Thursday, May 14, 2026

Sixth Job as Faculty in Dr MCR HRD Institute-1 >>>>> (National Training Policy: The Guiding Framework) >>>>> Professions, Checkered Career, and Lessons-10 : Vanam Jwala Narasimha Rao (May 15, 2026)

 Sixth Job as Faculty in Dr MCR HRD Institute-1

(National Training Policy: The Guiding Framework)

Professions, Checkered Career, and Lessons-10

Vanam Jwala Narasimha Rao (May 15, 2026)

This narrative brings together, in a single incessant flow, my sixth professional engagement at the Dr Marri Channa Reddy Human Resource Development (MCR HRDI) Institute and my association, experiences, and learnings with the Institute as it evolved into a nationally and internationally respected Centre of Excellence, to the extent possible, maintaining chronology, and retaining a wholly positive orientation.

Soon after Dr V Chandra Mouli assumed charge as Director General of the then Institute of Administration in 1995, one of his first decisions was to seek my deputation from the Handicrafts Development Corporation to the Institute. At that point, Rajaji, the then Chief Secretary, and a close friend of Chandra Mouli, expressed initial hesitation, as deputation from a public sector organization to a government institution involved procedural complexities.

Though the proposal initially encountered procedural hesitation, it moved forward with due approvals, and I joined the Institute on September 5, 1995 as Faculty, initially on a one-year deputation. That date coincided with a significant political transition in the State, but for me it marked the beginning of a defining professional phase. What was conceived as a one-year engagement extended organically into a continuous association of nearly nine years, despite changes in leadership at the helm of the Institute. 

During this period, the Institute witnessed changes in leadership, with Director Generals including Dr V Chandra Mouli, VK Srinivasan, PV Rao, Urmila Subba Rao (In-Charge), and PVRK Prasad. Amidst these transitions, my responsibilities deepened, and I was entrusted with higher academic and managerial roles, eventually serving as Senior Faculty.

What followed was an exceptionally enriching phase of my professional life. Working alongside a galaxy of eminent, intellectually accomplished, and deeply committed Director Generals was an experience of rare value. I also had the privilege of collaborating with several Additional Directors General and Joint Directors General drawn from diverse fields, each bringing with them distinct perspectives and expertise.

When a formal objection was raised by the Finance Department, seven long years, regarding prolonged deputation, I complied with the only option available, returning briefly to my parent organization, resigning, and rejoining the Institute on contract. This entire process was completed within a single day, and I was appointed as Additional Director, allowing continuity of work with enhanced responsibility.

            These years coincided with a transformative phase in the Institute’s history. When I joined, the Institute, then still widely known as the Institute of Administration, was relatively obscure, its location unfamiliar to many, its programs largely traditional, rule-based, and classroom-oriented, and its resources modest. Faculty members often waited anxiously for participants, budgets were limited, and training was not yet systematic. What followed over the next few years was a remarkable institutional metamorphosis.

A decisive impetus came with the leadership of PVRK Prasad, an exceptional administrator, institution builder, humanist and spiritualist, whose association with me spanned nearly five decades. His tenure as Director General marked a turning point. Under his stewardship, and with the active encouragement and vision of the then Chief Minister N Chandrababu Naidu, the Institute was renamed as Dr MCR HRD Institute, with a clear mandate to develop competent, future-ready human resources for the State Government.

PVRK Prasad as Director General, was ably supported by a dedicated team that included Urmila Subba Rao, Ravulapati Seetarama Rao, MP Sethy, Ranjana Shiva Shankar, Usha Ashok Kumar, and many other professional colleagues. The National Training Policy became the guiding framework, and a comprehensive State Training Initiative was launched with the ambitious but necessary vision of ‘Training for All.’ This growth was not confined merely to capacity building, but it marked a decisive shift towards true capability building within government systems.

One of the earliest and most pioneering steps in this direction was the Systematic Training Needs Analysis of government employees using Optical Mark Reader Technology. Beginning with nearly five to eight lakh employees and later expanding further, this exercise was among the first of its kind in the country. I was closely involved in conceptualizing, coordinating, and implementing this initiative, which laid the foundation for structured, evidence-based training across departments.

Infrastructure grew in parallel with intellectual ambition. The campus at Jubilee Hills expanded into a vibrant, state-of-the-art training environment, with modern classrooms, auditoriums, conference halls, hostels, guest houses, sports facilities, and a lush green setting spread over thirty-three acres. District Training Centers were established across the State under the leadership of District Collectors, decentralizing training delivery and embedding learning within administrative practice. A separate training budget head, equivalent to 1.5 per cent of the salary budget, was institutionalized, reflecting the seriousness with which training was accorded priority.

I was involved in developing structured training modules and introducing DVD-based training. A landmark development during this period was the establishment of the Centre for Good Governance (CGG) within the Institute campus, aimed at identifying best practices and developing replicable models of governance. The inauguration of the Centre by the then UK Prime Minister Tony Blair, and his extended interaction with the Chief Minister Chandrababu Naidu on campus, symbolized the global relevance the Institute had begun to command. I was always part of the Institute’s frequent interactions with the CM, who visited the campus almost thrice a week over a span of nine years.

Alongside institutional growth, my own professional journey deepened in both scope and substance. I consciously invested in strengthening myself as a training professional, undergoing rigorous programs in Systematic Approach to Training, Design of Training, Management of Training, Director Trainer Skills, and related trainer–training certifications, largely through the Government of India’s premier training institutions. These learnings were not mere academic exercises. They were continuously translated into program design, module development, and training delivery.

I learnt how to conceptualize and organize programs such as Governing for Results to suit the needs of the government of the day. I gained clarity on the Right to Information and on designing Citizen Charters, and all these learnings were consistently translated into training inputs delivered to participants.

