neenga nalla irukkanum
நீங்க
நல்லா
இருக்கோணும்
நாடு
முன்னேற
..
ஏன்
என்ற
கேள்வி
இங்கு
கேக்காமல்
வாழ்க்கை
இல்லை
Ulagam pirandhadhu Enakaha
நெஞ்சம்
உண்டு,
நேர்மை
உண்டு,
ஓடு
ராஜா
என்னதான்
நடக்கும்
நடக்கட்டுமே
Ondru Engal Jaathi
அங்கே
சிரிப்பவர்
சிரிக்க்கெட்டும்
அது
ஆணவச்சிரிப்பு...
நான்
ஏன்
பிறந்தேன்,
நாட்டுக்கு
நலம் என
புரிந்தேன்
என்று
நாளும்
பொழுதும்
வாழும்
வரையில்
நினைத்திடு
என்
தோழா!
நினைத்து
செயல்படு
என்
தோழா!
உடனே
செயல்படு
என்
தோழா!
*The Image Trap : M G Ramachandran
in Film and Politics - M.S.S. Pandian "The
social universe of the MGR is a universe of
asymmetrical power.......The conflict between the
upper caste/ class oppressors and MGR as a
subaltern, and its resolution forms the core of the
film. MGR, in the course of the conflict,
appropriates several signs or symbols of authority
or power from those who dominate..."
20 years on, MGR still lives,
25 December 2007 "Twenty years after his death MG
Ramachandran continues to wield an unseen and
uncanny sway over Tamil Nadu�s
masses, politicians and even
filmgoers."
MGR Remembered in Vavuniya,
Tamil Eelam 25 December 2003
�Though MGR was a movie star, he
did several good deeds for the people of Tamil Nadu
when he was the Chief Minister. When our movement
needed money, he gave us money out of his private
funds. He fully recognized the need for our armed
struggle. He never sought political gain through
his support to our cause,� said
Mr. Ezhilan, LTTE�s political head
in Vavuniya.
K.J.Yesudas on MGR, February
2004 - "One day, our late chief minister M G
Ramachandran called me over and asked me to sing
the song 'Vizhiye Kadhai Ezhudhu'. I was
elated and thrilled. My happiness doubled when the
song became a hit.
MGR is a mahaan. I came to know about him at a
later stage. He not only gave importance to music
but more to the art itself. His character was such
that he turned even his foes into friends.
For example, at a time when he had difference of
opinion with Kannadasan politically, he was not
satisfied with the lyrics for a particular song.
Finally, he himself suggested that Kannadasan be
called to write the lyrics. Others around him were
hesitant but MGR was firm. He told them that
Kannadasan had no equal and asked them to approach
him for the lyrics. Kannadasan also obliged and the
song was 'Odum Megangale' for the film
'Aayirathil Oruvan'. Enmity vanished... and art
gained importance..."
Biography of
M.G.Ramachandran"Maruthm Gopala Ramachandra Menon was born in
Kandy? Sri Lanka (formerly Ceylon) on 17January
1917. But this is a controversial date; some people
say that MGR was born at least seven years earlier.
His elder brother, M.G. Chakrapani, himself a
retired actor and producer, is certain that
MGR�s actual date of birth cannot
be more than six months removed, either way, from
the official date..."
The Tamil Nadu Dr.M.G.R.Medical
University - "Dr. M.G. Ramachandran,
endearingly known as MGR, was born on 17th January,
1917, at Kandy, Sri Lanka, to Marudhar Gopalan and
Satyabhama. After his father's death, MGR settled
with his family at Kumbakonam in Tamil Nadu. He
could not pursue his studies beyond the primary
stage and joined a drama troupe. Gaining
considerable experience on stage, he entered the
world of cinema, and gradually rose to enviable
positions by persistent efforts and endurance. He
became a great actor, director and producer. The
Government of India honoured him with the national
Award for the Best Actor for his acting in the film
"Rickshakaran" in 1972.
