My Father-in-Law and Mother-in-Law - A Tribute
Amar Maheshwari
I wish now I knew my father-in-law more than I know of him from
glimpses of his collection of books, his journals and letters he had sent to his
wife when he was a 21 year old student at Lahore. He was an intellectual
aristocrat and a truly educated person. He perhaps may have been one of the few
persons in India who possessed and had read the 54 volume set of the Great
Books of the Western World brought out by Professor Robert Maynard Hutchins as
their Chief Editor. Hutchins had had the longest tenure as the President of the
University of Chicago. He considered education in humanities as the foundation
of human thought and knowledge. It may be appreciated that Hutchins during his
long tenure collected at the University of Chicago the best minds of the world
in all branches of knowledge particularly science and maths and brought to it
scientists such as S. Chandrasekhar, Enrico Fermi and a galaxy of intellectual
giants to all the faculties of the University and was responsible for setting
up the Centre for South Asian Studies and making the University of Chicago a
premier university. My contacts with father-in-law were not too many and he
left us before I could know him better. Although I possessed a Ph.D. degree in
physics from the University of Chicago and had research experience but when I
look back my good fortune was that he associated me with his family being fully
aware I lacked what he considered holistic education based in humanities.
He came to our
home in New Delhi with his brother who my father knew as both of them were
senior civil servants in the Government of India. Mr. K. N. Jain was looking for a suitable
boy for his daughter. My father had told me in the morning that day that Mr
Jain from Calcutta will visit us in the evening and I should be at home. I had
been visited earlier by many persons who wanted to consider me as a possible
match for their daughter. They were disappointed because I was indifferent to
my future prospects. Mr. K. N. Jain asked me what my immediate plans were. I
told him that at the September end of 1971 I was leaving India for spending a
year at the International Centre for Theoretical Physics at Trieste in Italy. I
had not planned then what I would do next. I was a Pool Officer of the CSIR and
was spending it at the University of Delhi, as I had planned to stay with my
parents for one year. He did not ask me any other question and asked my father
that he should see his daughter to consider her as a match for his son. Later
in the evening my father showed me the bio-data of Asha and suggested that I
should also reach Calcutta as he was going there on an official visit and that
he would arrange a train ticket for me to reach Calcutta during his visit. I
will not recall here details of my visit and my good fortune of my marriage
with Asha within three weeks of that fateful visit of Mr. Jain.
Shortly after
my marriage I came to Calcutta to take Asha to my home with me as my wife.
During this short visit to him he took me with him to meet his close
friends. I stayed in a room in the lower
portion of the house where he had his rich collection of books and his bedroom.
The rest of the family lived in the upper portion of the house. He briefly told
me of his interest in English poetry and told me that he was reading then Sri
Aurobindo’s
epic poem Savitri. As I have admitted in the beginning of this tribute I lacked
his interest in English literature, philosophy, history and arts I could not
assess his deep knowledge of humanities and intellectual abilities. I did write
him a few letters from Trieste but he found them to be forced pieces of writing
and wrote me back that I need not spend my time in writing to him as Asha was a
good communicator.
As the fate
would have it I became during my career the Vice Chancellor of Cochin
University of Science and Technology, a post equivalent to the President of a
university in America. I had to discover my inner potentials in order to lead
the most prestigious institution in Kerala. In addition to faculties in science
and technology the University had faculties in humanities. My communication
skills both oral and writing surfaced out. I had to grasp significance of
proposals submitted by academics in order to provide financial support and
pursue their acceptance and release of funds both from the State Government and
the Central Government. I have given an account of my academic career in the
book I wrote as my tribute to my father on his centenary. My father-in-law would have liked it and been
proud of me. Recently, I learnt reading Urdu and have been able to browse his
journal in which he wrote by hand using a calligraphy style Urdu poetry. Poets
he liked were Ghalib, Iqbal and other eminent poets whom I am unable to
identify. Poetry he liked were on deep thoughts on life and human emotions expressed
using both Persian and Hindustani words. Though, I have not been able to
understand his selection of poetry, jottings in his journal made me think on
eternal questions on life and death. I
have tried to answer some of his concerns using natural science. My response to his jottings is given in the
linked article Life on Earth. He would have found that although I
did not become truly educated as per his standards, all the same, I may have acquitted
myself worthy of the trust he reposed in me.
My mother-in-law was an exceptional person for
she loved all her children and their spouses equally. She was one person who
could put at ease all those who came in her contact. She left everlasting
impression of a loving mother who supported me at all stages of my life. As a
centenary tribute has been contributed by her children and grand children I may
not have much to add in terms of anecdotes.
It is my good
fortune in life that I became a part of the family of my late father-in-law and mother-in-law. I have
written this brief note as a token of my tribute to them on the occasion of
their centenary celebrations.