ON V. KRISHNASWAMI AIYAR
(A
Commemoration Address)
By
K. RAMAKOTISWARA RAU
It
is a great honour to be called upon to deliver the
Commemoration Address on this occasion. Sri K. Balasubrahmania
Aiyar was not merely kind, but exceedingly generous and affectionate, in
extending the invitation to one who had never met his distinguished father. In
previous years, I used to sit here and listen with the utmost eagerness while
friends or associates of V. Krishnaswami Aiyar spoke of his life and
achievement. But today, I can only show you things through the wrong end of the
telescope, and describe the impression created in the young minds of a
generation that was at school or college when he passed away, and, especially,
how that memory moulded the thought and coloured the outlook on life of an aspiring lad of twelve
or thirteen, who lived in a far-away little town in one of the northern
districts.
To
me in those days, Krishnaswami Aiyar was an able and immensely rich lawyer,–one
of the band of Mylapore lawyers whose fabled
magnificence seemed to rival the glories of Haroun-Al-Raschid of the Arabian Nights, or of Yudhishtira at Indraprastha, as
narrated in the gorgeous prose and verse of Nannaya
in the ‘Sabha Parva’ of the
Telugu Mahabharata. Well, thought I, if my father, who practises in a mere Munsiff’s
court right opposite my house and makes only two or three hundred a month, is
considered rich, and if, as a result, I can wear fine clothes and a lace cap
and go about like a little prince amongst my school-fellows, surely
Krishnaswami Aiyar, who practises in the High Court
at Madras and earns ten thousand a month, must be infinitely richer, and, his
sons, of course, must have finer clothes and many more lace caps!
But to this impression of wealth and luxury succeeded
another. News of the great Arbuthnot
crash travelled into my little world, and people spoke of the famous
A
little later I passed into a new atmosphere, that of Masulipatam,
the stronghold of Nationalist ‘agitation’ in Andhra of those days. Dr. Pattabhi Sitaramayya, Mutnuri Krishna Rao of the Krishna Patrika,
and above all, Kopalle Hanumantha
Rao, evoked in me an admiration which bordered on worship. The Andhra Jateeya Kalasala was inaugurated while I was a student of
the Intermediate class in the local
Krishnaswami
Aiyar passed away before I migrated to
I
shall not weary you with more of what might appear ‘sentimental effusions’.
But, then, it is sentiment that accounts for my presence here. Else, how should
a man of many failures feel a kinship of spirit with Krishnaswami Aiyar who was
supremely successful in all he undertook? It is the love of culture, of Indian
culture especially, that constitutes the kinship between us.
Modern
India has given birth to eminent lawyers and statesmen, great scholars and
founders of institutions, noble philanthropists and friends of humanity. But
there was something distinctive about Krishnaswami Aiyar. I shall try to
evaluate the ‘something’ that was like an upsurge from within,–a
life-giving stream that fertilised the entire domain
of his life, and gave it a meaning and a purpose. In one word, Krishnaswami
Aiyar had ‘vision’. He came at a crisis in our nation’s history, when old
values were being questioned, and the foundations of Indian life were being underminded. As he grew up, he sensed the new life that men
like Sri Ramakrishna and Vivekananda, Naoroji and Ranade, poured forth
in abundance. He saw a new India in the making, and himself, contributed to
that making. That new India was, doubtless, to be free politically, but
political freedom was but an outward, tangible expression of that inner freedom
of the mind and the spirit, which could not be won until we grasped the
significance of the long ages of Indian culture and achievement, in art and
literature, in social organisation and religious quest. A whole generation, or
even two, had been cut off from this fount of life; and so, in the process of
raising the edifice of a new India, the revival and re-interpretation of
ancient Indian culture in varied domains was an essential need. If Krishnaswami
Aiyar was a friend of Vivekananda and Baba Bharati,
if he looked upon Malaviya and. Gokhale
as his own brothers, if he welcomed Subrahmania
Bharati, the poet, and Sambanda Mudaliar,
the playwright, if he edited the Arya Charitam and encouraged the recitation of the Gita, it
was entirely because he perceived, not just in a momentary flash but in the
effulgence of his intuition, that all this was an offering at the feet of the
Mother, who after a temporary eclipse was becoming ever more real to a whole people.
His fundamental faith was that the custodians of this great culture–the Vedic
scholars, the masters of the Sastras and Kavyas, must be sought out and provision made for the
continuity of the stream of national culture. Thus he founded this Sanskrit College.
Thus too he founded the sister institutions, the Ayurvedic
College and the Venkataramana Dispensary, for the
preservation and growth of the science of healing which the Rishis
left us as a precious legacy. And then, having the gifts of a statesman, he was
resolved, for the honour of India, to prove that
Indians could shape high policy and administer Departments of State.
The
‘stream of master-minds’ which flitted before Krishnaswami Aiyar’s
vision when he spoke at the Senate House, has been enriched by, among others,
Gandhi and Tagore, Aurobindo and Radhakrishnan. None
of these had become world-famous when Krishnaswami Aiyar uttered those
prophetic words. But, of them, young Radhakrishnan
was just then receiving the M. A. degree and drinking in Krishnaswami Aiyar’s great message of hope.