In 1953, MGR joined the Dravida Munnetra Kazhagam.
He became a member of the state Legislative Council
in 1962. He was first elected to the Tamil Nadu
Legislative Assembly in 1967, and subsequently in
the elections of 1971, 1977, 1980 and 1984. In
1972, he founded the All India Anna Dravida
Munnetra Kazhagam (AIADMK), which contested and won
the subsequent elections. In 1977, he became the
first film actor in India to be the Chief Minister
of a state. He continued as Chief Minister of the
rest of his life. He was a popular Chief Minister
and one of the most charismatic politicians of the
country. Always the first to personally offer
relief in disasters and calamities like fire,
flood, drought, cyclone, etc., he was the first
donor during the Chinese aggression of 1962,
donating Rs. 75,000/= to the war fund.
He founded the Tamil University, The Tamil Nadu Dr.
MGR Medical University and the Women's University
in Tamil Nadu. In 1983, the Madras University
conferred on him, Honoris Causa, the degree of
Doctor of Laws. MGR had traveled extensively and
visited Sri Lanka, Burma,Singapore, Japan,
Hong-Kong, France, Mexico, USA and USSR. MGR passed
away on 24 December, 1987. He was posthumously
awarded the "Bharat Ratna" by the President of
India." Text: Courtesy Government of Tamil
Nadu.
M.G.Ramachandran - "MGR made his
screen debut in Ellis R. Duncan's Sati Leelavathi
(1936) but his first major breakthrough came much,
much later with Rajakumari (1947).
MGR's 1950s screen persona in adventure films
constructed an image of political as well as
physical invincibility. Often the themes of his
films were derived from heroic ballads which are
part of the oral tradition of rural Tamil Nadu. For
example - Madurai Veeran (1956), one of his most
popular films, is based on the legend of Madurai
Veeran, a popular deity of Southern Tamil Nadu. His
legend has been the subject of various ballads and
plays and this was the second filmed version of the
story.
In the 1960s MGR turned to more 'realistic'
fantasies mostly in a contemporary setting often
playing someone from the oppressed class - a
peasant, taxi driver or fisherman. For millions of
fans, his image as the knight in shining armour,
saving damsels in distress and being totally
dutiful towards his mother was in fact a reality.
Mother tongue, motherland and motherhood were what
he based his popularity on...
MGR used food, colour patterns (black and red,
symbols of the DMK) and masquerades (often through
double roles of oppressor and oppressed) to
construct this universe. In Engal Thangam for
example, MGR playing a truck driver Thangam,
fights, sings, cares for the poor and preaches
against smoking and drinking.
The height of emotional response that 'MGR' could
evoke was evident when in 1987 during a critical
illness, 22 people committed suicide in the hope
their deaths would save him! Stories of poor people
selling their blood in order to get money to see
his films on first release are legendary! ..When he
died in 1987, his funeral procession was attended
by over 2 million people! A temple has been built
in Madras with MGR as deity."
One
Hundred Tamils
of the 20th Century
M.G.Ramachandran - MGR
17
January 1917 - 24 December1987
Eighty two years ago, a baby boy was born to
a migrant couple, Gopala Menon and Sathyabama, in a
�line-room� of a
tea estate in Kandy. Later, this baby boy would
grow into a leader with the name Maruthur Gopalan
Ramachandran (popularly adored by Tamils all over
the world with the acronym MGR).
Maruthur was the ancestral
village in the Kerala state from where his parents
hailed from. Many have ridiculed the uncertainty of
his birth date, though MGR had used 17 January 1917
in his personal documents. One should sympathise
with MGR on this matter because he was born to an
Indian immigrant family in a tea plantation in
Ceylon, which was then under British colonial rule.
Way back in 1917, the health care facilities
available for the plantation workers were
atrocious, leave alone the requirements related to
birth registration. That he survived into adulthood
itself was an achievement.
Though as a two-year old he
was taken to Kumbakonam by his mother (who had been
widowed after the birth of MGR), the destiny would
make it that in his last five years of life, MGR
would again have close links with the Tamils in the
land of his birth.