One of the most fulfilling recognitions of this work was the design and development of a module on ‘Reform Initiatives in Administration’ prepared at the instance of the Department of Personnel and Training (DoPT), Government of India. OP Agarwal, then heading DoPT, was highly impressed by this work resulting in Its subsequent adoption at the national level. Thet led to my selection for a three-week Indian Trainer Training Program at Thames Valley University in the United Kingdom.

That exposure significantly enriched and deepened my understanding of facilitation, mentoring, training needs analysis and contemporary training methodologies, while also offering moments of cultural and intellectual reflection that remain deeply cherished. It also gave me the opportunity to visit several places in the UK, including the British Museum, which remains close to my heart.

Another defining contribution of mine was the conceptualization and implementation of the ‘Orientation to Management of Training (OMOT)’ program. Designed to seek ownership and commitment from senior leadership, this module was conducted for nearly two hundred senior IAS, IPS and non-cadre officers, first time at MCR HRD Institute, under the explicit direction and support of the Chief Minister Chandrababu Naidu, coordinated by me and MP Sethy. Over time, this initiative too evolved into a nationally replicated model, reinforcing the idea that training succeeds when leadership leads by example.

{{From my Forthcoming Book

PROFESSIONS, CHECKERED CAREER, AND LESSONS

(From Librarian to CPRO to CM KCR)

A Journey from Khangi School to Center for Excellence}}

 

Architect of Livelihoods and Development Initiatives >>>>> Poultry Legend and Public Service Leader Ponnala : Vanam Jwala Narasimha Rao

 Architect of Livelihoods and Development Initiatives

Poultry Legend and Public Service Leader 

Ponnala Lakshmaiah

Vanam Jwala Narasimha Rao (May 14, 2026)

It was a pleasant evening yesterday (May 13, 2026) in the company of former minister in the united Andhra Pradesh, and former TPCC (I) first President Ponnala Lakshmaiah, who at the age of 82+ years, at every stage of conversation, displayed his memory, precision, flexible, expressive, and comprehensive style, so meticulously that, I and another senior journalist friend A Saye Sekhar, heard him spell bound, with least interruptions to seek clarifications.  Naturally it turned out to be an intellectual encounter with Ponnala, coupled with enthralling ‘Learning Experience’ especially to me. The meeting place was my apartment in Srinagar Colony.

Despite knowing Ponnala for over two decades, many of his multi-faceted avocations, his participation in separate statehood movements, his contacts with illustrious people like Jayashankar Sir, Janardhan Rao, his close association with PV Narasimha Rao, his acquaintance with Manmohan Singh, his ups and downs, and more than all these his extensive knowledge on irrigation systems and projects etc. are less known to me. In our meeting today he touched few of them.

Having known Ponnala Lakshmaiah more closely recently, and having heard him yesterday, I grasped from his words, how his life reflects a steady journey from rural deprivation to purposeful public service. Born in drought-prone Quilashapur, he grew up amidst agrarian hardship, where water scarcity defined existence. These early experiences instilled resilience and deep understanding of rural realities. His rise through education and professional achievement demonstrates the transformative power of perseverance when supported by mentors and determination.

These essentially good qualities and many similar aspects, that I have witnessed firsthand through our long-standing personal acquaintance, earlier, and heard from him during our meeting, I felt that ‘Ponnala is a person with Difference.’ Lakshmaiah pursued higher education with distinction and moved to the USA, excelling in a rewarding engineering role within aerospace research. Despite the promise of a prosperous career abroad, he returned to India after nearly a decade.

This decision marked a pivotal turning point, driven by a deep-seated belief that his vast knowledge and international experience could serve a larger purpose in his homeland. His return was not an act of renunciation, but a deliberate step toward catalyzing social and economic development, particularly for rural communities similar to the one that shaped his own resilient and determined character. Recognizing agricultural limitations in drought-affected regions, he sought alternative avenues for sustainable livelihoods.

One early initiative was promoting poultry farming, offering low investment and reliable income for rural households. This effort generated significant employment and strengthened the poultry sector, eventually earning him recognition as a leading industry contributor. His work illustrated a practical approach to rural development, identifying locally viable solutions that delivered consistent economic benefits. This dedication reflected his deep understanding of the challenges faced by agrarian communities.

Water remained central to his vision for transformation. Having witnessed scarcity since childhood, Lakshmaiah became actively involved in movements improving irrigation access. His participation in initiatives like the Godavari Jala Sadhana Samithi reflected a sustained effort addressing regional inequities. Additionally, he supported localized interventions, including watershed development, check dam construction, and water body restoration. These measures enhanced groundwater levels, improved agricultural prospects, and ensured environmental sustainability, demonstrating his commitment to resolving the hardships that defined his youth.

Ponnala’s entry into public life was encouraged by leaders like PV Narasimha Rao, under whose guidance he joined the Indian National Congress. Lakshmaiah was subsequently elected to the Andhra Pradesh Legislative Assembly and served in pivotal roles, including as a minister under Dr YS Rajasekhara Reddy. As Minister for Irrigation, he played a crucial role advancing large-scale water infrastructure projects, contributing to the conceptualization and execution of initiatives that expanded irrigation coverage statewide, thereby fulfilling a lifelong mission to bring sustainable water solutions to drought-prone regions. His role in articulating and popularizing ‘Jalayagnam’ during Dr YS Rajasekhara Reddy’s tenure reflects intellectual framing beyond mere administrative participation.

Most notable, recalled Ponnala, was that, the ‘Jalayagnam Program,’ accelerated irrigation development through a comprehensive project network. His technical background and grassroots understanding enabled him to contribute meaningfully to its planning. The initiative reflected a broader philosophy: infrastructure designed with long-term vision can transform agricultural productivity and rural livelihoods. His involvement ensured these large-scale projects remained grounded in the practical needs of the farming communities.

His contributions extended beyond irrigation into vital social sectors. In healthcare, his efforts identifying children requiring critical heart surgeries helped shape the early conceptual framework for the Aarogya Sri Health Scheme. By advocating for systematic treatment mechanisms, he pioneered a model providing financial protection for medical care to economically vulnerable populations. Similarly, his deep engagement with rural housing and village development influenced the evolution of programs like ‘Indiramma Illu,’ which successfully provided essential housing and basic amenities to thousands of disadvantaged families across the state.

