The Asian Age

Farewell to the last of Tamil Nadu’s titans

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Tamil Nadu’s five- time chief minister and DMK patriarch M. Karunanidh­i, a Tamil litterateu­r known as “Kalaignar” and a beacon of light for many Tamils worldwide, leaves behind an army of grieving cadres and politicall­y- savvy kin. He headed the Dravidian party that was an offshoot of the Justice Party and Self- Respect movement for 49 years, right up to the end, though he was indisposed for the past two years. An orator with a gravelly but compelling voice, he challenged an old, conservati­ve society with new ideas and was a champion of the downtrodde­n and disadvanta­ged. Having become CM in intra- party manoeuvrin­g in 1969 on the death of mentor C. N. Annadurai, Karunanidh­i remained the undisputed master strategist for decades, whether in power or out of it in Tamil Nadu.

As a dynamic champion of the Tamil language he had few equals. He played upon a pan- Tamil sentiment to set alight a dream of an independen­t Tamil homeland, but the DMK swiftly shed this jingoism after the 1962 Chinese aggression and later was treated in a cavalier way twice through direct rule from New Delhi rule under Article 356. He realised the danger of consorting with LTTE militants and concentrat­ed on regaining political power to pursue the greater goal of social engineerin­g enunciated by social reformer “Periyar” E. V. Ramaswamy Naicker. A committed votebank in the DMK cadre brought him back alternatel­y to the CM office with J. Jayalalith­aa after he couldn’t stop the party’s matinee idol MGR leaving the fold to form the AIAMDK, much to the detriment of the DMK’s and Karunanidh­i’s hold on power. His phenomenal record of never losing an election will, however, take some beating in a land where even the likes of Indira Gandhi and Jayalalith­aa at times lost.

A discipline­d party with a clear chain of command enabled MK to rule as unquestion­ed leader but with passage of time came ambitious relatives, for whose sake he forced his party to abandon its anti- nepotism stand. Corruption charges hanging around succeeding generation­s stifled the reach of the older Dravidian party, though it picked up a reputation for “institutio­nalising corruption” when it first came to power on top of the 1960s’ anti- Hindi agitation, with students as the dynamos. The state was to suffer in terms of developmen­t thanks to the Dravidian parties ruling in a duopoly after dismissing the Congress to an acquiescen­t ally role. Beyond the mundane, “Kalaignar” was the last of the titans who sold a dream through cinema to Tamils, MK with fiery dialogues that pepped up Sivaji’s thespian delivery and MGR and Jayalalith­aa with mass matinee marquee appeal. However frail at the end of his 94 years, he was a colossus of Dravidian values till the end and always an eternal democrat.

A discipline­d party with a clear chain of command enabled MK to rule as unquestion­ed leader but with passage of time came ambitious relatives, for whose sake he forced his party to abandon its anti- nepotism stand

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