The first woman
IAS officer in India
Calicut in the late 1930’s was quite different from what you
see today. It was a sleepy colonial town, not any longer the great trading
entrepôt it once was. The days when the Dutch, the Portuguese, the Arabs and so
many other nationalities who came to trade there were long gone, for the arrival of
the British had changed all that. It was some time in the 30’s that OA George
arrived at this Calicut with his children and wife Anna Paul, in order to start
up a little publishing outfit. Both of them were well educated graduates,
something unique in those days. KC Menon’s CESC had just
started to electrify the town. Traffic was sedate, with just bicycles and horse
carriages plying the main roads and Calicut exhibited hardly any hustle and bustle.
During weekends, some Europeans from the estates in Wynad drove in to party at
the European Club and by Sunday they were also gone. But Calicut had two
colleges, a few good schools and this was one of the main reasons why the couple
chose the town.
This story is about their daughter, who went on to become a
pioneer and a trailblazer to women in the field of administration and it was
in that Calicut that Anna Rajam George (Born July 16, 1927) grew up with her
parents and four siblings (an elder brother, two younger brothers and a younger
sister). Anna’s family lived right across the Providence girls’ school on
Gandhi road, close to the beach, so it was only natural that she did her
schooling there. Though the family were originally from Niranam (the writer
Pailo Paul was her grandfather) near Cochin, Calicut became their home, and as
we all term it, their native place. George stuck a friendship with Norman (as
he was called after his printing press) Achutan Nair and settled down to run
his little business.
After schooling at Providence Calicut, Anna finished her intermediate
at the Malabar Christian College Calicut and moved on to complete her BA Honors at
Presidency College Madras, where she majored and topped in literature. During
her growing years, she had a keen ear for music and played the Piano, but they
were always waging a difficult existence, what with a father who had been
victim to a stroke. Nevertheless, her education did not suffer.
With hardly any other job avenues open to women in those
days, Anna started her career as an upper division clerk at the AG’s office in
Madras. As they all say, some things occur by chance, and thus it was that her
cousin, an engineer, who was applying for the IREC, brought home an
application for the Civil services examinations (in 1950). She probably did not
even know what IAS was all about, I guess, but she filled in the application,
only to realize that the fee to be remitted with the application was a princely
sum of Rs 140/-, something neither she nor her family could not afford. Her
friend’s mother offered to pay the fees, and she did so (The benevolent lady’s
son rose up to become an IPS officer later).
While her two brothers went on to work for the P&T
department in North India, Grace the youngest, continued studies at Calicut. It
was at this juncture that Anna got news that she had been successful in the civil
services written examinations. Interestingly,
even though her mother was one of the first women graduates from Madras
university, she never worked, and Anna had always been told that she had to do
more than tending to a home.
When Anna appeared for her interviews in 1952, the interview
board suggested that she choose the foreign service because it was more suited
for women. Anna was insistent that she would not choose any easy option (Her
sister Grace adds – She was a tough nut to crack) and chose the Madras cadre.
Reporting to Chief minister C. Rajagoplachari, a person who did not quite agree
that this was a field for women, she was offered a job at the secretariat, but
the obstinate Anna would not budge, she wanted a Sub divisional officer’s post.
That was how she was deputed as the Sub Collector of Hosur district, Rajaji’s
birthplace, an area bordering the Mysore state, not far from Bangalore.
Her days as a sub collector at Hosur & Tirupattur were
legendary. Though I had read about a lady collectors elephant encounter, I
never imagined it was Ann Rajam, and it was not until Grace, her sister mentioned
to me that Chettur had written about it, that I got it in a flash, for in his
book Mango seed and other stories, there was this charming story of the
sub-collecteress and the elephants, titled “Her finest Hour”. I quickly got my
copy out and reread the story, which Chettur had written as a piece of fiction.
