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Rukmini Devi Arundale (29 Feb 1904 – 24 Feb 1986) T he story of Rukmini Devi and Kalakshetra is now part of the cultural history of contemporary India. Her life was part fairytale, part heroic saga, a life lived by lofty ideals and unshaken conviction. She played a large role in the revival of Bharatanatyam, redefined its stage and costume aesthetics as well as its grammar and spiritual underpinnings. A brilliant choreographer and designer, she created the genre of dance-drama, collected around her some of the finest artists and teachers from a variety of disciplines, to teach and practise at Kalakshetra. She did a magnificent job of preserving traditional arts and crafts, making the Kalakshetra weaving department a centre of excellence. She was a strong and vocal advocate of vegetarianism and compassion to animals. She became an effective, often inspiring speaker on all the subjects dear to her. Above all, she was an institution builder par excellence. And like many others of her high standards as a teacher, mentor, head of institution, she perhaps failed to put in place a proper succession plan. In her own words, “Often people exclaim and say: ‘What will happen after you!’ My answer is twofold; firstly, one must do the best one can while one is alive and even that is worthwhile. Secondly, we must not stop working just because we may not find the kind of successors we expect. I feel sure that there will be some who will carry on the work and that, if our destiny is good, there will be some one or more outstanding personalities to take over, who will make their own contribution.” Rukmini Devi’s faith in a benign destiny seemed misplaced for a while and there were anxious moments about the future of the institution when she died in 1986. The roles played by several individuals like the much loved Sankara Menon, former president of India R. Venkataraman and others in the smooth transition to Kalakshetra’s continued state of stability are well known to people familiar with the history of the Foundation. True there have been moments of uncertainty and some steps perhaps taken in the wrong direction, but few can complain of any great loss of identity or decline of standards over the decades after Rukmini Devi, especially when we consider the serious depredations globalisation has made into institutions and traditions all around. This profile of Rukmini Devi Arundale, written by Gowri Ramnarayan as a three-part serial in the first year of Sruti’s publication, takes the reader through her journey of discovery and excellence, while also providing insights into her holistic philosophy of art truly rooted in nature, and her compassion for all things living. EDITOR “The first time I saw her was when she invited me to India. The second time I saw her was when she gladdened the eyes of the children of my school in Europe by the beautiful presence of her Indian womanhood. I saw her again a third time from an aeroplane on the sacred land of India and her hands were covered with garlands of roses and jasmine, and then I lived next to her. I have seen her in all the beauty of her unsurpassing Art of Kalakshetra which she cares for with the generous goodness of her exceptional spirit. Today the occasion of her birthday, which, however, comes only every four years, I have felt the miracle of being here in her domain and of seeing her in glory among her pupils and have wished her with all my heart, all the good that can be obtained in this world and the triumph of her ideals.” Dr. MARIA MONTESSORI 1 z SRUTI T he imperious voice rings out a refusal. " N o . I cannot spare the time to give interviews. T h e r e is so much important work to be d o n e and h e r e come all these people pestering and pressurizing me." Another voice implores: "This is a very special occasion. You have just turned eighty and it's a landmark...." At this, Kukmini Devi, who has been walking away to get into her car turns around. All traces of annoyance have vanished. With a broad smile she asks: "Is t u r n i n g eighty such an achievement? All men and women grow old. Some live longer than others. Completing eighty is not a sacred landmark in my life! I don't even feel old! My work is by n o means complete. I am looking forward to achieving more and more worthwhile goals in the future." She is old, no doubt. H e r freshly washed silver hair proclaims her years, as d o the wrinkles and pouches u n d e r the eyes. She had been leaning on a colleague's shoulders d u r i n g the short walk to the car. Yet, when she talks of the future and the work to be done, she seems to shed all traces of the passage of years. T h e r e is a glow in her eyes, a youthfulness in her voice and a zest and power of eloquence in her speech. Assuredly, unpredictability is the main streak in Kukmini Devi's nature. She eludes e n t r a p m e n t by eulogy. She refuses to permit the ossification that sets in with excessive adulation which would 'monumentalize' her and cut her off from the mainstream of life. It is often said that personalities make destiny. T h i s truism is applicable with special force in Rukmini Devi's case. It is surely her own dynamic nature, with its multifaceted interest in the varied aspects of life and art, that has made her a unique "cult figure'. And today, at the mellow, age of four-score plus one, she still remains an extraordinary source of kinetic energy, a trend-setter, a revolutionary who battles with all the power at her command to preserve the purity of tradition and keep the insidious encroachment of ugliness in both life and art at bay. Rukmini Devi's missionary zeal has been channelized into many and varied streams of activity. T h e y have borne fruits in several spheres and not only in the aesthetic realm which has received the greatest attention. But she herself draws no dividing lines between the various activities to which she has paid attention. Hers is a holistic approach towards life which does not look upon animal welfare and Bharatanatyam as separate, watertight compartments. H e r involvement with education is not segregated from her interest in the handicrafts. Working for the vegetarian cause is as important as giving lectures on theosophy. A heuristic sensibility makes her various activities an authentic contribution of the individual towards changing the course and direction of the world. With this approach, she has brought to the world of art, which is a world of illusion and make-believe, the thrust and force of real life. She feels strongly on the importance oi art and articulates her views with passion. "People say that art makes you grow. But anything that inspires you makes you grow. Learning and practising any of the arts will add to your poise and make you more graceful, expressive and articulate. But the personality doesn't grow by the attention given to a subject. It grows by an inner understanding. Artists and art lovers are sometimes very cruel. So don't think that a mere learning of music or dance will make a person more compassionate. "But the arts have a much more important role to play in h u m a n life and human endeavour than the development of individuals. In an invisible overall way, art fosters the spiritual growth of humanity. When you partake of an art, somewhere, somehow, p e r h a p s like a hairline, t h e r e is a development of your own nature, your higher self. T h e change is so subtle that you cannot easily define it. It is a gradual but sure change of civilization itself." Ultimately what genuine art strives to communicate is the sense of beauty and a joy in that beauty. When highly created art evolves, she says, "its beauty is such that it will gradually penetrate into your nature." T h i s may not