Nidheesh M K Profile picture
Sep 17, 2020 13 tweets 3 min read Read on X
PR Krishnakumar of Coimbatore AryaVaidya Pharmacy has passed away. We shared a puzzling bond; one that had no reason to exist other than his curiosity to connect with young people. It also belied my youthful rage that all great men are ego-maniacs. This is how we met: Thread Image
My father used to have a low-profile work under him in the Coimbatore AVP temple. Once, dad spotted Michel Danino's name in the temple premises and told someone that he had seen this name in a book on my table. Krishnakumar overheard my dad. He asked to meet me.
To be honest, in my youthful zest, I had hated this. Felt like the Padma Shri recipient is throwing his weight around by kind of summoning me. I was in college, all of 18 or 19 then. Still, on my dad's prodding, I boarded a train from our hometown Calicut to Coimbatore.
I met him the next day. He was sitting cross-legged on the beautiful AVP temple premises, making his daily morning visit. He said he was surprised that I'm reading Danino. I said it was not to praise the man, but to discuss in a peer group of wannabe Marxists. He gave a big smile
He asked about the group. I told him we'd pick one book every week, discuss it during the weekend at a public park. He said he missed being young. I said it's dull being young. Nobody takes you seriously. We discussed Danino, Osho, Krishnamurthy (all cliched now), and so on
I have now forgotten most of what we spoke about that day. But the touch and feel remain. I mostly remember him as a great listener, even to a teenager who can't possibly grasp fully all the big stuff he is saying. And when he spoke, he was like Dumbledore: wise and worldly.
He filled me up with hope. He asked to follow passions in life, not money. I rebuked that the rich can afford to say so. He disagreed, told strange tales of growing up in an elite Palakkad family, amidst people who were apparently jealous for the money and power that he'd inherit
In the end, he asked to shoot anything I want: I asked if Ayurveda was a fraud, how would one standardise it using modern science? "That is a good question," he said. "And that, young man, is the passion I've chased my whole life." I read on the AVP Research Foundation only later
Alas, he asked me to reach out for any help in the future. I never did, even when I was badly short of cash to study journalism, which he suggested! But occasionally, we wrote each other emails. Back then, having the choice to reach out to a great person was quite wonderful!
For ex, I was one of the last students to be recruited from my j-school. I walked out of a job intw (still don't regret). When a newspaper asked to essay abt the "degradation of journalism", I wrote abt how maintaining accuracy in their own reports would be nice (with examples).
The result was totally frustrating. Everybody was placed except a few of us. I wrote to Krishnakumar how I felt chasing passions. Pat came his reply: "let them be what they want or say... but you have in mind that u need a job n put up with all that"
Well, I didn't "put up with all of that". But I did go back to the office of the editor I had fought with, reasoned with him, and, by EOD, got my first job.

By then actually, Krishnakumar had gone behind my back and did some pujas! Both of us could brag that it was our doing!
Likewise for my wedding, surprisingly, he arranged someone to personally deliver me flowers. These gestures would happen once in a while, and they felt really, really nice. There was hardly anything I could offer in return to such a great man, except perhaps telling these stories

• • •

Missing some Tweet in this thread? You can try to force a refresh
 

Keep Current with Nidheesh M K

Nidheesh M K Profile picture

Stay in touch and get notified when new unrolls are available from this author!

Read all threads

This Thread may be Removed Anytime!

PDF

Twitter may remove this content at anytime! Save it as PDF for later use!

Try unrolling a thread yourself!

how to unroll video
  1. Follow @ThreadReaderApp to mention us!

  2. From a Twitter thread mention us with a keyword "unroll"
@threadreaderapp unroll

Practice here first or read more on our help page!

More from @mknid

May 18
A 🧵on the new cabinet of Kerala, other than CM VD Satheesan, in the order they are swearing in:

PK Kunhalikutty: the swearing-in crowd cheered big for a reason, the don of the Muslim League is back, 85327 votes from Malappuram is not the total votes polled for him, that's his winning margin (the biggest ever for a Kerala MLA).

Going to be a towering figure in this cabinet by sheer experience of having seen it all done it all already, fifth time as minister now (imagine being a CM who was never a minister and now has to work with a man who was already Industries Minister in 1991 when you were yet to be even elected anywhere).

First won an assembly seat in 1982 at the age of 31, had his face scrubbed in the mud over the ice cream parlour case in which he was never formally charged but the political fallout cost him his ministership and his only electoral defeat in 2006.
Ramesh Chennithala: the CM man Kerala never had, six time MLA from Haripad (his wins are underrated I think, Haripad being the kind of seat where the tricorner contest with the BJP rising is a big factor, and he just took it again by 23377 votes), playing second fiddle to the CM the way he did in the Chandy ministry, Home Minister again like he was in 2014-16, when his Operation Kubera crackdown on illegal blade mafia money lenders was the one big churn he brought to the force.

Knows the IAS-IPS officials (and their unpublished stories) and the way power operates in the Secretariat like the back of his hand. I'm assuming at some point he'd want to push his son Ramit (Interview topper, UPSC, IRS) to the limelight in the next five years.
Sunny Joseph: if you have never driven up to Iritty it is hard to explain the pull of this man, son of a high-range farmer who they call Sunnychaayan in the Kannur hills, four-time MLA from Peravoor who just took out KK Shailaja of all people (the woman who held the previous record for biggest margin in Kerala).

