Artist Spotlight: Elle Festin, Spiritual Journey Tattoo

By Tina Astudillo-Ash
In the past few years, Tatak Ng Apat Na Alon (Mark of the Four Waves) Tribe has been blessed with continued momentum in their efforts to revive indigenous Filipino tattoos. The Tribe's family has grown throughout the United States, especially in California, as more people have reached out to get in touch with their Filipino roots through tattooing.
The growing interest in the Tribe's work has allowed tattooist Elle Festin to continue to hone his skills at hand-poked tattoos. Elle utilizes several different hand-made tools, which he has been able to model after indigenous tools.

In 2011, Elle opened the Tribe's official tattoo studio, Spiritual Journey Tattoo & Tribal Gallery. The art found throughout the shop and applied on the walls pay homage to many indigenous cultures and their tattoo traditions. The shop also has a special room reserved only for applying tattoos by the traditional methods. Although a great majority of clients are seeking Filipino tattoos, the artists also do traditional American, Polynesian, color and black and grey tattoos.

Through Spiritual Journey Tattoo & Tribal Gallery, the Tribe continues to educate the community about indigenous-style Filipino tattoos, as well as offer other traditional work and contemporary tattoo art.
Spiritual Journey Tattoo & Tribal Gallery is located at 7159 Katella Avenue in Stanton, CA.

Sailor Jerry

Copyright: Legendary Classic
“Sailor Jerry did traditional tattoos with the bold lines, the broken hearts and the pinup girls; those iconic images that you really associate with tattooing. They were dark, but they were more the ironic kind of dark,” notes Erich Weiss, a filmmaker who recently wrapped up “Hori Smoku Sailor Jerry,” a documentary on the artist.. Jerry’s humor was also salty as you might expect; some of his designs feature comic-book type characters saying things they couldn’t say in a comic book—or a teen-rated game. “He was big on slogans, lots of double entendres,” Weiss says.
Other designs have secret meanings that a sailor would recognize. Some, for instance, would wear a pig on one foot and a chicken on the other—that meant that the farm animals would help your safe return to land. Sparrows on the chest would represent the number of nautical miles you’ve travelled. A golden dragon would mean you sailed the Asiatic Sea, and a turtle meant that you’d crossed the equator in a submarine.
It was a natural evolution when the original 50’s rock’n’rollers, the greasers and bikers, adopted tattooing; and this was something Sailor Jerry had no problem with. The real shift happened during the 60’s, when tattoos became aligned with the San Francisco hippie culture. At this time a new school of tattoos appeared, coming directly out of the hippie scene
Sailor Jerry didn’t live long enough to see tattooing become mainstream, and he practically died with his boots on (he had a heart attack while taking his new Harley Davidson on a test run; and succumbed later at home). But he already had mixed feelings about tattoos crossing into pop culture. “He was really anti-hippie, hated the whole movement-- in fact he was a right-wing libertarian,” notes Weiss. “In terms of music, he was more into Chinese opera. So if he was around today, I think he’d have mixed feelings. But he’d be blown away by the level of artistry that’s in tattooing now.”
Thai tattoo designs
ramayana)

