Saturday, September 15, 2007

Swami Vivekananda



Swami Vivekananda : Life and Teachings

Swami Vivekananda, known in his pre-monastic life as Narendra Nath Datta, was born in an affluent family in Kolkata on 12 January 1863. His father, Vishwanath Datta, was a successful attorney with interests in a wide range of subjects, and his mother, Bhuvaneshwari Devi, was endowed with deep devotion, strong character and other qualities. A precocious boy, Narendra excelled in music, gymnastics and studies. By the time he graduated from Calcutta University, he had acquired a vast knowledge of different subjects, especially Western philosophy and history. Born with a yogic temperament, he used to practise meditation even from his boyhood, and was associated with Brahmo Movement for some time.

With Sri Ramakrishna
At the threshold of youth Narendra had to pass through a period of spiritual crisis when he was assailed by doubts about the existence of God. It was at that time he first heard about Sri Ramakrishna from one of his English professors at college. One day in November 1881, Narendra went to meet Sri Ramakrishna who was staying at the Kali Temple in Dakshineshwar. He straightaway asked the Master a question which he had put to several others but had received no satisfactory answer: “Sir, have you seen God?” Without a moment’s hesitation, Sri Ramakrishna replied: “Yes, I have. I see Him as clearly as I see you, only in a much intenser sense.”
Apart from removing doubts from the mind of Narendra, Sri Ramakrishna won him over through his pure, unselfish love. Thus began a guru-disciple relationship which is quite unique in the history of spiritual masters. Narendra now became a frequent visitor to Dakshineshwar and, under the guidance of the Master, made rapid strides on the spiritual path. At Dakshineshwar, Narendra also met several young men who were devoted to Sri Ramakrishna, and they all became close friends.

Difficult Situations
After a few years two events took place which caused Narendra considerable distress. One was the sudden death of his father in 1884. This left the family penniless, and Narendra had to bear the burden of supporting his mother, brothers and sisters. The second event was the illness of Sri Ramakrishna which was diagnosed to be cancer of the throat. In September 1885 Sri Ramakrishna was moved to a house at Shyampukur, and a few months later to a rented villa at Cossipore. In these two places the young disciples nursed the Master with devoted care. In spite of poverty at home and inability to find a job for himself, Narendra joined the group as its leader.

Beginnings of a Monastic Brotherhood
Sri Ramakrishna instilled in these young men the spirit of renunciation and brotherly love for one another. One day he distributed ochre robes among them and sent them out to beg food. In this way he himself laid the foundation for a new monastic order. He gave specific instructions to Narendra about the formation of the new monastic Order. In the small hours of 16 August 1886 Sri Ramakrishna gave up his mortal body.
After the Master’s passing, fifteen of his young disciples (one more joined them later) began to live together in a dilapidated building at Baranagar in North Kolkata. Under the leadership of Narendra, they formed a new monastic brotherhood, and in 1887 they took the formal vows of sannyasa, thereby assuming new names. Narendra now became Swami Vivekananda (although this name was actually assumed much later.)

Awareness of Life’s Mission
After establishing the new monastic order, Vivekananda heard the inner call for a greater mission in his life. While most of the followers of Sri Ramakrishna thought of him in relation to their own personal lives, Vivekananda thought of the Master in relation to India and the rest of the world. As the prophet of the present age, what was Sri Ramakrishna’s message to the modern world and to India in particular? This question and the awareness of his own inherent powers urged Swamiji to go out alone into the wide world. So in the middle of 1890, after receiving the blessings of Sri Sarada Devi, the divine consort of Sri Ramakrishna, known to the world as Holy Mother, who was then staying in Kolkata, Swamiji left Baranagar Math and embarked on a long journey of exploration and discovery of India.

Discovery of Real India
During his travels all over India, Swami Vivekananda was deeply moved to see the appalling poverty and backwardness of the masses. He was the first religious leader in India to understand and openly declare that the real cause of India’s downfall was the neglect of the masses. The immediate need was to provide food and other bare necessities of life to the hungry millions. For this they should be taught improved methods of agriculture, village industries, etc. It was in this context that Vivekananda grasped the crux of the problem of poverty in India (which had escaped the attention of social reformers of his days): owing to centuries of oppression, the downtrodden masses had lost faith in their capacity to improve their lot. It was first of all necessary to infuse into their minds faith in themselves. For this they needed a life-giving, inspiring message. Swamiji found this message in the principle of the Atman, the doctrine of the potential divinity of the soul, taught in Vedanta, the ancient system of religious philosophy of India. He saw that, in spite of poverty, the masses clung to religion, but they had never been taught the life-giving, ennobling principles of Vedanta and how to apply them in practical life.
Thus the masses needed two kinds of knowledge: secular knowledge to improve their economic condition, and spiritual knowledge to infuse in them faith in themselves and strengthen their moral sense. The next question was, how to spread these two kinds of knowledge among the masses? Through education – this was the answer that Swamiji found.

Need for an Organization
One thing became clear to Swamiji: to carry out his plans for the spread of education and for the uplift of the poor masses, and also of women, an efficient organization of dedicated people was needed. As he said later on, he wanted “to set in motion a machinery which will bring noblest ideas to the doorstep of even the poorest and the meanest.” It was to serve as this ‘machinery’ that Swamiji founded the Ramakrishna Mission a few years later.

Decision to attend the Parliament of Religions
It was when these ideas were taking shape in his mind in the course of his wanderings that Swami Vivekananda heard about the World’s Parliament of Religions to be held in Chicago in 1893. His friends and admirers in India wanted him to attend the Parliament. He too felt that the Parliament would provide the right forum to present his Master’s message to the world, and so he decided to go to America. Another reason which prompted Swamiji to go to America was to seek financial help for his project of uplifting the masses.
Swamiji, however, wanted to have an inner certitude and divine call regarding his mission. Both of these he got while he sat in deep meditation on the rock-island at Kanyakumari. With the funds partly collected by his Chennai disciples and partly provided by the Raja of Khetri, Swami Vivekananda left for America from Mumbai on 31 May 1893.



The Parliament of Religions and After
His speeches at the World’s Parliament of Religions held in September 1893 made him famous as an ‘orator by divine right’ and as a ‘Messenger of Indian wisdom to the Western world’. After the Parliament, Swamiji spent nearly three and a half years spreading Vedanta as lived and taught by Sri Ramakrishna, mostly in the eastern parts of USA and also in London.

Awakening His Countrymen
He returned to India in January 1897. In response to the enthusiastic welcome that he received everywhere, he delivered a series of lectures in different parts of India, which created a great stir all over the country. Through these inspiring and profoundly significant lectures Swamiji attempted to do the following:

to rouse the religious consciousness of the people and create in them pride in their cultural heritage;
to bring about unification of Hinduism by pointing out the common bases of its sects;
to focus the attention of educated people on the plight of the downtrodden masses, and to expound his plan for their uplift by the application of the principles of Practical Vedanta.

Founding of Ramakrishna Mission
Soon after his return to Kolkata, Swami Vivekananda accomplished another important task of his mission on earth. He founded on 1 May 1897 a unique type of organization known as Ramakrishna Mission, in which monks and lay people would jointly undertake propagation of Practical Vedanta, and various forms of social service, such as running hospitals, schools, colleges, hostels, rural development centres etc, and conducting massive relief and rehabilitation work for victims of earthquakes, cyclones and other calamities, in different parts of India and other countries.

Belur Math
In early 1898 Swami Vivekananda acquired a big plot of land on the western bank of the Ganga at a place called Belur to have a permanent abode for the monastery and monastic Order originally started at Baranagar, and got it registered as Ramakrishna Math after a couple of years. Here Swamiji established a new, universal pattern of monastic life which adapts ancient monastic ideals to the conditions of modern life, which gives equal importance to personal illumination and social service, and which is open to all men without any distinction of religion, race or caste.

Disciples
It may be mentioned here that in the West many people were influenced by Swami Vivekananda’s life and message. Some of them became his disciples or devoted friends. Among them the names of Margaret Noble (later known as Sister Nivedita), Captain and Mrs Sevier, Josephine McLeod and Sara Ole Bull, deserve special mention. Nivedita dedicated her life to educating girls in Kolkata. Swamiji had many Indian disciples also, some of whom joined Ramakrishna Math and became sannyasins.

Last Days
In June 1899 he went to the West on a second visit. This time he spent most of his time in the West coast of USA. After delivering many lectures there, he returned to Belur Math in December 1900. The rest of his life was spent in India, inspiring and guiding people, both monastic and lay. Incessant work, especially giving lectures and inspiring people, told upon Swamiji’s health. His health deteriorated and the end came quietly on the night of 4 July 1902. Before his Mahasamadhi he had written to a Western follower: “It may be that I shall find it good to get outside my body, to cast it off like a worn out garment. But I shall not cease to work. I shall inspire men everywhere until the whole world shall know that it is one with God.”



Chronology of Main Events related to Swami Vivekananda

1863
January 12
Birth in Kolkata
1879

Enters Presidency College
1880

Transfers to General Assembly Institution
1881
November
First meeting with Sri Ramakrishna
1882-
1886
Association with Sri Ramakrishna
1884

Passes B. A. Examination


Father passes away
1885

Sri Ramakrishna’s last illness
1886
August 16
Sri Ramakrishna passes away

Fall
Establishes Baranagar Math

December 24
Informal vow of sannyasa at Antpur
1887
January
Formal vows of sannyasa at Baranagar Monastery
1890-
1893
Travels all over India as itinerant monk
1892
December 24
At Kanyakumari, South India
1893
February 13
First public lecture, Secunderabad, South India

May 31
Sails for America from Mumbai

July 25
Lands at Vancouver, Canada

July 30
Arrives in Chicago

August
Meets Professor John Ft. Wright of Harvard University

September 11
First address at Parliament of Religions, Chicago

September 27
Final address at Parliament of Religions

November 20
Begins mid-western lecture tour
1894
April 14
Begins lectures and classes on East Coast

May 16
Speaks at Harvard University

July-August
At Green Acre Religious Conference

November
Founds Vedanta Society of New York
1895
January
Begins classes in New York

June 4-18
At Camp Percy, New Hampshire

June-August
At Thousand Island Park on St. Lawrence river, N.Y.

