in my childhood - Ramanadha Sastry, Aravindan and Sivaprakasan. All these boys were from
orthodox Hindu Brahmin families. As children, none of us ever felt any difference amongst
ourselves because of our religious differences and upbringing. In fact, Ramanadha Sastry
was the son of Pakshi Lakshmana Sastry, the high priest of the Rameswaram temple. Later
he took over the priesthood of the Rameswaram temple from his father; Aravindan went
into the business of arranging transport for visiting pilgrims; and Sivaprakasan became a
catering contractor for the Southern Railways.
During the annual Shri Sita Rama Kalyanam ceremony, our family used to arrange
boats with a special platform for carrying idols of the Lord from the temple to the marriage
site, situated in the middle of the pond called Rama Tirtha which was near our house. Events
from the Ramayana and from the life of the Prophet were the bedtime stories my mother
and grandmother would tell the children in our family.
One day when I was in the fifth standard at the Rameswaram Elementary School, a
new teacher came to our class. I used to wear a cap which marked me as a Muslim, and I
always sat in the front row next to Ramanadha sastry, who wore the sacred thread. The new
teacher could not stomach a Hindu priest's son sitting with a Muslim boy. In accordance
with our social ranking as the new teacher saw it, I was asked to go and sit on the back bench.
I felt very sad, and so did Ramanadha Sastry. He looked utterly downcast as I shifted to my
seat in the last row. The image of him weeping when I shifted to the last row left a lasting
impression on me.
After school, we went home and told our respective parents about the incident.
Lakshmana Sastry summoned the teacher, and in our presence, told the teacher that he should
not spread the poison of social inequality and communal intolerance in the minds of innocent
children. He bluntly asked the teacher to either apologize or quit the school and the island.
Not only did the teacher regret his behaviour but the strong sense of conviction Lakshmana
Sastry conveyed ultimately reformed this young teacher.
On the whole, the small society of Rameswaram was very rigid in terms of the
segregation of different social groups. However, my science teacher Sivasubramania Iyer,
though an orthodox Brahmin with a very conservative wife, was something of a rebel. He
did his best to break social barriers so that people from varying backgrounds could mingle
easily. He used hours with me and would say, "Kalam, I want you to develop so that you are
on par with the highly educated people of the big cities."