be an instantaneous transfiguration and perhaps not occur in one lifetime. T h e human collective unconscious is enriched by it for "it will surely penetrate into the n a t u r e of o u r civilization." T h e poet Shelley had observed that imagination is a great moral force o p e r a n t in the arts, which impels man towards goodness because it unfolds vistas of hitherto unperceived beauty. Art contributes to the effect by acting upon the imagination, he e said. Kukmini Devi avers that it is not so much the power of imagination as the power of art to make man more sensitive that develops the h u m a n qualities of compassion and fellow feeling. She elaborates: "Artists have a d e e p emotioncharged sensitivity. T h e y are sensitive to everything, to beauty, to sorrow, to cruelty. So they cannot stand ugliness in life and cruelty is an ugliness in life. With their natural instincts tuned to this fine, sensitive pitch, they get a better mental u n d e r s t a n d i n g of life. But since the change wrought by artists is neither preceded by a sudden upheaval nor followed by a total change, you may think that there is no change. But the change is taking place all the time and artists are helping civilisation to change. I think art is essential for h u m a n development because it contributes, immeasurably yet imperceptibly, like a d r o p in the ocean, to the evolution of noble and good character in people." These words gain meaning and validity in the light of the speaker's own life. Rukmini Devi was born on 29 February 1904 — a leap year — in Madurai d u r i n g the auspicious time of the Mahamagam festival. H e r father was Nilakantha Sastri who hailed from Tiruvisanalluron-the Kaveri. Sastri and his wife had eight children. T h e eldest was Sri Ram; then came Subbulakshmi, Sivakamu, Padmanabhan, Yagneswaran, Rukmini Devi, Visalakshi and Subramaniam. Sastri belonged to an orthodox Brahmin family of Sanskrit scholars. H e added Western education to his knowledge of the language of the Gods' and worked as a civil engineer in the Public Works Department of the Government. T h i s job entailed relocation every two years and thus the family kept moving from place to place in South India. Sivakamu, R u k m i n i Devi's elder sister, explains that the father was a great student of Vedanta who wrote commentaries on some of the Upanishads. "My mother," she adds, "was very musical a n d came from an equally conservative family of T i r u v a i y a r u but steeped in music. H e r uncle could sing well and play the violin. Two of my uncles, Ramachandra Iyer and Krishnaswamy Iyer could also sing well though they didn't have formal training. My mother had inherited the talent, for I r e m e m b e r her singing in a sweet voice d u r i n g the daily puja. She knew the ragas well; she would identify them easily right upto the time of her death at the age of 104. She could sing highlighting the essential features of a raga and demonstrate how it should go." Visalakshi, the younger sister, adds that their mother Seshammal was very artistic by temperament Sealed fl lo r): Sri Ram. Mother Seshammal. Subbulakshmi. Padmanabhan Standing (I to r). Visalakshi. Subramaniam. Sivakamu. Yagneswaran & Rukmini and that she used to enjoy watching the rehearsals as well as the actual performances of R u k m i n i Devi and h e r disciples. "She loved the music in the dance dramas of Kalakshetra. She had excellent musical taste. She herself did not become a singer, probably due to family commitments. You see, ours was a large family of eight children with grandparents, and visitors were constantly coming and going. My mother managed this oldfashioned household and she did it very smoothly." T h e period of R u k m i n i Devi's birth and girlhood was one of ferment affecting the" history of India. T h e nation was shaking off the stupor of foreign domination. An e m e r g i n g consciousness of the Indian cultural heritage was awakening the desire to revive the glory of the past. Riding the crest 19 of the renaissance was the Theosophical Movement which emphasized that there was no religion higher than the truth — satvarn nasti parodharmah — and that this universal truth could be realised by every person irrespective of caste, creed, colour or race. T h e emphasis was on the universal brotherhood of man and a higher spiritual quest, sometimes through occult methods, all of which focalized on the great wisdom ot India's past. T h e theosophical approach appealed to the Sanskrit scholar and the liberal thinker in Nilakantha Sastri. for it seemed to him to contain the quintessence or Vedanta in its spiritual search for the Brahman. H e joined the movement. Society's-compound freely, attend lectures, meet the Theosophists and so on." Sivakamu recalls: "Mv father was initiated into the Theosophical Society by Colonel Olcott, its Founder-President. H e heard the lectures of the Theosophists and was impressed by their books. H e was very appreciative of Dr. Besant's work, personality and talent. When he retired, he naturallv wanted to settle down near the Society. Building a house within the Society's compound would have made it the Society's property and therefore he bought land nearby and built our house at No.l, Guindy Road — the onlv house in that area at that time. T h e Theosophical Society with its beautiful grounds was the only inhabited area at Adyar and the rest was wooded wilderness. We used to go in and out of the In the circumstances, all the children were deeply influenced by Theosophy from childhood. Sri Ram later became the President of the organisation and Rukmini Devi herself became and is still the chief of the International Theosophical Centre at Naarden in the Netherlands. Mother Seshammal, who continued to wear the nineyard saree in the traditional m a n n e r of tnadisar, nevertheless adapted herself to the new current without sacrificing the essential values of the old ways. Before moving to Madras, the family stayed for a year at Pudukottai where Nilakantha Sastri designed and built a palace for King M a r t h a n d a . It was here, for the first time, Rukmini Devi was exposed, although only indirectly, to Bharatanatyam or Sadir, as it was called then. Until then, she tells us, she had had acquaintance with music alone, studying it as she was with her sister Visalakshi. "As a child I had no exposure to any other art except music. I was brought up on music and, being near Tiruvaiyaru for some time d u r i n g childhood, I got many opportunities to listen to great music. T h e r e was even a family legendthat Tyagaraja Swami used to visit my maternal grandfather's home. "I wanted to be a musician and that was my one desire from childhood. I learnt from some very great musicians. And when I got married, I started travelling a lot and went to many foreign countries as well. Wherever I went, I became interested in the art of the place. I heard the greatest musicians of the West and learnt to appreciate Western classical music. I was fascinated by drama too. But jazz, which had become very popular by then, and ballroom dancing did not appeal to me, although I tried to like them because everyone else did. In North India. 