August-September
In Paris

October-November
Lectures in London

December 6
Sails for New York
1896
March 22-25
Speaks at Harvard University, offered Eastern Philosophy chair

April 15
Returns to London

May-July
Gives classes in London

May 28
Meets Max Muller in Oxford

August-September
In the Europe for six weeks

October-November
Gives classes in London

December 30
Leaves Naples for India
1897
January 15
Arrives in Colombo, Sri Lanka

February 6-15
In Chennai

February 19
Arrives in Kolkata

May 1
Establishes Ramakrishna Mission Association, Kolkata

May-December
Tours northwest India
1898
January
Returns to Kolkata

May
Begins North India pilgrimage with Western devotees

August 2
At Amarnath, Kashmir

December 9
Consecrates Belur Math
1899
March 19
Establishes Advaita Ashrama at Mayavati

June 20
Leaves India for second visit to the West

July 31
Arrives in London

August 28
Arrives in New York City

August-November
At Ridgely Manor, New York

December 3
Arrives in Los Angeles
1900
February 22
Arrives in San Francisco

April 14
Founds Vedanta Society in San Francisco

June
Final classes in New York City

July 26
Leaves for Europe

August 3
Arrives in Paris for International Exposition

September 7
Speaks at Congress of History of Religions at Exposition

October 24
Begins tour of Vienna, Constantinople, Greece and Cairo

November 26
Leaves for India

December 9
Arrives at Belur Math
1901
January
Visits Mayavati

March-May
Pilgrimage in East Bengal and Assam
1902
January-February
Visits Bodh Gaya and Varanasi

March
Returns to Belur Math

July 4
Mahasamadhi



Vivekananda’s contributions to World Culture

Making an objective assessment of Swami Vivekananda’s contributions to world culture, the eminent British historian A L Basham stated that “in centuries to come, he will be remembered as one of the main moulders of the modern world…” Some of the main contributions that Swamiji made to the modern world are mentioned below:
1. New Understanding of Religion: One of the most significant contributions of Swami Vivekananda to the modern world is his interpretation of religion as a universal experience of transcendent Reality, common to all humanity. Swamiji met the challenge of modern science by showing that religion is as scientific as science itself; religion is the ‘science of consciousness’. As such, religion and science are not contradictory to each other but are complementary.
This universal conception frees religion from the hold of superstitions, dogmatism, priestcraft and intolerance, and makes religion the highest and noblest pursuit – the pursuit of supreme Freedom, supreme Knowledge, supreme Happiness.
2. New View of Man: Vivekananda’s concept of ‘potential divinity of the soul’ gives a new, ennobling concept of man. The present age is the age of humanism which holds that man should be the chief concern and centre of all activities and thinking. Through science and technology man has attained great prosperity and power, and modern methods of communication and travel have converted human society into a ‘global village’. But the degradation of man has also been going on apace, as witnessed by the enormous increase in broken homes, immorality, violence, crime, etc. in modern society. Vivekananda’s concept of potential divinity of the soul prevents this degradation, divinizes human relationships, and makes life meaningful and worth living. Swamiji has laid the foundation for ‘spiritual humanism’, which is manifesting itself through several neo-humanistic movements and the current interest in meditation, Zen etc all over the world.
3. New Principle of Morality and Ethics: The prevalent morality, in both individual life and social life, is mostly based on fear – fear of the police, fear of public ridicule, fear of God’s punishment, fear of Karma, and so on. The current theories of ethics also do not explain why a person should be moral and be good to others. Vivekananda has given a new theory of ethics and new principle of morality based on the intrinsic purity and oneness of the Atman. We should be pure because purity is our real nature, our true divine Self or Atman. Similarly, we should love and serve our neighbours because we are all one in the Supreme Spirit known as Paramatman or Brahman.
4. Bridge between the East and the West: Another great contribution of Swami Vivekananda was to build a bridge between Indian culture and Western culture. He did it by interpreting Hindu scriptures and philosophy and the Hindu way of life and institutions to the Western people in an idiom which they could understand. He made the Western people realize that they had to learn much from Indian spirituality for their own well-being. He showed that, in spite of her poverty and backwardness, India had a great contribution to make to world culture. In this way he was instrumental in ending India’s cultural isolation from the rest of the world. He was India’s first great cultural ambassador to the West.
On the other hand, Swamiji’s interpretation of ancient Hindu scriptures, philosophy, institutions, etc prepared the mind of Indians to accept and apply in practical life two best elements of Western culture, namely science and technology and humanism. Swamiji has taught Indians how to master Western science and technology and at the same time develop spiritually. Swamiji has also taught Indians how to adapt Western humanism (especially the ideas of individual freedom, social equality and justice and respect for women) to Indian ethos.



Swamiji’s Contributions to India
In spite of her innumerable linguistic, ethnic, historical and regional diversities, India has had from time immemorial a strong sense of cultural unity. It was, however, Swami Vivekananda who revealed the true foundations of this culture and thus clearly defined and strengthened the sense of unity as a nation.
Swamiji gave Indians proper understanding of their country’s great spiritual heritage and thus gave them pride in their past.
Furthermore, he pointed out to Indians the drawbacks of Western culture and the need for India’s contribution to overcome these drawbacks. In this way Swamiji made India a nation with a global mission.
Sense of unity, pride in the past, sense of mission – these were the factors which gave real strength and purpose to India’s nationalist movement. Several eminent leaders of India’s freedom movement have acknowledged their indebtedness to Swamiji. Free India’s first Prime Minister Jawaharlal Nehru wrote: “Rooted in the past, full of pride in India’s prestige, Vivekananda was yet modern in his approach to life’s problems, and was a kind of bridge between the past of India and her present … he came as a tonic to the depressed and demoralized Hindu mind and gave it self-reliance and some roots in the past.” Netaji Subhash Chandra Bose wrote: “Swamiji harmonized the East and the West, religion and science, past and present. And that is why he is great. Our countrymen have gained unprecedented self-respect, self-reliance and self-assertion from his teachings.”
Swamiji’s most unique contribution to the creation of new India was to open the minds of Indians to their duty to the downtrodden masses. Long before the ideas of Karl Marx were known in India, Swamiji spoke about the role of the labouring classes in the production of the country’s wealth. Swamiji was the first religious leader in India to speak for the masses, formulate a definite philosophy of service, and organize large-scale social service.


Swamiji’s Contributions to Hinduism
1. Identity: It was Swami Vivekananda who gave to Hinduism as a whole a clear-cut identity, a distinct profile. Before Swamiji came Hinduism was a loose confederation of many different sects. Swamiji was the first religious leader to speak about the common bases of Hinduism and the common ground of all sects. He was the first person, as guided by his Master Sri Ramakrishna, to accept all Hindu doctrines and the views of all Hindu philosophers and sects as different aspects of one total view of Reality and way of life known as Hinduism. Speaking about Swamiji’s role in giving Hinduism its distinct identity, Sister Nivedita wrote: “… it may be said that when he began to speak it was of ‘the religious ideas of the Hindus’, but when he ended, Hinduism had been created.”
2.Unification: Before Swamiji came, there was a lot of quarrel and competition among the various sects of Hinduism. Similarly, the protagonists of different systems and schools of philosophy were claiming their views to be the only true and valid ones. By applying Sri Ramakrishna’s doctrine of Harmony (Samanvaya) Swamiji brought about an overall unification of Hinduism on the basis of the principle of unity in diversity. Speaking about Swamiji’s role in this field K M Pannikar, the eminent historian and diplomat, wrote: “This new Shankaracharya may well be claimed to be a unifier of Hindu ideology.”
3. Defence: Another important service rendered by Swamiji was to raise his voice in defence of Hinduism. In fact, this was one of the main types of work he did in the West. Christian missionary propaganda had given a wrong understanding of Hinduism and India in Western minds. Swamiji had to face a lot of opposition in his attempts to defend Hinduism.
4. Meeting the Challenges: At the end of the 19th century, India in general, and Hinduism in particular, faced grave challenges from Western materialistic life, the ideas of Western free society, and the proselytizing activities of Christians. Vivekananda met these challenges by integrating the best elements of Western culture in Hindu culture.
5. New Ideal of Monasticism: A major contribution of Vivekananda to Hinduism is the rejuvenation and modernization of monasticism. In this new monastic ideal, followed in the Ramakrishna Order, the ancient principles of renunciation and God realization are combined with service to God in man (Shiva jnane jiva seva). Vivekananda elevated social service to the status of divine service.
6. Refurbishing of Hindu Philosophy and Religious Doctrines: Vivekananda did not merely interpret ancient Hindu scriptures and philosophical ideas in terms of modern thought. He also added several illuminating original concepts based on his own transcendental experiences and vision of the future. This, however, needs a detailed study of Hindu philosophy which cannot be attempted here.
.
Selected Teachings of Swami Vivekananda

My ideal, indeed, can be put into a few words, and that is: to preach unto mankind their divinity, and how to make it manifest in every movement of life.
Education is the manifestation of the perfection already in man.
We want that education by which character is formed, strength of mind is increased, the intellect is expanded, and by which one can stand on one's own feet.
So long as the millions live in hunger and ignorance, I hold every man a traitor who, having been educated at their expense, pays not the least heed to them.
Whatever you think, that you will be. If you think yourselves weak, weak you will be; if you think yourselves strong, strong you will be.
If you have faith in all the three hundred and thirty millions of your mythological gods, … and still have no faith in yourselves, there is no salvation for you. Have faith in yourselves, and stand up on that faith and be strong; that is what we need.
Strength, strength it is that we want so much in this life, for what we call sin and sorrow have all one cause, and that is our weakness. With weakness comes ignorance, and with ignorance comes misery.
The older I grow, the more everything seems to me to lie in manliness. This is my new Gospel.
Purity, patience, and perseverance are the three essentials to success, and above all, love.
Religion is realization; not talk, not doctrine, nor theories, however beautiful they may be. It is being and becoming, not hearing or acknowledging; it is the whole soul becoming changed into what it believes.
Religion is the manifestation of the Divinity already in man.
Teach yourselves, teach everyone his real nature, call uon the sleeping soul and see how it awakes. Power will come, glory will come, goodness will come, purity will come, and everything that is excellent will come when this sleeping soul is roused to self-conscious activity.
They alone live who live for others, the rest are more dead than alive.
This is the gist of all worship – to be pure and to do good to others.
It is love and love alone that I preach, and I base my teaching on the great Vedantic truth of the sameness and omnipresence of the Soul of the Universe.

