After posting two stories on Antony Sar many more keep surfacing in my mind. As I wrote in the previous post, he had a deep knowledge in Electronics. The story I write here was in fact told to me by my friend Shaju Mathew George of the Chemistry department, CMS College. Many years ago Shaju and Antony Sar were in the University of Hyderabad attending a refresher course/workshop. The participants were from all over India. One guy from Kerala frowned at the two and with contempt and arrogance writ large on his face uttered the following non sense, " you should have come in attires suiting the occasion". Perhaps for the "learned professor (LP)" it was the prestige of Malayalees that was at stake. Shaju was a little upset over his respected senior being bluntly disgraced in his presence. But Antony Sar just smiled. Even today I can imagine that disarming smile.
After the inaugural function, the classes started. One or two days passed of peacefully. On the third day or so the resource person was a senior professor from Delhi University. His plan was to introduce and if possible make the participants experts in working with a variety of electronic equipment. But to his dismay most of the participants were staggeringly ignorant of even the basics of Electricity, forget about electronics. Most of them did not know the difference between current and voltage. None could differentiate between a resistance and a capacitor. Transistors and IC's were heart breaking aliens. The DU Professor was at the verge of abandoning the classes when he saw Antony Sar (in the back row - you guessed it right!), explaining things to a fellow participant. He invite Antony Sar to the front and talked to him personally for some time(certainly that was an interview to gauge Antony Sar's depth in Electronics). The participants, including our "LP" waited with bated breath not knowing what was happening in the front. The "LP" might have even thought that Antony Sar was being reprimanded for coming to the class clad in a dhothy.
After some ten minutes of talking to Antony Sar, the DU Professor rose from his chair and made the following announcement. "This man Antony from Kerala will be our leader for the rest of the sessions. He knows much more Electronics than any of us in the Chemistry department of DU knew. His classes will start now". Yes, the classes started and Antony Sar taught Electronics to an initially unwilling group Chemistry teachers in his inimitable style. By the end of several sessions spanning several days, the participants were a happy lot. While the smart ones became experts in operating the various equipment some became fairly literate in Electronics. I am sure, back in their colleges, the teachers would have transferred the newly acquired knowledge to their students. After all this is how a knowledgeable society is formed or created.
All credit to the DU Professor also for "unearthing" Antony Sar.
No comments:
Post a Comment