1 learnt music — sarangi and dilruba — from Nasiruddin Khan." A in nnil Lover For a long time she showed interest in all the art forms that she came into contact with, learnt to appreciate them discriminatingly, and even tried to learn some forms motivated by the sheer joy of p a r t a k i n g in an art experience. Still, she never even imagined that her unique contribution to the world of culture would be through Bharatanatyam. " D u r i n g childhood, my only glimpses of Bharatanatyam were at Pudukottai where my father, as an officer serving the Maharaja, took responsibility for arranging the Navaratri festival. In those days, dance was very much a part of temple festivals and I saw a dancer among those in the temple procession for a fleeting moment. This made no impression upon me at that time. At Pudukottai I actually lived amidst dancers and musicians. In the two houses opposite ours lived famous dancers, while a nattuvanar lived in a house behind our own. I could hear the sounds of music and the staccato beats of the tattukazhi, or the conductor's baton, very often. But I was curious only a little." In those days Sadir had a ghetto existence, imprisoned behind the iron curtain of taboos, confined to a certain section of society that was socially not highly respected and this section looked u p o n dancing as its preserve. Another section composed of males felt it was its special privilege to appreciate its intricacies. No wonder that little Rukmini did not feel impelled to peep into the hidden mysteries. T h e aversion or revulsion those a r o u n d her exhibited towards Sadir perhaps affected her too. At any rate the initial curiosity died. She was learning music — her guru had taught Coimbatore Thayi among others — and it absorbed her. "I really didn't think that there was anything in dance," she recalls. "It never occurred to me to try to see the dancers or their art." Rukmini Devi not only studied but also attentively listened to music as she had done from the age of two. She had heard her own grandfather sing, and had been taught some songs by her mother. T h e father recognised and nurtured her musical talent, although he wanted his Rukmini to become a Sanskrit scholar as well as musician. So he arranged for her tp study music u n d e r Mahavaidyfenatha Iyer and his son Sabesa Iyer, who were foremost among the musicians of the day. However Rukmini's brief period of learning came to an end when Nilakantha Sastri fell ill and passed away, necessitating a change of plans in the family. We can only guess what the father's reaction would have been if he had been alive to see his daughter become a luminary in the dance world. H e had actually signed a pledge never to see or encourage dance in anyway. But he once asked his daughter why she took such an interest in Western dance and not in Bharatanatyam which was "according to the Sastras, an art". H e might have been delighted to see Rukniini as a dancer and as the head of a great cultural institution where music and Sanskrit llourished and found expression in a dance form with a tilt different from the typical Sadir of his days. T h e reaction of the mother, a strictly-reared Brahmin lady, was unusual. Seshammal's concept of traditional values were unfettered by prejudice. She accepted all ancient art forms and the incidental excrescences of decadent elements did not frighten her. She was confident that her d a u g h t e r would find a way to discover and taste the inner kernel of the forbidden fruit. Visalakshi speaks for the entire family: "We knew that dancing meant coming into contact with people considered immoral. No one in our family considered this as a serious issue. We looked at Bharatanatyam as an aesthetic art form. We were convinced that it was intrinsically beautiful, even if it might have been used or misused in a corrupt way. And we knew of Balasaraswati who was doing wonderful work in this field." Connoisseurs, scholars and many of the dancers of the y o u n g e r generation speak of Rukmini Devi as the one who revolutionized Bharatanatyam and brought a newvalue and a new attitude to it, the new value actually being a revival of the old traditional value, which is realized by stripping the moss and p r u n i n g the weeds obscuring the ancient art form. In India, a r r i s looked upon as a pathway to reach ' God. If not actually moksa sad ha mi, it is brahmasvada sahodara (akin to the experiencing of ultimate bliss). Singing and dancing are seen as partaking of the activities of Gods . and Goddesses, for the Puranic lore depicts those as performers and connoisseurs of art. T h e Upanishads describe God as Kavih Krishna dances with the Gopis a n d on Kalinga and his Bute binds the world in its magic spell. Even the elephant-headed, pot-bellied Ganapati dances in glee. Saraswati is a Veenadharini described as Sarigatnapadaniratam. Nataraja is seen as the Supreme Dancer who, dancing out of pure joy, reveals the secret of the cosmic energy controlling and sustaining the universe. T h e image of the usually matted locks of Siva falling freely r o u n d his head as h e dances illustrates the essential principle of art, namely the balancing and blending of dynamic motion and stasis. It also illustrates how art can capture the stillness in the midst of life's turbulence, how man can realize a tranquil bliss inhering at the central point of tension and action. Hence saints and poets extol the Gods through songs and dances. T h e predominant emotion of these arts is rati, the basic attraction which transforms into sringara, the experience of love in. aesthetic rapture. T h e apparently p o r n o g r a p h i c flamboyance of sculpture in temples is never meant to be secular. Furthermore, the ancient H i n d u s who created these architectural marvels were untainted by prudery, prurience o r puritanism. Love and sex being important experiences of life, they saw the former as a pre-taste of the ultimate bliss, a metaphor and a pathway to-that ultimate Reality. Sex they viewed as the creative principle inherent in man which could b e worshipped as the divine cosmic energy of creativity. T h e themes found myriad forms of expression through theology, mytho/ogy. philosophy and the different forms of art. T h e dance in a sense is the combination of all the fine arts. It is colourful and picturesque; it has m o r e dimensions than painting. It has motion and space, with sound and sense (music and poetry) as its valued adjuncts. Paradoxically, it uses the physical and the sensual m e d i u m of the body to express the spiritual and the sublime. Kukmini Devi puts it thus: " T h e dance can contribute both to the positive and the negative, to the beautiful and the ugly side of human beings. It isan expression by the physical body Because it is a physical expression. it is both a dangerous and a magnificent instrument. T h e weakness of the physical body is its coarseness and vulgarity. For those who in their minds and emotions are unable to transcend the physical, the dance can become an instrument of sensuality and coarseness." When Rukmini Devi came into the field, the physical dimension it was that came through mainlv. Veena vidwan K.P. Sivanandam, a descendent of the famous foursome — the T a n j a v u r quartet — who enriched the art of dancing by their inimitable compositions, believes that the art of dancing was unadulterated, untainted and elevating as long as it remained part of temple rituals and festivals. In parallel to its jx?rlormance in the temples, Sadir came to be offered — without blemish — as an aesthetic experience for the connoisseurs in the courts of, the kings and zamindars who patronised musicians and dancers. T h e deterioration set in when dances began to be organized in the houses of the rich as entertainment d u r i n g the weddings and other family festivities. T h e situation got worse as secularization gained over the years and it degenerated to such an extent that, at the beginning of the century, the public came to consider dancing as a vulgar occupation for the performer and the spectator alike and a campaign was launched for a law against the system of the devadasis dedicating themselves to the temple a n d dancing within its precincts. And then again, the Victorian outlook fostered by Western education made the 'educated' and 'cultured' man