Friday, September 14, 2007

Srinivasa Aiyangar Ramanujan



Born: 22 Dec 1887 in Erode, Tamil Nadu state, India
Died: 26 April 1920 in Kumbakonam, Tamil Nadu state, India

Click the picture above
to see a larger version

Srinivasa Ramanujan was one of India's greatest mathematical geniuses. He made substantial contributions to the analytical theory of numbers and worked on elliptic functions, continued fractions, and infinite series.

Ramanujan was born in his grandmother's house in Erode, a small village about 400 km southwest of Madras. When Ramanujan was a year old his mother took him to the town of Kumbakonam, about 160 km nearer Madras. His father worked in Kumbakonam as a clerk in a cloth merchant's shop. In December 1889 he contracted smallpox.

When he was nearly five years old, Ramanujan entered the primary school in Kumbakonam although he would attend several different primary schools before entering the Town High School in Kumbakonam in January 1898. At the Town High School, Ramanujan was to do well in all his school subjects and showed himself an able all round scholar. In 1900 he began to work on his own on mathematics summing geometric and arithmetic series.

Ramanujan was shown how to solve cubic equations in 1902 and he went on to find his own method to solve the quartic. The following year, not knowing that the quintic could not be solved by radicals, he tried (and of course failed) to solve the quintic.

It was in the Town High School that Ramanujan came across a mathematics book by G S Carr called Synopsis of elementary results in pure mathematics. This book, with its very concise style, allowed Ramanujan to teach himself mathematics, but the style of the book was to have a rather unfortunate effect on the way Ramanujan was later to write down mathematics since it provided the only model that he had of written mathematical arguments. The book contained theorems, formulae and short proofs. It also contained an index to papers on pure mathematics which had been published in the European Journals of Learned Societies during the first half of the 19th century. The book, published in 1856, was of course well out of date by the time Ramanujan used it.

By 1904 Ramanujan had begun to undertake deep research. He investigated the series (1/n) and calculated Euler's constant to 15 decimal places. He began to study the Bernoulli numbers, although this was entirely his own independent discovery.

Ramanujan, on the strength of his good school work, was given a scholarship to the Government College in Kumbakonam which he entered in 1904. However the following year his scholarship was not renewed because Ramanujan devoted more and more of his time to mathematics and neglected his other subjects. Without money he was soon in difficulties and, without telling his parents, he ran away to the town of Vizagapatnam about 650 km north of Madras. He continued his mathematical work, however, and at this time he worked on hypergeometric series and investigated relations between integrals and series. He was to discover later that he had been studying elliptic functions.

In 1906 Ramanujan went to Madras where he entered Pachaiyappa's College. His aim was to pass the First Arts examination which would allow him to be admitted to the University of Madras. He attended lectures at Pachaiyappa's College but became ill after three months study. He took the First Arts examination after having left the course. He passed in mathematics but failed all his other subjects and therefore failed the examination. This meant that he could not enter the University of Madras. In the following years he worked on mathematics developing his own ideas without any help and without any real idea of the then current research topics other than that provided by Carr's book.

Continuing his mathematical work Ramanujan studied continued fractions and divergent series in 1908. At this stage he became seriously ill again and underwent an operation in April 1909 after which he took him some considerable time to recover. He married on 14 July 1909 when his mother arranged for him to marry a ten year old girl S Janaki Ammal. Ramanujan did not live with his wife, however, until she was twelve years old.

Ramanujan continued to develop his mathematical ideas and began to pose problems and solve problems in the Journal of the Indian Mathematical Society. He devoloped relations between elliptic modular equations in 1910. After publication of a brilliant research paper on Bernoulli numbers in 1911 in the Journal of the Indian Mathematical Society he gained recognition for his work. Despite his lack of a university education, he was becoming well known in the Madras area as a mathematical genius.

In 1911 Ramanujan approached the founder of the Indian Mathematical Society for advice on a job. After this he was appointed to his first job, a temporary post in the Accountant General's Office in Madras. It was then suggested that he approach Ramachandra Rao who was a Collector at Nellore. Ramachandra Rao was a founder member of the Indian Mathematical Society who had helped start the mathematics library. He writes in [30]:-

A short uncouth figure, stout, unshaven, not over clean, with one conspicuous feature-shining eyes- walked in with a frayed notebook under his arm. He was miserably poor. ... He opened his book and began to explain some of his discoveries. I saw quite at once that there was something out of the way; but my knowledge did not permit me to judge whether he talked sense or nonsense. ... I asked him what he wanted. He said he wanted a pittance to live on so that he might pursue his researches.

Ramachandra Rao told him to return to Madras and he tried, unsuccessfully, to arrange a scholarship for Ramanujan. In 1912 Ramanujan applied for the post of clerk in the accounts section of the Madras Port Trust. In his letter of application he wrote [3]:-

I have passed the Matriculation Examination and studied up to the First Arts but was prevented from pursuing my studies further owing to several untoward circumstances. I have, however, been devoting all my time to Mathematics and developing the subject.

Despite the fact that he had no university education, Ramanujan was clearly well known to the university mathematicians in Madras for, with his letter of application, Ramanujan included a reference from E W Middlemast who was the Professor of Mathematics at The Presidency College in Madras. Middlemast, a graduate of St John's College, Cambridge, wrote [3]:-

I can strongly recommend the applicant. He is a young man of quite exceptional capacity in mathematics and especially in work relating to numbers. He has a natural aptitude for computation and is very quick at figure work.

On the strength of the recommendation Ramanujan was appointed to the post of clerk and began his duties on 1 March 1912. Ramanujan was quite lucky to have a number of people working round him with a training in mathematics. In fact the Chief Accountant for the Madras Port Trust, S N Aiyar, was trained as a mathematician and published a paper On the distribution of primes in 1913 on Ramanujan's work. The professor of civil engineering at the Madras Engineering College C L T Griffith was also interested in Ramanujan's abilities and, having been educated at University College London, knew the professor of mathematics there, namely M J M Hill. He wrote to Hill on 12 November 1912 sending some of Ramanujan's work and a copy of his 1911 paper on Bernoulli numbers.

Hill replied in a fairly encouraging way but showed that he had failed to understand Ramanujan's results on divergent series. The recommendation to Ramanujan that he read Bromwich's Theory of infinite series did not please Ramanujan much. Ramanujan wrote to E W Hobson and H F Baker trying to interest them in his results but neither replied. In January 1913 Ramanujan wrote to G H Hardy having seen a copy of his 1910 book Orders of infinity. In Ramanujan's letter to Hardy he introduced himself and his work [10]:-

I have had no university education but I have undergone the ordinary school course. After leaving school I have been employing the spare time at my disposal to work at mathematics. I have not trodden through the conventional regular course which is followed in a university course, but I am striking out a new path for myself. I have made a special investigation of divergent series in general and the results I get are termed by the local mathematicians as 'startling'.

Hardy, together with Littlewood, studied the long list of unproved theorems which Ramanujan enclosed with his letter. On 8 February he replied to Ramanujan [3], the letter beginning:-

I was exceedingly interested by your letter and by the theorems which you state. You will however understand that, before I can judge properly of the value of what you have done, it is essential that I should see proofs of some of your assertions. Your results seem to me to fall into roughly three classes:
(1) there are a number of results that are already known, or easily deducible from known theorems;
(2) there are results which, so far as I know, are new and interesting, but interesting rather from their curiosity and apparent difficulty than their importance;
(3) there are results which appear to be new and important...

Ramanujan was delighted with Hardy's reply and when he wrote again he said [8]:-

I have found a friend in you who views my labours sympathetically. ... I am already a half starving man. To preserve my brains I want food and this is my first consideration. Any sympathetic letter from you will be helpful to me here to get a scholarship either from the university of from the government.

Indeed the University of Madras did give Ramanujan a scholarship in May 1913 for two years and, in 1914, Hardy brought Ramanujan to Trinity College, Cambridge, to begin an extraordinary collaboration. Setting this up was not an easy matter. Ramanujan was an orthodox Brahmin and so was a strict vegetarian. His religion should have prevented him from travelling but this difficulty was overcome, partly by the work of E H Neville who was a colleague of Hardy's at Trinity College and who met with Ramanujan while lecturing in India.

Ramanujan sailed from India on 17 March 1914. It was a calm voyage except for three days on which Ramanujan was seasick. He arrived in London on 14 April 1914 and was met by Neville. After four days in London they went to Cambridge and Ramanujan spent a couple of weeks in Neville's home before moving into rooms in Trinity College on 30th April. Right from the beginning, however, he had problems with his diet. The outbreak of World War I made obtaining special items of food harder and it was not long before Ramanujan had health problems.

Right from the start Ramanujan's collaboration with Hardy led to important results. Hardy was, however, unsure how to approach the problem of Ramanujan's lack of formal education. He wrote [1]:-

What was to be done in the way of teaching him modern mathematics? The limitations of his knowledge were as startling as its profundity.

Littlewood was asked to help teach Ramanujan rigorous mathematical methods. However he said ([31]):-

... that it was extremely difficult because every time some matter, which it was thought that Ramanujan needed to know, was mentioned, Ramanujan's response was an avalanche of original ideas which made it almost impossible for Littlewood to persist in his original intention.

The war soon took Littlewood away on war duty but Hardy remained in Cambridge to work with Ramanujan. Even in his first winter in England, Ramanujan was ill and he wrote in March 1915 that he had been ill due to the winter weather and had not been able to publish anything for five months. What he did publish was the work he did in England, the decision having been made that the results he had obtained while in India, many of which he had communicated to Hardy in his letters, would not be published until the war had ended.

On 16 March 1916 Ramanujan graduated from Cambridge with a Bachelor of Science by Research (the degree was called a Ph.D. from 1920). He had been allowed to enrol in June 1914 despite not having the proper qualifications. Ramanujan's dissertation was on Highly composite numbers and consisted of seven of his papers published in England.

Ramanujan fell seriously ill in 1917 and his doctors feared that he would die. He did improve a little by September but spent most of his time in various nursing homes. In February 1918 Hardy wrote (see [3]):-

Batty Shaw found out, what other doctors did not know, that he had undergone an operation about four years ago. His worst theory was that this had really been for the removal of a malignant growth, wrongly diagnosed. In view of the fact that Ramanujan is no worse than six months ago, he has now abandoned this theory - the other doctors never gave it any support. Tubercle has been the provisionally accepted theory, apart from this, since the original idea of gastric ulcer was given up. ... Like all Indians he is fatalistic, and it is terribly hard to get him to take care of himself.

