Chuppala Nagesh Bhushan How a film star’s electoral upset in Tamil Nadu has ignited fresh hope—and hard questions—among Telangana’s long-marginalised Backward Classes There is a saying, attributed to no particular wit yet beloved of south Indian political romantics, that a lion is always a lion—however many jackals and other animals crowd the forest, there will be only one king. Vijay, the Tamil film star who last month shattered sixty years of Dravidian-party dominance in Tamil Nadu, is being invoked across the Deccan plateau as precisely that lion. The question animating activist meetings and WhatsApp forums from Warangal to Hyderabad is whether his improbable triumph contains a lesson—or even a blueprint—for the Backward Classes (BC) movement of Telangana. T. Chiranjeevulu, a retired Indian Administrative Service officer who chairs the BC Intellectuals Forum in Hyderabad, has been among the most vocal in drawing the parallel. Speaking to an audience of activists and young...
MOHAN GURUSWAMY: The late Jayendra Saraswathy, the self styled Shankaracharya was accused of having a former acolyte, Sankararaman, murdered and was sensationally arrested by the Tamil Nadu Police in a midnight operation when he was visiting Mahbubnagar, then in AP. The arrest of this "prince of Brahmins" sent shock waves through the powerful TamBram establishment in Tamil Nadu. How this came to pass is at the most obvious level a tale of hubris. When Henry II wanted to be rid of Thomas Beckett, the Archbishop of Canterbury all he had to do was to loudly exclaim: “Will no one rid me of this troublesome priest?” He had hardly uttered these words when four knights led by Reginald Fitz Urse set of for Canterbury to do the dastardly deed. Henry II Plantagenet was in Winston Churchill’s opinion “the very greatest King England ever knew” but history knows him mostly as the man who murdered Beckett. Likewise Jayendra Saraswathy will be remembered, rightly or wrongly, as the man w...