of the times to condemn eroticism as obscene. In some cases, they were perhaps justified. According to Semmangudi Srinivasa Iyer, the dances were sensual orgies' and 'displays of lust' which turned him awav from the art whose beauty he perceived only much later, when stripped of the excrescences. And Sankara Menon, Vice-President of Kalakshetra and a close associate of Rukmini Devi, has this to say: 'When Rukmini Devi took to this dance, there were a large n u m b e r of devadasis who were brilliant dancers, like Jeevaratnam and Varalakshmi. T h e y were wonderful dancers from the point of view of the technical aspects of dance, such is adavu-s and jati-s. But thev danced without understanding what they were doing. They were dancing to a set of rules given to them, which were flogged into them through severe training. You cannot say that Rukmini Devi had no examples because she had all these people that she had seen a n d herself marvelled at. We were all struck by the glory of the dancing. But we also thought they were dancing to very trivial things without any meaning or just a vague sringara rasa. A n d the sringara that they tried to portray was a very ordinary, low sringara. But there was nothing wrong with the vigorously maintained discipline." Those were the days when even singing was taboo for women who were not devadasis. T h e women knew songs, they listened to a good deal of music at the temples, and if they belonged to a familv of (male) musicians, they learnt everything before the disciples did. But to display their learning was unthinkable. It remained well hidden except for the occasional crooning and h u m m i n g within the four walls of the home, even then the anterior portion of it. T h e fourday wedding celebrations had ceremonies such as oonjal, nalangu and sobhanam at which, in the houses of the orthodox, songs were sung by devadasis retained to perform dances in the evening. Sometimes, folksy items such as kummi (clap-dance) kolattam (stickdance) and sobfuxnam were performed by them. And at the e v e n i n g s dance recital the bigwigs of the area would be greeted bv the devadasis with flowers, betel leaves and other paraphernalia, and sometimes with the application of sandal paste to their forehead neck and hands. T h e n the dance would commence a n d as and when the devadasi pleased the onlookers with her performance, she would be offered gifts a n d money. Violation of tradition in such an ambience prostituted the art. But even then there were dancers who lived with dignity and honour. Some lived with a man to whom they remained so true as to consider themselves widowed at his demise. In a televised interview, Rukmini Devi has given her own analysis. According to her, much of the glory of the past has departed from Bharatanatyam and at the present time, the art is going t h r o u g h a rather superficial phase emphasizing glamour and the cult of the personality. T o recapture the spiritual and impersonal h a r m o n y of the art, commitment and sincerity are required. And that necessitates the total extinction of the self-centred ego. Answering the oft-made charge against her that she has eschewed sringara. Rukmini Devi claimed that such statements were examples of j u m p i n g to u n w a r r a n t e d conclusions, for if she had really spoken opposing sringara, then she herself must have set a very bad example by presenting varnam-s and pada-s in the "controversial" rasa. Later on she explains her position to us again. "I have done abhinaya for a few kriti-s of Tyagaraja, Dikshitar and Papanasam Sivan, because they were soaked in the bhakti rasa, which I consider very important. But sringara is important too. Perhaps my interpretation of sringara was different from the way in which most people conceived of it. Sringara is not sensuality. It also means a love of a great kind, such as the love of Radha for Krishna as depicted in Gita Govmdam which I have produced. Why would I do that if I thought it vulgar and wrong? It is nothing buLsringara from beginning to end. In fact, devotion itself is love in a higher form. Even sex is not coarse in its light place. Children are born of sexual relationship, but it is not only sex but love that creates a child. So if it has been said that I am against sringara, I can only say that the inference is wrong. But t h e r e are certain types of pada-s that I have objected to. From one vidwan I learnt the old padam tamarasaksha (Yadhukulakhamboji). with a lot of sanchari bhava-s of the languishing navika separated from her lover. She describes not only her love but the whole process of physical contact and in gestures at that! T o depict such things is unthinkable for me. A famous man gave m e a book on sanchari bhava. When I read it I just felt sick. Mind you. I don't say that the ladies who danced such things were vulgar. They were taught that way and were probably ignorant of some of the meanings. I too did not know the meaning of some of the things I had been taught. But my guru Meenakshisundaram Pillai used to make m e eliminate the lewd element, saving: This is not for you. You should no I do it. Mere was a nattuvanar censoring parts of songs as unsuitable and these were things that he was accustomed to all his life! T h e r e is another reason for my thinking this way. A devadasi is inured to certain things from childhood. She has seen her mother and her g r a n d m o t h e r dance to certain things. So, even if a mudra is Sankara Mcnon & Rukmini vulgar in meaning she may not be conscious of it. But I was not hi o u g h t u p that way or in circumstances where vulgarity was accepted with a matter-of-factness. And therefore, for me, certain things remain unacceptable and I keep them out ol ray life." While she has felt this way and acted accordingly, Rukmini Devi has never denied the excellence of some of the practitioners ol the ait. She always had a great respect and admiration for Balasaraswati's dancing. Rukmini Devi avers thai Balasaraswati's art was beautilul and untainted by vulgarity. She smilingly discloses that Bala had once told her that the ostensibly 'good class' of girls who had taken up Bharatanatyam were themselves cheapening the art through tasteless presentations. Bala had described this phenomenon as the new kind of vulgarity. " T h e r e was some truth in it," says Rukmini Devi. "Many of the younger dancers, themselves highly critical of some of the old trends, are doing things which are much worse. I don't like their gaudy glitter and artificial abhinaya. T h e irony is that many ol them are very well behaved and cultured women off the stage. You'd never believe they are the same girls when you see them perform." She also paid a handsome tribute to nattuvanars and devadasis in writing about Bharatanatyam in the Sunday edition olAmrita Patrika (1954): Devi Bazar " T h e ' s a d i r was performed by devadasis in temples, palaces and the houses of the people in general on all auspicious occasions.... T h o u g h in latter days the 'sadir' unfortunately developed sensual characteristics which almost brought about the extinction of the art, it must also be remembered that the devadasis kept u p both the technique and the spirit of the dance tradition. T h e y were dedicated to the temples and this was no mere formality but a real dedication for, when they danced d u r i n g the temple festivals or rituals, they were examples of pure devotion. T h e joy of dancing and offering their art at the altar of the Supreme was great and had no ulterior motive. "This was why SO manv outstanding artistes were born among the devadasi class of people. T h e corruption that nearly killed the art was not theirs alone but that of the society in general for which society must bear the