On 18 February 1918 Ramanujan was elected a fellow of the Cambridge Philosophical Society and then three days later, the greatest honour that he would receive, his name appeared on the list for election as a fellow of the Royal Society of London. He had been proposed by an impressive list of mathematicians, namely Hardy, MacMahon, Grace, Larmor, Bromwich, Hobson, Baker, Littlewood, Nicholson, Young, Whittaker, Forsyth and Whitehead. His election as a fellow of the Royal Society was confirmed on 2 May 1918, then on 10 October 1918 he was elected a Fellow of Trinity College Cambridge, the fellowship to run for six years.

The honours which were bestowed on Ramanujan seemed to help his health improve a little and he renewed his effors at producing mathematics. By the end of November 1918 Ramanujan's health had greatly improved. Hardy wrote in a letter [3]:-

I think we may now hope that he has turned to corner, and is on the road to a real recovery. His temperature has ceased to be irregular, and he has gained nearly a stone in weight. ... There has never been any sign of any diminuation in his extraordinary mathematical talents. He has produced less, naturally, during his illness but the quality has been the same. ....

He will return to India with a scientific standing and reputation such as no Indian has enjoyed before, and I am confident that India will regard him as the treasure he is. His natural simplicity and modesty has never been affected in the least by success - indeed all that is wanted is to get him to realise that he really is a success.

Ramanujan sailed to India on 27 February 1919 arriving on 13 March. However his health was very poor and, despite medical treatment, he died there the following year.

The letters Ramanujan wrote to Hardy in 1913 had contained many fascinating results. Ramanujan worked out the Riemann series, the elliptic integrals, hypergeometric series and functional equations of the zeta function. On the other hand he had only a vague idea of what constitutes a mathematical proof. Despite many brilliant results, some of his theorems on prime numbers were completely wrong.

Ramanujan independently discovered results of Gauss, Kummer and others on hypergeometric series. Ramanujan's own work on partial sums and products of hypergeometric series have led to major development in the topic. Perhaps his most famous work was on the number p(n) of partitions of an integer n into summands. MacMahon had produced tables of the value of p(n) for small numbers n, and Ramanujan used this numerical data to conjecture some remarkable properties some of which he proved using elliptic functions. Other were only proved after Ramanujan's death.

In a joint paper with Hardy, Ramanujan gave an asymptotic formula for p(n). It had the remarkable property that it appeared to give the correct value of p(n), and this was later proved by Rademacher.

Ramanujan left a number of unpublished notebooks filled with theorems that mathematicians have continued to study. G N Watson, Mason Professor of Pure Mathematics at Birmingham from 1918 to 1951 published 14 papers under the general title Theorems stated by Ramanujan and in all he published nearly 30 papers which were inspired by Ramanujan's work. Hardy passed on to Watson the large number of manuscripts of Ramanujan that he had, both written before 1914 and some written in Ramanujan's last year in India before his death.

History of YAHOO

The History of Yahoo!

Yahoo! began as a student hobby and evolved into a global brand that has changed the way people communicate with each other, find and access information and purchase things. The two founders of Yahoo!, David Filo and Jerry Yang, Ph.D. candidates in Electrical Engineering at Stanford University, started their guide in a campus trailer in February 1994 as a way to keep track of their personal interests on the Internet. Before long they were spending more time on their home-brewed lists of favorite links than on their doctoral dissertations. Eventually, Jerry and David's lists became too long and unwieldy, and they broke them out into categories. When the categories became too full, they developed subcategories ... and the core concept behind Yahoo! was born.
The Web site started out as "Jerry and David's Guide to the World Wide Web" but eventually received a new moniker with the help of a dictionary. The name Yahoo! is an acronym for "Yet Another Hierarchical Officious Oracle," but Filo and Yang insist they selected the name because they liked the general definition of a yahoo: "rude, unsophisticated, uncouth." Yahoo! itself first resided on Yang's student workstation, "Akebono," while the software was lodged on Filo's computer, "Konishiki" - both named after legendary sumo wrestlers.
Jerry and David soon found they were not alone in wanting a single place to find useful Web sites. Before long, hundreds of people were accessing their guide from well beyond the Stanford trailer. Word spread from friends to what quickly became a significant, loyal audience throughout the closely-knit Internet community. Yahoo! celebrated its first million-hit day in the fall of 1994, translating to almost 100 thousand unique visitors.
Due to the torrent of traffic and enthusiastic reception Yahoo! was receiving, the founders knew they had a potential business on their hands. In March 1995, the pair incorporated the business and met with dozens of Silicon Valley venture capitalists. They eventually came across Sequoia Capital, the well-regarded firm whose most successful investments included Apple Computer, Atari, Oracle and Cisco Systems. They agreed to fund Yahoo! in April 1995 with an initial investment of nearly $2 million.
Realizing their new company had the potential to grow quickly, Jerry and David began to shop for a management team. They hired Tim Koogle, a veteran of Motorola and an alumnus of the Stanford engineering department, as chief executive officer and Jeffrey Mallett, founder of Novell's WordPerfect consumer division, as chief operating officer. They secured a second round of funding in Fall 1995 from investors Reuters Ltd. and Softbank. Yahoo! launched a highly-successful IPO in April 1996 with a total of 49 employees.
Today, Yahoo! Inc. is a leading global Internet communications, commerce and media company that offers a comprehensive branded network of services to more than 345 million individuals each month worldwide. As the first online navigational guide to the Web, www.yahoo.com is the leading guide in terms of traffic, advertising, household and business user reach. Yahoo! is the No. 1 Internet brand globally and reaches the largest audience worldwide. The company also provides online business and enterprise services designed to enhance the productivity and Web presence of Yahoo!'s clients. These services include Corporate Yahoo!, a popular customized enterprise portal solution; audio and video streaming; store hosting and management; and Web site tools and services. The company's global Web network includes 25 World properties. Headquartered in Sunnyvale, Calif., Yahoo! has offices in Europe, Asia, Latin America, Australia, Canada and the United States.
Management Team:
Terry SemelChairman and Chief Executive Officer

Terry S. Semel is the chairman and chief executive officer of Yahoo! Inc, a leading global Internet company. Semel is focused on providing the strategy and vision that will allow Yahoo! to attain its goal to be Internet's leading global consumer and business services company. A globally-respected media and entertainment executive, Semel was named Yahoo!'s chairman and CEO in May 2001.
Previously, Semel spent 24 years at Warner Bros., most noted for his role as chairman and co-chief executive officer where he and his partner, Robert Daly, helped build Warner Bros. into one of the world's largest and most creative media and entertainment enterprises. Like Yahoo!, Warner Bros. reaches billions of worldwide consumers through its vast stable of properties. Semel is credited with building Warner Bros. from a single revenue source generating less than $1 billion to nearly $11 billion total revenues from multiple, diverse businesses in 50 countries.
Prior to Warner Bros., Semel was in charge of Walt Disney's Theatrical Distribution division and previously in charge of CBS' Theatrical Distribution division. Semel is currently on the Board of Directors of Polo Ralph Lauren Corporation, the Guggenheim Museum and the Museum of Television and Radio.
In 2005, Semel was granted the UCLA Medal, which is the highest honor bestowed by the university, and the Yale Legends in Leadership Award.


Jerry YangCo-founder and Chief Yahoo

Jerry Yang, a Taiwanese native raised in San Jose, Calif., co-created the Yahoo! Internet navigational guide in April 1994 with David Filo and co-founded Yahoo! Inc. in April 1995. Mr. Yang, a leading force in the media industry, has been instrumental in building Yahoo! into the world's most highly trafficked Web site and one of the Internet's most recognized brands. A member of Yahoo!'s board of directors, Mr. Yang works closely with the company's CEO and executive team to develop corporate business strategies and guide the future direction of the company. Mr. Yang is currently on the Board of Directors of Alibaba, the Asian Pacific American Community Fund, Cisco and Yahoo! Japan, and is also on the Stanford University Board of Trustees. Mr. Yang holds B.S. and M.S. degrees in electrical engineering from Stanford University and is currently on a leave of absence from Stanford's electrical engineering Ph.D. program. Terry S. Semel is the chairman and chief executive officer of Yahoo! Inc, a leading global Internet company. Semel is focused on providing the strategy and vision that will allow Yahoo! to attain its goal to be Internet's leading global consumer and business services company. A globally-respected media and entertainment executive, Semel was named Yahoo!'s chairman and CEO in May 2001.
Previously, Semel spent 24 years at Warner Bros., most noted for his role as chairman and co-chief executive officer where he and his partner, Robert Daly, helped build Warner Bros. into one of the world's largest and most creative media and entertainment enterprises. Like Yahoo!, Warner Bros. reaches billions of worldwide consumers through its vast stable of properties. Semel is credited with building Warner Bros. from a single revenue source generating less than $1 billion to nearly $11 billion total revenues from multiple, diverse businesses in 50 countries.
Prior to Warner Bros., Semel was in charge of Walt Disney's Theatrical Distribution division and previously in charge of CBS' Theatrical Distribution division. Semel is currently on the Board of Directors of Polo Ralph Lauren Corporation, the Guggenheim Museum and the Museum of Television and Radio.
In 2005, Semel was granted the UCLA Medal, which is the highest honor bestowed by the university, and the Yale Legends in Leadership Award.
Semel holds a Bachelor of Science degree from Long Island University and an honorary doctor of humane letters degree from Emerson.
Terry S. Semel is the chairman and chief executive officer of Yahoo! Inc, a leading global Internet company. Semel is focused on providing the strategy and vision that will allow Yahoo! to attain its goal to be Internet's leading global consumer and business services company. A globally-respected media and entertainment executive, Semel was named Yahoo!'s chairman and CEO in May 2001.
Previously, Semel spent 24 years at Warner Bros., most noted for his role as chairman and co-chief executive officer where he and his partner, Robert Daly, helped build Warner Bros. into one of the world's largest and most creative media and entertainment enterprises. Like Yahoo!, Warner Bros. reaches billions of worldwide consumers through its vast stable of properties. Semel is credited with building Warner Bros. from a single revenue source generating less than $1 billion to nearly $11 billion total revenues from multiple, diverse businesses in 50 countries.
Prior to Warner Bros., Semel was in charge of Walt Disney's Theatrical Distribution division and previously in charge of CBS' Theatrical Distribution division. Semel is currently on the Board of Directors of Polo Ralph Lauren Corporation, the Guggenheim Museum and the Museum of Television and Radio.
In 2005, Semel was granted the UCLA Medal, which is the highest honor bestowed by the university, and the Yale Legends in Leadership Award.
Semel holds a Bachelor of Science degree from Long Island University and an honorary doctor of humane letters degree from Emerson.
David FiloCo-founder and Chief Yahoo!