The story itself runs close to reality, as recorded by another eminent
Malayali, MKK Nayar IAS (1949 cadre), to whom Raju (yes, that was Anna’s pet
name) was as close as his own sister.
Let’s take up the
story from Nayar’s book, and I acknowledge the source in gratitude – He starts
off mentioning that the news of ‘a lady sub collector at Hosur and the
elephants’ had hit the press - The men who read the news were not amused.
Some raised eyebrows! What! A woman in the IAS? A she-elephant storming into
the bastion of bull-elephants? How did the Government permit this? If a serious
riot broke out, would a girl be able to quell it? Or give orders to shoot?
Would she be able to face a charging mob of communal madmen and address them?
Anyway, as the story went, a group of elephants from
Denganikotta forest had lost their way and strayed into open land venturing
eastward, terrorizing the villagers on the way. Walking eighteen miles, the
elephants reached Hosur. The villagers gathered at the sub-Collector’s bungalow
to cry and complain. It was only when Anna, who was taking a bath, came out
that they realized the sub-Collector was a woman. As they fidgeted, a woman
among them told her about the calamity and pleaded “Please save us, Amma!’ For
a moment the sub-collecteress (as Chettur called her) was stunned, not knowing
how to handle this. But she recalled that elephants were scared of loud noises.
With the little Tamil that she knew, she asked the villagers to get hold of all
kinds of tins and cans. Joining the villagers and creating a bedlam, she
accosted the elephant herd, cautiously.
Picking up Nayar’s words once again - Wonder of wonders!
The leading tusker slung his trunk on his tusk, turned around and began to
retreat. Other elephants followed him. Anna’s ploy had worked. Anna and the
villagers followed and the elephants began to go faster. Other villagers on the
way also joined with pots and pans they could find and joined the tin-beating
procession. In four hours, the elephants were back in the forest and hiding.
Anna was very tired and weak by then but did not lose heart. The villagers
celebrated their success with a festival at Denganikotta looking on Anna as
Goddess Durga. She was surrounded by hundreds of women of the village who
massaged her feet, legs and arms. They fed her milk. She became their
Mariamman…
Anna was tired and wished to get away somehow. By then,
hearing about the incident, the DFO arrived in his car. With his help, Anna
escaped further anointments, offerings, dousing in turmeric powder etc and went
home by 1AM at night. She slept until noon next day. She thus became the
heroine of a fairy-tale that received wide publicity and put to shame her male
detractors. As SK Chettur put it, It was her finest hour!!
There are mentions both in Chettur’s story as well as in
other articles of her colleague’s suggestions that the elephants be shot, but
Anna would not harm these gentle giants, she knew that they just had to leave,
not die. Anna, as Grace explained, actually got the idea of making loud noises
from the time she had spent with her cousin and witnessing ‘khedda’ operations
in the past.
There are so many such incidents in this iron lady’s life,
there is a story of how she and her team accosted a bunch of smugglers at the
border, with no weapons or other means, on a dark night. The district collector
was aghast hearing all this, he admonished her foolhardiness, read her the
complete riot act and gave her a pistol and ammunition to take care of herself
in future. Well, these were all novel things mind you, a fearless women
administrator, one who could ride a horse, fire a gun and so on. All this
becomes even more surprising, considering that Ann was a diminutive lady
tipping the scales at just 98 pounds in weight!
Anna returned to Madras around 1956, lived at Chetput where
Grace schooled, and perhaps continued at the Madras secretariat until the early
70’s, after which she moved on to Delhi. However, I could not ascertain the
exact timeline and Grace feels she went off to Delhi not too long after getting
back to Madras. Asked often what she felt about being the first IAS woman
officer, she would reply that it was not important, it is just a statistic. She
always believed that women always had the desire, but the many social pressures
and a general lack of opportunities, were the reasons they remained behind the
scenes.
