Unlit Cigar and the ‘Nineteenth Friday Evening Meeting’
With
Political Commentator and Political Analyst
Sanjaya
Baru as Special Guest at Press Club Hyderabad
By
Vanam Jwala Narasimha Rao (June 19, 2026)
The
weekly Friday evening meetings at Press Club Hyderabad have quietly become a
sacred platform for the city's senior journalists. It is a space where
like-minded thoughts gather to unpack the immediate past events over a social
drink, occasionally joined by select guests who shape public discourse. But the
nineteenth Friday meeting carried a distinct, high-profile energy. The evening’s
special guest was Sanjaya Baru, a son of the Telangana soil, who modestly navigated
the highest corridors of power in Delhi, most notably serving as Prime Minister
Manmohan Singh’s (PMO) official spokesperson.
Sanjaya
Baru brought an aura of national political history besides few interesting
anecdotes to the table. The normal practice of conversation preceded with a
gesture that perfectly matched the gravity of the guest, when a regular
participant, senior journalist A Saye Sekhar stepped forward and presented Baru
with an impressive box containing a 'Churchill': a premium Cuban Cigar from the
IIC brand. Named after Britain’s wartime Prime Minister, the Churchill Size is
legendary, built for long, deliberate reflections.
Instead
of reaching for a lighter, Sanjaya Baru simply held the cigar unlit. It was a
striking visual. While couple of smokers in the group, frequently stepped out
of the room to catch their quick smokes, Baru’s premium Cuban Tobacco remained
entirely unsparked. Yet, it served as a powerful anchor for the evening. There
was no smoke to cloud the room around him, but just the sharp clarity of
insider insights, laughter, and pure, unfiltered camaraderie among familiar
friends. The casual conversation over social drinks gradually evolved under
Baru’s guidance into exploration of one of South India's success stories: the
Trichinopoly Cigar.’
Steered
by Baru's sharp historical lens, the discussion recollected about the Trichinopoly
Cheroot, once a staple across the British Empire, which was supposed to be framed
not merely as a tobacco product, but as an early pioneer of international
trade. These hand-rolled cigars from Tiruchirappalli were in fact, commanding
markets in Britain. The brand cemented its place deeply into the Victorian Consciousness.
The conversation settled toward the legendary connection between Winston
Churchill and the Trichinopoly.
Baru
highlighted how Churchill was fond of the Cigars. However, the narrative
carefully separated historical reality from regional lore. While industry
traditions vividly claim that a clandestine ‘Churchill's Cigar Assistant’ was
appointed in Madras to ship Trichy Cigars to Downing Street when Nazi U-boats
cut off his Cuban supply, the table treated these accounts with a journalist's
healthy scepticism, noting they remain fascinatingly reasonable but lack
definitive archival proof. This distinction extended to the role of Guntur
tobacco also.
Finally,
the dialogue turned to recent social media buzz surrounding a ‘Revival’ of the
craft. An FB Post according to Baru says: ‘Today, the industry has heavily
dwindled. But, the historic 123-year-old Fenn Thompson and Co, the last primary
manufacturer, has been still keeping the heritage craft alive.’ The consensus
steered clear of exaggeration: reports of the Trichinopoly Cigar’s absolute
demise are factually incorrect, as traditional manufacturing quietly persists
on a limited scale via heritage-focused houses.
Ultimately,
the evening's discourse yielded a striking reflection on India's commercial
history. The story of the Trichinopoly cigar serves as a powerful, elegant
reminder that South Indian craftsmanship captured global imagination,
infiltrated British Elite Culture, and established international branding over
a century before the modern corporate era. The smooth flow of the evening
perfectly mirrored the unique nature of these Friday Meetings, as gatherings
devoid of formal agendas, official invitations, or professional obligations,
where every participant quietly picks up their own bill purely for the joy of
high-calibre company.
As
the conversation shifted, Sanjaya Baru revealed a beautiful, poignant
coincidence behind his personal visit to Hyderabad. The very day of this Nineteenth
Friday Gathering marked the Birth Centenary of his illustrious father, the late
BPR Vithal, a towering colossus of the Indian Administrative Service (IAS) and
a definitive authority on fiscal federalism. Vithal was legendary as the
country’s longest-serving Finance and Planning Secretary, whose pivotal
research on Telangana's budget surpluses provided the intellectual bedrock for
the statehood movement.
With
deep reverence, Baru recounted an intimate glimpse into the disciplined
personal life of the great administrator. No matter how demanding or chaotic
his schedule, Vithal maintained a lifelong, unshakeable ritual: a single peg of
a social drink every single evening, a habit he kept right up until he breathed
his last at the age of 94 years! The room broke into captivated smiles as Baru
shared a classic, telling anecdote from his father’s bureaucratic career.