Lakshmaiah also promoted dairy development as a complementary rural enterprise. By facilitating subsidy access and encouraging fodder cultivation, he helped increase milk production and create additional income for farmers. These efforts were marked by a consistent emphasis on self-sustenance, enabling communities to build economic stability rather than relying on external support, thereby fostering long-term resilience and independence. His pioneering efforts in this field earned him the ‘Poultry Legend of India’ distinction, marking him as a leader who consistently prioritized grassroots economic empowerment.

Lakshmaiah’s approach combined technical insight, administrative experience, and an understanding of ground realities. Lakshmaiah’s journey illustrates how individual initiative, aligned with public purpose, yields lasting impact. What one can understand is: Underlying these varied roles and contributions is a consistent thread: the belief that development must be inclusive and practical. Whether promoting alternative livelihoods, strengthening water infrastructure, or contributing to social welfare, his efforts were directed toward creating measurable improvements in the lives of the people.

Throughout his public career, including tenure as President of the Telangana Congress Committee, he managed organizational responsibilities during critical political phases. Later, he joined the Bharat Rashtra Samithi under K Chandrashekar Rao, maintaining his public life while adapting to changing contexts, ensuring his vast experience continued to serve the region's evolving aspirations.

Equally significant are the formative experiences that shaped his outlook, revealed Ponnala Lakshmaiah. Witnessing a village tank’s restoration in childhood and observing major dam constructions during his student years fostered an early appreciation for water’s transformative potential. These impressions anchored his professional and political priorities, reinforcing a lifelong focus on irrigation and rural development as essential pillars for regional progress and social equity.

Lakshmaiah’s journey illustrates how individual initiative, aligned with public purpose, yields lasting impact. His life is not a series of isolated achievements but a continuum addressing interconnected challenges: livelihoods, water, health, and infrastructure. These efforts’ outcomes extend beyond immediate visibility, influencing systems and opportunities that benefit future generations, marking a legacy of dedication to the sustainable progress of society.

His story serves as a factual account and a broader message. It demonstrates that meaningful change results from sustained, cumulative contributions rather than singular acts. It also underscores the importance of returning knowledge and opportunity to the communities that shape individuals in their formative years. Through vision, persistence, and grounded action, Ponnala Lakshmaiah’s life reflects how one individual’s commitment can contribute to the long-term progress of society, leaving an indelible mark on his homeland.

In assessing Ponnala Lakshmaiah’s public life, defining contributions stand out for their enduring institutional and social impact. His clarity and grounded experience earned him significant leadership confidence, reflected in the respect with which he was widely addressed as ‘Mantri Saab,’ a title signifying both his ministerial rank and deep personal authority, reminisced Ponnala. Beyond formal roles, certain moments capture the spirit of his engagement and visionary continuity.

One such was the Srisailam Temple episode, where a reflective exchange on large-scale irrigation possibilities occurred, stands as a symbolic precursor to his transformative agenda. Earlier, his contributions to rural enterprise, advancing poultry as a sustainable livelihood model, brought recognition and tangible economic benefits to countless families. 

His journey, shaped initially under the guidance of PV Narasimha Rao and continuing through evolving political contexts including his later association with K Chandrashekar Rao, reflects a remarkable adaptability anchored in consistent public purpose. Taken together, these contributions illustrate a life defined by cumulative impact rather than isolated milestones. The pioneering ideas he helped shape have continued to translate into enduring public benefit, outliving the immediacy of their origin to become institutional pillars.

Ponnala’s trajectory demonstrates that when personal experience, technical understanding, and public intent converge, they produce outcomes that serve society over generations. In that sense, Ponnala Lakshmaiah’s work stands not only as a record of achievement but as a powerful reminder that sustained individual commitment can quietly, yet decisively, influence the course of collective progress and inspire future leaders.

Last but not the least, nevertheless, the best part of the evening conversation was a revelation made by Ponnala Lakshmaiah. During the discussion he mentioned with humility and in all sincerity, that the general belief of ‘Telangana Movement was born in 1969’ is a partial truth, and not actually factual and accurate. He recalled that, it was he, after Bhupathi Krishna Murthy, who first raised his voice for Telangana State with the Blood Boiling Slogan of ‘Vishala Andhra Vaddu, Telangana Muddu (Do not want United Andhra, instead prefer only Telangana)’ in his early  school days as far back in the year 1955 itself.

Ponnala also recollected that, in 1964, five years before the 1969 first phase of recorded Telangana statehood agitation, in Osmania University Campus, in the company of some like-minded friends, he raised the demand of ‘Andhra Vice Chancelor DC Reddy Go back.’ This ‘Heart Touching Slogan’ which eventually took off and became popular, remembered Ponnala, and said that, it spread over the Telangana Fraternity, seedling the thought of New Telangana State.

I presented by Latest book on Ramayana (736-page voluminous first part of ‘Simplified and Faithful Rendering of the Adi Kavya: Valmiki Ramayana – The Greatest Epic; Bala and Ayodhya Kandas. In turn I received a book from him, ‘అనగనగా ఒక లక్ష్మయ్య.’

As usual and as the normal practice, my wife served to all of us the choicest vegetarian, simple, and guests’ liking dinner, but not before a Social Drink.

Tuesday, May 12, 2026

The kitchen is the New Frontier of National Defense >>>>> PM Modi’s ‘Civic Satyagraha’ and the ‘Nine Disciplines’ : Vanam Jwala Narasimha Rao

 The kitchen is the New Frontier of National Defense

PM Modi’s ‘Civic Satyagraha’ and the ‘Nine Disciplines’

Vanam Jwala Narasimha Rao (May 12, 2026)

On May 10, 2026, Prime Minister Narendra Modi addressed a massive gathering at the Parade Grounds in Hyderabad. His speech was notable for its shift from typical political rhetoric to a call for Economic Patriotism through ‘nine specific disciplines’ intended to safeguard the national economy amidst global turmoil. ‘Patriotism is not only about the willingness to sacrifice one’s life on the border, but it is about living responsibly and fulfilling our duties to the nation in our daily lives’ observed PM.