There was a love story brewing through it all and her beau
was none other than her brilliant IAS batch mate, RN Malhotra. But it was not a
time for marriage (in the 50’s it was simply not feasible for a Punjabi lad to
marry a Christian woman, that level of tolerance was ages away) and in any
case, Anna was not for it. At that time, only unmarried women or widows without
encumbrance could join the services, though none had. Though her appointment
order had these lines: “In the event of marriage your service will be
terminated”, this clause was rescinded some years later. Grace mentions that
when Anna and her classmates debated this topic, Anna was the one who was
against a female IAS officer marrying and straying away from her chosen path.
While all the boys argued for the rule to be changed, she was the only one who suggested
it remain as is!
After her tenure in Madras, she moved to Delhi during the
Indira Gandhi years. As additional secretary for agriculture, she was very much
involved in the Green Revolution and argued against the many detractors of
fertilizers. There is a story of how she had to accompany Indira on an
eight-state tour to review food production, a trip she undertook, despite a
fractured ankle. By 1973, the food situation had stabilized.
Now we pick up the story of her husband, the revered Ram Narain Malhotra, who went on to become the governor of the Reserve bank. His family
had arrived as Punjabi refugees from Pakistan during the partition, and
Malhotra was a hardworking and efficient IAS officer. A brilliant administrator
and financial whiz, Malhotra was later posted to the IMF in Washington DC as an
executive director after a stellar tenure as the finance secretary at Delhi.
Anna visited the US in 1975, during that time and when Malhotra proposed, Anna
accepted. They were married at Washington DC, after a long 25-year wait!
Malhotra returned to take up the RBI position in 1985 during which period he
carefully shepherded India through a period of credit crunch and foreign
currency deficits.
We can see that by 1977, Anna had taken up the post of
additional secretary of the department of animal husbandry and fisheries. By
1980, she became the Chairman of the National Seeds Corp and thence the head of
the State farms Corp in 1981. Around 1982, we see Anna as the secretary of the department
of Education and Culture. During this tenure, knowing that legislative measures
to stop ragging would take time, heads of institutions and universities were
asked by her to ban ragging through executive orders. She also headed India’s
delegation as its secretary general and spoke in a few UNESCO conferences. We
also get to understand that she worked closely with Rajiv Gandhi when he was in
charge of the 1982 Asian Games, to help set it up.
Malhotra by the way, had succeeded Manmohan Singh
in Feb 1985, who moved on to the Planning Commission. At that juncture, the high
command was faced with a problem of finding an appropriate posting for Anna. There
were only a few options available in Bombay (as she belonged to the TN cadre).
Finally, it was suggested that Anna take charge of a project that had been
announced recently to set up a greenfield port close to the Bombay harbor. The
Bombay port trust was not capable of handling the increased demands and it was
decided to build a new modern container handling terminal. This was how Anna took
on the responsibility of building India’s first computerized container port,
Nhava Sheva, in Bombay. Anna took up the challenge, and it was a huge one. As
the eleventh major port of India, it was constituted as a separate port trust,
with its own constitution and Anna Malhotra, was its chairperson.
Starting from a marshy salt pan in 1984-85, the JNU port project
took shape and for once, a project was completed ahead of time (3 ½ years) and
below budget, thanks to the iron will and tough work ethic of its administrator.
Anna had a harrowing time with the archaeology department, but ensured that
controlled blasting techniques were used to avoid any damage to the nearby
Elephanta caves. As Grace puts it, she was a tough cookie alright and a
taskmaster, no excuses worked with her. At the end when all was done and
dusted, there was not a whiff of a scandal, that was how Anna completed the 1200
crore project, traveling daily from South Bombay to Nhava Sheva and back. An
impressed Rajiv Gandhi, India’s prime minister, had only one complaint, about
the ordinary food that Anna would arrange, that too for a dignitary! Today the
port handles around 60% of India’s container volumes and I could not help but
wonder at what Bal Thackeray had to say about this Madrasi, who built him his
greatest asset, the Nhava Sheva port!