Decades
ago, while serving as a member of the Tenth Finance Commission of India under
the chairmanship of veteran statesman KC Pant, Vithal put forward a singular,
highly specific request to the chief: ‘Let there be no meetings scheduled
after 7:30 PM.’ It was a characteristically polite, yet uncompromising, nod
to his inviolable evening social hour. Baru noted with nostalgic affection that
those were eras defined by immense mutual respect, elegance, and a profound
regard for elders.
Recognizing
the wisdom and human necessity behind the request, Chairman Pant instantly
issued informal executive orders. The directive, strictly forbidding
late-evening official huddles, was swiftly honoured not just across the
corridors of power in New Delhi, but seamlessly adopted by all state
governments hosting the commission. For the senior journalists listening at the
Press Club, the story was a beautiful reminder of a golden era of governance,
where towering intellect and a perfectly balanced lifestyle walked hand in
hand.
Keenly
listening to Baru and on BPR Vithal, one of the participants, who was well
acquainted with late Vithal, placed before the group to ponder and compare current
undisciplined political expenditures with the financial discipline of previous
eras, especially of BPR Vithal’s times. The roundtable criticized the modern,
routine use of state resources, symbolized by indiscriminate helicopter and
private aircraft usage for routine partisan activities, as a stark departure
from past standards of public accountability.
Sanjaya Baru’s keen interest in the Friday
Meetings was unmistakable. He readily agreed to an invitation extended by Amar
Devulapalli, one of the pioneers of these Meetings. As the evening progressed,
Baru atypically drew a fascinating parallel between Hyderabad's Friday Gathering
and a legendary institutional counterpart in the national capital: the ‘Saturday
Club’ (or Saturday Discussion Group) of New Delhi. He revealed that he had been
associated as a member of this elite, informal forum since 1994, though its
roots trace back to 1977.
Born
as a poignant ‘Post-Emergency’ development, the group was conceived during an
era when civil liberties and intellectual discourse were reclaiming their
breath. Much like the Friday Meetings at the Press Club, the Saturday Club
operates on strict lines of egalitarian camaraderie, devoid of formal
structures, where every participant unpretentiously clears their own bill. He
said that: Meeting regularly at the prestigious India International Centre
(IIC) in Delhi, the forum serves as a rare, eclectic melting pot.
He
added that: It brings together a diverse galaxy of thinkers, academics,
journalists, and senior politicians across ideological divides. Over the
decades, the group has boasted an extraordinary roster of minds, including
former Prime Minister IK Gujral {whose famous ‘Gujral Doctrine’ was partly (Supposed
to be) shaped within these very deliberations!}, veteran statesman LK Advani,
former Vice President Krishan Kant, political veteran S Jaipal Reddy, and
iconic journalists like Pran Chopra and strategic thinkers like Bhabani
Sengupta.
However,
said Baru that, in those earlier decades, the club was known for its
high-quality, unflinching deliberations, where policy strategists and political
giants argued without malice. However, when the conversation touched upon the
modern status and continuity of these historic Delhi meetings, Baru offered a
subtle, yet biting, third-person diagnosis of changing times. He noted that
while the gatherings persist, the sheer quality and depth of the deliberations
have noticeably come down since the BJP rose to power.
{{The
observation led to a reflection on how national polarization slowly alter the
efficacy of a decade old organization. The Saturday Discussion Group's
influence peaked in 1997, highlighted by an India Today profile which noted:
‘For the first time the eclectic forum enjoys a spell of fame,’ which captured
the group during IK Gujral's Prime Ministership. This period marked the height
of the club's prominence and unique political connection.’}}
The
19th Friday Meeting, followed a familiar and electric trajectory.
After winding down a few non-political subjects, such as reminiscing the great economist
BPR Vithal, and the lingering old-world charm of ‘Churchill Cigar,’ the
conversation shifted fundamentally into current affairs, more on politics. Such
a transition is entirely natural for the Friday Roundtables, but it felt
particularly inevitable in this meeting, given the composition of the room.
The
special guest of the evening being Sanjaya Baru, the formidable political
commentator, economic policy analyst, and renowned author of The Accidental
Prime Minister, and seated around the informal table was a galaxy of a
dozen senior journalists, veterans of the multifaceted reporting, alongside a
shifting ring of occasional onlookers drawn by the gravity of the discussion,
who come to club either for a leisure or on professional assignment. The
conversation kick-started with a provocative view by one of the participants:
‘The
BJP has systematically engineered splits in the Trinamool Congress and the Shiv
Sena (Uddhav group) is actively planning to splinter the Samajwadi Party, perhaps
even securing the tactical, under-the-table support of the DMK. What exactly is
Modi up to? Is he preparing to structurally delete the words 'Secular' and
'Socialist' from the Preamble, transition India into a Presidential Form of
Democracy, and effectively establish himself as a President?’
