M. K. KAW-- THE LAST OF A VANISHING BREED.
Last week another tenuous link to a glorious past was broken. MK Kaw, a retired IAS officer of the 1964 batch of the Himachal Pradesh cadre passed away at the untimely age of 78 in Delhi, suddenly and without even bidding farewell to his myriad admirers and friends. Mr. Kaw was perhaps the last of that unique breed of scholar-administrators who made the IAS one of the inimitable civil services of the world. He represented a pedigree that has almost disappeared today-an inquisitive student of many disciplines, an eclectic man of letters, an epicure of refined and gentlemanly tastes, and a public servant of exceptional sensitivity and ability.
He was a prodigy who did his matric at the age of ten, completed his Masters when he was only sixteen, and joined the IAS at twenty three at his very first attempt. And all this without ever attending a formal school. He wrote 13 books, was an artist, a singer, a deeply spiritual man, a social worker who headed the All India Kashmiri Sansthan for many years, served as Dean of the Sri Satya Sai International Center for Human Values; all this while he discharged his bureaucratic responsibilities with rare competence, vision and objectivity at all levels, ending a remarkable career as Secretary to the Govt. of India.
All of these qualities and talents are to be found in many persons, but it is only once in a generation that they all together come in a harmonious package in one individual. And rarer still in someone who is a perfect gentleman, a warm and caring individual. I worked for two years under him as his Joint Secretary in the Finance Department in the eighties. The seniority gap between us was eleven years, in pecking order terms the distance between a meerkat and a lion, an unbridgeable gap in the civil services. But Mr. Kaw bridged such chasms effortlessly, with gentle banter, irrefutable logic, an unmatched breadth of vision, a mordant sense of humour and a twinkle in his eyes that dared you to be offended. He bonded with his juniors as no one else has done either before or after him, and not surprisingly, managed to get the best out of them without any officious effort. In those days there used to be two lunch clubs in the Secretariat. The Senior lunch club was for the Secretaries and would admit no upstarts below the 1972 batch, we hewers of wood and drawers of water belonged to the junior lunch club. Mr. Kaw, however, would join us for lunch once in a while and regale us with tales of intrigues in the senior version. We asked him to become a regular member of our club but he declined, stating: " I confess the food here is much tastier than the balanced diet in the senior club but the gossip there is much spicier!"
Mr. Kaw had an unmatched and contagious zest for life and living. He was literally the heart and soul of the IAS Association, organising its cultural nights, farewells, dinners. He invariably wrote a play or two, humorous and satirical ones; I still recollect one that eerily anticipated today's ghar wapsi rationale- it was titled The Department of Love. He always encouraged me to write what in those days were called "middles" on the op-ed pages of newspapers, perhaps recognising that my forte lay in the realm of nonsense rather than sense! I last met him a year ago at a lunch where he stoutly objected to my not mailing him by blogs. I promised to do so immediately and have since been marking all of them to him. How do I now delete his name?
In his autobiography " An Outsider Everywhere" Mr. Kaw terms himself the perennial outsider. For once he was wrong. For he was the outsider who was at home everywhere, such was his endowment, warmth and flair. For he showed us how beautiful and amazing this world could be, if only we cast off our blinkers and approached it with honest curiosity. And then, on the 28th of last month, he just walked away , his mission accomplished, as if reminding us of these words from the "Rubaiyat of Omar Khayyam":
" Ah, make the most of what we yet may spend,
Before we too into the Dust descend;
Dust into Dust, and under Dust, to lie,
Sans Wine, sans Song, sans Singer, and - sans End!"
Goodbye, sir, and thank you- for everything.
I salute Sh. Kaw and pray to the Almighty for bestowing such virtues to the baton holders.
ReplyDeleteRIP Sir.
Shulka Sir u have rightly described the legend.
Om Shanti!
'umble it well might be but inadequate I think not. Rather, a handsome and generous tribute. Never obsequious (not in your blood), but fulsome in admiration and real regret for the untimely passing.
ReplyDeleteI was distantly connected (he was on the Board of Governors at Bishop Cotton till mid-way through my term) and was immediately off to a good thing shortly after we met, in the exchange of some comfortable conversation about poets and poetry. And also with a quick word of approval and an encouraging keep-it-up-kabir pat on the back.
It was like being back in school, glowing the whole day long because the Captain of School called you by name to run an important errand.
And so some gratitude Sir, for a most fitting tribute on behalf of several.
Nice comment from 'Mr/ Mrs/ Ms/ Madam Unknown, too....'rightly described the legend.' Very nice and heartfelt.
ReplyDeleteI thought you'd be the best person to do justice to highlight the many facets of our admirable and lovable Mr Kaw, and was hoping you'd write something about him. And sure enough you've eloquently captured the essence of this larger than life being we'll forever miss, remember and cherish. Thank you!
ReplyDeleteAvay you have written a great tribute to my brother, capturing the various facets of his personality with such eloquence. On behalf of the entire Kaw clan I thank you.
ReplyDeleteYou humble me with your thanks, Asha ( and Yoshita and Iti on the HILLPOST blog). It was my good fortune and privilege to have known and spent time with Mr.Kaw, and I know I speak for a whole multitude of officers in HP. I was there at his prayer meeting the other evening ( lurking in the back rows, as usual) and the packed auditorium was testimony to how highly he was esteemed and loved by people in all walks of life, not just his colleagues. I'm sorry, but I could not muster the courage to meet you and the family in this, your very private hour of grief and remembrance. If it's any consolation, know this: you do not grieve alone.
DeleteI've always admired your felicity with words and an ability to craft brilliant prose, but this time you've set a new standard! I never knew the late Shri Kaw who was clearly an exceptional man... undoubtedly deserving your fulsome praise. But your tribute is truly a literary masterpiece. God bless his soul....and you Mr Shukla, take a bow.
ReplyDeleteThank you. It needed no great effort- the man describes himself.
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