responsibility.... "It needed new life, it needed to be put through the fire so that the gold obscured by dross may once m o r e shine. Whether the brilliance and purity of the gold is too good for our present society is a question that demands an answer. T h e decadence in character that almost destroyed the art once has taken another shape and may once again attempt destruction. Hence, the 23 ^? need to understand, to know, to educate and be educated into the real spirit of India." It may be asserted that Rukmini Devi's earnest mission in life has been this desire to understand, to know, to educate and to be educated into the real spirit of India. In p u r s u i n g this mission, Rukmini Devi was fortunate in having an atmosphere at her parents' home which was supportive of unshackled development of the m i n d a n d the s p i r i t T h e family was rooted in tradition and steeped in culture, but was not orthodox or rigidly conventional. T h e father had sympathy for the downtrodden and a sense of fairplay. Over the years he embraced progressive ideas. T h u s , he joined a league formed of parents who vowed not to marry their daughters young. T h i s was after his eldest d a u g h t e r Sivakamu had already been m a r r i e d as a child. T h i s t u r n e d out to be a mistake, for when Nilakantha Sastri had settled down at Madras close to the head and heart of the Theosophical Movement, d a u g h t e r Sivakamu decided to leave h e r husband and return to her parents' h o m e so that she could continue h e r education and take u p medicine as a career. T o welcome a d a u g h t e r who repudiated her marriage in o r d e r to p u r s u e a career was going radically against the norms of society but welcome her Sastri did. H e supported Sivakamu's decision saying she had every right to continue her studies if she wished to do so. She could choose her own life, to continue her marriage or not, he said. " H e wouldn't be bullied or coerced into changing his mind by the shocked reaction of our relatives, Sivakamu's in-laws or society in general," says Visalakshi, a d d i n g : "Sivakamu had suffered but Rukmini and I were saved the horrors of child marriage." ■14 In the event. C.W. Leadbeater, an eminent theosophist, took a liking to Sivakamu and he encouraged h e r to go to Benares for her schooling u n d e r the guidance of Miss Francesca Arundale. So Sivakamu completed her studies a n d enrolled herself in the J.J. School of Medicine at Bombay, passing out with an outstanding academic record. Later she went to Ireland, England and Austria and studied obstetrics and gynaecology (MRCP). Sivakamu's contact with Rukmini Devi was only d u r i n g the holidays. But they shared a common interest despite the difference of eight years in age and that was a love of animals and birds. According to sister Visalakshi, it was Sivakamu more than Rukmini who was all the time befriending stray dogs and cats and bringing little wounded creatures home for treatment and care. Perhaps the elder sister's compassionate interest played a part in influencing the younger sister's nature. But Rukmini Devi did not stop with showing love towards those few creatures she personally came into contact with. Over the years she has d o n e admirable work for animal welfare a n d has worked towards m a k i n g people realize that the preservation of wild life is as necessary from a practical point of view as it is for the cultivation of humanitarian qualities in men. She has been a patron, representative and member of several organisations promoting animal welfare and vegetarianism. Passionately committed that she is to these goals, she is horrified by the torture and exploitation of animals in the name of entertainment or science. She tells us how she was affected when she saw elephants in a circus ring: " T h e y were made to perform the usual feat of standing on their heads or with all their feet on a small stool. T h e youngest one was unable to follow the directions but the man used his prod.... T h e baby elephant squealed and finally succeeded after which they all joyfully ran back to their prisons. I wept silent tears when I saw this.... "I had an equally miserable time when...a film was shown of a pharmaceutical institute showing how some experiments were performed in these places. A little mouse was taken and put into a tube so that injections of diseases or their cures could be given from behind. I heard its cries. Young beagles — c h a r m i n g y o u n g dogs — bred at the institute were kept in cages. Each one was picked up...for experiments such as forced cigarette smoking, etc. T h e friendly creatures, unaware of their fate, wagged their tails and licked the very hands that were going to torture them. Also I heard the cries of beautiful cats a n d other creatures. Such things can h a p p e n nowhere else but on earth which man makes so hideous." She has protested against vivisection and whipping too but not due to a blind belief. H e r campaign against non-vegetarianism is not the squeamish aversion of the gently n u r t u r e d B r a h m i n lady to 'unclean' food. T h e y are part of her Weltanschauung that wants to eradicate evil and cruelty m a r r i n g the beauty of life. She herself has said: "...not only is there most heartr e n d i n g cruelty everywhere, but t h e r e is so m u c h indifference and ignorance. We, who work for culture cannot ignore this aspect of culture, for culture is neither performance nor entertainment, but life. Art is an expression of life. I cannot imagine culture and cruelty going together. In fact, I wish every artist would give some time to this aspect of culture. I know many people think we must h e l p h u m a n beings first and then only animals. T h e y d o n ' t realize that love and compassion to animals makes us better h u m a n beings." K. Chandrasekharan is a close friend and associate of R u k m i n i Devi. H e recalls to us a revealing incident. Once when he and a few others were talking to her at Kalaksbetra, she suddenly b o u n d e d out into the garden. Looking for the cause of her flurry, they found a stalking cat about to pounce upon a squirrel. In saving the squirrel from the cat's paws, Rukmini Devi broke her toe! Laughingly K.C. adds: "Whenever you visit her, you will see some dogs or cats around, coming and going freely. She will never speak to these creatures harshly. If work needed her u n d i v i d e d attention, she would gently push them away or ask someone to take them out. She is truly a prani mitra. " T h e reference is to an award given to her. " H e r love for the animals makes one think of the Advaita concept. If the same spirit — atman — pervades all with its omnipresence, then animals are also part of the divine life-force. So when we differentiate between h u m a n beings and animals without realising our kinship to these creatures, we live in ignorance. What moves Rukmini Devi to serve animals is not pity, but love." studied at Triplicane H i g h School in Madras where we learnt English in which we became fluent du e to o u r close association with the Theosophists. But otherwise, at home, we spoke only Tamil- At Pudukottai, our studies had been disrupted and so at Madras both Rukmini and I had to join in lower classes. She was very good at music and drawing. She participated in extra-mural activities, especially in acting out plays and skits." Sivakamu remembers Rukmini's imitative skill. Apparently she had a naughty streak that added sauciness to her mimicry which was so good that it kept people in splits of laughter. T h i s capacity of mimic sounds, speech and dance did not make anyone think of teaching her to dance because, dancing was after Doctor Sivakamu also has d o n e wonderful work to alleviate the