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Hometown, school eulogise MAHAKAVI’S LEGACY

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MADURAI: The 100th death anniversar­y of the legendary Tamil poet C Subramania Bharathi was observed in Madurai, where the poet worked as a teacher in Sethupathi Higher Secondary School, which remains in the heart of the city since 1889, and Ettayapura­m, his birthplace in Thoothukud­i district, on Saturday.

Scores of people and scholars offered floral tributes to the late poet at the statue facing the school entrance. P Moorthy, Minister for Commercial Taxes and Registrati­on, Madurai Collector S Aneesh Sekhar and officials from various department­s paid homage at the school, where the poet did a short stint as a teacher of Tamil in 1904.

At the school, which now has an enrollment of around 2,400 students, where the poet served in the days of yore, a literary programme was organised to mark the centenary of Bharati’s death. Scholars and other dignitarie­s recalled the ancient Tamil poet’s literary contributi­ons and his kind of journalism.

Eulogising the poet’s legacy and his phenomenal role in the freedom movement, KS Narayanan, Head Master, Sethupathi School, where he worked for three months in 1904, said Mahakavi Bharathi is still with us (as teaching faculty) and the poet’s name is being maintained in the school registry and that it will remain there forever.

B Balamuruga­n, an alumnus, who has been instrument­al behind the establishm­ent of Anbu Suvar (Wall of Kindness) on the school premises on this anniversar­y, said books penned by Poet Bharathi were placed on the shelves to motivate like-minded people to offer educationa­l aid to the needy.

R Mohan, the caretaker of the poet’s house in Ettayapura­m, who reWLUHG LQ -DQXDU\ DIWHU \HDUV of service, said Bharathi Illam (Bharathi’s house) was taken into possession by the State government RQ 0D\ IRU EHWWHU FDUH ZKHQ M Karunanidh­i was the Chief Minister. The poet’s house, which during the 90s was visited by political stalwarts including BJP veteran LK Advani, was initially maintained by PWD and later on by Archaeolog­y Department, and only after 1992, it came under the control of the Department of Informatio­n and Public Relations, he said.

Bharathiya­r Memorial Trust, Kovilpatti, hailed the state government’s

Muthu Murugan, founder of the Trust, along with young students from Tamil Baptist Primary school, Ettayapura­m, showcased patriotic fervour by wearing a white turban, black jacket and dhoti resembling the poet, and took out a rally to Bharathi’s manimandap­am, where they paid homage. The participan­ts drew rangoli of the poet’s image, where Social Welfare Minister P Geetha Jeevan offered prizes to winners of contests organised to mark the day.

 ??  ?? Rangoli at Bharathi’s manimandap­am in Ettayapura­m; (below) ‘Anbu Suvar’, the wall of kindness, with books penned by the Mahakavi
Rangoli at Bharathi’s manimandap­am in Ettayapura­m; (below) ‘Anbu Suvar’, the wall of kindness, with books penned by the Mahakavi
 ??  ?? announceme­nt declaring the death anniversar­y of Mahakavi Subramania Bharathi as Mahakavi Day. P
announceme­nt declaring the death anniversar­y of Mahakavi Subramania Bharathi as Mahakavi Day. P

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