Through Reforms, Tradition,
Science, and Humor
Twenty-Third Meeting of
Friday
Evening Team (FETE)
Press Club Hyderabad (July 17, 2026)
Vanam Jwala Narasimha
Rao
Some traditions demand ceremony; others thrive on
consistency. The Friday Evening Meetings at the Press Club Hyderabad exemplify
the latter. What began as an informal interaction among like-minded journalists
has evolved over 23 uninterrupted weeks into a prestigious academic fellowship.
Here, experience is shared informally, disagreements remain cordial, curiosity
knows no bounds, and every gathering leaves a lasting intellectual legacy.
The 23rd gathering on July 17, 2026,
reaffirmed this evolving character with clarity. The evening proved that
meaningful dialogue rarely follows a script. Instead, it moves naturally
through its own rhythm: bridging contemporary constitutional developments with
civilizational knowledge, democratic institutions with epic geography, and
astronomical science with cinema, humour, and media broadcasting memories.
The familiar circle welcomed first-time participant MVR
Sharma (Darshanam Sharma), a Press Club member and respected scholar of India's
traditional knowledge systems. Other attendees included Lalita Iyer, GK Murthy,
Hanumanth Rao, Bhandaru Srinivasa Rao, Aitharaju Bharat, and myself.
Devulapalli Amar and Mallepally Lakshmaiah joined virtually from Sri Lanka via
Zoom. Their online presence highlighted a defining feature of the fellowship:
geographical distance may separate participants, but it never interrupts
continuity.
Increasingly, the evening naturally opened with
developments flowing from the previous week's discussions. Conversations rarely
conclude within a single Friday; they mature over successive gatherings through
collective reflection. Accordingly, the first segment focused on the delegation
that met the Chief Electoral Officer of Telangana on July 16, 2026, pursuing a
unanimous decision taken during the 22nd Friday Meeting.
The gathering appreciated the initiative of the Friday
Evening Team (FETE: a Fellowship Celebrating Continuous Civic Engagement and Intellectual
Enlightenment) delegation, which highlighted the practical difficulties
ordinary citizens face during the ongoing Special Intensive Revision (SIR) of
electoral rolls. Meeting with the Chief Electoral Officer, the team presented
three entirely constructive, non-partisan suggestions aimed at systemic
facilitation.
First, issuing a Permanent Residence Certificate as an
acceptable documentary basis wherever appropriate. Second, extending prescribed
timelines to accommodate genuine applicants unable to complete the process
within the existing schedule. Third, simplifying procedural requirements so
every eligible adult citizen exercises their constitutional right to vote
without avoidable hardship. The emphasis throughout remained entirely on
facilitation rather than criticism.
The discussion underscored the principle that electoral
integrity and citizen convenience are complementary democratic objectives, not
competing considerations. Participants noted with quiet satisfaction the wider
public attention the initiative attracted, particularly a detailed report by
the Mumbai-based digital platform Influencing. Titled ‘Press Club
Hyderabad lobbies CEO TG for voter roll reforms amid SIR concerns,’ the article
was based on Ms Meena R Prashant’s interview with Amar.
The report observed that a delegation of senior
journalists and professionals approached the Chief Electoral Officer solely in
the larger public interest of protecting ordinary citizens' voting rights,
rather than seeking media privileges or institutional advantages. Several
participants noted this distinction as the most meaningful recognition of the
initiative's true spirit. The article highlighted that the delegation spent
considerable time discussing the practical implications and potential procedural
complexities of the electoral revision process.
The report equally noted that the initiative was an
effort motivated by democratic responsibility rather than institutional
lobbying for professional advantage. The meeting acknowledged that such
independent public recognition strengthens confidence that objective,
non-partisan civic engagement commands true credibility. This led to a broader
reflection: the interaction with the CEO served as a prime example of
responsible citizenship grounded in experience, moderation, and constitutional
faith.
Characteristically, a single incidental observation
completely transformed the evening's direction. With Amar and Mallepally
joining virtually from Sri Lanka, a passing remark noted that the island had
entered Indian consciousness millennia before modern political boundaries
emerged. This simple insight bridged present-day electoral processes with the
timeless narrative of the Ramayana Kishkindha Kanda. It seamlessly shifted the
focus to a region that occupies an incredibly significant geographical and
civilizational location in India’s literary memory.
A delightful characteristic of these meetings is their
capacity to travel effortlessly across time and disciplines. Sri Lanka ceased
to be merely a modern nation-state across the Palk Strait, transforming instead
into the Lanka of Valmiki: the destination that tested Hanuman's courage,
intelligence, and unwavering devotion. Geography merged with literature, and
mythology intertwined with history, as contemporary travel unexpectedly
reopened one of the most enduring narratives of Indian civilization.