sufferings of men and animals, especially at Bikaner where she was the head of a hospital and an orphanage. In fact she received the Kaiser-i-Hind medal for this work. She says that her sister Rukmini was a large-hearted person from childhood. "She couldn't see suffering in an animal or a human. She was not just fond of animals in a passive way; she wanted very much to do some thing for them." Equally, she has been kind and helpful to people, though this has been masked by her strictness and plain-speaking. "Rukmini has upset people very often by her way of talking which is not always considerate," observes Sivakamu, "But in h e r heart she is very sympathetic." Rukmini Devi and her brothers and sisters had an easy, companionable childhood. As Sivakamu recalls, "We children did not have many household chores to do but had plenty of freedom and time to grow, to play and to dream." And Visalakshi adds: "But at no time did I imagine she would become so famous and in the field of dancing at that! Rukmini, however, was always very dreamy and imaginative. She was forever making up stories to regale me with.... T h e general education that we received was very good. We Rukmini Devi & Dr. Arundale all a vocation of the devadasis only. However, music lessons from 'an old man with a violin' did continue for the y o u n g e r girls. Visalakshi continues: "My father fell ill and passed away in 1919. Rukmini was sixteen and 1 was thirteen at that time. Rukmini was a school girl still and although she was interested in and good a t . studies, she gave u p her studies because she got married a year after father's death. T h e r e was one activity in which both of us were rather hopeless and that was needlework. My father always discouraged us from doing e m b r o i d e r y saying that it was bad for the eyes. At school we had to make an embroidered table-cloth in preparation for the visit of an, inspectress. O u r work was screened by the teacher prior to the visit and u p o n seeing Rukmini's table cloth, she made the cryptic comment: Don't bring your table cloth to school tomorrow for the inspection. "We were not allowed to take up strenuous household tasks but father was keen that we girls should learn some cooking. Mother obviously didn't agree. Sometimes we would look into the kitchen to h e l p her in o r d e r to please lather. T h e n Amma would show us a little bit of tamarind or salt and say: Have vou ever seen this? Do vou know what it is? All right, now you can go. " T h e mother felt that since the girls had too many things to do already, going to school and learning music. it was unfair to burden them with household work. When they grew u p they would learn it of their own accord. T h u s , without a strict regimen, the children had plenty of free time to be by themselves and develop their interests. Before h e r father's death, Rukmini Devi had come to share his ardent belief in the goals of Theosophy and his devotion to D r Annie Besant who was then a lionized leader in the seething political arena. Dr. Besant's eloquence flooded hearts and moved minds. H e r probity and integrity and her extraordinary magnetism left a profound impact upon people's minds. T e e n a g e r Rukmini became a zealous worker for the causes espoused by Dr. Besant. D u r i n g this time, as part of the National Week celebrations, the members of the Theosophical Society enacted R a b i n d r a n a t h Tagore's Malini at the Victoria Public Hall. In one of the scenes a slip of a girl appeared a n d sang a song in Kedaragowla raga. T h e r e were no microphones, but such was the clarity of tone and rendition that everyone responded to its sweetness. T h e r e was warm applause at the end. "I was stunned by the impact of Rukmini Devi's appearance," says Chandrasekharan who was present on the occasion. "She was a young girl, not very fair but with lustrous eyes and long, heavy black tresses parted in the middle. T h e dividing line was clearly visible because of the darkness of the hair. When she bowed her head, I could see even from a distance the beauty of this feature and understand why Sanskrit poets waxed lyrical upon the glory of the central parting line of the heroines and compared it to the Milky Way or the flowing Ganga. I realized that the idealistic description of seema (especially in the devi stuti-s) is not far from the real. Oh, what a picture she made!" T h i s might sound like the ecstatic eulogy of a y o u n g man but Chandrasekharan states that the impact she made then remained undiminished through the years both in her solo performances and in her dramatic productions. H e has always felt that Rukmini Devi belonged to a higher plane of existence. Nilakantha Sastri had not wholeheartedly approved of her participation in the play. She had obtained his consent by representing that the play was not for entertainment but for the national cause. At the end of the p r o g r a m m e , he was so pleased that h e took h e r by the shoulders and said: "My dear, you must become a musician." Rukmini Devi became more and more involved with Theosophy. Dr. Besant was a perennial source of inspiration, guiding her creative spirit. Of this leading light. Rukmini Devi says it was she who made her understand the real background of India and kindled a love for Indian culture. "Dr. Besant had a Western body but was a better H i n d u and Indian than most of us. She taught m e to respect my heritage. I didn't appreciate all that was good in our own country. I couldn't understandwhy she praised India so glowingly in her lectures. Once when I voiced my doubts, she replied: My dear, you have seen the form but you haven't seen the soul of India. I hope someday you will understand the soul. " Rukmini Devi was an eye-witness to an incident that illustrated Dr. Besant's deep love for India — a love reflected in her involvement in India's political resurgence and her social-psychological progress but also and above all in her regard for India's spiritual values. Embarking from a P & 0 steamer at Bombay's docks, Dr. Besant prostrated herself on bare earth. Sensing that Rukmini Devi needed an explanation of this act, she said: My dear, this country has given birth to such greatness that I consider its soil holy. Dr. Besant believed that Indian art was not for the leisured class alone. In the euphuistic language of the day, she wrote that beauty diversified into the arts was the refiner and uplifter of humanity, as it was the instrument of true culture that destroyed prejudice and petty coarseness. Democracy a n d equality of social intercourse could not be actualized without the universal language of art which had no limitations of time and space. Believing that art and religion were inseparable, she predicted their united revival starting from the East and spreading throughout the world. O n e of the luminaries a r o u n d Dr. Besant was Dr. George Sydney A r u n d a l e , an English-born educationist who was equally a lover of India and her ancient culture. When R u k m i n i Devi met him at a party given by his aunt in 1913, he was in his mid-thirties. H e had clearly defined features, and a distinguished presence. His broad forehead and arresting eyes indicated his intellectual dimension. He was d e b o n a i r without being flashy. H e was full of wit and h u m o u r and friendliness, without losing the glow of idealism that guided his life a n d work in the field of education. A tribute paid by Dr. Sarojini Naidu vignettes his personality: " H e taught not only through his mind but through the imagination and spirit.... [H]e imparted not merely knowledge but also a lovejier thing — faith. His wisdom expressed itself not only in solemn counsel but in his gay, spontaneous laughter, his wit, his h u m