Modi stated that the current crisis is not just a government challenge, but a test of national character. In his speech, he bridged an earlier amicable official event with Telangana CM Revanth Reddy to the later politically charged rally. During the earlier event, Modi joked to Revanth Reddy, ‘Aap Mere Se Hi Judo,’ suggesting it is better to join him. This set a tone of ‘Cooperative Federalism’ that laid the groundwork for his subsequent call for ‘Economic Patriotism’ to address global fiscal challenges.

The core of the speech was a set of nine requests to citizens to help manage foreign exchange reserves and reduce reliance on imports. These disciplines articulated by Modi represent a significant shift in India’s crisis management philosophy. While past PMs typically managed crises through state centric austerity or emergency mobilization, the Hyderabad address frames ‘economic defence’ as a participatory ‘Civic Satyagraha’ for Indians to ward off global turmoil.

Each of the nine disciplines has its own imperative and implication. ‘Fuel Conservation’ involves using public transport, carpooling, and Metros to minimize personal vehicle use, eventually reducing the massive oil import bill. This move lowers current account deficit and inflation. ‘Curtail Gold Buying’ aims to avoid non-essential gold purchases for one year. The imperative is that Gold is a major drain on FOREX and the implication is stabilizing the Rupee against global volatility.

‘Postpone Foreign Trips’ implies just to delay overseas vacations and destination weddings for a year. The imperative is to keep capital within the domestic economy, and its implication is boosting local tourism and hospitality sectors. The ‘Work from Home’ discipline is reviving Covid era practice of virtual meetings to save fuel and energy. The imperative is immediate reduction in energy consumption, and the implication is digital transformation and urban traffic relief.

Next is ‘Vocal for Local’ by prioritizing Made in India daily use items. The imperative is strengthening MSMEs and self-reliance while the implication is job creation and manufacturing growth. ‘Edible Oil Reduction’ cuts down cooking oil consumption at the household level. The imperative is that high import dependency on palm and sunflower oils comes down. The implication is improved public health and reduced import costs. Farmers are also urged to ‘Halve Chemical Fertilizer Use’ and shift to natural farming. This leads to soil health, lowering fertilizer subsidies, sustainable agriculture and significant fiscal savings.

The eighth discipline is ‘Solar Irrigation’ by adopting solar powered pumps instead of diesel dependent ones. The imperative is decarbonizing agriculture and reducing diesel costs. The implication is energy independence for rural areas. Lastly, ‘Digital Transactions’ continue the push for a cashless economy to ensure transparency. The imperative is formalizing the economy. The implication is efficient tax collection and financial inclusion.

BJP aims to use these Disciplines as grassroots campaign. By making every household a partner, BJP seeks to build a narrative of shared responsibility, which is harder for opposition parties to criticize without appearing anti national. By asking for cooperation rather than just votes, PM attempted to bridge the gap with a population that was governed by BRS and now by Congress, by framing his requests as  ‘National Duty’ not as ‘Political Mandate.’

Incidentally, the speech occurred against the backdrop of the West Asia conflict and global supply chain disruptions, which the PM cited as a direct threat to India’s economic stability. Strategically choosing Hyderabad, a key hub in non-BJP Telangana State, obviously was a deliberate move to project the ‘National Leader Image’ over a ‘Party Leader’ one. It signalled that the BJP views Telangana as its next major growth frontier after West Bengal.

Prime Minister framed these sacrifices as modern patriotism. Instead of asking for lives at the border, he requested responsible living. This framing is designed to gain public agreement by linking personal habits directly to the country’s strength. The Prime Minister strategically linked these individual efforts to the government’s infrastructure push, including the significant projects inaugurated during the same visit. 

The choice of Hyderabad and the presence of CM Revanth Reddy on the dais in another function added a layer of ‘Competitive Federalism’ to the speech. By exchanging pleasantries with a Congress CM, the Prime Minister established a ‘National Interest First’ atmosphere. This made the subsequent call for Nine Disciplines at the party meeting appear as a statesman's advice to the nation rather than just a party leader's rhetoric.

Delivering this message in a non-BJP state serves to democratize his leadership style, proving he can command a massive following and set a national agenda even in opposition territory. The BJP strategy essentially involves converting these nine disciplines into a social movement. Prime Minister may use platforms like MyGov to track the progress of these disciplines. Vocal for Local discipline may lead to immediate job creation in the neighbourhoods.

By focusing on health benefits such as use of less edible oil, and convenience like work from home, Prime Minister projected discipline as personal gain rather than an imposed burden. Ultimately, while earlier Prime Ministers asked the nation to wait out a crisis, the Hyderabad speech asks the nation to innovate out of one by fundamentally changing how India consumes.

The political strategy underlying Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s Hyderabad address is a masterclass in ‘Cooperative Confrontation.’ By blending a statesman like appeal for national discipline with sharp political messaging in a non-BJP stronghold, the eventual gains are structured to be both immediate and long term. ‘Potential Political Gains in Telangana’ are not ruled out. The BJP aims to transition from being a strong third player to the primary challenger to the Congress.

By introducing the Nine Disciplines in Hyderabad, the BJP is positioning itself not just as a political party, but as a lifestyle and governance alternative. It challenges the Congress led state government by setting a national agenda that local leaders cannot easily dismiss without appearing to oppose national stability. The Prime Minister's witty exchange with CM Revanth Reddy, for instance, the Gujarat like offer was a tactical move to show that the Centre is ready to support Telangana, provided there is political alignment. This undermines the regional pride narrative often used by the BRS and Congress.