David Filo, a native of Moss Bluff, La., co-created the Yahoo! Internet navigational guide in April 1994 with Jerry Yang and co-founded Yahoo! Inc. in April 1995. Filo serves as a key technologist, directing the technical operations behind the company's global network of Web properties. He is credited with helping build Yahoo! into the world's most highly trafficked Web site and one of the Internet's most recognized brands. Filo holds a B.S. degree in computer engineering from Tulane University and an M.S. degree in electrical engineering from Stanford University. He is currently on a leave of absence from Stanford's electrical engineering Ph.D. program







Biografy of Jerry Yang:

Jerry Yang
Jerry Yang
Born:
November 6, 1968Taipei, Taiwan
Occupation:
Co-founder and Chief Yahoo!, Yahoo! Inc.
Salary:
(unknown)
Net worth:
$2.4 billion USD (2006)
Spouse:
Akiko Yamazaki





Early life
Born in Taipei, Taiwan, Yang moved to San Jose, California at the age of ten, with his widowed mother (Lily) and younger brother (Ken). His father had died when Yang was two. He claimed that despite his mother being an English teacher, he only knew one English word (shoe) on his arrival. Mastering the English language in only three years, he was soon placed into an AP English class.
Yang graduated from Piedmont Hills High School, then went on to receive his B.S. and M.S. degrees in electrical engineering from Stanford University, where he was a member of Phi Kappa Psi fraternity.
Career
While undertaking his Ph.D. studies in Electrical Engineering at Stanford University, he co-created an Internet website consisting of a directory of other websites in April 1994 with David Filo called "Jerry's Guide to the World Wide Web". It was renamed Yahoo, a backcronym for "Yet Another Hierarchical Officious Oracle", but Yang and Filo insist they selected the name because they liked the general definition of a yahoo: "rude, unsophisticated, uncouth". Yahoo became really popular, Yang and Filo realized the business potential and co-founded Yahoo! Inc. in April 1995.[2] They took a leave of absence and postponed their doctoral programs indefinitely.
Yahoo! started off as a web portal with a web directory to providing an extensive range of products and services for online activities, it is now one of the leading internet brands and has the most trafficked network on the internet.
Personal life
Yang married Akiko Yamazaki, a Japanese American raised in Costa Rica. She is an anthropologist.
Yang is currently on the Board of Directors of Alibaba, the Asian Pacific American Community Fund, Cisco and Yahoo! Japan, and is also on the Stanford University Board of Trustees.[3]
Yang created controversy based on his public comments regarding Yahoo's role in the imprisonment of reporters in the People's Republic of China, in particular his defense of Yahoo's willingness to turn over the identity of Chinese reporters who were later jailed.[citation needed] Shi Tao was among those imprisoned.
Jerry Yang and his wife pledged to give USD $75 million for Stanford University, his alma mater that would be used for building a new environmental building, etc.[4]





Biografy of David Filo:
David Filo
Born:
Wisconsin, US
Occupation:
Co-founder and Chief Yahoo!, Yahoo! Inc.
Salary:
(42,000,009)
Net worth:
$3 billion USD (2005)
Website:
http://yhoo.client.shareholder.com/press/management.cfm
David Filo is the co-founder of Yahoo! with Jerry Yang.
David Filo, at age 6, moved to Moss Bluff, Louisiana, a suburb of Lake Charles, Louisiana. He graduated from Sam Houston High School and then earned a BS in Computer Engineering from Tulane University (through the Dean's Honor Scholarship) and a MS from Stanford University.
Until the company recently decided to switch to PHP (A programming language for creating dynamic websites), his Filo Server Program, written in C, would provide Filo Server Pages that brokered requests from the Yahoo! home page.
According to Forbes, in 2005, Filo was worth an estimated $3 billion, ranking #73 in the wealthiest of Americans.
As a philanthropist, in 2005 he donated $30 million to his alma mater, Tulane University

N.T.Rama Rao


నందమూరి తారక రామారావు


నందమూరి తారక రామారావు
తెలుగువారు “అన్నగారు” అని అభిమానంతో పిలుచుకొనే నందమూరి తారక రామారావు (Nandamuri Taraka Rama Rao / NT Rama Rao / NTR) (1923 మే 28 - 1996 జనవరి 18) ఒక గొప్ప నటుడు, ప్రజానాయకుడు. రామారావు, ఎన్.టి.ఆర్, ఎన్.టి.రామారావు గా కూడా ప్రసిద్ధుడైన ఆయన, తెలుగు, తమిళం మరియు హిందీ భాషలలో కలిపి దాదాపుగా 302 చిత్రాలలో నటించారు. తన ప్రతిభను కేవలం నటనకే పరిమితం చేయకుండా పలు చిత్రాలను నిర్మించి, మరెన్నో చిత్రాలకు దర్శకత్వం కూడా వహించారు. విశ్వ విఖ్యాత నటసార్వభౌముడుగా బిరుదాంకితుడైన ఆయన, అనేక జానపద, సాంఘిక చిత్రాలలో వైవిధ్యభరితమైన పాత్రలెన్నో పోషించి మెప్పించడమేగాక, రాముడు, కృష్ణుడు వంటి పౌరాణిక పాత్రలతో తెలుగు వారి హృదయాలలో శాశ్వతంగా నిలచిపోయారు. రామారావు 1982 లో తెలుగుదేశం పేరుతో ఒక రాజకీయ పార్టీని స్థాపించి రాజకీయ రంగప్రవేశం చేసారు. పార్టీని స్థాపించిన కేవలం 9 నెలలలోనే ఆంధ్ర ప్రదేశ్ లో కాంగ్రెస్ పార్టీ ఏకచ్ఛత్రాధిపత్యానికి తెరదించుతూ అధికారాన్ని కైవసం చేసుకున్నారు. ఆ తరువాత మూడు దఫాలుగా దాదాపు 8 సంవత్సరాల పాటు ఆంధ్ర ప్రదేశ్ ముఖ్యమంత్రిగా పనిచేసి, అప్పటి వరకు అత్యధిక కాలం పనిచేసిన ముఖ్యమంత్రిగా నిలచారు.ప్రవేశం

బాల్యము, విద్యాభ్యాసము
నందమూరి తారక రామారావు 1923, మే 28 వ తేదీన, సాయంత్రం 4:32కి ఆంధ్ర ప్రదేశ్ రాష్ట్రంలోని కృష్ణా జిల్లా, పామర్రు మండలంలోని, నిమ్మకూరు గ్రామంలో లక్ష్మయ్య చౌదరి, వెంకట రామమ్మ దంపతులకు జన్మించాడు. మొదట కృష్ణ అని పేరుపట్టాలని తల్లి అనుకున్నప్పటికీ, మేనమామ తారక రాముడయితే బాగుంటుంది అని చెప్పడంతో ఆ పేరే పెట్టారు. తరువాత అది కాస్తా తారక రామారావుగా మారింది. పాఠశాల విద్య విజయవాడ మునిసిపలు హైస్కూలులో చదివాడు. తరువాత విజయవాడ ఎస్.ఆర్.ఆర్. కాలేజీలో చేరారు. ఇక్కడ విశ్వనాథ సత్యనారాయణ తెలుగు విభాగానికి అధిపతి. ఒకసారి రామారావును ఒక నాటకములో ఆడవేషం వేయమన్నాడు. అయితే రామారావు తన మీసాలు తీయటానికి 'ససేమిరా' అన్నాడు. మీసాలతోటే నటించడం వలన ఆయనకు "మీసాల నాగమ్మ" అనే పేరు తగిలించారు. 1942 మే నెలలో 20 ఏళ్ళ వయసులో మేనమామ కూతురు అయిన బసవ రామతారకంను పెళ్ళి చేసుకున్నాడు. వివాహం విద్యనాశాయ అన్నట్లు పెళ్ళయిన తరువాత పరీక్షలలో రెండుసార్లు తప్పాడు. తరువాత గుంటూరు ఆంధ్రా క్రిస్టియన్ కళాశాలలో చేరాడు. అక్కడకూడా నాటక సంఘాల కార్యకలాపాలలో చురుకుగా పాల్గొనేవాడు. ఆ సమయంలోనే నేషనల్ ఆర్ట్ థియేటర్ గ్రూప్ (NAT) అనే నాటక సంస్థను స్థాపించి కొంగర జగ్గయ్య, ముక్కామల నాగభూషణం, కె.వి.ఎస్.శర్మ తదితరులతో చేసినపాపం వంటి ఎన్నో నాటకాలు ఆడాడు. తరువాతి కాలంలో ఈ సంస్థ కొన్ని చిత్రాలను కూడా నిర్మించింది. ఎన్టీఆర్ మంచి చిత్రకారుడు కూడా. రాష్ట్రవ్యాప్త చిత్రలేఖన పోటీలలో ఆయనకు బహుమతి కూడా లభించింది. సుభాష్ చంద్రబోసు విజయవాడ వచ్చినప్పుడు ఎన్టీఆర్ బోసు బొమ్మను చిత్రించి ఆయనకు కానుకగా ఇచ్చాడు.

