MY MASTER GARU
Dr. A. S. RAMAN
July,
1938. Friends advise me to join the Loyola or the Presidency at
Now where the hell is Maharanipet? I keep going into and coming out of street after street till at last I land right at his very doorstep. I knock on the door. A tall, lean, hungry-looking man opens the door and says, “Yes, please”. I introduce myself, and say that I have come to meet Prof. M. Venkatarangaiya. He replies graciously: “Oh, please sit down. I’ll be back in a minute.” And he is back in less than a minute with a cup of steaming coffee for me. What warmer welcome could I have expected in my present dark mood? I feel thoroughly comfortable and tell him about my mission. He sees my mark sheet and says approvingly: “No problem. See me at the university at about 11a. m. If you have any difficulty in finding your way about, I can pick you up: you give me your address.” To avoid causing further embarrassment to him, I decline his very gracious offer and return to the choultry.
Somehow
I reach the university campus well in advance and wait for the professor’s
arrival. About hair hour later he takes me to his office, and gives me the
forms only for my signature; he has already filled up the columns on the basis
of the information furnished by me. His
humility and generosity are simply divine. After going through all the formalities
on my behalf with the help of the office staff, he says: “Now you are enrolled.
You may attend classes from tomorrow.” Before taking leave of him I enquire
whether I can expect any financial assistance from the university. He says non-committaly:
“I’ll have to find out. Would you like to join the hostel?” I say Yes and he secures my admission to the hostel also. A week
later, after the class, he takes me with him to his office and announces: “You
have been given the Anantapur District Board Scholarship: Rs. 350 per annum”.
Overwhelmed with joy, I bend to touch his feet. But stopping me he says: “No,
don’t do that. You deserve the scholarship. Study well. My best wishes.”
Thus
began my three year long student-teacher relation with him. He enriched my
experience in its totality. I learnt so much from him not only in the
class-room but outside. He had mastered the art of concealing his profound
scholarship and uncompromising intellectual integrity beneath his affection and
compassion. He would analyse any intricate problem into its barest essentials
and explain IJ8 implications in a language within the reach of even a child. He
was unique in his style of exposition in the sense that he unmasked
profundities of scholarship and made them seem utterly lucid and commonplace.
As we students were busy consulting reference books in the library, he would watch
us from behind and suddenly disappear behind the shelves to return with more books of
relevance to our study. He would invite our attention to particular passage in
those books and advise us to meet him later for a discussion. He took such a
keen interest in his students that they felt thoroughly comfortable and earned
for in his presence. He was strict without being stern, firm, without being
rigid, sympathetic without being sentimental, profound without being pedantic, and self-respecting without being supercilious. He was deeply emotional, highly intellectual
and transparently lucid in expression. Whenever I had any personal or academic
problem, he was the one and only one to solve it gracefully and realistically.
After
leaving the university I remained in close touch with him. When I started a
cultural monthly in
As Editor of the “Illustrated Weekly of India” also I used to seek his advice and guidance whenever I had to organise features of academic interest. Earlier, my editor, C. R. Mandy, had become so fond of his writing that he would ask me to approach the professor for articles on political and international affairs. The beauty of Professor Venkatarangaiya’s writing lay in its brevity, clarity, elegance of expression, precision and incisiveness. His style was almost bland, but it had inner refinement and depth. He was never rhetorical or assertive. He was cool, objective, analytical and gently persuasive.
Whenever
I visited