The focus on work from home, digital transactions, and fuel conservation specifically targets the tech savvy urban electorate of Hyderabad and Cyberabad. This is a strategic pivot to consolidate the urban vote bank ahead of future local body and assembly contests. A ‘New Definition of Patriotism’ can be evidently seen. The BJP is successfully aligning the definition of Nationalism bringing the border military closer to the kitchen and the commute economic. This allows the party to maintain a high decibel patriotic narrative even in the absence of a direct security threat, keeping the base energized.

By asking for voluntary restraint now, the government builds a political safety net. If global conflicts like the West Asia crisis lead to inflation later, the BJP can argue that the Nation was warned adequately and must stay the course, rather than blaming Policy Failure. Political pundits visualize the nine disciplines to act as a ‘Future Civic Manifesto,’ imprinting the BJP as the only party with a long-term vision for India’s global economic standing.

The Kitchen is the New Frontier of National Defense.’


Monday, May 11, 2026

Simplified and faithful rendering of the Adi Kavya-22 >>>>> Episode of Vishwamitra and Trishanku Heaven >>> Mythical Marvel and Philosophical Meditation: Vanam Jwala Narasimha Rao

 Episode of Vishwamitra and Trishanku Heaven

Mythical Marvel and Philosophical Meditation

Simplified and faithful rendering of the Adi Kavya-22

Vanam Jwala Narasimha Rao (May 12, 2026)

The Valmiki Ramayana is not merely an ancient epic meant for ritual recitation. It is a living reservoir of moral, spiritual, and philosophical insights. As generations of Indians living abroad, and their children, gradually lose direct access to Sanskrit and Regional Indian languages, the responsibility of presenting these narratives in clear, meaningful English becomes essential. The episode of Trishanku and the extraordinary Cosmic Intervention of Sage Vishwamitra is one such profound narrative that demands careful retelling. It addresses universal human impulses, such as, ambition, frustration with authority, compassion, ego, and the consequences of challenging established order. In an era dominated by technological confidence and the belief that ‘Anything and Everything is Possible,’ this story serves as a timeless reminder that power without balance can distort even noble intentions.

Consequent to Vishwamitra deciding firmly to observe a more rigorous penance to achieve the exalted status of Brahmarshi, and thus conquer his senses to rise to the highest spiritual plane, he was midway through his austerities encountered the unusual aspiration of Trishanku, a principled king of the Ikshvaku dynasty. Trishanku was renowned for his discipline, moral restraint, and adherence to righteousness. Shatananda, continuing his narration of Vishwamitra’s life, informed Rama that Trishanku conceived an extraordinary desire, to perform a ritual that would enable him to ascend to heaven with his physical body intact. This desire reflected a deeply human longing to overcome natural boundaries, echoing modern aspirations to defeat aging, death, and limitation through science or extraordinary achievement.

When Trishanku openly revealed his desire and respectfully invited Sage Vasishta to officiate the ritual, Vasishta categorically declared that, it was impossible, citing cosmic law and scriptural injunctions. Unwilling to abandon his aspiration, Trishanku approached the hundred noble sons of Vasishta. Though younger, they were themselves radiant ascetics, resplendent through severe penance. Trishanku humbly requested them to perform the ritual and honestly disclosed that their father had refused. This episode highlights a recurring human tendency of seeking alternative approvals when authority denies validation, a behavior visible even in modern educational, religious, and bureaucratic systems.

The sons of Vasishta, however, reacted with indignation. They accused Trishanku of impropriety, stating that approaching them after being denied by their father was akin to seeking nourishment from a branch after rejecting the root of the tree. They asserted that Vasishta, the royal preceptor, was the ultimate spiritual authority for the Ikshvaku lineage. Firmly rejecting Trishanku’s plea, they advised him to abandon his ambition and rule his kingdom responsibly. Here the Ramayana subtly critiques institutional rigidity, showing how unquestioned authority can sometimes suppress genuine spiritual longing.

Deeply hurt, Trishanku bade farewell to the sons of Vasishta and resolved to seek guidance elsewhere, expressing that he had been insulted rather than counseled. Provoked by his words, the sons erupted in fury and cursed him to become a Chandala, his royal form disfigured, his appearance degraded, and his social identity destroyed. Having pronounced the curse, they returned to their hermitage, unmoved by its consequences. This incident starkly illustrates how power combined with anger can destroy lives instantly, a lesson painfully relevant in today’s polarized social and ideological climates.

The next morning, Trishanku gazed upon his reflection and was horrified to find himself completely transformed, bearing no resemblance to the king he once was. His ministers, attendants, and subjects immediately deserted him, unwilling to associate with his cursed form. Stripped of dignity and support, he wandered until he reached Sage Vishwamitra’s hermitage. Vishwamitra, upon seeing him, was filled with compassion. On inquiry, Trishanku narrated his rejection by Vasishta, the curse of his sons, and his still-unfulfilled aspiration to reach heaven with his body. The scene reveals a timeless social truth: respect is often conditional, vanishing the moment status and appearance are lost.

Trishanku earnestly sought Vishwamitra’s refuge. Vishwamitra, recognizing him as a righteous ruler of the Ikshvaku dynasty, consoled him and vowed to fulfill his desire. He assured Trishanku that he would personally conduct the ritual, invite eminent sages, and enable him to ascend to heaven with his mortal body, either in its cursed state or even with the form which was deformed by the curse of Vashishta’s sons. Vishwamitra instructed his sons and disciples to prepare for the grand sacrifice. This moment reflects Vishwamitra’s defining trait of his refusal to abandon one who seeks refuge, even at great personal and cosmic cost.

Fearful of Vishwamitra’s formidable ascetic power, sages and brahmins attended the ritual unwillingly. The sons of Vasishta deliberately stayed away. Enraged by their defiance, Vishwamitra cursed them to be reduced to ashes and condemned them to seven hundred births as corpse-eaters, dog-meat consumers, wandering the earth in deformed bodies. One son, Mahodaya, received an even harsher curse, descending into extreme barbarity and violence. The episode warns that spiritual authority, when inflamed by anger, can become as destructive as worldly tyranny.