The discussion revolved around Sugriva's remarkably
detailed instructions to the Vanara search parties before they dispersed for
Sita. Participants reflected with astonishment upon the geographical knowledge
embedded within the Ramayana. Long before modern maps, satellites, or
cartographic sciences, the epic described mountains, forests, rivers, oceans,
and distant regions with an accuracy that continues to intrigue scholars.
Sugriva's directions were clearly no vague poetic references.
They constituted a structured geographical briefing,
identifying routes, landmarks, and natural formations across the known world of
that era. Viewed literally, symbolically, or historically, these descriptions
offer extraordinary testimony to the geographical imagination and observational
abilities preserved in India's ancient literary tradition. This sparked a
thoughtful discussion on Hanuman's search for Sita, with participants observing
that his success arose from far more than mere physical strength.
Hanuman's patience, presence of mind, capacity to analyse
unfamiliar situations, and unwavering commitment eventually enabled him to
discover Sita in the Ashoka Vatika after exhausting every other possibility.
The narrative thus became an enduring lesson in perseverance rather than just
an epic episode. Participants remarked that human endeavour often reaches its
destination not through force, but through resilience, careful observation, and
a refusal to surrender to uncertainty. This naturally recalled how ancient
narratives reveal fresh insights when revisited with contemporary sensitivity.
Interestingly, the discussion touched upon a broader
civilizational issue. Participants observed that ancient Indian literature
frequently integrated geography, astronomy, ethics, governance, ecology, and
philosophy into a single narrative framework. Traditional Indian knowledge
systems clearly encouraged an integrated understanding of the world.
Consequently, a discussion on Hanuman's journey could simultaneously illuminate
geography, leadership, diplomacy, psychology, ethics, and devotion without appearing
fragmented.
While this conversation unfolded, a contemporary
development entered the discussion naturally. Media reports circulating that
day referred to significant Supreme Court observations concerning the
constitutional limits of the Election Commission during electoral roll
revisions. Though details required deeper analysis, participants reflected on
the emerging constitutional principle: determining citizenship is a matter
governed strictly by law and competent statutory authorities, rather than an
issue conclusively decided through the administrative process of electoral
enrolment alone.
This observation resonated deeply, connecting directly
with concerns discussed over the previous two Friday meetings. Participants
reiterated that free and fair elections constitute the foundation of
parliamentary democracy. Equally indispensable, however, is the assurance that
genuine citizens are neither excluded by procedural complexities nor subjected
to uncertainty regarding constitutional rights. Electoral purity and universal
participation are not opposing objectives; rather, each actively strengthens
the legitimacy of the other.
A democracy derives its moral authority not merely from
accurate electoral rolls, but from public confidence that fairness governs
every stage of the process. Members felt that constitutional institutions
derive their greatest strength not from the extent of their powers, but from
the clarity with which they exercise them within constitutional limits. Respect
for institutional boundaries is itself an essential constitutional value.
Whenever each institution faithfully performs its
designated role while respecting the jurisdiction of others, democratic
governance acquires stability and credibility. In that context, the reported
judicial observations were viewed less as a confrontation between institutions
and more as an affirmation of the constitutional architecture envisioned by the
framers. The discussion also served to reinforce the philosophy that had
inspired the Friday Evening Team's recent interaction with the Chief Electoral
Officer.
By this stage, the Friday Meetings had once again
demonstrated their unique, evolving rhythm. Moving effortlessly from the
civilizational geography of the Ramayana, the conversation entered
another fascinating domain: India's traditional astronomical knowledge and
calendrical sciences. This transition introduced the gathering to the profound
intellectual legacy of the forthcoming Telangana Vidwatsabha (First week of
August, 2026 in Ravindra Bharati), presented by first-time participant
Darshanam Sharma.
The discussion illuminated another enduring pillar of
India's intellectual heritage: its remarkable tradition of scientific
time-reckoning, astronomical observation, and centuries-old scholarly debate.
The Telangana Vidwatsabha stands as an annual congregation of scholars devoted
to preserving, refining, and disseminating India's classical intellectual
systems. Sharma's exposition was neither a formal lecture nor an academic
presentation; instead, it effortlessly unfolded the deep sophistication of a living
knowledge framework.
