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Piyush
Roy
Indian Express
12 February 2007
The occasion couldn't have been more opportune,
and the chief guest and Maharashtra Governor
S M Krishna pointed it out while releasing
the book, One Day At A Time, a biography
on veteran industrialist B K Birla and his
wife Dr Sarla Devi, at the Ravindra Natya
Mandir on Monday evening.
"While
grandson Kumar Mangalam Birla dominated
today's headlines with the Novelis deal
making the nation proud, the biography of
his grandparents B K Birla and Dr Sarala
Devi celebrates and provides a peek into
a family that has been closely associated
with national growth since the independence
movement. The Birlas are a pioneer in introducing
ethics, morality and spirituality into business,"
he said.
While
on stage the Birla family was represented
by Rajashree Birla, Kumar Mangalam and Neerja
Birla, off it Yash and Avanti Birla led
the guests list with representatives from
some of Mumbai's leading industrial families,
like Harsh Goenka and Tina Ambani, and Mumbai
Police Commissioner A N Roy.
Rajashree
Birla introduced the book, authored by Ingrid
Albuquerque Solomon, stating that it admirably
captured the many facets of B K Birla and
Sarala Devi's 65 years of togetherness since
their marriage in the summer of 1942.
One
of the evening's high point was journalist-anchor
Rajiv Mehrotra's reading of some touching
passages revolving around the early memories
of a young Kumar Mangalam Birla of his grandparents.
Stating
that his grandparents had lived the life
of a Sthita Pragyan as mentioned
in the Bhagwat Gita, Kumar Mangalam
had noted: "One of the biggest lessons
of their life is that they never talked
about their faith, they rather lived it."
Many
interesting nuggets from the lives of the
energetic couple were shared by family members
and the author like their trek to the arduous
Kedarnath more than 15 times, B K Birla's
first day at work at the age of 14, Sarala
Devi's insistence at meeting the man she
was going to marry (an act unthinkable for
girls in the 1940s) and the fact that the
senior Birla goes to office from 9 am to
5 pm at the age of 86 and works non-stop
without taking a lunch break.
However,
spirituality seemed to define the overall
mood at the event, with author Solomon taking
it to an altogether different height by
singing a devotional song and stating: "The
biography is the journey of a grand young
spiritual couple with grace that's worthy
of emulation and not about their white graphs
(business success) and spinning wheels."
An
overwhelmed Solomon, who hails from Bangalore,
also provided a lighter touch to the evening,
when she made a "a politically incorrect"
plea to governor Krishna to return to Bangalore
saying: "Please come home. Maharashtra
can have many governors, but we need you
more in Bangalore."
media
reports: We are family
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