The assembled sages debated among themselves what righteousness demanded. Fearing Vishwamitra’s wrath, they concluded that his command must be executed precisely. Vishwamitra assumed the role of principal officiator. After prolonged ritual observances, he formally invited the gods to receive their sacrificial oblations called Havirbhavas. None responded. The silence of the gods symbolizes ethical resistance, of the moments when higher order refuses to endorse actions that disrupt universal balance.

Furious at the divine refusal, Vishwamitra lifted the sacrificial ladle and proclaimed that by the sheer power of his penance, Trishanku would ascend to heaven with his mortal body. Immediately, Trishanku began rising skyward as all present watched in astonishment. As he neared heaven’s threshold, Indra commanded him to fall back to earth, head inverted.
This moment underscores the limits imposed by cosmic governance, reminding that not all feats, however extraordinary, gain universal sanction.

When Mahendra said so, and as Trishanku began to fall, he made a desperate request by loudly exclaiming at the ascetically wealthy Vishvamitra saying, 'save me, save me.' Being in the process of falling down from heaven he cried aloud to Vishwamitra for protection. On hearing his desperate plea, and the exclamatory sentence of Trishanku who was shouting it loudly, Vishvamitra quickly assumed an uncharacteristic fury, commanded him to halt, and suspended him mid-air through the force of his ascetic power. This suspension mirrors moral limbo, that, neither ascent nor fall, often experienced when ambition collides with ethical restraint.

Still consumed by anger, and not keeping quiet with that, like the replica creator, Vishwamitra resolved to create an alternate cosmic order. He fashioned new constellations in the southern hemisphere of the sky, creating another heaven complete with celestial beings. He replicated the southern Ursa Major and continued generating stars and galaxies, even declaring that Indra himself could be replaced. This act mirrors modern humanity’s belief that any system, be it natural, social, or cosmic, can be redesigned through sheer will.

At this juncture the gods who were frightened and terrified, approached Vishwamitra and pleaded for restraint. Vishwamitra declared that his promise to Trishanku that he will ascend to heaven with his earthly body must stand and hence, the heaven he created would endure as long as the worlds existed. Acknowledging the inviolability of his vow, the gods agreed to his proposal. The episode elevates truthfulness and commitment as forces powerful enough to compel even the divine.

The gods decreed that Trishanku would remain among the stars created by Vishwamitra, shining like a celestial but hanging upside-down, since Indra’s command could not be annulled. The stars would eternally circumambulate him. Trishanku’s fate symbolizes partial success, that, achievement attained, yet stripped of harmony and fulfillment. Thus, the ‘Trishanku Heaven’ remained permanently in the sky, along with its stars and galaxies. Trishanku continued to shine, neither fully rejected nor fully accepted, suspended eternally between worlds. His condition stands as a lasting metaphor for ambition pursued without alignment to universal order.

The episode of Vishwamitra and Trishanku is not merely a mythical marvel but a philosophical meditation on human aspiration. It teaches that, while determination and compassion are noble, unchecked ego and defiance of cosmic balance can lead to distorted outcomes. For modern readers, especially young minds growing up outside India, this story conveys that progress must be guided by humility, wisdom, and ethical restraint. True elevation lies not in bypassing natural order, but in understanding and harmonizing with it. >>>>> Photographs courtesy Rama Bhakta Vijaya Raghava Dasu.

{{From my Published Book ‘Simplified and Faithful Rendering of the Adi Kavya’

Valmiki Ramayana: The Greatest Epic (Bala and Ayodhya Kandas)}}

(This Book is free of cost for all those who are interested to read the English Version of Valmiki Ramayana, provided they collect it from me in person preferably. Mobile: 8008137012)

 

Sunday, May 10, 2026

The Hermeneutics of Reconciliation on the Ontological Synthesis of the Vedic and the Dialectical : Aditya K. Roy (INTRODUCTION to: ‘Simplified and Faithful Rendering of the Adi Kavya’)

The Hermeneutics of Reconciliation

On the Ontological Synthesis of the Vedic and the Dialectical

Aditya K. Roy (April 8, 2026)

{INTRODUCTION to: ‘Simplified and Faithful Rendering of the Adi Kavya’

Valmiki Ramayana: The Greatest Epic (Bala and Ayodhya Kandas)

Authored by Vanam Jwala Narasimha Rao}

To introduce this volume is to engage with a text that functions less as a conventional translation and more as a dense, late-career intervention into the fractured intellectual history of the Indian subcontinent. My father’s project - a faithful rendering of Late Shri Vavilikolanu Subbarau’s Andhra Valmiki Ramayanam Mandaram, (which itself is a faithful rendering of the Adi Kavya - Valmiki’s Ramayan) into a contemporary English idiom - cannot be decoupled from the peculiar, layered consciousness of its architect.

We are presented here with a synthesis that resists the simplistic taxonomies of the modern era; it is a work produced by a mind that has spent seven decades navigating the jagged terrain between the deterministic moral universe of the Vedas and the materialist, transformative teleology of Marxist humanism. This is an intellectual exercise in ‘Both/And’ logic, a refusal to allow the analytical rigors of the political scientist to fully eclipse the primordial resonances of the shloka.

The document serves as a cartography of a complex internal migration. My father’s boundaried departures from the rural, orthodox rhythms of his origins did not result in the standard secular erasure so common in mid-century intellectualism. Instead, he initiated an arduous process of philosophical layering.

His commitment to a ‘People’s Democratic Secular society’ exists not in opposition to, but in a tense, dialectical conversation with the ‘living light’ of the ancestors. One must view this book as an attempt to resolve the cognitive dissonance of the post-colonial subject: the struggle to inhabit a world shaped by Das Kapital while remaining anchored to a soul nourished by the Gayatri Hymn. This is not a comfortable coexistence; it is a ‘Strangely Harmonious yet Deeply Paradoxical’ state of being that requires a constant recalibration of one’s moral and intellectual compass.