o u r and his speciaPgift of touching with glamour the commonplaces of life. H e dedicated the best years and the best love of his existence in India.... H e had a reverant passion for her past, a radiant vision of her future." Dr. Arundale placed a great deal of hope in Rukmini Devi working for that 'radiant future' and encouraged her potential to flower outwardly in every way he could. y o u n g girl of a Brahmin family with a Sanskritic tradition and a foreigner was anathema to the orthodox and the conservative. Even people with a supposedly broader outlook cavilled at the proposed marriage between a sixteen-year old girl and a fortyyear old man. Sivakamu recalls: " T h e Madras public was very much against the marriage. But what was m o r e surprising, many theosophists were also against it. Perhaps the age difference of upon the reactions of family members. She feels that their father would not have opposed the match as he had respect and regard for Dr. Arundale but he might have had certain reservations because of the age difference. T h e initial reaction of mother Seshammal might have been o n e of astonishment but such was her faith and trust in Dr. Besant that she left the matter entirely in h e r hands. Sri Ram, the eldest brother, found that, as the head of the family, he A r u n d a l e first saw Rukmini as the y o u n g d a u g h t e r of a fellow theosophist. Dr. Sivakamu was a friend from her Benares days where she had been a student under his aunt and he the Principal of the Central H i n d u College. Dr. Sivakamu describes him eagerly: " H e was extremely popular at Benares, simply adored by everyone. H e paid personal attention to every student and sympathised with his aspirations. H e did not stop with verbal encouragement but chose thirteen of the best students and sent them to England for further studies. H e knew every single student at the College and was devoted to the cause of education." Visalakshi's description of Dr. Arundale is so enthusiastic that a string of adjectives tumble out: friendly, helpful, magnanimous, truly noble, generous. As she saw him, he was altogether a rare, warm-hearted person. Love of young people was a special trait. H e firmly believed that the great fruits of India's cultural a n d spiritual efflorescences of the past were not the properties of Indians alone but belonged to humanity at large. Dr. Arundale came from an aristocratic family which h a d produced painters and artists. H e himself had once intended to become a musician. H e was a connoisseur of the arts who adopted India as another home. When Arundale proposed marriage to Rukmini (this was after the death of Nilakantha Sastri), it was as if a volcano had erupted, spewing hot lava in every direction. A marriage between a Sfi Ram & Rukmini Devi twenty-four years struck them as preposterous. T h e truth is that Dr. A r u n d a l e was a very attractive person, very talented, with a great name. So I was not at all surprised at Rukmini falling for his charm. H e was a very dear person and I felt that anybody would have been attracted to him. H e had liked her very much and the attachment ripened into love when she responded. I must also tell you that there were many who were attracted to him, but it was Rukmini whom h e decided to marry. In fact, until he met Rukmini he was very much the confirmed bachelor absorbed in his work." T h e opposition was persistent and strident. Visalakshi adds m o r e details to the picture* by dwelling had to steer all of them out of troubled waters. Rukmini Devi herself has recorded, in an obituary notice she wrote in 1973 on Sri Ram, her "gentle and just brother" who had been of great support to her, that "a storm of protest broke out in the eountry with the British and the Indians both objecting, the first because a Britisher had no right to marry an Indian, a n d the other because an Indian Brahmin girl had no right to marry a foreigner." In an obstreperous mood, Yagneswara, another brother, opposed Rukmini Devi's decision. H e joined the ranks of his uncles who thought that in, a fatherless home, advantage was being taken of a y o u n g girl's innocence. Yagneswara had always been the rebellious protester and ornaments as my mother felt jewellery made it unsafe for young girls. It was a simple registration ceremony without any chanting of mantras. A fairly big reception was held in the evening for the — Theosophist friends." his widow N o r m a says that it is this spirit of contradiction in him that must have egged him on to take u p cudgels against Dr. A r u n d a l e . However, Dr. Besant approved of the match as a true marriage of two m a t u r e minds and Sri Ram found the strength to overcome the opposition and sanction the marriage. T h e question is whether Rukmini Devi herself had the mental maturity at that tender age to take such a decision independently. Visalakshi laughs as she answers: "She was always precocious. And nobody either co-erced or encouraged her to marry! She could have refused if she had wanted to. It was the other way r o u n d . In spite of all the pressures and persuasions, she held on to her decision to marry A r u n d a l e . Neither Dr. Besant nor Sri Ram proposed the match. T h e proposal came from Arundale and she accepted it. And I for one was overjoyed at her choice. I r e m e m b e r pacifying mother with Why are you afraid of others? And I also r e m e m b e r saying to Rukmini: Oh. you MUST marry him! H a v i n g been brought u p on the Theosophical tradition, the idea of racial difference did not worry Rukmini Devi or her family. T h e mother was certainly aware of the gargantuan social problems likely to arise but had confidence in her d a u g h t e r and abided by her choice. However, Seshammal was later to be greatly troubled by the estrangement the marriage caused between h e r and her brothers, who refused to visit her 'tainted' home for years. Fearing to hold the wedding ceremony in Madras, the family went to Bombay to solemnize it. Visalakshi describes the occasion: " R u k m i n i looked lovely in a Benares saree in blue with gold spots. She had on the m i n i m u m of With the marriage, a radical change took place in Rukmini's life. For one thing she stopped attending school. More significantly she began to emerge as a public figure. Public attention came quickly because of the unusualness of a woman working for many causes, coming out into the open, and it e n d u r e d because of the value of her contributions. In the words of Peter Hoffman of Kalakshetra who has been working on her biography for many years, after her marriage Rukmini Devi "joined in an intimate association with two of the greatest people of that period and became daughter, pupil and helper to Dr. Besant as well as life's companion and assistant to Dr. Arundale." H e adds: "She later became associated with many other outstanding people in various fields. She has travelled virtually over the entire planet taking the message of Indian culture an her own message, which might be described as the religion of beauty and compassion." Rukmini Devi herself has said over and over that at no time did she feel that Dr. A r u n d a l e was a foreigner. Sankara Menon explains that her marriage did not lessen her attachment to India, but on the contrary, increased it, for her husband encouraged her in h e r quest for the higher things, even as he opened her eyes to the glories of Western art by taking her to museums and art galleries, operas and plays, music concerts and dance recitals in Europe. In starting her new life full of purposeful activities, Rukmini Devi quietly found — and revealed — she had abilities to make eloquent speeches and she spoke to many forums. She became the President of the All India