Saturday, June 24, 2023

Making of the Encyclopaedia | Prof. George Menachery | Part 2

Saturday Evening Post

Making of the Encyclopaedia

From the Horse’s own Mouth

George Menachery

Two


During the course of the Seminar I had interviewed His Eminence Joseph Cardinal Parecattil for a London periodical. He had just returned after the consistory in Rome where he had been made cardinal – the second Indian - after Cardinal Valerian Gracias of Bombay - by Pope Paul VI and was given a rousing reception by the Seminar participants.  This was my second encounter with him – earlier we the directors of the Institute for Lay Leadership Training had been to the Metropolitan Palace, Ernakulam in 1967 to seek His Grace’s blessings for the Institute, which was the first such enterprise in India at least. The National Seminar emphasized this when it made a recommendation to start Institutions like the one we had started in Nadathara at the  Madonna Sehiona in all dioceses. I was immensely pleased when His Eminence allotted me a First Class coupe in the specially chartered train which carried His Eminence to Ernakulam after the Seminar. About His Eminence’s lasting interest in the Encyclopaedia project later.

The enthusiasm I had experienced at Bangalore to write a book on the history and culture of Christianity in India gradually cooled off once I returned to my regular work in the college at Trichur. Also other urgent duties prevented me from giving much attention to this much beloved dream project. At various times I had started quite a few interesting enterprises such as the Ayurveda Encyclopaedia of India, The Encyclopaedia of the Arabian Sea, The Muziris Book, The Pazhama Series, writing of the book Church Architecture of Kerala commissioned by the Department of Archaeology, and afterwards by the Cultural Department also, writing books on Nidhirickal Mani Kathanar and Arnos Pathiri entrusted me by the Kerala History Association’s project “Architects of Modern Kerala,” The Pazhama Youtube Series, setting up various museums and libraries… all with great vigour and earnestness, most of which still  remain somewhat uncompleted mainly on account my chronic laziness and inertia coupled with so called “perfectionism” resulting in procrastination and deviation into other projects. That must be the reason that generally only tasks that could be completed in a short time find me finishing them- like editing souvenirs, presenting papers, organizing conferences, workshops, expos, little museums and the like. In short I was often a sort of Jack of all Trades as my detractors truthfully propagated, while some said though jokingly “but a master of many!”. (This is the problem with writing autographically – often one cannot express anything that sounds even a little self-laudatory without feeling shy about it. One should, I suppose, follow Julius Caesar’s third person narrative style of the Gallic Wars.)

 In 1969 when I returned from the Bangalore Seminar there was still some work connected with my Bharathiya Saahitya Samithi’s publication of thirty-five books by best known Malayalam literary figures on a single day in 1968, a feat that surprised and much praised by even D. C. Kizhakkemuri then at the helm of affairs at the National Book Stall and the SPCS. Also by this time I had been compelled by my partners, especially Prof. K. C. Shekar and Prof. A. J. Varghese to become sole proprietor of the Eiffel Books with all its debts and the remaining unsold books in the book shop. One of the reasons that prompted me to take over this risky ownership was that I badly needed an office for myself near my college.  Phone calls which came for the teachers were never even informed them at the college, and the vast distances of most teaching classes from the college office made it next to impossible to use the phones – no mobile phones then.  The phone connection at the Book Shop, and the availability of the services of the three  staff members of the shop were powerful incentives. Also, in those days I was a chain smoker of Char Minar cigarettes and smoking was taboo in the college, so the book shop provided a safe abode to indulge this craze. The place also helped me to entertain friends and scholars.  And the second World of Books Expo also had to be organized shortly. A number of programmes of the Institute for Lay Leadership Training were to be organized in co-operation with fellow directors, especially Prof. P. P. Peter, Prof. Joseph Kolengadan, and Advocate K. P. Devassy. Lecture visits to some colleges and organizations of professionals mostly outside Kerala, under the aegis of various Newman Circles had been previously fixed for me, as I was the national vice-president of the Newman Association of India from 1964 to 1972. And my very active AKPCTA work could not be neglected.  What with one thing and another  the attempt to write the projected book on Indian Church History remained neglected and even forgotten.