At the heart of this exercise is a rigorous interrogation of how tradition survives the pressures of globalized displacement. My father identifies the ‘inner landscapes’ of the Indian consciousness as being in a state of perilous erosion, yet his response is not a retreat into fundamentalism. Rather, he posits that the preservation of the sacred is a dynamic, often matriarchal, act of resistance against the sterility of the modern.

In his observation of my mother’s fifty-six-year ritualistic discipline, he identifies a ‘moral center’ that operates outside the ‘posture of command’ typical of patriarchal structures. His interpretation suggests that the ritual is not a stagnant repetition, but a sophisticated technology of familial and spiritual equilibrium: an autonomous space that he, as the erstwhile patriarch, has had to learn to respect through a ‘marching forward as partners.’

The intellectual weight of this work lies in its refusal to offer the reader a sanitized or singular truth. By invoking the ‘Akshaya Patra’--the inexhaustible vessel of Indian philosophical schools, alongside the dialectical materialism of the West, he creates a space for ‘beautiful uncertainty.’ He treats the Ramayana not as a static relic of piety, but as a living participant in the discourse of human dignity and social justice. This is an exercise in expansive humanism, where the metaphysical scaffolding of the Upanishads is utilized to support the weight of modern social critique.

Ultimately, my humble urge to the reader is to be prepared to acknowledge the subsequent text as a site of encounter. It challenges the reader to move beyond the binary of tradition versus modernity and to instead enter a multi-dimensional reality where the sacred and the revolutionary ‘nod to each other in recognition.’ It is a testament to an intellectual journey that has traded the safety of dogma for the complexity of synthesis, suggesting that our truest heritage lies not in the answers we inherit, but in the depth and layers of the questions we dare to sustain.

(‘Hermeneutics’ is the theory, methodology, and philosophy of interpretation, focusing on understanding written texts, human actions, and communication. ‘Ontological Synthesis’ refers to the process of combining, integrating, or unifying different conceptual frameworks, theories, or representations of existence into a single, cohesive structure-Author of Book)

సయోధ్య తరహా హర్మెన్యూటిక్స్

వేద, ద్వంద్వ సిద్ధాంత ఆత్మసంబంధ సమన్వయం  

ఆదిత్య కె. రాయ్ (ఏప్రిల్ 8, 2026)

ఈ (సింప్లిఫైడ్ and ఫెయిత్ ఫుల్ రెండరింగ్ ఆఫ్ ఆదికావ్య) పుస్తకానికి ముందుమాట ఇవ్వడం అంటే మామూలు విషయం కాదు. ఈ పుస్తకం ఒక  సాధారణ ఆంగ్లానువాదం (translation) అని అనడం కంటే, భారత ఉపఖండంలోని విభిన్నమైన మేధో చరిత్ర (intellectual history) లో భాగంగా, విభజనల మధ్య లోతైన, కీలక దశలోని ఆలోచనాత్మక జోక్యం (late career intervention) ద్వారా చదువరులతో మమేకం కావడమే!

స్వర్గీయ శ్రీ వావిలికొలను సుబ్బారావు గారి ‘ఆంధ్ర వాల్మీకి రామాయణం మందరం,’ ఆదికావ్యం (Adi Kavya) సంస్కృత వాల్మీకి రామాయణానికి నిష్ఠతో చేసిన తెలుగు అనువాదం. అలాగే మా నాన్నగారు ఆ ఆంధ్రవాల్మీకి రామాయణాన్ని ఒక ప్రాజెక్టుగా భావించి, వర్తమాన కాలానికి అనుగుణంగా, సమయోచితంగా అన్వయించుకుంటూ,  తదనుగుణంగా, ఇంగ్లీష్ భాషలోకి (contemporary English idiom) మార్చడం, గొప్ప కృషి. ఈ కృషిని, అంచెలంచెలుగా మారుతూ వస్తున్న ఆయన ఆలోచనా నిర్మాణంలోని ప్రత్యేకమైన, పలు పొరలతో కూడిన చైతన్యం (layered consciousness) నుండి వేరుచేయలేము.

ఇక్కడ మనకు కనిపించేది ఆధునిక యుగపు (modern era) సులభ వర్గీకరణలను (simplistic taxonomies) నిరాకరించే ఒక సమన్వయం (synthesis), వేదాల నిర్ణీత నైతిక విశ్వం (deterministic moral universe), మార్క్సిస్ట్ మానవతావాదం (Marxist humanism) లోని భౌతికవాద మార్పును లక్ష్యంగా పెట్టుకున్న దిశా భావనల (materialist transformative teleology) మధ్య ఏడు దశాబ్దాలుగా సాగిన ఆయన ఆలోచనా ప్రయాణం ఫలితం ఇది. ఇది ‘ఇదీ/అదీ’ (Both/And logic) అనే తర్క విధానం, రాజకీయ శాస్త్రవేత్త (political scientist) యొక్క విశ్లేషణాత్మక కఠినత (analytical rigor), శ్లోకంలోని మూలాధార ప్రతిధ్వనులను (primordial resonances) పూర్తిగా తొలగించనీయని విశిష్ట ధోరణి.

ఈ పుస్తకం ఒక క్లిష్టమైన అంతర్గత వలస ప్రయాణానికి (internal migration) పటముగా (cartography) నిలుస్తుంది. గ్రామీణ, సనాతన (orthodox) సంప్రదాయాల నుంచి ఆయన బయటకు వచ్చినప్పటికీ, మధ్య శతాబ్ద మేధో ప్రపంచంలో సాధారణంగా జరిగే లౌకిక నిర్మూలనం (secular erasure) ఆయనలో చోటు చేసుకోలేదు. బదులుగా, ఆయన తాత్విక పొరల నిర్మాణం (philosophical layering) అనే కఠినమైన ప్రక్రియను ప్రారంభించారు.