Federation of Young Theosophists (1923) and later the President of the World Federation of Y o u n g Theosophists (1925). She delved into the tenets of theosophy and clairvoyant C.W. Leadbeater initiated her into mysticism and the occult. Once a meeting was organized u n d e r the big banyan tree at the Theosophical Society. Some very eminent people were present but Rukmini Devi addressed them all confidently. K. C h a n d r a s e k h a r a n remembers her walking up to the podium clad in cool yellow silk. Narayana Menon, a close friend, was as usual holding an umbrella over her head to shade her from the sun. H e r feminine grace and stately beauty inspired the Right H o n o u r a b l e Srinivasa Sastri to turn to Chandrasekharan and exclaim, What a beautiful figure! Chandrasekharan says that h e never saw her appear in anything garish, or anything that offended the eye or good taste. Showy razzledazzle and glittering finery were not for her. She believed then — as she does now — that the colour scheme should blend subtly with the e n v i r o n m e n t . It was not only her striking beauty that arrested attention. "She was only twenty-two or so but she spoke very well." People were impressed by her looks and her zeal. Voicing the feelings of many who came into contact with her, Chandrasekharan observes: " T h e r e was an aura, some indescribable quality that set her apart from others. Apparently she was not conscious of her good looks. She never seemed to care about being the cynosure of all eyes. No doubt, she was a beauty. When her heavy eye-lashes d r o p p e d , what a picture it m a d e of Madonna-like loveliness! And when she began to speak, she could rise to great heights. Prof. R. Srinivasan commented that she gets possessedby a godly power when she addresses people at meetings." A force that shaped Rukmini Devi's future at that time emanated from a wraithe-like creature, a ballerina named Anna Pavlova. In 1924, the Arundales were in London and went to see Pavlova at the Covent Gardens. That was Rukmini Devi's first glimpse into the fairy world of ballet and she* had become enraptured by the dancing and more particularly by the Pavlova magic. T h e famous dancer appeared in a Russian folk tale as a princess metamorphosed into a bird, and subsequently in her own composition Autumn Leaves. For Rukmini Devi, it was all breathless enchantment. She had seen Western dance before, when she was fifteen or twenty in Madras. But that had neither interested h e r nor kindled her curiosity to learn more about the different kinds of Western classical dance. But Pavlova affected her differently. "I didn't know anything about ballet, but I was affected by Pavlova's delicate beauty and charm. When she came on stage people used to gasp and say Aaahhh! and I shared their fascination." Anna Pavlova came to India shortly after and had a season at Bombay. Rukmini Devi longed to see her although it was the time of the annual Theosophical convention at Benares. T h e President of the convention remarked sarcastically, What is all this mad rush, running after a dancer? Undeterred, Rukmini Devi journeyed to see Pavlova and again felt the magic. She went backstage to meet the stir and saw the ballerina come out of h e r room lightfootedly and talking quickly. "She turned me around and looked at my saree, my figure and then with an Oh, it's lovely to see you, dashed out in a hurry," she recalls. "And I thought she walked out of my life." It turned out she was wrong. In 1928, Society work took the Arundales to Australia and the East Indies. Dr. Arundale lectured in city after city. T o their surprise and delight, the couple found that the Pavlova Company'was also touring the same cities simultaneously. And in every single city Rukmini Devi told h e r new friends that they must see the great Pavlova and she attended the concerts with them. Finally, at Surabaya, when she and Dr. Arundale got into a boat sailing tp Australia, whom should they see but Pavlova and her whole troupe of forty dancers! O n e of them was charming Cleo Nordi, a soloist who unexpectedly came to the Arundales and told them that she was pleased to meet them. She later became Rukmini Devi's ballet instructor. T h e encounter with Pavlova was more intimate. In the boat were two luxury cabins facing o n e another. Rukmini Devi came out of hers to find Pavlova emerging from the other with a pleasant Hello! "After that, I was following her about everywhere. I had no ambition to learn ballet but I watched her with rapt wonder. T h e r e was a swimming pool at the top deck where the whole company would gather to practise ballet and I would be there watching them." Soon R u k m i n i Devi got to know Pavlova very well. While sitting on the deck one day, Rukmini Devi said to her: "I wish I could dance like you but I know I never can." Pavlova was quick to reply: "No, no. You must never say that. You don't have to dance, for if you just . walk across the stage, it will be enough. People will come to watch you do just that." T h i s warm tribute to her grace from one so dainty herself was — and is still today — greatly cherished by R u k m i n i Devi. T h e thrill was enhanced when she reached the hotel after disembarking and found an e n o r m o u s bouquet of flowers with the note Love from Pavlova. While in Australia, Rukmini Devi helped edit the n u m e r o u s photographs Pavlova had taken in India. She also wrote captions for them and all this threw Pavlova and h e r together a lot and helped develop a'rich relationship between the middle aged dancer and the girl in her early twenties. Rukmini Devi went to every performance with large groups of friends and this adoration made Pavlova give her a free pass. Sometimes she would stand in the wings (a privilege the ballerina gave no one else) and watch. Every once in a while Pavlova would dance towards her and say How are you darling or Oh I'm so nervous and pirouette away. Rukmini Devi r e m e m b e r s that many members of the company said Pavlova showed this interest because Rukmini Devi was an I n d i a n and Pavlova loved everything Indian. Apparently, they gave credit not to R u k m i n i Devi's charm but to the fact of her being Indian. Such remarks didn't bother her any, she says. T o u c h e d by Rukmini Devi's devotion, Pavlova told her on one occasion: "You seem so fond of the dance. I'm sure you can learn it." "Learn! I'm too old to begin. I don't think I can be a dancer." This was R u k m i n i replying. A n d Pavlova: "If you were a Westerner, I would agree but you are an Indian. You have a supple body and I think you can learn ballet. I will teach you if you come to London. In the meanwhile Cleo who is staying on in Australia will teach you." An examination of Rukmini Devi's feet confirmed Pavlova in h e r opinion and so R u k m i n i Devi made an appointment with Pavlova to meet her in London. H e r lessons with Miss Nordi began as a preparation for the honour. But one day, when Rukmini Devi was sitting on a ferry, one of h e r friends who was r e a d i n g the newspaper suddenly cried out: "Look! Look at the headlines! Anna Pavlova is dead." . Lost a bit in memory lane, Rukmini Devi sighs and concludes her recapitulation: "And so ended my career with Anna Pavlova. I learnt ballet from Cleo Nordi and z few others. I did perform sometimes with my friends but never with the idea of becoming a full-fledged daiicer. It was just to train my body and m o r e for the sheer joy of learning something beautiful. Incidentally Pavlova once said to m e : You CAN learn ballet but I think that everyone m\ist try to revive the art of his own country. Pavlova herself stated that she h a d said the same thing to Uday Shankar who danced with her as Krishna." (First in a series)