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Was India's First Dalit President K.R. Narayanan Really A Christian?

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https://www.outlookindia.com/websit...ashes-of-former-president-kr-narayanan/299818

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How did the remains of K.R. Narayanan, the first Dalit President of India who was officially cremated on the banks of Yamuna according to Hindu rituals in 2005, end up in a tomb in a cemetery exclusively for Christians in Delhi?

Narayanan, who was born into a Hindu Dalit family in Uzhavoor village in Kerala and remained so officially, has a tomb alongside his wife Usha Narayanan in the non-denominational cemetery run by the Delhi Cemeteries Committee on Prithviraj Road.

When Narayan died on November 9, 2005 at the age of 85, he was survived by his wife Usha and two daughters- Chitra, who had been India’s ambassador to many countries, and Amrita. His last rites of consigning the body to the flames were performed by his nephew Dr S. Ramachandran at a spot between 'Shanti Van', the memorial of Jawaharlal Nehru, and 'Vijay Ghat', that of Lal Bahadur Shastri.





Rev. J. Rebello of the Catholic church, who is also the chairman of Delhi Cemeteries Committee, told Outlook: "The burial happened because the Christian pastor of his wife, a protestant, could have vouched that Narayanan is a Christian."

Narayanan had not officially willed that he be buried after death, and his wife was too unwell to have made the decision to inter the remains of her husband. Usha died in January 2007.

If it wasn’t Usha, the burial decision, which raises questions of grave illegality, could have been taken by his daughter Chitra. The illegality arises from the fact that Narayanan, who rose up the ladders enjoying the benefits of positive discrimination accorded to Dalits by the Constitution, was given a burial without his will. It is not publicly known whether he was baptized after demitting the office.

Outlook has sought a response from Chitra and will update the article as soon as we receive her comments.

Narayan, during his stint in Rangoon as an Indian Foreign Service Official, had met his wife, a Burmese woman named Tint Tint, an Evangelist protestant, and married her in 1950 after the Centre gave its blessing. Tint Tint later adopted the name Usha and used to attend mass at the Cathedral church (viceroy church) near the Rashtrapati Bhawan after Narayan became the 10th President of the country in 1997.

“The church has no problem in burying the ashes, the Pope too has allowed it. But the person has to be a Christian,” said the Rev. Rebello.

“Even cremation of Christians is allowed.”

The burial of “non-Christian” Narayanana becomes stark against the recalcitrant attitude of the Church towards rebels or those who have married out of community.

Last year, when actress Priyanka Chopra’s grandmother died, there was a controversy around her proposed burial. She had wished to be buried in the same Jacobite Syrian Christian cemetery in Kerala where her ancestors were interred. Some church officials declined her last will claiming that she had stopped living the ‘Christian way’, including the manner in which she had married, which was without following Christian conventions.

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At the time, retired Supreme Court judge K.T. Thomas had reportedly called the confrontation regrettable. "Cemeteries are usually reserved for parish members. If you start burying outsiders, there will be a problem of space. But in Mary John's case, she was a parish member and I don't agree with the stand that she ceased to be one because she married into another community.”

But amid the growing rumbles, K.R. Narayanan’s remains lie interred in a tomb with an epitaph which reads thus: A Gentle Colossus, 4-2-1921 – 9-11-2005 President of India 1997-2002 Loving husband of Usha Narayanan.
 
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Leave him. YSR was also christian.
I'm wonder where would pappu will end up
 
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http://www.rediff.com/news/2005/nov/09iype.htm

The last time former President K R Narayanan was in his home state of Kerala was in February, along with Prime Minister Manmohan Singh for realising his last dream, perhaps - dedicate his ancestral home for the study of ayurveda and siddha.

Dr Singh came down to inaugurate the ancestral home turned into the Navajyoti Karunakaraguru Research Centre for Ayurveda and Siddha at Uzhavoor village, Narayanan's birthplace in Kerala's Kottayam district.

Narayanan's modest, four-room tiled house at Uzhavoor, where his sister K R Gowri and brother K R Bhaskaran stayed was perhaps the only property he financially helped his siblings with.

"He had helped us build this home. So after constructing this house, I prepared its documents in his name," Gowri had told rediff.com in February. But Bhaskaran and Gowri did not want to keep the home to themselves. "I wanted to give it to the public for a just cause in the name of my famous brother," Gowri said.

So when she told Narayanan about gifting the only property the family had to Santhigiri Ashram, which runs two Ayurveda hospitals in Kerala, the former president was elated.

Narayanan talked to the Ashram officials, and within months, the former president brought in Dr Singh to hand over the keys of his modest home for setting up an ayurveda and siddha research centre.

Dr Singh had lots of praise for the Narayanan family. "This is a noble gesture by a gracious family, which is doubly significant because of the purpose for which the building is being used - the promotion of our traditional systems of medicine, Ayurveda and Siddha," he said at the inauguration.

"Just as Narayanan symbolises human achievement through intellectual endeavour, Ayurveda and Siddha represent the pinnacles of Indian traditional scientific enquiry in the area of healing. Today's event is truly a homage to our tradition of giving primacy to knowledge," Dr Singh pointed out.

"Knowledge is all about giving and, through this gracious act, this family has reinforced our belief in the Indian tradition of the gift of knowledge, which is the greatest gift of all," he added.
Their neighbours in Uzhavoor say the dedication of their ancestral home for ayurveda research was typical of the Narayanan family.

"The greatness of the Narayanan family members is that they always remained poor and they did not want to earn out of the high offices that the former president occupied," said Keshavan Kutty, a close aide of the Narayanan family in Uzhavoor.

He added that the decisionof the Narayanan family members to gift the little property they all owned together for a noble cause showed their dedication and service for the people and the nation.

When he became the President of India in 1997, Narayanan had taken a Lincolnesque journey to the Rashtrapati Bhavan. Born in a thatched hut in a poor dalit family, the man who was elected India's tenth president had overcome innumerable economic and social hurdles to ascend to the highest office in the land.

And early this year, by dedicating his ancestral home to the Shantigiri Ashram, Narayanan showed to the world the extraordinary life he lived-that he lived for the society and the nation.
 
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The whole bunch of parasites , so called seculars- from pappu, lalu, mamta, maya are big bunch of liars.
How do you expect them to do corruption - including moral- without lying.
Nitish too is liar..either he lied in 2013 or on last wednesday.

Lying and Politics goes hand in hand. Nothing much anyone can do about it.
 
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