చలనచిత్ర జీవితం
రామారావు కాలేజీలో విద్యాభ్యాసం చేస్తున్నప్పుడు వారి ఆస్తి మొత్తం కొన్ని కారణాల వలన హరించుకుపోయింది. అప్పుడు యుక్తవయసులో ఉన్న రామారావు జీవనం కోసం అనేక పనులు చేసాడు. కొన్ని రోజులు పాల వ్యాపారం, తరువాత కిరాణా కొట్టు, ఆపై ఒక ముద్రణాలయాన్ని కూడా నడిపాడు. ఆర్థిక ఇబ్బందులు ఉన్నప్పటికీ అప్పు చేసేవాడు కాదు.
రామారావు 1947లో పట్టభద్రుడయ్యాడు. తదనంతరం ఆయన మద్రాసు సర్వీసు కమీషను పరీక్ష రాసాడు. పరీక్ష రాసిన 1100 మంది నుండి ఎంపిక చేసిన ఏడుగురిలో ఒకడుగా నిలిచాడు. అప్పుడు ఆయనకు మంగళగిరిలో సబ్-రిజిస్ట్రారు ఉద్యోగం లభించింది. అయితే సినిమాలలో చేరాలనే ఆశయం కారణంగా ఆ ఉద్యోగంలో మూడు వారాలకంటే ఎక్కువ ఉండలేకపోయాడు.
ప్రముఖ నిర్మాత బి.ఏ.సుబ్బారావు ఎన్టీఆర్ ఫొటోను ఎల్వీ ప్రసాదు దగ్గర చూసి, వెంటనే ఆయనను మద్రాసు పిలిపించి పల్లెటూరి పిల్ల సినిమాలో కథానాయకుడిగా ఎంపిక చేసాడు. దీనికి గాను రామారావుకు వెయ్యి నూటపదహార్ల పారితోషికం లబించింది. వెంటనే ఆయన తన సబ్-రిజిస్ట్రారు ఉద్యోగానికి రాజీనామా చేసేసాడు. కానీ సినిమా నిర్మాణం వెంటనే మొదలు అవ్వలేదు. ఈలోగా మనదేశం అనే సినిమాలో అవకాశం రావడంతో దానిలో నటించాడు. అంచేత ఆయన మొదటిసారి కెమేరా ముందు నటించిన సినిమా మనదేశం అయింది. 1949లో వచ్చిన ఆ సినిమాలో ఆయన ఒక పోలీసు ఇన్స్‌పెక్టర్‌ పాత్ర పోషించాడు. 1950లో పల్లెటూరి పిల్ల విడుదలైంది. అదే సంవత్సరం ఎల్వీ ప్రసాదు షావుకారు కూడా విడుదలైంది. ఈ రెండు సినిమాల తరువాత ఎన్టీఆర్ తన నివాసం మద్రాసుకు మార్చివేశాడు. థౌజండ్‌ లైట్స్‌ ప్రాంతంలో ఒక చిన్న గదిని అద్దెకు తీసుకొని అందులో ఉండేవాడు. ఆయనతో పాటు ఆ గదిలో యోగానందు (తరువాతి కాలంలో నిర్మాత అయ్యాడు) కూడా ఉండేవాడు.

శ్రీకృష్ణుడుగా ఎన్టీఆర్
1951లో కె.వి.రెడ్డి పాతాళభైరవి, దాని తరువాత అదే సంవత్సరం బి.ఎన్‌.రెడ్డి మల్లీశ్వరి, 1952లో ఎల్వీ ప్రసాదు పెళ్ళిచేసి చూడు, ఆ తరువాత వచ్చిన కమలాకర కామేశ్వరరావు చిత్రం చంద్ర హారం ఆయనకు నటుడిగా గొప్ప కీర్తిని సంపాదించి పెట్టాయి. ఈ సినిమాలన్నీ విజయావారివే. ప్రతీ సినిమాకు నెలకు 500 రూపాయిలు జీతం మరియు 5000 రూపాయిల పారితోషికమూ ఇచ్చారు. పాతాళభైరవి 34 కేంద్రాలలో 100 రోజులు ఆడి అప్పట్లో సంచలనం సృష్టించింది. తన ఉంగరాల జుట్టుతో, ఎత్తయిన రూపంతో, వెలుగులు విరజిమ్మే నవ్వుతో ఆంద్రదేశ ప్రజలను ఆకట్టుకుని వారి మనసులలో నిలిచిపోయాడు.
1956లో విడుదలయిన మాయాబజార్‌లో ఆయన తీసుకున్న 7500 రూపాయల పారితోషికం అపట్లో అత్యధికం అని భావిస్తారు. 1959లో ఎవిఎమ్ వారు నిర్మించి, విడుదల చేసిన భూకైలాస్ చిత్రంలో రావణబ్రహ్మ పాత్రకు రామారావు ప్రాణప్రతిష్ఠ చేసాడు. 1960లో విడుదలయిన శ్రీ వెంకటేశ్వర మహాత్మ్యం భారీ విజయం సాధించింది. శ్రీమద్విరాటపర్వములో ఆయన ఐదు పాత్రలు పోషించాడు. ఆ విధముగా 1950లలో ఎన్టీఆర్ ఎంతో ప్రజాదరణ పొందిన నటుడిగా ఎదిగాడు. సంవత్సరానికి 10 సినిమాల చొప్పున నటిస్తూ ఉండేవాడు. 1963లో విడుదలయిన లవకుశ అతి పెద్ద విజయాన్ని నమోదు చేసింది. ఎన్టీఆర్ సినిమాలలోకి వచ్చిన 22 సంవత్సరముల వరకు ఆయన పారితోషికం 4 లేదా 5 అంకెలలోనే ఉండేది. 1972నుంచి ఆయన పారితోషికం లక్షల్లోకి చేరింది.
ఎన్టీఆర్ దర్శకత్వంలో వచ్చిన మొదటి చిత్రం 1961లో విడుదలైన సీతారామ కళ్యాణం. ఈ చిత్రాన్ని తన సోదరుడు త్రివిక్రమరావు ఆధీనంలోని "నేషనల్ ఆర్టు ప్రొడక్షన్సు" పతాకంపై విడుదల చేసాడు. 1977లో విడుదలయిన దాన వీర శూర కర్ణలో ఆయన మూడు పాత్రలలో నటిస్తూ స్వయంగా దర్శకత్వం చేసాడు. 1978లో విడుదలయిన శ్రీరామ పట్టాభిషేకం సినిమాకు కూడా ఆయన దర్శకత్వం వహించాడు. ఎన్టీఆర్ నటించిన సాంఘిక చిత్రాలు అడవిరాముడు, యమగోల గొప్ప బాక్సాఫీసు విజయం సాధించాయి. 1991 ఎన్నికల ప్రచారం కోసం ఆయన నటించి, దర్శకత్వం వహించిన బ్రహ్మర్షి విశ్వామిత్ర 1990లో విడుదలయింది.
ఎన్టీఆర్ క్రమశిక్షణలో చాలా కచ్చితంగా ఉండేవాడు. గంభీరమైన తన స్వరాన్ని కాపాడుకోడానికి ప్రతీరోజూ మద్రాసు మెరీనా బీచిలో అభ్యాసము చేసేవాడు. నర్తనశాల సినిమా కోసం ఆయన వెంపటి చినసత్యం దగ్గర భరతనాట్యం నేర్చుకున్నాడు. వృత్తిపట్ల ఆయన నిబద్ధత అటువంటిది. కెమెరా ముందు ఎన్టీఆర్ తడబడిన దాఖలాలు లేవని చెబుతూంటారు, ఎందుకంటే ఆయన డైలాగులను ముందుగానే కంఠతా పట్టేసేవాడు.
రాజకీయ ప్రవేశం
1978లో ఆంధ్ర ప్రదేశ్‌లో అధికారానికి వచ్చిన కాంగ్రేసు పార్టీ అంతర్గత కుమ్ములాటల వలన అపకీర్తి పాలయ్యింది. తరచూ ముఖ్యమంత్రులు మారుతూ ఉండేవారు. ఐదు సంవత్సరాల కాలంలో నలుగురు ముఖ్యమంత్రులు మారారు. ముఖ్యమంత్రిని ఢిల్లీలో నిర్ణయించి, రాష్ట్రంలో శాసనసభ్యులచేత నామకార్థం ఎన్నిక చేయించేవారు. ఈ పరిస్థితి కారణంగా ప్రభుత్వం అప్రదిష్ట పాలయింది.
1981లో ఊటీలో సర్దార్‌ పాపారాయుడు చిత్రం షూటింగు విరామసమయంలో ఒక విలేఖరి, మీకు ఇంకో 6 నెలల్లో 60 సంవత్సరాలు నిండుతున్నాయి కదా, మరి మీ జీవితానికి సంబంధించి ఏదయినా నిర్ణయం తీసుకుంటున్నారా? ఆని అడిగాడు. దానికి జవాబుగా నేను నిమ్మకూరు అనే చిన్న గ్రామములో పుట్టాను. తెలుగు ప్రజలు నన్ను ఎంతగానో ఆదరించారు. వారికి నేనెంతో రుణపడి ఉన్నాను. కాబట్టి నా తరువాతి పుట్టిన రోజునుంచి నా వంతుగా ప్రతీనెలలో 15రోజులు తెలుగుప్రజల సేవకోసం కేటాయిస్తాను అని చెప్పాడు. ఆయన చేయబోయే రాజకీయ ప్రయాణానికి అది మొదటి సంకేతం.
అప్పటి నుండి ఎన్టీఆర్ తాను నటించవలసిన సినిమాలు త్వరత్వరగా పూర్తి చేసాడు. 1982 మార్చి 21హైదరాబాదు వచ్చినప్పుడు అభిమానులు ఆయనకు ఎర్రతివాచీ పరిచి స్వాగతం పలికారు. 1982 మార్చి 29 సాయంత్రము 2:30లకు కొత్త పార్టీ పెడుతున్నట్లు చెప్పాడు. ఆసమయంలోనే తన పార్టీ పేరు తెలుగుదేశంగా నిర్ణయించి, ప్రకటించాడు. పార్టీ ప్రచారానికై తన పాత చెవ్రోలెటు వ్యానును బాగు చేయించి, దానిని ఒక కదిలే వేదికగా తయారు చేయించాడు. దానిపై నుండే ఆయన తన ప్రసంగాలు చేసేవాడు. దానిని ఆయన "చైతన్యరథం" అని అన్నాడు. ఆ రథంపై "తెలుగుదేశం పిలుస్తోంది, రా! కదలి రా!!" అనే నినాదం రాయించాడు. ఆ తరువాతి కాలంలో భారత రాజకీయాల్లో పరుగులెత్తిన ఎన్నో రథాలకు ఈ చైతన్యరథమే స్ఫూర్తి.