Many participants confessed that although long familiar
with concepts like Panchanga, Muhurtam, Nakshatras, and Tithis,
few had examined the scientific foundations behind them. Darshanam Sharma’s
insights became an illuminating exercise in separating inherited understanding
from informed appreciation. What emerged was not an explanation of ritual
practices, but a rare glimpse into an extraordinarily disciplined tradition of
empirical astronomical observation and mathematical calculation.
Long before modern observatories emerged, Indian
astronomers developed sophisticated methods to calculate and record celestial
phenomena with remarkable precision. This realization expanded the discussion
into the historical evolution of Indian astronomical sciences, which produced
an unbroken succession of distinguished mathematicians whose contributions
command international respect. Their works demonstrate that Jyotisha
encompasses a far broader, more rigorous intellectual tradition than popularly
recognized today, rooted firmly in mathematics, geometry, astronomy, and the
systematic measurement of time.
Darshanam Sharma described the purpose and functioning of
the Telangana Vidwatsabha. Far from being ceremonial, it serves as an important
forum where diverse scholars deliberate upon calendrical calculations,
reconcile astronomical observations, and resolve interpretative differences to
maintain regional uniformity in Panchanga preparation. Such scholarly
exchanges exemplify an enduring tradition where knowledge advances through
dialogue, rigorous examination, and collective reasoning rather than rigid
dogma.
The atmosphere in the hall underwent a subtle
transformation. What began as a standard introduction to traditional calendars
quickly evolved into one of the most intellectually stimulating sessions of
recent Friday gatherings. Members who expected a casual evening found
themselves revisiting centuries of Indian scientific thought, collectively
recognizing that the civilization's intellectual inheritance extends far beyond
what is commonly encountered in contemporary discourse.
Over a social drink, the evening gently drifted from
ancient observatories and celestial calculations to the modern worlds of
cinema, espionage, and popular culture. This transition was deeply symbolic;
the very same gathering that had just debated Hanuman’s legendary intelligence
mission in Lanka seamlessly pivoted to discussing the film Durandhar, a
contemporary cinematic narrative centred entirely on intelligence agencies and
covert operations. What followed demonstrated the remarkable versatility of
these gatherings, where profound scholarship and delightful informality coexist
with ease: each enriching the other rather than diminishing it.
As the evening progressed, curiosity shifted from cinema
to an unexpected subject: the bottle of rum on the table. Why, someone wondered
aloud, do most varieties prominently display ‘XXX’ on their labels? The
question opened an animated discussion, with explanations ranging from old
traditions of denoting maturity and strength to commercial branding inherited
from colonial times. This informal conversation reflected the group's
characteristic tendency to explore the history behind even the most ordinary
objects.
Attention then turned to the character of rum itself.
Participants compared it with whisky and other spirits, discussing raw
materials, flavour, aging, and regional preferences. Someone humorously
observed that rum is perhaps less susceptible to adulteration due to its modest
price, provoking another round of laughter. Whether technically accurate or
not, the remark perfectly captured the light-hearted spirit of the moment.
The evening concluded with a captivating segment as GK
Murthy and Hanumanth Rao shared professional memories. First, they narrated how
teamwork, experience, and calm decision-making transformed a logistically
challenging public event into a major broadcasting achievement. Conversely,
their second recollection highlighted a painstakingly prepared program rendered
unsuccessful by uncontrollable circumstances. Shared with refreshing honesty
and gentle humour, it reminded everyone that media broadcasting: like life
itself, is measured equally by lessons learned from disappointments.
As the 23rd Friday Evening Meeting drew to a close,
participants experienced the defining hallmark of these gatherings. Moving
effortlessly without a rigid agenda, formal resolutions, or a predetermined
destination, the unhurried conversation travelled from electoral reforms and
constitutional principles to the Ramayana and astronomy, and from traditional
scholarship and cinema to convivial humour and cherished broadcasting memories.
These evenings are not organised merely to exchange information, but to celebrate
conversation itself.
Here, deep scholarship beautifully coexists with humour, experience with curiosity, and serious reflection with warm companionship, adding another rich page to a growing collective memory. After twenty-three uninterrupted weeks, one fundamental truth stands out with absolute clarity: institutions are built by rules, friendships by trust, but traditions by continuity. The Friday Evening Meetings have quietly evolved into such a living tradition: a prestigious forum where ideas are exchanged freely, differences are respected gracefully, and memories are preserved affectionately. By seamlessly blending intellectual depth with effortless camaraderie, every gathering leaves each member a little wiser and a little happier.


You have integrated Kishkinda Kanda so well to our evening, thanks to the Sri Lankan call.
ReplyDeleteWonderfully warm narrative, with the strength of the xxx of rum.