After landing in Tamil Nadu,
MGR would rise in his professional ranks with
perseverance, hard work and the smile of Lady Luck.
He reached the
�top�, step by
step; 10 years as a vaudeville child actor, 10
years as an apprentice actor with secondary roles
in movies, 30 years as an
�uncrowned king�
in the Tamil movie land and finally 10 years as the
Chief Minister of Tamil Nadu.
Having experienced poverty
personally during his young days and forfeiting the
opportunity to have a formal education, MGR would
see to it that at least one song in his movie had
some educational value to the average
man.
He would take a keen interest
in the theme of the song, its musical composition
and its exact appearance in the movie. Not
surprisingly, it would turn out to be a hit song. I
can recollect a dozen of these songs
here:
1. Acheham enpathu
madamaiyadah - Anjaamai Dravidar udamaiyadah
(on Dravidian glory and heroism) அச்சம்
என்பது ..
மடமையடா..
அஞ்சாமை
திராவிடர்
..
உடமையடா
2. Thoongathe Thambi
Thoongathe - Nee somberi enra peyar
vaankaathe (on the consequences of idling and
procrastination) தூங்காதே
தம்பி
தூங்காதே
- நீயும்
சோம்பேறி
என்ற
பெயர்
வாங்காதே!
4. Thirudathe - Paapaa
Thirudathe (on prevention of bad habits,
especially stealing, while young) திருடாதே,
பாப்பா
திருடாதே,
வறுமை
நிலைக்கு
பயந்து
விடாதே
5. Moonrezhuthil En Moochchirukkum -
Athu mudinthapin thaane Pechehirukkum (on the
dignity of duty) மூன்றெழுத்தில்
என்
மூச்சிருக்கும்....
அது
முடிஞ்ச
பின்னாலும்
என்
பேச்சிருக்கும்...
MGR would also make sure that
he will teach good manners and discipline to the
masses through the movies. Therefore, in the
characters he played in 120-odd movies, he would
never smoke or take alcoholic drinks. On top of
that, he would never physically or mentally abuse
women. This self-imposed rigidity restricted the
character roles he would play and movie critics
ridiculed him for this 'un-natural style' of his
characters. But MGR would have the last word.
Ultimately, he claimed the respected honorific
�vaathiyar�
(teacher) in its proper sense of the
word.
Call it a mere coincidence or
the destiny of Eelam Tamils, that when the
liberation struggle began earnestly in 1977, MGR
would become the chief minister of the Tamil Nadu.
Though his interest in the problems of Eelam Tamils
remained passive till 1982, the ethnic holocaust of 1983 kindled
his support for the Eelam cause. 1983 also saw the
change in guard among the political leaders of the
Eelam Tamils. MGR had never felt comfortable with
the TULF leadership since he had perceived them as
emotionally more close to the DMK
leadership.
When the leadership mantle
in the struggle for Eelam needed a change and a
boost, MGR became the god-father of the LTTE
and made sure that the �new born
baby� would not suffer a premature
death in the hands of wily
J.R.Jayewardene.
To his allies in politics,
Indira Gandhi and Rajiv Gandhi, the link that MGR
had with the LTTE proved embarrassing. But they
simply had to ignore it for their own political
survival in the South India. For the support that he extended to
the Tamil Eelam cause, MGR became the
arch-enemy of the Sinhalese power brokers from 1983
till his death in December 1987.
Many Eelam Tamils also did
not expect much from MGR after his skirmish with
the TULF leadership at the 1981 Madurai Tamil International
Conference. But, now in hindsight, one can see
how vital was the support of MGR for the Eelam
cause from 1983 till his death.
That the admiration Tamil
masses had for MGR was not purely a
�cinema craze�
was proved in India, when movie stars of equal
stature such as Sivaji Ganesan, N.T. Rama Rao and
Amitabh Bachchan could not transfer their
popularity in movies to the political world. The
political careers of Sivaji Ganesan and Amitabh Bachehan
never took off from the ground.