ప్రచార ప్రభంజనం

నందమూరి తారక రామారావు

రామారావు ప్రచార ర్యాలీ.
ఎన్టీఆర్ ప్రజలను చైతన్య పరుస్తూ చైతన్యరథంపై ఆంధ్ర ప్రదేశ్ నలుమూలలకూ ప్రచార యాత్రను సాగించాడు. చైతన్యరథమే ప్రచార వేదికగా, నివాసంగా మారిపోయింది. ఒక శ్రామికుడి వలె ఖాకీ దుస్తులు ధరించి, నిరంతరం ప్రయాణిస్తూ, ఉపన్యాసాలిస్తూ ప్రజల హృదయాలను దోచుకున్నాడు. ఆంధ్రుల ఆత్మగౌరవ పరిరక్షణ అనే ఒక ఉద్వేగభరితమైన అంశాన్ని తీసుకుని ప్రజల మనోభావాలను తీవ్రంగా ప్రభావితం చేసాడు. కాంగ్రెసు అధికారాన్ని కూకటివేళ్ళతో పెకలించివేసిన ప్రచార ప్రభంజనమది.
ఎన్టీఆర్ ప్రసంగాలు ఉద్వేగభరితంగా, ఉద్రేక పూరితంగా ఉండి, ప్రజలను ఎంతో ఆకట్టుకునేవి. ముఖ్యమంత్రులను తరచూ మార్చడం.., అదీ ఢిల్లీ పెద్దల నిర్ణయం ప్రకారమే తప్ప, శాసనసభ్యుల మాటకు విలువ లేకపోవడం వంటి వాటిని లక్ష్యంగా చేసుకుని తన ప్రసంగాలను మలచుకున్నాడు. కాంగ్రెసు నాయకులు కుక్కమూతి పిందెలనీ, కొజ్జాలనీ, దగాకోరులనీ, దగుల్బాజీలని, అధిష్టానం చేతిలో కీలుబొమ్మలనీ తీవ్రపదజాలంతో విమర్శించాడు. కాంగ్రెసు పార్టీ కారణంగా తెలుగువారి ఆత్మగౌరవం దెబ్బతిన్నదనీ, దాన్ని ఢిల్లో తాకట్టు పెట్టారనీ విమర్శిస్తూ, ఆ ఆత్మగౌరవ పునరుద్ధరణకే తాను రాజకీయాల్లోకి వచ్చానని చెప్పాడు. కాంగ్రెసు నిర్వాకానికి అప్పటికే విసుగు చెందిన, ప్రజలు ఆయన నినాదం పట్ల ఆకర్షితులయ్యారు.
1983 జనవరి 7 న మధ్యాహ్నం ఎన్నికల ఫలితాలను ప్రకటించారు. తెలుగుదేశం 199, కాంగ్రెసు 60, సిపిఐ 4, సిపిఎం 5, బిజెపి 3 సీట్లు గెలుచుకున్నాయి. 97 ఎళ్ళ సుదీర్ఘ చరిత్ర ఉన్న కాంగ్రెసు పార్టీ 9 నెలల తెలుగుదేశం పార్టీ చేతులలో ఓడిపోయింది. ఆయన విజయానికి అప్పటి దినపత్రికలు - ముఖ్యంగా ఈనాడు - ఎంతో తోడ్పడ్డాయి.

రాజకీయ ఉన్నత పతనాలు
1970లలో ఎదుర్కొన్న చిన్నపాటి ఒడిదుడుకులు తప్పించి, ఎన్టీఆర్ సినిమా జీవితం విజయవంతంగా, అప్రతిహతంగా సాగిపోయింది. అయితే ఆయన రాజకీయ జీవితం అలా -నల్లేరుపై నడకలా సాగలేదు. అద్భుతమైన విజయాలకూ, అవమానకరమైన అపజయాలకు మధ్య తూగుటుయ్యాలలా సాగింది. ఎన్నికల ప్రచారసమయంలో ఎన్టీఆర్ కాంగ్రెసు నాయకులపై చేసిన ఆరోపణల కారణంగాను, ఎన్నికల్లో తెలుగుదేశం చేతిలో కాంగ్రెసు పొందిన దారుణ పరాభవం వలనా, ఆ రెండు పార్టీల మధ్య వైరి భావాన్ని పెంచింది. రాజకీయపార్టీల మధ్యన ఉండే ప్రత్యర్థి భావన కాక శతృత్వ భావన వారి మధ్యన నెలకొంది. తెలుగుదేశం పాలిత ఆంధ్ర ప్రదేశ్ కు కాంగ్రెసు పాలిత కేంద్రానికీ మధ్య వివాదంగా మారే వరకు వెళ్ళింది. కేంద్రం మిథ్య అనేంతవరకు ఎన్టీఆర్ వెళ్ళాడు.
1983 శాసనసభ ఎన్నికలలో ఆయన సాధించిన అపూర్వ విజయం ఆయన రాజకీయ జీవితంలో అత్యున్నత ఘట్టం. అధికారం చేపట్టిన తరువాత, అనేక వివాదాస్పద నిర్ణయాలు తీసుకున్నాడు. ప్రభుత్వోద్యోగుల పదవీ విరమణ తగ్గింపు వీటిలో ప్రధానమైనది. ఈ నిర్ణయాల కారణంగా చాలా వేగంగా ప్రజాభిమానం కోల్పోసాగాడు. 1984 ఆగష్టు 16నాదెండ్ల భాస్కరరావు, అప్పటి గవర్నరు రాంలాల్, ప్రధానమంత్రి ఇందిరా గాంధీల లోపాయికారీ సహకారంతో రామారావును అధికారం నుండి తొలగించి, తాను దొడ్డిదారిన గద్దెనెక్కడంతో తిరిగి రామారావు ప్రజల్లోకి వెళ్ళాడు. జరిగిన అన్యాయాన్ని ఎలుగెత్తి చాటాడు. ఈ ప్రజాస్వామ్య పునరుద్ధరణ ఉద్యమంలో మిత్రపక్షాలు ఆయనకు ఎంతో సహాయం చేసాయి. ఫలితంగా సెప్టెంబర్ 16 న రామారావును తిరిగి ముఖ్యమంత్రిగా ప్రతిష్టించక తప్పింది కాదు, కేంద్రప్రభుత్వానికి. నెలరోజుల్లోనే, ఆయన ప్రభ తిరిగి శిఖరాగ్రానికి చేరిన సందర్భం ఇది.
ఆంద్ర ప్రదేశ్ లో మొదటి కాంగ్రేసేతర ముఖ్యమంత్రిగా ప్రమాణస్వీకారం చేసిన తరువాత ఆయన ఎన్నో కార్యక్రమాలు చేపట్టాడు. 1984లో సినిమారంగంలో "స్లాబ్ విధానము"ను అమలుపరిచారు. ప్రభుత్వానికి ఖర్చు తప్ప ఎందుకూ పనికిరాదని చెప్పి శాసనమండలిని రద్దు చేసాడు (1985 జూన్ 1 న అధికారికంగా మండలి రద్దయింది). హైదరాబాదు లోని హుస్సేన్‌సాగర్ కట్టందు ( ట్యాంకుబండ్నందు) సుప్రసిద్ధులైన తెలుగువారి విగ్రహాలు నెలకొల్పాడు. నాదెండ్ల కుట్ర కారణంగా శాసనసభలో తనకు తగ్గిన ఆధిక్యతను తిరిగి సంపాదించే ఉద్దేశ్యంతో మార్చి 1985లో ప్రజలతీర్పు కోరుతూ మధ్యంతర ఎన్నికలకు వెళ్ళాడు. ఆ ఎన్నికలలో 202 స్థానాల్లో గెలిచి తిరిగి అధికారంలోకి వచ్చాడు.
1985-89 మధ్య కాలంలో తన ఏకస్వామ్యపాలన వలన ఎన్టీఆర్ ఎంతో అప్రదిష్ట పాలయ్యాడు. పార్టీలోను, ప్రభుత్వంలోను అన్నీ తానే అయి నడిపించాడు. ప్రజల్లో నిరసన భావం కలగడానికి ఇది ప్రధాన కారణమైంది. 1989లో ఎన్నికలకు కొద్ది నెలల ముందు మొత్తం మంత్రివర్గాన్ని ఏకపక్షంగా రద్దుపరచి కొత్త మంత్రుల్ని తీసుకున్నాడు. ఈ కాలంలో జరిగిన కొన్ని కులఘర్షణలు కూడా ప్రభుత్వ ప్రతిష్టపై దెబ్బతీసాయి. 1989 ఎన్నికలలో ఇది తీవ్ర ప్రభావం చూపింది. కాంగ్రెసు తెలుగుదేశాన్ని చిత్తుగా ఓడించి తిరిగి అధికారానికి వచ్చింది. ఎన్నికలలో ఓడిపోయినా భారత దేశంలోని ప్రాంతీయ పార్టీలన్నిటినీ, కమ్యూనిస్టులతో కలిపి కాంగ్రేసుకు ప్రత్యామ్నాయంగా నేషనల్ ఫ్రంట్ అనే ఒక సంకీర్ణాన్ని ఏర్పాటు చేయటంలో ఎన్టీఆర్ విజయం సాధించాడు. 1991 లో నంద్యాల లోక్‌సభ ఉప ఎన్నికలలో కాంగ్రెసు తరపున అభ్యర్థిగా అప్పటి ప్రధానమంత్రి పి.వి.నరసింహారావు నిలబడగా, ప్రధానమంత్రి అయిన ఒక తెలుగువాడికి గౌరవ సూచకంగా ఎన్టీఆర్ ఎవరినీ పోటీగా నిలబెట్టలేదు.
1989-94 మధ్యకాలం ఎన్టీఆర్ రాజకీయ చరిత్రలో అత్యంత నిమ్నదశగా చెప్పవచ్చు. ప్రతిపక్ష నాయకుడిగా శాసనసభలో అధికార కాంగ్రెసు పార్టీ చేతిలో అవమానాలు పొందాడు. శాసనసభలో అధికార, ప్రతిపక్ష పార్టీల మధ్య ఘర్షణ ఏస్థాయిలో ఉండేదంటే - ఈ కాలంలో ప్రతిపక్ష తెలుగుదేశం పార్టీ సభ్యులను 9 సార్లు సభనుండి బహిష్కరించారు. ఈ కాలంలో నాలుగు సినిమాలలో నటించాడు కూడా. తన జీవితకథ రాస్తున్న లక్ష్మీపార్వతిని 1993 సెప్టెంబర్‌లో పెళ్ళి చేసుకున్నాడు. రామారావు వ్యక్తిగత జీవితంలో ఇదో కీలకమైన మలుపు. ఆయన వ్యక్తిగత జీవితం, కుటుంబ సభ్యులతో ఆయన సంబంధాలపై ఈ పెళ్ళి కారణంగా నీడలు కమ్ముకున్నట్లు కనిపించాయి.
1994లో కిలో బియ్యం రెండు రూపాయలు, సంపూర్ణ మద్య నిషేధం, వంటి హామీలతో, మునుపెన్నడూ ఏపార్టీ కూడా సాధించనన్ని స్థానాలు గెలిచి మళ్ళీ అధికారంలోకి వచ్చాడు. ప్రభుత్వ ఖజానాకు ఎంత భారంపడినా కూడా ఎన్టీఆర్ తన హామీలను అమలుపరిచాడు. అయితే ఆయన రెండవ భార్య లక్ష్మీపార్వతి పార్టీ, ప్రభుత్వ విషయాలలో విపరీతంగా కలుగజేసుకోవటం వలన ఆయన చాలా సమస్యలు ఎదుర్కొనవలసి వచ్చింది. పార్టీలో ప్రముఖులు అభద్రతా భావాన్ని ఎదుర్కొన్నారు. పార్టీలో ముదిరిన సంక్షోభానికి పరాకాష్టగా ఆయన అల్లుడు, ఆనాటి మంత్రీ అయిన నారా చంద్రబాబునాయుడు తిరుగుబాటు చేసాడు. అంతటితో ఎన్టీఆర్ రాజకీయ జీవితం ముగిసినట్లయింది. అనతికాలంలోనే, 1996 జనవరి 18న 73 సంవత్సరాల వయసులో గుండెపోటుతో ఎన్టీఆర్ మరణించాడు.
ముప్పైమూడేళ్ళ తెర జీవితంలోను, పదమూడేళ్ళ రాజకీయ జీవితంలోను నాయకుడిగా వెలిగిన ఎన్టీఆర్ చిరస్మరణీయుడు. ఆయన మరణించినపుడు ఈనాడు పత్రికలో శ్రీధర్ వేసిన ఈ కార్టూను ప్రజల హృదయాల్లో ఎన్టీఆర్ పట్ల ఉన్న అభిమానానికి అద్దం పడుతుంది.

