A
GREAT DREAMER
S. A. GOVINDARAJAN
When
Gandhiji said of Andhra that “it has poetry, it has faith, it has the spirit of
sacrifice,” he was referring to men like K. Ramakotiswara Rau. I knew him as a
journalist and as a writer but he has remained for me the supreme dreamer, who
did not spare himself or his slender resources in making his dreams come true.
The
very name Triveni, which he gave to the periodical he started after
making up his mind not to toil in the office of daily newspapers or in the dark
corridors of the law-courts, was symbolic of his idealism. At various times he
gave differing expositions of the significance of that name but they all boiled
down to this: he was all out to work for a renascence of culture in which the
three ideals of love, knowledge and service would impart new life to
Triveni
first
saw the light of day in Christmas of 1927.
C. Jinarajadasa, who was later to become President of the Theosophical
Society, was the author of the first article in the first issue. In the
subsequent years Ramakotiswara Rau had many gifted men and women to write for
him. His list of contributors reads like a muster-roll of greatness. One fact,
therefore, I recall with special pride after all these years. Not only did he
commission an article by me to make me figure in such distinguished company but
he asked me to join him in trying to persuade my chief, A. Rangaswami Iyengar,
Editor of “The Hindu”, to write a piece for him.
Ramakoti’s
death has cast a gloom upon all who cared for certain values. However, his many
friends feel that the present Editor of Triveni will help to carry his great
work forward.