Only N.T.Rama Rao was able to
become the chief minister of Andhra Pradesh and he
too lost that position subsequently. To my friends
in the USA, when I tried to explain the unusual
career of MGR, I called him a "three-in-one". He
had the movie magic of John Wayne, the political
success of Ronald Reagan and the messianic appeal
of Martin Luther King Jr.
How could one explain the
extraordinary career of MGR, which began in Kandy
and ended in Madras? Though not considered a
native in the place of his birth or in Tamil Nadu
where he grew up and called it home, he became the
adored leader, who would be envied by every local
politician.
At least Kavi Arasu
Kannadasan (who had been a close friend and
sometimes harshest critic of MGR) had an answer. In
1980, Kannadasan noted that MGR was blessed with an
"Asura Jathakam" (devil�s
horoscope). Not everyone will agree with that
assessment. But, considering the unfavourable odds
he faced in his life and the
�fights� he won,
definitely there should have been a blessing from
the devil which protected him in so many
trials.
Like other great leaders and
revolutionaries, MGR also had his weaknesses. But
these do not detract the good deeds he did for the
down-trodden in Tamil Nadu and for Eelam Tamils
who landed in India as refugees after 1983. MGR was
neither an intellectual nor a folk philosopher. But
his life-time teaching was short and simple; "Fight
for your Rights". That�s what he
preached in his 100-odd movies. ...We miss you,
Vathiyar.
Recently I provided a translation of an anecdote
about movie maestro Sivaji Ganesan which had
appeared in renowned Tamil movie script writer
Aroordhas�s memoir book
�Naan Muham Paartha Cinema
Kannadigal [The Cinema Mirrors I have Looked At,
Kalaignan Publishers, Chennai, 2002, 224 pages].
Here I provide the translation of another anecdote
recollected by Aroordhas in this book, but on
M.G.Ramachandran (MGR), whose 89th birthday was on
January 17th.
It is a well known fact that MGR was born in
Kandy for an Indian immigrant couple in 1917.
Aroordhas had visited Kandy nearly six decades
later, when the shooting for Pilot Premnath movie
starring Sivaji Ganesan took place in Kandy. Here
follows Aroordhas�s anecdote [pp.
33-34], in my English translation:
�When the shooting for
�Pilot Premnath�
movie took place in Kandy, I grapped a handful of
soil from that city and filled it in a plastic
vial. After returning to Chennai, I met MGR.
�Elder, I�m
offering you a gift now, which othes might not have
given it for you until now.�
�Is that so? May I know what is
it?�
�Will you open your
palm?�
[MGR] offered his palm.
I placed that particular plastic vial in his sandal
wood-colored palm.
�What�s this?
Soil?�
�Yes of course. This is your birth
soil. I collected this from Kandy, and brought it
especially for you�, I explained.
When MGR heard this, he became so emotional and
touched both his eyes with that vial.
He opened the lid of the vial. Like picking the
holy ash (viboothi), he pinched a little of the
soil by his thumb and index finger, and placed it
in his mouth. Then he applied a little soil onto
his head as well.
I saw both his eyes were welled [with tears]. Like
a child, he asked me, �Can I keep
this vial?�
I replied, �Elder, what are you
talking? I brought this especially for
you.�
�Thank you. I�ll
keep this gift forever with care.�
he said and grapped my hands.�
The Significance of the �Birth
Soil Bond�
In Tamil language, the �birth
soil bond� is known as
�Pirantha Mann
Patru�. The event described above
by script writer Aroordhas happened in late 1970s,
after MGR became the Chief Minister of Tamil Nadu.
But Aroordhas have brought this to the public
domain in 2002.
Curiously in 1995, I have alluded to this
�birth soil bond�
of MGR in an essay I wrote on him and published in
my short collection of essays, entitled
�MGR Movies Revisited and Other
Essays� in a limited edition of
100 copies. It was entitled,
�MGR-JR Duel�
(pp.9-10).