The
political segment of the 19th Friday Meeting at the Press Club Hyderabad
evolved into a rigorous evaluation of India’s systemic realities. Guided by the
extensive experience of Sanjaya Baru, the roundtable moved past superficial
electoral analysis to examine structural governance, institutional decline, and
alternative models for national development. The collective findings of the
group could be systematised, refined, and structured into thematic pillars.
The
discussion centred on a fundamental structural transformation within the Indian
executive, led by the insights of Sanjaya Baru regarding centralized power
dynamics. The group reached a near consensus that the current leadership model by
and large mirrors a Presidential Framework. The consensus indicated a distinct
institutional admiration for highly centralized, top-down models of authority,
such as that of Vladimir Putin, where the Prime Minister effectively operates
as a singular, systemic executive.
Drawing
from his analytical work published during the 2024 general election titled: ‘Who
wants 370 majority? Not even BJP leaders’ Baru’s premise was revisited to
contextualise this executive drive: ‘No business person too would want a PM so
powerful that he can continue to hound them through instruments available to a
government ... Prime Minister Modi has himself claimed that such a convincing
majority will enable his government to undertake important economic reforms
that will speed up India's growth and make it a developed economy by 2047.’
The collective opinion
concluded that the constant push for overwhelming majorities is designed to
minimize parliamentary friction, validating the theory that the political
executive prefers a direct, presidential mandate over collective cabinet
accountability.
The table shifted to an objective critique of opposition politics, noting a
deep structural disconnect within the primary opposition party despite glaring
national opportunities. The observation was that, understanding contemporary
Congress party strategy remains a challenge for political analysts, and absence
of nationwide ‘Charismatic Leadership’ to counter BJP and NDA.
The
Friday meeting agreed that the broader political ecosystem is currently facing
a systemic absence of unifying, and it was strongly opined that Priyanka Gandhi
possesses a better high degree of latent political potential. The consensus
suggested that she could step into a major national leadership role to address
the party's structural challenges, provided the organizational hierarchy
chooses to actively empower her. Sanjaya Baru and the participating journalists
opined that Mamata Banerjee stands out as perhaps the only truly self-made,
grassroots woman leader who, for the present appears to be nearly ‘politically
finished.’
A
major philosophical pivot that can be broadly titled as ‘The 20-Year Strategic
Pause’ occurred when Sanjaya Baru introduced a seasoned, alternative vision for
India’s long-term trajectory, which resonated widely with the table. As part of
this pragmatic diplomatic stance, which the group largely endorsed, it was
proposed that: ‘Instead of exhausting creative, financial, and political
capital on high-stakes global posturing to match the United States or China,
India should adopt a quiet, low-profile stance in the international political
arena for the next 20 years.’
Likewise,
as Sanjaya Baru suggested, the group reasoned that the Nation's Primary focus
must return to domestic stability. Success should be measured by the peaceful
conduct of daily life, guaranteed access to basic nutrition and quality
education, and the preservation of cultural practices as an individual option.
The Friday Get-together agreed that over-ambitious global posturing should not
override fundamental domestic human development indices. The growing systemic
anxieties regarding North-South regional divide also came in conversation.
Interestingly,
on the periodic friction points suggesting a North-South division among states,
the group raised a cynical, yet precise question: ‘Does India possess a
committed, regional leadership free of systemic corruption to handle this
divide constructively? The broad view settled on the troubling reality was that
institutionalized corruption cuts cleanly across party lines, complicating
genuine federal representation.
The
19th Friday Evening Meeting concluded by citing Brazil’s Economic Trajectory
as a vital warning. The participants guided by Special Guest, Sanjaya Baru, noted
how Brazil, once celebrated as an emerging global model of development,
stumbled by sustaining its growth with unsustainable public finances and
over-leveraging its economy without securing foundational domestic industries. Participants
expressed their concern, whether India faces a parallel structural risk if it
prioritizes rapid, speculative financial metrics over robust, institutionalized
economic discipline.
The
Nineteenth Friday Evening Meeting reaffirmed the enduring value of a simple yet
powerful idea: when experienced minds gather without hierarchy, agenda, or
compulsion, conversation itself becomes a repository of knowledge. From
reflections on history, governance, economics, journalism, and public life, the
evenings demonstrated how informal dialogue can generate insights often absent
in formal forums.
These
gatherings continue to evolve as living archives where memory is documented,
experience is shared, and diverse perspectives are respectfully examined. Their
strength lies not in numbers but in continuity, openness, and intellectual
curiosity. As the circle steadily expands, more members, professionals, and
thoughtful individuals are encouraged to participate. Every new voice enriches
the collective narrative.


Sacred platform? 🤔
ReplyDeleteSo the Friday intellectuals decided that priyanka gandhi has political potential. 👏
No decisions please. Only expression of opinions
Delete