‘ప్రజల ప్రజాస్వామ్య లౌకిక సమాజం’ (People’s Democratic Secular society) పట్ల ఆయన నిబద్ధత, పూర్వీకుల ‘జీవన కాంతి’ (living light) కి వ్యతిరేకంగా కాకుండా, ఒక ఉద్రిక్త, మాండలిక సంభాషణ (dialectical conversation) రూపంలో ఉంటుంది. ఈ గ్రంథాన్ని వలసానంతర విషయ పరిజ్ఞానంలో(post-colonial subject) ఏర్పడే అభిజ్ఞా వైరుధ్యాన్ని(cognitive dissonance) పరిష్కరించే ప్రయత్నంగా చూడాలి. ‘దాస్ కాపిటల్’ (Das Kapital) ప్రభావంతో ఏర్పరుచుకున్న ప్రపంచంలో జీవిస్తూ, ‘గాయత్రి మంత్రం’ (Gayatri Hymn) ఆత్మతో అనుసంధానం కొనసాగించాలనే పోరాటం ఇది. ఇది సౌకర్యవంతమైన సహజీవనం కాదు, ‘వింతగా సమన్వయంగా ఉన్నా, లోతైన విరోధభరితమైన” (Strangely Harmonious yet Deeply Paradoxical) స్థితి.

ఈ రచనలో ప్రధానంగా సంప్రదాయం (tradition), గ్లోబలైజేషన్ (globalized displacement) ఒత్తిళ్ల మధ్య ఎలా నిలబడుతుంది అనే ప్రశ్నను పరిశీలిస్తుంది. భారతీయ చైతన్యంలో ఉన్న అంతర్గత ప్రపంచాలు (inner landscapes) క్షీణిస్తున్నాయని ఆయన భావించినప్పటికీ, ఆయన ప్రతిస్పందన మౌలికవాదం (fundamentalism) వైపు వెళ్లడం మాత్రం కాదు. పవిత్రత (sacred) పరిరక్షణను ఒక చురుకైన, ముఖ్యంగా మాతృస్వామ్య (matriarchal) ప్రతిఘటనగా ఆయన ప్రతిపాదిస్తారు.

వివాహానంతరం, మా అమ్మగారి యాభై ఆరు సంవత్సరాల ఆచారపరమైన క్రమశిక్షణ (ritualistic discipline) ను నిశితంగా గమనిస్తూ, ఆమెద్వారా కుటుంబంలో ఒక నైతిక కేంద్రం (moral center) ఉన్నదని గుర్తించారు నాన్నగారు. ఇది పితృస్వామ్య నిర్మాణాలలో కనిపించే ఆజ్ఞాపన, ఆదేశాత్మక ధోరణికి  (posture of command) వ్యతిరేకంగా, విరుద్ధంగా పనిచేస్తుంది. ఆయన వ్యాఖ్యానం ప్రకారం, ఆచారం (ritual) స్థిరమైన పునరావృతం కాదు, కుటుంబ, ఆధ్యాత్మిక సమతుల్యతను నిలబెట్టే ఒక సున్నితమైన సాంకేతికత (technology). దీనిని ఆయన భాగస్వామ్య భావనతో ముందుకు సాగుతూ (marching forward as partners) గౌరవించడం నేర్చుకున్నారు.

ఈ పుస్తక మేధో బలం (intellectual weight) పాఠకుడికి ఒకే ఒక శుద్ధమైన సత్యాన్ని (sanitized or singular truth) ఇవ్వకుండా ఉండడంలోనే ఉన్నది. భారతీయ తత్వ పాఠశాలల అనంతమైన పాత్ర (Akshaya Patra), పాశ్చాత్య ద్వంద్వ భౌతికవాదం (dialectical materialism) తో కలిపి, ‘అందమైన అనిశ్చితి’ (beautiful uncertainty) కి స్థలం సృష్టిస్తుంది. రామాయణాన్ని కేవలం ఒక సుస్థిరమైన భక్తి గ్రంథం (static relic of piety) గా, అవశేషంగా మాత్రమే కాకుండా, మానవ గౌరవం (human dignity), సామాజిక న్యాయానికి సంబంధించిన (social justice) చర్చలో ఒక సజీవ భాగస్వామిగా పరిగణించాలని సూచిస్తున్నారు నాన్నగారు.

ఇది విస్తృత మానవతావాదం (expansive humanism), ఉపనిషత్తుల ఆధ్యాత్మిక, తాత్త్విక నిర్మాణాన్ని, (metaphysical scaffolding of the Upanishads) ఆధునిక సామాజిక విమర్శ (modern social critique) ప్రాముఖ్యతను నిలబెట్టడానికి ఉపయోగపడుతుంది.

చివరగా, పాఠకులకు నా వినమ్ర విజ్ఞప్తి: ఈ గ్రంథాన్ని ఒక సాక్షాత్కార స్థలంగా (site of encounter) స్వీకరించండి. సంప్రదాయం, ఆధునికత అనే ద్వంద్వాన్ని దాటి, పవిత్రత (sacred), విప్లవాత్మక ఆలోచన (revolutionary) పరస్పరం గుర్తించుకునే బహుముఖ వాస్తవికతలోకి ప్రవేశించండి. సిద్ధాంతాల భద్రతను (dogma) వదిలి సంశ్లేషణ, సమన్వయాల (synthesis) సంక్లిష్టతను స్వీకరించిన ఒక మేధో ప్రయాణానికి ఇది నిదర్శనం. మన నిజమైన వారసత్వం మనం పొందే సమాధానాలలో కాకుండా, మనం ధైర్యంగా కొనసాగించే ప్రశ్నల లోతు, వాటి పొరలలో ఉందని ఇది సూచిస్తుంది.

{{From my Published Book ‘Simplified and Faithful Rendering of the Adi Kavya’

Valmiki Ramayana: The Greatest Epic (Bala and Ayodhya Kandas)}}

(The Book is free of cost for all those who are interested to read. Mobile: 8008137012)