In this essay, I attempted to highlight the
point that of all the Indian politicians who had
shown interest on the Eelam Tamil issue, MGR had
something special �
�birth soil
bond�. This is not to cast
aspersions on the sincerity of politicians like
Vaiko, P.Nedumaran and a few others who stand in
the Eelam corner. But the link of MGR to Eelam
Tamil issue was unique. Since that book of mine is
now long out of print, here is a reproduction of
the relevant section of my old essay for
reading.
�Most commentators have viewed
MGR�s interest in the Sri Lankan
Tamil issue as a not-so unusual response of a
regional chief in Indian politics, to score brownie
points with the prime minister of India, whether it
is Indira Gandhi or Rajiv Gandhi. There may be some
truth in this perception. But, I feel the story is
incomplete if one accepts this reasoning as a
complete one. Three other plausible reasons for
MGR�s active interest in the Eelam
issue are as follows:
First, MGR viewed the young Tamil rebels
(especially the LTTE and its leader Prabhakaran) as
fighting a worthy cause against oppression. When
J.R.[Jayewardene] labeled the LTTE as
�the private army of
Mr.M.G.Ramachandran, the present chief minister of
Madras�, MGR retorted strongly,
and as reported in the Time magazine (May 11,
1987), he thrashed J.R. with the words,
�Tamil groups are spearheading the
war against the dictatorial and fascist actions of
the Jayewardene regime, and they should be
congratulated and helped.�
This view has to be interpreted from the
perspective of MGR�s lifelong
philosophy of �fighting the evil
forces�. For four decades, MGR
preached the down-trodden Tamil masses, via the
Tamil movie screen, a simple philosophical theme;
�Fight for Your
Rights�.
Secondly, MGR also wanted to project an
international stature as a politician. And the
Eelam issue was the only one in which he could
exert his weight. As the Time magazine (May 11,
1987) stated, �Even as the Central
government in New Delhi tried to maintain a civil,
though somewhat cool, stance toward its neighbor to
the south, Tamil Nadu Chief Minister Ramachandran
seemed intent on fueling the fires on the island.
He announced a grant of $3.3 million to Sri Lankans
last week for food, clothes, medicine and
ominously, other help.�
While diplomats and academics viewed MGR only as
a regional politician of India, he himself (with
some justification) did not believe in that line.
Demographically speaking, Tamil
Nadu�s population is three fold
larger than that of entire Sri Lanka. In terms of
population, Tamil Nadu ranked equally with Britain,
or France or [the then] Federal Republic of
Germany.
Due to historical and political incongruities,
while the titular heads of these three European
nations were given the status as
�world leaders�,
the Chief Minister of Tamil Nadu was treated as an
�extra� in
MGR�s cinematic analogy, and he
would have felt uncomfortable with that reality.
Tus MGR aimed to make a stronger stage presence
than he was assigned by the diplomatic
protocols.
Thirdly, Eelam issue also provided a
psychological tonic to MGR in his last years of the
legendary career. It gave him an opportunity to
contribute to the history of his Land of Birth. It
is well known that displaced individuals keep an
affectionate spot to the land of their birth, and
this affection reaches a climax, when they near the
end of their lives.
MGR was a displaced individual and fate had it
that he was moved to Tamil Nadu as a toddler from
Kandy, the place of his birth. Though he earned
fame in Tamil Nadu, MGR was treated as an outsider
in the political arena. Thus an active role in the
Eelam issue would have given MGR a psychological
uplift to influence the history of his Land of
Birth. It can be asserted that other ranking Indian
politicians would not bother to engage themselves
with the Eelam issue as MGR was, since they do not
possess the �birth
identity� MGR had with Sri
Lanka.�
[ year, movie name, production banner and
the director(s) name; Source:
�Sadhanigal Padaitha Thamizh
Thiraipada Varalaru�, by
�Film News�
Anandan, Sivagami Publications, Chennai, 2004.]
contributed by Sachi Sri Kantha