“TRIVENI”:
RETROSPECT AND PROSPECT
Dr. D. ANJANEYULU
Introduction
IT
IS HEARTENING to learn that a public charitable trust – by name Triveni
Foundation – is formed at Hyderabad to have a permanent basis for publishing Triveni
uninterruptedly. To all of us connected
with it in one way or another – as readers, contributors or publishers – this
is sure to be a matter for supreme gratification. Especially in view of the
increasing mortality of similar publications of a serious character the world
over.
Obviously,
this is not a time conducive for little reviews and literary periodicals.
Maybe, it never has been, for a long time. The Pall Mall Gazette and
the Review of Reviews, Nation, Horizon, Adelphi and Atheneum, Scrutiny and The Criterion, which were once the pride of the English
intelligentsia, had long ago fallen by the wayside. Encounter, the
international monthly, which stood for cultural freedom and intellectual
dissent, and Punch, the familiar symbol of British humour, have recently
joined the ranks of the great departed.
In
America the Saturday Review (once called The Saturday Review of
Literature) is probably defunct. One only hopes that the Partisan Review and the Ever-Green Review are alive and kicking, though not shining
as before. We have, of course, the New Yorker going strong.
Numerous are the English periodicals in India, which were a byword for cerebral quality and social prestige. Some of the names that come readily to one’s mind are: Modern Review (Ramananda Chatterji); Hindustan Review (Dr. Sachchidananda Sinha); Indian Review (G.A. Natesan) and India monthly (Humayun Kabir).
Against
this disturbing and depressing background, it is quite a pleasant surprise that
Triveni quarterly has completed 65 years of its purposeful existence.
Even those unsure about the continuity of its publication look back nostalgically to its halcyon days. They are happy to
hear of its latest issue.
To
ensure its safety, the Editor-Publisher of Triveni
has been changing its place of printing and publication, mostly for reasons
beyond his control. This has happened a number of times, without any glaring
change in its quality of content or format and production.
I
remember that the inaugural issue of Triveni came out from “Malabari
House”, in Vepery, Madras, in January 1928 while its office was formally opened on December 25, 1927. It was a sumptuous,
well-got-up volume of 144 pages, printed on fine featherweight paper, with a
number of art plates for reproduction of sculptures and paintings.
Worth
recalling are the words of its Founder-Editor, K. Ramakotiswara Rau, (a young
lawyer of Narasaraopet, in Guntur District,
Andhra Pradesh, who had given up his profession, in response to Gandhi’s call
during the struggle for freedom), setting out his aims and ideals in launching
the new periodical. He wrote in September 1928:
“Triveni seeks to interpret the Renaissance movement as reflected in the various
linguistic units of India. The Editor is an Andhra, and in close touch with the
literary and art movements in Andhra Desa. But he is anxious to publish
detailed accounts of similar movements in other parts of India. He makes an earnest
appeal to scholars in other linguistic areas to write about the literary and
art movements with which they are familiar. Triveni will thus lay the
foundations for that inter-provincial harmony and goodwill which is the
prelude, to a federation of Indian cultures”.
From
this, one could imagine that this pioneer editor cast himself in the ambitious
and idealistic role of a one-man academy of art and letters. In the event, he
anticipated the work of the national akademis of free India by a full
quarter-century and more. He sought to do single-handed, and actually did in
the beginning, what the Sahitya Akademi had
set out to do with infinitely larger resources, with official patronage.
But
the fact that this Editor was in the thick of the Freedom Struggle did not make
matters easy for the journal. From 1937 to 1939, he was a member of the Madras
Legislative Assembly. But what is more to
the point is that he was arrested in the August movement of 1942. But he took
care to leave the publication in the hands of like-minded friends and wellwishers,
including K. Sampatgiri Rao, Nittoor Srinivasa Rao (later Mr. Justice), A.N.
Murti Rao and others in Bangalore, where it stayed on for some years.
It
was in 1949 that Triveni obtained what looked like a permanent home, at
Machilipatnam, when Mr. (now Dr.) Bhavaraju
Narasimha Rao of Triveni Publishers, an ardent admirer of Ramakotiswara Rau,
undertook the onerous responsibility of printing and publishing it. Through
thick and thin, through fair weather and foul, he has been in charge of the
frail bark, ever since.
It was in the spirit of sacrament, of Bharata treating the Padukas of Rama. After the demise of Ramakotiswara Rau in 1970, it was a case of Bharata holding those Padukas high, without the expectation of Rama’s return.
From
Bangalore or from Machilipatnam, a few
years earlier, Ramakotiswara Rau was, in all his innocence and credulity,
attracted by the offer of a one-time Associate Editor (Mr. Burra V.
Subrahmanyam), then a leading lawyer of Hyderabad, to look after the
publication of the periodical, as he could well afford to do it. But it proved
a wrong step, soon retraced, for return to the safe and secure hands of
Narasimha Rao at Machilipatnam.
Sometime
in the mid or late ’Sixties, Mr. Bhavaraju toyed with the idea of having a
branch office of the Triveni Publishers in Madras and editing the journal from the city, where it was born, while the
printing was done at Machilipatnam as before. Though the exercise was not as
successful as it was expected to be (thanks largely to the gradual
disappearance of the ageing generation of its old friends, patrons and
supporters), it was notable at least for one achievement. The Golden Jubliee
Number, a sumptuous production, with varied fare, was formally released in
Madras in March 1978 by Professor K. R. Srinivasa Iyengar, Srimati Rukmini Devi
presiding, at the Sastri Hall. It was released later in May at Machilipatnam by
Dr. B. Gopala Reddi, an old student of Ramakotiswara Rau at the Andhra Jateeya
Kalasala, a pre-Independence national institution set up by patriots.
It
was always a struggle for Triveni with its limited elite readership and
uncertain advertisement revenue. It had no
good Samaritan like Cecil King (a nephew of Lord Northcliffe), chairman of the
Mirror group, who printed Encounter free for some years, to come to its
aid. For once, it appeared there might be someone to make a like gesture. And
that was Prof. C.V.N. Dhan, a successful educational entrepreneur, of Guntur,
who published it for a few years. It was from here that the Diamond Jubilee
Number was released late in 1988 by Dr. K. Satchidananda Murti.
The general experiment, however, did not last much longer. The journal had, therefore, to go back to Machilipatnam once again, under the familiar, protective wings of Dr. Bhavaraju Narasimha Rao. He has been shouldering the burden, with admirable patience and forbearance, all along.
We cannot overlook the relentless fact that he is not growing any younger. He is fast approaching eighty, though keeping reasonably fit for his age. He can’t be expected to bear the burden single-handed forever. It is indeed heartening to find that a trust has been formed by his son, B.N. Murty, in Hyderabad to help bring out the periodical from Hyderabad from January 1993. The idea is to ensure the continuance of the institution, not letting it depend entirely on an individual. It started as a votive offering in Madras; our prayerful hope is that it would be a place of worship on the banks of the Musi, in Hyderabad.