebrated on a grand scale
in January 1957, under the presidentship of Dr. S. Radhakrishnan, the then Vice-President
of India.
Radhakrishnan had
obviously a soft corner for Iyer, with whom he used to crack jokes, at times.
He it was who publicly mentioned the close similarity in physiognamy between
Balasubramania Iyer and his father. At a public meeting once in Rajaji Hall,
the invocation song was rendered by Srimati M. S. Subbulakshmi, with Dr.
Radhakrishnan in the chair. In his vote of thanks at the end, Balasubramania
Iyer, obviously by a slip of the tongue, referred to the good “speech” of
Subbulakshmi, to the amusement of the audience. While Radhakrishnan was coming
down from the dais, he was greeted by Subbulakshmi, to whom he said: “It
appears you spoke very well at the meeting”, to her embarrassed merriment.
As an educationist, who had a lot to do with policy-making at various levels, Balasubramania Iyer believed, with Dr. Radhakrishnan.