ఎన్టీఆర్ జాతీయ పురస్కారం
ఎన్టీఆర్ పేరిట సినిమా ప్రముఖులకు జీవిత కాలంలో చేసిన సేవకు గుర్తింపుగా ఎన్టీఆర్ జాతీయ పురస్కారాన్ని ఆంధ్ర ప్రదేశ్ ప్రభుత్వం 1996 లో నెలకొల్పింది. 2002 వరకు ఇస్తూ వచ్చిన ఈ అవార్డును ప్రభుత్వం తరువాత నిలిపివేసింది. ఎన్టీఆర్ వర్థంతి సందర్భంగా 2006 జనవరి 18 న ఈ పురస్కారాన్ని పునరుద్ధరించాలని ప్రభుత్వం నిర్ణయించింది.

ఎన్టీఆర్ విశిష్టత


సిసలైన ప్రజానాయకుడు ఎన్టీఆర్‌. ఆంధ్ర ప్రదేశ్ లో, ఆయన సమకాలికుల్లో ఆయనంతటి ప్రజానాయకుడు మరొకరు లేరు.
వటవృక్షంలాంటి కాంగ్రెసు పార్టీకి ఆంధ్ర ప్రదేశ్ లో దీటైన ప్రత్యామ్నాయాన్ని నిలబెట్టిన గొప్పదనం పూర్తిగా ఎన్టీఆర్‌దే.
పట్టుదలకూ, క్రమశిక్షణకు మారుపేరైన వ్యక్తి ఆయన. ఈ కారణాలవల్లనే కాంగ్రెసు పార్టీని ఎదుర్కొని స్థిరమైన ప్రభుత్వాన్నీ, ప్రభావవంతమైన ప్రతిపక్షాన్ని రాష్ట్ర ప్రజలకు ఇవ్వగలిగాడు.
తెలుగుజాతికీ, తెలుగుభాషకూ దేశవ్యాప్తంగా గుర్తింపు తెచ్చిన వ్యక్తి ఎన్టీఆర్.
స్త్రీలకు ఆస్తిలో వాటా ఉండాలని చట్టం తెచ్చిన ఘనత రామారావుదే.
బలహీన వర్గాలకు లక్షలాదిగా ఇళ్ళు కట్టించిన గొప్పతనం ఆయనకు దక్కింది.
రెండు రూపాయలకే కిలో బియ్యం వాగ్దానం చేసి, ఎన్నో ఆర్థిక ఇబ్బందులకు ఓర్చి, తన వాగ్దానాన్ని నిలబెట్టుకున్నాడు.
తెలుగుగంగ ప్రాజెక్టులో పట్టుబట్టి రాయలసీమ సాగునీటి అంశాన్ని చేర్చిన ఘనత కూడా ఎన్టీఆర్‌దే.
దేశంలో ప్రధాన ప్రతిపక్షాలను ఒకతాటిపైకి తెచ్చిన నేత ఆయన.
ఎందరో కొత్తవారిని, బాగా చదువుకున్నవారిని రాజకీయాలకు పరిచయం చేసి, ఒంటిచేత్తో వారిని గెలిపించిన ప్రజానాయకుడు ఆయన. దేవేందర్ గౌడ్, కె.చంద్రశేఖరరావు మొదలైన నేతలు ఆయన పరిచయం చేసినవారే.

ఎన్టీఆర్ పై విమర్శ
ఏకస్వామ్య పరిపాలన
వ్యక్తుల గురించి, రాజకీయ పార్టీల గురించి ఆయన వాడిన భాష రాజకీయాల్లో ఒక కొత్త ఒరవడిని సృష్టించింది. ఇతర పార్టీలు దీన్ని మరింత ముందుకు తీసుకువెళ్ళడంతో రాజకీయనేతలు వాడే భాషా స్థాయి మరింత పడిపోయింది.
ఏ ఇతర నేతకూ లభించని ప్రజాదరణ పొందినా కేవలం స్వీయ తప్పిదాల కారణంగా దాన్ని నిలుపుకోలేకపోయాడు.
ఆయన పాలనా కాలంలో కులపరమైన ఘర్షణలు జరిగాయి. ఆయనకు ప్రత్యక్ష సంబంధం లేకున్నా, అప్పటి ముఖ్యమంత్రిగా బాధ్యత వహించక తప్పలేదు.

సినిమాలు

నటుడిగా
యన్టీ రామారావు నటించిన సినిమాల జాబితా

దర్శకునిగా
శ్రీసీతారామకళ్యాణం(1962)
గులేబకావళికథ(1962)
శ్రీకృష్ణపాండవీయం(1966)
వరకట్నం(1969)
తల్లాపెళ్ళామా(1970)
తాతమ్మకల(1974)
దానవీరశూరకర్ణ(1977)
చాణక్యచంద్రగుప్త(1977)
అక్బర్ సలీమ్ అనార్కలి(1978)
శ్రీరామపట్టాభిషేకం(1978)
శ్రీమద్విరాటపర్వం(1979)
శ్రీతిరుపతివెంకటేశ్వరకల్యాణం(1979)
చండశాసనుడు(1983)
శ్రీమద్విరాటపోతులూరివీరబ్రహ్మేంద్రస్వామిచరిత్ర(1984)
బ్రహ్మర్షివిశ్వామిత్ర(1991)
సామ్రాట్ అశోక(1992)

నిర్మాతగా
సామ్రాట్ అశోక (1992)
శ్రీనాథకవిసార్వభౌమ (1993)
దానవీరశూరకర్ణ

రచయితగా
బిదాయి(1974) (హిందీ)

ఇంతకు ముందు ఉన్నవారు:కోట్ల విజయభాస్కరరెడ్డి
ఆంధ్ర ప్రదేశ్ ముఖ్యమంత్రి09/01/1983—16/08/1984
తరువాత వచ్చినవారు:నాదెండ్ల భాస్కరరావు
ఇంతకు ముందు ఉన్నవారు:నాదెండ్ల భాస్కరరావు
ఆంధ్ర ప్రదేశ్ ముఖ్యమంత్రి16/09/1984—03/12/1989
తరువాత వచ్చినవారు:డా.మర్రి చెన్నారెడ్డి
ఇంతకు ముందు ఉన్నవారు:కోట్ల విజయభాస్కరరెడ్డి
ఆంధ్ర ప్రదేశ్ ముఖ్యమంత్రి12/12/1994—01/09/1995
తరువాత వచ్చినవారు:నారా చంద్రబాబునాయుడు

Hyd_Golkonda


You will have to visit the Golkonda fort, 10 kilometres west of Hyderabad city, to appreciate the majesty and grandeur of the 800-year-old ruins and the architectural glory of those structures, which have survived the ravage of time and rampage by Mughal vandals. One of the most magnificent fort complexes in the country, Golkonda, meaning shepherd hill, was built consecutively by three dynasties, the Kakatiyas, the Bahmanis and the Qutub Shahis, the major contribution coming from the latter. It betrays the confluence of Hindu and Muslim architectural perceptions of the times. It was the capital of the Bahmani kings first and the Qutub Shahis later for sometime, before they shifted the capital to what is now the old city of Hyderabad. The fort has now become a symbol of the composite cultural heritage of the 400-year-old city.
The fort area on the hill is fenced off by a series of high and broad granite walls built in concentric circles, their defences strengthened by several moats and drawbridges. Legend has it that Golkonda was the centre of a flourishing trade in diamonds and that the world-famous Kohinoor diamond came from this market. The rugged and time-ravaged ruins throw up fleeting evidence of a golden age with Golkonda as its essence. The Qutub Shahis expanded the modest structures built by the Kakatiyas in the thirteenth century into a fortress complex that occupied the entire area of the hill and overflowed into the terrain around it. Its outside wall, around ten miles in length, is designed as a first checkmate to any aggression. The width of the wall ranges from 17 to 34 feet broken by 87 semi-circular bastions, 50 to 60 feet high.