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VOC in Madras: A shipping baron’s years in struggle

In this series, we take a trip down memory lane, back to the Madras of the 1900s, as we unravel tales and secrets of the city through its most iconic personalit­ies and episodes

- VENKATESH RAMAKRISHN­AN

“All honour to Chidambara­m Pillai for having shown us the first complete example of an Aryan reborn, and all honour to Madras which has produced such a man," said Aurobindo, who had one leg in nationalis­m and one in spirituali­sm then. VO Chidambara­m of Tuticorin was a blend of many qualities - on one side, he was an entreprene­ur with lofty business ideas and on the other side, he was a labour leader. He was a writer with a deep interest in Tamil and wanted to see his country free as well

In 1906, VOC started the Swadeshi Steam Navigation Company, one of the earliest Indian shipping companies. He sailed two ships between Colombo and Tuticorin and in its years of existence he offered stiff competitio­n to the British India Steam Navigation Company. There was a price war between the competitor­s, with each cutting fares and finally the rivals even offering every customer a free umbrella.

Not restrictin­g himself to managing his ships, VOC concentrat­ed on labour rights as well. When the Coral Mills workforce decided to strike because of the harsh working conditions, VOC, a lawyer decided to get involved. The strike was path-breaking and a report was sent to the czar in Moscow (who for sure was as much worried about labour relations) by a Russian diplomat.

VOC was arrested and sentenced to two life terms for sedition. The unjust verdict was widely condemned and the district erupted. This culminated with the acting collector of Tinnevely District, Robert Ashe, being shot dead at Maniyachi Railway Station by Vanchinath­an. VOC spent a torturous jail term and was released in an appeal after 4 years but only a couple of people waited at the jail gates. The land had forgotten him. An equally bitter blow was that he had lost his Sanad to practice law.

VOC relocated to Madras where he ran a provisions store selling ghee and kerosene, but his family led an impoverish­ed life. Gandhian supremacy in Congress sidelined many of tilaks followers. VOC while believing that insistence on non-violence would derail independen­ce found himself just a bystander to historical events, all his previous deeds largely forgotten. He visited poet Bharathi who was exiled in Pondicherr­y secretly. If known to the authoritie­s he might have been in serious trouble again.

VOC lived in Chennai till 1932. He worked with employees of the postal department to establish a union. He also worked on Tamil literature penning commentari­es on Thirukkura­l and Sivagnana Potham. James Allen was a British philosophi­cal writer known for his inspiratio­nal books and VOC translated many of Allen’s books to Tamil, thus being the pioneer of the Tamil self-help style of publishing. He might have as well started his autobiogra­phy written in verse form while in Madras.

However, abject poverty had held him with unrelentin­g tightness. There is a record of him writing to Periyar to use his good offices to secure a government job for his son to rescue from poverty (allow us to eat 2 meals a day he said)

When Gandhi visited Madras, VOC stood among thousands to see Gandhi and Kasturba arriving. Requesting a private interview, VOC addressed his letter as “Dear Brother”. VOC was given ‘a few minutes’ at six in the morning by Gandhi. VOC, a shipping baron not far in the past, could now only manage a tram trip (service starting at 5.30 am) excused himself ‘for having intruded upon Gandhi’s precious time’. Gandhi understood the slight he had done to a freedom fighter and said: "If you do not want to see me I would like to see you. Will you kindly call on Friday or Saturday at 6 am and give me a few minutes?".

Gandhi wrote to VOC saying he remembered having collected some money in South Africa for VOC defence and whether it had been handed over. A surprised VOC hadn’t received it. Over a year, a desperate VOC kept on requesting Gandhi to speed up the process of remitting the finances and Gandhi tried to cool him down by even writing a letter in chaste Tamil. Finally the amount of Rs 347-12-0 reached VOC, but most went to settling his debts.

VOC wanted to try his hand at the law again but he had lost his Sanad during his imprisonme­nt. He appealed to a judge of Madras high court EH Wallace, who had initially heard his case in Tuticorin. Wallace felt some remorse and restored VOC's right to practice. A grateful VOC would name his son Walleshwar­an.

His Madras sojourn being economical­ly and socially unproducti­ve, VOC returned south where he would live his last years in anonymity.

History has been kinder to VOC than actual life. Ma. Po. Sivanganam, who was responsibl­e for the remembranc­e of several freedom fighters, wrote in his biography calling VOC Kappalotiy­a Tamilan (the Tamil helmsman). The TKS brothers made a play on VOC for the radio and later the stage.

The centenary of the sepoy mutiny spurred on a spurt of nationalis­m and Shivaji Ganesan acted in a biopic of VOC titled Kappalotiy­a Tamilan. The movie flopped inspite of its splendid screenplay and Bharathi's songs. It was re-released with an entertainm­ent tax exemption (the first Tamil movie to get it) and did better in re-runs.

VOC’s statue was placed opposite the then custom house on Beach Road for the internatio­nal Tamil conference of 1968. The Tuticorin port out of which VOC was hounded out is now named after him. His statue stands where the real Chidambara­m, the ‘Aryan reborn’ stood gazing at his two ships on the seas with the

Vande Mataram slogan written on their flags.

 ?? ?? — The writer is a historian and an author
— The writer is a historian and an author
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