When the port was opened in 1989, the country took notice
and a year later fetched Anna the Padma Bhushan award. Interestingly, a year
later, Malhotra also got his Padma Bhushan, perhaps the only couple in
history to have both been recipients of such high honor!!
Meanwhile Malhotra had resigned after Yeshwant Sinha asked
him for his resignation in order to make way for a Congress nominee, S Venkitramanan to take the position in 1900 (Source YS’s autobiography). Malhotra
was later tasked with regulating the insurance sector. His committee’s work
allowed entry of private entities into the insurance sector, and created the
IRDAI, to regulate the sector and protect the interests of policyholders.
When Malhotra passed away in 1997, it was a massive blow for
Anna, she had waited so long for them to be together and just after just two
decades of togetherness, he was gone! She continued with many ventures such as
the National commission for women and the film certification board. Grace
mentions that she was the worldly person of the family, the agony aunt, who
always had an answer, a solution for anyone with a problem, be it an insurance
policy issue or paperwork or anything to help out.
One person who changed her life at this juncture was none
other than the legendary Capt Krishnan Nair who as you may recall, built up his
Leela hotel empire from scratch, after the age of 65. Anna who had run into him
some decades back at Delhi and known him over the years, joined the Leela Group
as a director of the board. Anna often mentioned of her enormous respect for
the self-made Krishnan Nair, and it was apparent that the respect was mutual. Concerned
about her safety, staying alone in a large house in Delhi after the death of
her husband, the Nair family wanted her to relocate to a place close to them. Anna
moved to Bombay, Nair had arranged a flat at Marol - Andheri and tasked one of
his employees, Sujith Damodaran from Cannanore, to ensure that any assistance Anna
needed was provided.
That 20+ year tenure in Bombay was in no way a retired life
for Anna, for she traveled to Delhi often, met hundreds of people in connection
with the Leela hotel affairs, took care of many projects and board meetings,
and oversaw the group finances. Sujith wistfully recalls the days when these
families united, how Anna would be always supervising Sujith’s children,
forcing them to improve their English, how Krishnan Nair’s children grew up
under their godmother’s hawk eye and how they all loved their Annama! He breaks
up when he tells of the day he got a frantic call from Anna, who had fallen in
the bathroom and how he rushed there to see her in a pool of blood, an injury
which she eventually recovered from after the doctors had put in 18 stitches on
her head. Manmohan Singh, Narendra Modi, she hobnobbed with them all, in those
days. In the autumn years of Anna’s life, one could often see her meeting her
visitors at the lobby of the Leela hotel or spending time with Captain Krishnan
Nair and his family. Until the end, she would still field a number of telephone
calls from various people who wanted some assistance or clarification. Anna was
equally at home in Malayalam, Tamil and Hindi and I would not be surprised if
he handled a smattering of Marathi as well. Capt Krishnan Nair passed away in
2014.
Grace, her youngest sister and Anna’s biggest fan, who lives
in Rhode Island, USA remembers it all, how they used to spend a month or two at
their little home in Edappali - Cochin, and that is where we get to hear of a
final chapter in Anna’s life, relating to a maid who worked at their house.
Anna as usual checked and tutored the maid’s kids, and found out one day that the
maid was a college graduate who after marriage could not find work. She had
passed her PSC exams, and had been trying for long to land a job as a typist,
but of no avail. Anna got to working the phones over this matter and harangued
every authority possible. Many years passed by. Just as she thought she had
succeeded in 2016, elections intervened and the whole process ground to a
standstill. Anna was distraught, she had tried so hard, and she had not
succeeded. But things would change, for in June, the lady got her appointment
order as a typist.
It was possibly her last hurrah and Anna Rajam (George)
Malhotra bid adieu to our world, in Sept 2018. She wrote no memoirs, always
downplayed her part in history and was immensely happy in the success of women.
