In Dalitwada Lakshmama, Akkalavva, Annasamy and other old people say that if he were alive, they would not be in such difficulties. To all of them he was a son.
Chalapathi says that but
for his encouragement and assistance he would not have become a teacher. In his memory he aids many young students now. To
such youth he was a father ...
Annasamy, tells me - " you forget him
sometimes when you are working don't you ? I remember him every day, and light
a lamp at his samadhi"
Barefoot: What I learnt from Naren, Harsh Mander (Sept 26 2009, The Hindu)
Narendranath Gorrepati was a humanist whose initiatives for change were underpinned by humility and love ...
In his thirties, Naren returned to his village, to work
on his farms and pursue a quiet life of service. He was born into a
landlord family. His father, unwilling to alter the rules of the caste
society of the village, refused to allow dalits to enter the kitchen or
sit at their table. Naren too was stubborn, but in his gentle way. The
satyagrah he crafted was uniquely his: in all his years in the village
while his father was alive, he ate his food on the kitchen floor, not on
the dining table, and when there were dalit visitors, they ate with him
on the floor. His wife and two young daughters joined him in this
practice. So that his father was not lonely when he ate, Naren would sit
with him at the table when he had his meals, but not eat himself. Only
later would he eat, seated on the floor.
Narendranath
Gorrepati, or Naren as we called him, breathed his last a few months
ago, succumbing calmly on July 5, 2009 to a malevolent brain tumour. I
was among his devastated family and close friends who gathered by his
side, as his life ebbed away. We knew he was widely loved, but none of
us was prepared for the crowds that gathered as news of his death
spread. His body was taken to his village Venkatramapuram in Chittoor,
Andhra Pradesh. Overnight people had prepared posters saluting him. The
District Collector and senior officials observed silence in respect to
his memory, which had never happened for a non-official in living
memory. Hundreds of people joined his funeral procession. It was as
though every home in the village, dalit or upper caste, had lost their
own son or brother.
Touching lives
I
had known, loved and admired Naren for three decades now. But I had not
suspected the extent to which he had touched — and illuminated — so
many lives. There are very few who wear their goodness so lightly, so
casually on their shoulders, as did Naren. I decided then to set out to
rediscover my friend, after he left us. And in so doing, he taught me
many lessons, of life and of goodness.
Naren was in
university in Delhi with me, a few years my senior. He joined as an
officer in the State Bank of Hyderabad, but was restless from the start.
He resigned in five years, and initially worked for Lokayan in Delhi in
1980, at half his bank salary. He then moved to Hyderabad, with his
wife and life-long soul-mate Uma Shankari. He soon involved himself in
efforts to document the suffering of people displaced by the Srisailam
mega-project, and joined efforts for communal harmony in Hyderabad.
Crucial decision
A
series of personal tragedies — the loss of Uma’s father, and Naren’s
mother in a fire accident — pushed them to take the next decision,
changing the rest of their lives. Uma recalls, “Somehow death became
certain, life very, very uncertain. We realised that whatever good
things we want to do, we should do today, now. We planned therefore to
follow our hearts: go to our village, look after the lands with organic
farming, and continue Naren’s social work”. So in 1987, the family
returned to Venkatramapuram, where they lived until Naren took ill this
year. Naren’s father joined them, they sent their elder daughter
Samyuktha to school in Chennai, and raised their younger Lakshmi in the
village until she grew older.
Naren was
disillusioned by funded NGOs, so he crafted his own mode of social
engagement, what Uma calls “a kind of Gandhian swadeshi-swaraj model. He
believed that apart from taking care modestly of their own families,
everybody should do some public work. It could be on a very small scale,
restricted maybe to a panchayat or even a village. He also felt there
were enough resources, funds for public work within even the poorest
communities in India; it is just that people are not inspired to
contribute these”. Naren decided to work within the district, without
any funding.
He was troubled by oppression of dalits,
and joined hands with friends for a padayatra, or march, through many
villages, where they documented practices of untouchability like
barriers to drawing water from the village well or worship at the
temple, symbolically breaking the separate cups for dalits at tea
stalls. He contributed invaluably to land reforms, countering
conventional wisdom that there was no land left to be distributed to the
landless, by painstakingly identifying — over many years — 12,000 acres
of lands in the district, which were legally surplus but still held by
landlords, and also temple lands. He would on an average day leave home
at dawn and return by the last bus, travelling to villages and
collecting evidence in land cases, which he would present to district
officials every week. And when all else would fail, he would join the
peaceful but forceful occupation of these lands by the poor. Naren would
be at the forefront when the police would use force.
Unconventional
Naren
firmly believed in organic ecological farming, therefore he cultivated
his own fields experimenting with these technologies, defying
conventional market wisdom. His own travails and losses taught him
first-hand the suffering of dry-land farmers, about which he campaigned
extensively, and wrote a Telugu book Itlu Oka Raithu. He contributed to
village self-rule by reviving and participating in village settlement of
family and land disputes. He fought the destruction of crops by
elephants in ways that would protect both the elephants, by creating a
corridor for them, and victims who lost crops, by adequate compensation.
He resisted and helped reverse heavy electricity tariffs on farmers.
Naren
had phenomenal moral energy but he was not a moralist, as Vijay Pratap,
another friend recalls. He was never judgemental about others; he did
not make other persons feel small for the choices they were making. Yet
he was resolute and uncompromising in the pursuit of his own
convictions. He strived to practise every idea he preached; he was not
always successful, but he always tried.
Even much
more important than what he contributed to his people, was how he
related with them. Dalit families recall how Naren used to routinely
visit their homes, eat with them and wash his own plate. He helped
educate many dalit children and youth, and encouraged inter-caste
weddings. In his own home, everyone was welcome and fed generously, even
as Uma sometimes argued with him about how they would make ends meet.
He sent mangoes from their orchard every year to all: to comrades, and
officials, but never forgot all the poorer people who had no mango
gardens of their own — the washer-folk, barbers, potters, smiths,
carpenters, mechanics, and school teachers.
Everyone’s friend
His
comrade Rajni Bakshi recalls how he uniquely crossed all boundaries:
everyone was his friend — the police, government officials, Naxals, RSS
members, Communists, Ambedkarites, dalits, casteists, even the very
persons whose lands they were claiming for assigning to the poor. Human
rights activist Balagopal recalls, “To Gandhians he spoke of class
struggle. To Naxalites he spoke about the immorality of violence”. Both
mourn him inconsolably today.
There are perhaps many
who did more than Naren for land reforms, for organic farming, for
dalit equity. But what made Naren different was that all the work he
accomplished, he did with humility and great love. He carried no rancour
against those he fought. “Naren did not work for a mere acre of land or
more wages or better farm prices or subsidies. He worked for truth,
justice and love.”
In the months since I wept by his
bedside, bereft as his last breath left him, these are the lessons — of
life and goodness — that I learnt from my friend Naren. "
"Vinoba went from village to village appealing to the landlords to hand over at least one sixth of their land to the landless cultivators of their village. ... a generation later Naren took over trying to identify and return the bhoodan lands to the people ... the torch passes on ...
"Vinoba went from village to village appealing to the landlords to hand over at least one sixth of their land to the landless cultivators of their village. ... a generation later Naren took over trying to identify and return the bhoodan lands to the people ... the torch passes on ...
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