Saturday, June 17, 2023

Making of the Encyclopaedia | Prof. George Menachery | Part 1

 


Making of the Encyclopaedia

George Menachery

One

Early during the eleven-day-long All-India Seminar  ‘The Church in India Today,’ Bangalore, May 1969, I was approached by Fr. Dr. Jacob Vellian and Fr. Dr. Xavier Koodappuzha, both then professors at the St. Thomas Apostolic Seminary of Kottayam,  with the request that I introduce a resolution at the final plenary session on the need for permitting pastors of different Indian rites to attend to the spiritual needs of their own fold scattered throughout the country and even abroad.

I was staying at the accommodation provided by the organizers at the St. John’s Medical College, which was to be inaugurated as a part of the National Seminar. The necessary two-hundred-odd participants’ signatures for eligibility to move the resolution had already been obtained. (There were 485 participants eligible to vote, including 2 cardinals, 14 archbishops, 47 bishops, 3 prefects apostolic, 4 exarchs ...)

This writer introduced the resolution at 7 p.m. on the 24th of May, the eve of the Pentecost. Another resolution was moved saying that this permission was unacceptable. The discussion “did go through a period of apprehension” is how the official printed report Ever Ancient Ever New describes what then took place. In fact the debate boisterously proceeded past midnight till 2. a. m.  the next day (sic)—with tiny breaks for supper (9. p.m.- which in the Seminar time-table was scheduled for 8 p. m.), ice cream (which the sisters at Dharmaram  had prepared for the Pentacostal Dinner the next day - 11.50 p. m.), and black coffee (there was nothing else available - 1 a. m.)— overrunning by six hours the allotted time. Finally a compromise resolution had to be moved by one of the seminar secretaries, Fr. Jonas Thaliath (afterwards made the bishop of Rajkot), which was accepted. “In the debate which preceded this, important people had said that the acceptance of the resolution would be an event of Pentecostal importance for the future of the Catholic Church in India. Great thanksgiving and rejoicing followed the acceptance of the resolution with a unanimous vote,” My Impressions of the All-India Seminar, N.C. Sargant, Anglican bishop of Mysore. The scene of Archbishop Benedict Mar Gregorios climbing upon the chair and clapping incessantly on the passing of the resolution is still in my memory.

Why I was chosen to move this historic resolution still remains a mystery to me. I had just turned 31 the previous month, on 2nd April 1969, and was one of the youngest participants at the Seminar, and was practically an ignoramus as far as details of Indian Church history went. True, I was attending all the sessions, dressed in full suit and carrying a small typewriter in my hand - as people carry laptops today. I was making frequent interventions, interventions on various aspects relating to the future of the Church in India as called for by the topics discussed in different sessions, and in good English, they thought. And above all I was a layman from Trichur,  considered an impartial and neutral area with no axes of their own to grind. Maybe these were some of the reasons which prompted the organizers of the move to choose me as the mover of the resolution. The words of Msgr. Zacharias Vazhappilly, Vicar General of Trichur and Fr. Dr. Joseph Kannath, Founder Director of the POC might have guaranteed my “harmlessness”.

In the course of the tense hours of argumentation and controversy this writer needed some clarifications on certain aspects of Indian church history, to conclude the remarks on the resolution.

However when I sought enlightenment on some points in the history of the Church in India, it transpired to one’s disappointment and surprise that many august persons present whom I consulted did not have any clear idea about even the major developments in the history of Christianity in India. Then and there was conceived the idea of putting together a booklet on the subject for the use of individuals in the same plight. That was the first seed which three years later became the publication edited by me : The St. Thomas – Christian Encyclopaedia – of India

Making of the Encyclopaedia | Prof. George Menachery | Part 21

     Saturday Evening Post Making of the Encyclopaedia From the Horse’s own Mouth George Menachery Twenty One I went to P. Orr. & Sons...