23/12/2015 அன்று இரவு 7 மணிக்கு பொன்மன செம்மல் எம்.ஜி.ஆர். வழங்கும்
"சங்கே முழங்கு " சன் லைப் தொலைக்காட்சியில் ஒளிபரப்பாக உள்ளது.
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தகவல்கள் உதவி : மடிப்பாக்கம் திரு. சுந்தர்.
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23/12/2015 அன்று இரவு 7 மணிக்கு பொன்மன செம்மல் எம்.ஜி.ஆர். வழங்கும்
"சங்கே முழங்கு " சன் லைப் தொலைக்காட்சியில் ஒளிபரப்பாக உள்ளது.
http://i64.tinypic.com/2dlq4ad.jpg
தகவல்கள் உதவி : மடிப்பாக்கம் திரு. சுந்தர்.
இன்று விவசாயிகள் தினம் .
மக்கள் திலகத்தின் விவசாயி திரைப்படத்தில் இடம் பெற்ற கதையின் கரு , வசனங்கள் பாடல்கள் எல்லாமே அருமை .
விவசாயின் மேன்மையை ஒரே பாடல் மூலம் மிக தெளிவாக மக்கள் திலகம் பாடியிருந்தார் .அதே போல் நட்டு மக்களுக்கு மற்றுமொரு பாடல் மூலம் விளக்கியிருந்தார் .
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TOMORROW ONWARDS (24.12.2015) AT COIMBATORE SHANMUGHA
Political vacuum
M.G. Ramachandran's death marks the passing of an era of stability in Tamil Nadu
The year of ironies
It was as if the heart of Tamil Nadu had stopped. For two days normal life was paralysed. Shops were closed, essential supplies were cut off, vehicular transport ground to a halt and passengers were stranded at railway stations and the airport. Vice-President S.D. Sharma was stuck at the airport for three hours.
The cries of the anguished multitude had reached an eerie crescendo by the time the body of the matinee idol-turned-chief minister of Tamil Nadu, was taken on its last journey through the frenzied streets of Madras where 4 million people had descended. For three years the people of Tamil Nadu had been expecting his death.
And yet, the sight of the venerated leader, lying supine on the flower-bedecked gun-carriage, with his characteristic fur cap and dark glasses glinting in the afternoon sun, hit the surging, sobbing, milling crowd like a hammer-blow.
"Thalaiva, nee sollamai poittaye" (leader you have gone without telling us), wailed a young woman, babe in arms, running behind the funeral procession, unmindful of the jostling crowd, immune to the blows that were rained on her and her infant by the hysterical throngs who were screaming, pulling their hair, beating their breasts and faces in desperate sorrow.
Grief-stricken mourners
After a three-hour procession from Rajaji Hall where he lay in state for 29 hours, MGR was finally brought to the Marina Beach. On Christmas day, at 4.30 p.m. to the accompaniment of Abide with me and with full military honours, MGR was lowered into a sandalwood bier and interred in a 6 ft by 4 ft grave by the side of C.N. Annadurai, former chief minister and founder of the DMK MGR's friend, philosopher, guide and political mentor.
A burial identical to that accorded to Annadurai was provided for MGR-from the location of the site and the design of the coffin, right down to the showering of sandalwood billets into the grave.
It was a poignant historic moment when the mourners gazed one last time at MGR's beloved face, before the coffin lid shut him out forever. What had died was not just a chief minister and founder of a powerful regional party, but a symbol, a phenomenon, a legend. President R. Venkatraman observed: "MGR was the most charismatic leader in the country."
Added Karnataka Chief Minister Ramakrishna Hegde: "He has left a void not only in Tamil Nadu politics, but at the national level as well." And interim Chief Minister of Tamil Nadu V.R. Nedunchezhian aptly remarked: "It is the end of an institution, the end of an era."
MGR: the three letters were like a magic mantra for the poor of Tamil Nadu. As one of MGR's cabinet colleagues said: "Having faced deprivation in his early years, MGR could easily identify with the poor." Enthralled by his charisma, enchanted by his good looks and overwhelmed by his munificence, the masses had come to respect, adore and worship him. MGR's famous free midday meal for children came to be looked upon as divine prasadam.
Union ministers Buta Singh, Narasimha Rao and Fotedar pay respect
Ultimately, MGR's special link with his people had a near psychic dimension to it. His style of governance was autocratic, his demeanour feudal, his attitude vindictive, his administration inefficient. But the people of that region, in their blind, mystic reverence for him, saw none of this.
Moreover, the adulation cut across the usual caste, economic and party lines. As former vice-chancellor of Madras University and noted economist Dr Malcolm S. Adiseshaiah put it: "MGR had a golden heart."
Despite his administrative failings. MGR, because of the sway he held over the masses, was able to perform a critical balancing act that made him not just a regional politician but a national figure as well.
He was able to consolidate radical regional aspirations-preserving the character of the state's ethnic and regional identity-while still harmonising with the Centre. He was able to keep Tamil chauvinism and secessionism-once the pillars of the Dravidian movement-in check, enabling the state to return to the national mainstream.
Because of his popularity, generated in part by his numerous welfare schemes for the poor and the landless, he was able to avoid the opprobrium of being branded a stooge of the Delhi durbar. Union Minister N.D. Tiwari remarked: "MGR was first and foremost a true patriot." In recognition of his national stature, the Union Government took the unprecedented step of declaring the day of his death a national holiday.
courtesy - india today-1988