Throughout her life, only one thing was paramount for her, education. Any child
she came across, would be questioned, cajoled and scolded, if she found him or
her not focused on studies.
This no nonsense, tough and competent character who took all
her achievements lightly, always brushing off compliments, insisted that her
best days were spent in the villages she served, not the politicians or bigwigs
she worked for. The bureaucracy during her last years left her disappointed as
she saw it getting mixed with politics. Her era was different, she said, and
the women who succeeded her showed “high conduct.” Her overriding motto in
governance, as Sujith explained was “if you have to upset one person in order
to avoid upsetting a thousand, that is the step to take.” Playing down her
pioneering role, she called it a “fluke” during an interview with the Hindu in
2012. Her story will perhaps teach anybody who aspires public office that a
stubborn and honest person could also do well, in today’s world.
Anna broke barriers, set examples and blazed through to
showcase an enviable career which I hope many more women will emulate and
people like me can write about.
References
The Story of an era told without ill will - MKK Nayar (Trans
- Gopakumar M Nair)
Mango seed and other stories – S K Chettur
Remembering Anna, India's first woman IAS – Cris @ The
Newsminute, Sept 20, 2018
Pahal episode 13, Doordarshan, interview by Tabassum
With many thanks to Cris, my friend and journalist at
Trivandrum, Sujith Damodaran at Leela Hotels - Mumbai and Grace, Anna’s sister
at Rhode Island USA, each of whom narrated Anna’s story to me, passionately.
Photo –
Courtesy Grace V
13 comments:
Thanks for sharing the inspiring detail of Anna.
I thought all this happened a long time ago, but on reading find that she only died recently. What an inspiring story, what an inspiring lady. Enjoyed your write up.
Thank you, Maddy, for this lovely write up on Miss George, as we fondly called her. She and my father worked together and she became a family friend.
We are familiar with most of her life after she joined IAS. Nice to learn about her early life.
You are familiar with my mother's blog. Miss G features in this.
https://lifeinpondicherry.blogspot.com/2008/07/babujis-ezharai-sani-part-ii.html?m=1
Thanks Lljoy,
glad you liked this
Thanks VMK..
Yes, a very inspiring character, but hardly known. Am glad I could shed some light on the topic!
Thanks Raji,
Hope you are doing well, Oh yes, I recall your mom's blogs too.
So their paths crossed, I can see how she must have been at work, from your mom's jottings. Small world, I suppose.
Keep well and keep safe
rgds
What an enjoyable read, as always. Did she also not oversee the Asiad that took place in Delhi?
Thanks, Maddy for the meticulous research which has corrected many incorrect details about her. Yes, she was indeed a gracious lady with a fantastic drive for achieving whatever she had resolved to undertake. I used to know the couple when they were in the USA where the respected grandfatherly Ram Malhotra was the Executive Director of IMF. When I mentioned to her that I was from Calicut, she was genuinely happy to meet someone from the city where she spent much of her childhood. In fact, we travelled together in November 2015 to India when Ram Malhotra was returning to take up the Governorship of RBI.
I had heard on the corridors of Finance Ministry that they decided to wait to get married as Ram Malhotra did not want to hurt his mother's feelings and that it was only after the old lady passed away that they tied the knot. It could just be a gossip.
Anyhow, a great story, Maddy!
Thanks unknown...
Yes, I mentioned it as well, though I am not too sure about the extent of her involvement in the 82 ASIAD.
Thanks CHF, CK..
A remarkable couple, as you mention. When you study the lives of these people, you come to realize that they are also just that, normal people, but with a little more focus, purpose and drive - not some superhuman machines.
Greatly impressed with your write-up!! Very informative...We would be grateful if you agree for using the information of this article by giving you the courtesy...Thank you!
Beautiful peice. We were all discussing this in our family (kayyalathu) WhatsApp group today. My mother was Rajukochamma's cousin. Thanks a lot for writing this.
Joseph
Thanks Joseph,
glad you enjoyed this
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