The KPCC President quietly drafted into the cabinet, the man whose first term as MLA in 2011 is when Iritty finally became a taluk. The average highrange farmer (who is the most affected by man-animal conflicts on the rise in Kerala) has now a voice in the cabinet.
Read 15 tweets
Jan 1, 2025
Dr. K.S. Manilal, one of Kerala’s greatest unsung heroes, has passed away. He discovered new plants, rediscovered what was believed to be extinct, helped save Silent Valley, and unlocked a 300-year-old botanical mystery in Latin—yet many Malayalis may not have known his name. 🧵 Image
In the 1970s, Silent Valley became a battlefield. KSEB wanted to build a dam, sparking protests. They weaponized Dr. B.K. Nair, a Calicut University professor, whose report claimed the Valley wasn’t unique. Manilal, his junior, secured a grant and vanished into the forest.
He and three students— C.R. Suresh, C. Satheeshkumar, and T. Sabu— spent 400 nights in Silent Valley, enduring leeches, poisonous plants, wild elephants, and relentless rain. In 4 years, they published “Flora of Silent Valley”, which showed science outweighed convenience. Image
Read 9 tweets
May 24, 2024
Anasuya Sengupta, who grew up in Kolkata and studied at Jadavpur University, has become the first Indian to win the Cannes Best Actor award.

"The Shameless," directed by Konstantin Bojanov, seems like a film mainstream Bollywood wouldn’t dare to finance or act in.

It looks🧵 Credit: @cup_o_t on IG
at the harsh reality of a Delhi brothel, through the eyes of a woman on the run, acc to reports. The movie faced endless delays& financial nightmares before #Cannes2024.

Bojanov told The Hindu: “There were points when I nearly gave up on the film”. Tanmay Dhanania, one of the
film's stars (@tanmaydhanania), had blasted on IG about indie makers scraping for funds while clueless influencers get sponsored to walk the red carpet. It’s absurd. These actors had to resort to IG for support to attend Cannes. The lack of genuine support for these talents is
Read 6 tweets
May 8, 2024
About fifty years ago, he was a man in a remote part of Kerala who had nothing to lose but his farmer father's dozen ducks.

He exited a US class action lawsuit in 2019 for $37 million.

Years ago, this is how I began my pitch to an editor to do a profile about him. A 🧵
I was fascinated by him.

In 2003, he formed Believers Church, where he was practically the Pope.

Gospel For Asia, which he founded in 1979, supposedly raised $700 million for Indian charities btw 2003-2014. Over $100 million of this money allegedly disappeared annually.
He developed massive Indian and US homes and offices during this time. He ran a 2300-acre rubber estate, a large engineering and medical institution, and six schools in Kerala. He even had a football team, GFA FC, playing for Myanmar National League.
Read 13 tweets
Aug 15, 2023
A story about journalistic curiousity, epic homes and 2000km bus rides to work.

Years ago, I came across this data: 7-9% of Kerala's middle- and low-income workforce disappears during Bihar's Chhath festival. After months of my editor pressing me to write about this, I dove in🧵 Image
It was relatively an easy story. As a Malayali, this was my lived reality. Migrant workers were everywhere in Kerala, from your neighborhood tea chettan to carpenter to fishermen to front office staff. They were so common that Churches held Sunday masses in Odia, Hindi etc. But
further research stunned me: 1 in 4 adult males in Kerala were interstate migrants. Kerala employed 2.5 million people from Odisha, Bihar, Assam, UP, etc. Soon, they'll be 5 million. We published Great Indian Migration: Kerala's Silent Revolution. However t.ly/Xg9KX
Read 15 tweets
Mar 7, 2023
Ordinary people who stand up for liberal causes despite opposition have my admiration. Here's one such story. C Shukoor, who made you laugh in #NnaThaanCaseKodu, is remarrying his wife of 29 years, Sheena, on this Women's Day. Why? It's political defiance to a 7th century law.
Under Muslim Personal Law in which he married first, his daughters will receive two-thirds of his money. The family's men would get the rest. Shukoor, a practicing Muslim, believes Islamic law as applied in Prophet Mohammed's day should not influence his daughters' inheritance.
He's remarrying Sheena Shukoor under the Special Marriage Act on Women's Day as a solution. He says it's not money but about respecting Article 15 of the Constitution, which says the State shall not discriminate any citizen on the ground of gender.
Read 4 tweets

Did Thread Reader help you today?

Support us! We are indie developers!


This site is made by just two indie developers on a laptop doing marketing, support and development! Read more about the story.

Become a Premium Member ($3/month or $30/year) and get exclusive features!

Become Premium

Don't want to be a Premium member but still want to support us?

Make a small donation by buying us coffee ($5) or help with server cost ($10)

Donate via Paypal

Or Donate anonymously using crypto!

Ethereum

0xfe58350B80634f60Fa6Dc149a72b4DFbc17D341E copy

Bitcoin

3ATGMxNzCUFzxpMCHL5sWSt4DVtS8UqXpi copy

Thank you for your support!

Follow Us!

:(