(I also am recounting the tale of Thai Ramakian legends on the above link on one of my many Thai Culture and Buddhism related websites, which is another of my activities)
Update: Kathakali Photo Shoot
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Photo © Tewfic El-Sawy-All Rights Reserved |
The performance and the earlier 3 hours make-up session took place at the Kalatharangini Kathakali School, and I, for one, sweated so much at the intensity of it all that I had to wipe my hands continuously to be able to shoot. I almost filled 3 full 16gb CF cards during that one photo shoot which started at 3:00 pm and ended just before 9:00 pm. On top of that, I probably videoed some 20 minutes of the performance with my Canon Mark II.
We will spend most of today in class to work on our individual multimedia photo essays, since we need to catch up with that element of the workshop. With all the photography we do, we really need to set time aside to work on these projects.
I am also preparing an evening surprise for the group members, which I think they will find very interesting.
The above image is of one of the Kathakali performers, and was made with my iPhone4s.
Note: This post's actual date is March 20 as it's written in India.
Labels: India, My Work, Photo Tours
Comics Stamps
Here's a blast from the past. To celebrate the 75th anniversary of the The Dandy, the UK's longest-running comic, Royal Mail will issue a set of 10 first class comics stamps featuring Dennis the Menace, Desperate Dan, Roy of the Rovers, Eagle, The Topper And Tiger, Bunty, Buster, Valiant, Twinkle and 2000AD. Stamps and first day covers will be issued tomorrow. Anyone sending a Dan Dare first day cover from outer space will have a collectible worth a fortune! Click the title link for the Royal Mail Comics Stamps page, CLICK for BBC News' graphics of 6 of the new stamps.
NGA Images
To mark its 71st anniversary, The National Gallery of Art in Washington DC has launched NGA Images, a major online resource of more than 20,000 open access digital images, up to 3,000 pixels each, available free of charge for download and use. You can also create a "lightbox", your own collection of NGA images which you may share via e-mail or copy to social media sites. You will need to register to download pictures. I chose Jean-Honoré Fragonard's beautiful Young Girl Reading (c. 1770) which would be better entitled "Young Lady Reading", because she is nubile, literate and wearing an expensive dress. Click the title link for NGA Images.
Vedic Gurukul
Photo © Tewfic El-Sawy-All Rights Reserved |
I was surprised to learn that the restaurant manager at our hotel was also an authority on all Keralite festivals....we're trying to convince him to join our workshop!!!
Computer Art
Here are two news items about computer art that fit together nicely. Firstly, Valve's Portal 2 won best game and best design at the BAFTA Video Game Awards yesterday. It won the Golden Joystick last year. Above is Chell, your character who guides the escapee robot of Portal 2. CLICK for a list of winners. Secondly, the Smithsonian American Art Museum has just opened The Art of Video Games, which it claims is one of the first exhibitions in the world to explore the evolution of video games as an artistic medium (title link). This prompted BBC News' Washington correspondent, Jane O'Brien, to gush, "Video games represent more than an evolving form of entertainment. They are also a platform for innovative art" (CLICK). Strewth! The BBC has finally woken up! I've been saying this for decades.
Duchess at Dulwich
The visit of Prince Charles and his wife and daughter-in-law Kate, Duchess of Cambridge, to Dulwich Picture Gallery on Thursday proved a success. Local schoolchildren eagerly gathered round to show the royal visitors what they've gained from The Prince's Foundation for Children and the Arts. Here we see Kate showing the girls how to make ironing look sexy, while Prince Charles is obviously wondering what to do with this strange gadget. "Is this thing on?" he wonders. HRH would have been happier using traditional paint brushes to create art. He is a talented amateur artist, but tends to keep his light under a bushel. Click the title link for a BBC video of the visit.
Harry Potter Studio Tour
The website for Warner Bros Studio Tour London: The Making of Harry Potter has pulled out all the stops, with roiling thunderclouds, torches flickering in the Hogwarts eatery and the stirring Harry Potter theme music by John Williams (title link). This 1:24 Scale Model of Hogwarts gives you an idea of the goodies on offer. CLICK for The Telegraph's slide show. Although Warner Bros claims the studio is in London, it's actually 20 miles to the northwest in Watford. You must book tickets in advance and, as you might expect, they cost an arm and a leg: £28 for adults, £21 for children aged from 5 to 15 years and £83 for families (2 + 2). The red-carpet Grand Opening is on 31 March.
Cities of Gold
Seeing Paddington Bear after so many years reminded me of another TV animation series of similar vintage: The Mysterious Cities of Gold. This was a Japanese-French co-production which clearly had a much bigger budget than Paddington. Catchy theme tune too. I used to watch it with my five-year-old son. He had a crush on the Inca girl Zia (shown). If anyone fancies a nostalgia trip, the complete series is on DVD for around £30. Check eBay (title link).
BAA 2012
An online poll to determine the UK's Favourite Ever British Animated Character of all time was won by that illegal immigrant from Darkest Peru Paddington Bear, created by Michael Bond. The winner was announced at the British Animation Awards in London yesterday. I assume adult nostalgia dominated the voting, because the animation dates from the 1970's and 80's and was nothing to rave about, a novel but rather creaky mixture of 2D and 3D as though Paddington were an actor walking through his own storyboard. View the YouTube video to see what I mean. Michael Hordern's narration greatly enhanced these short animations made by Filmfair and directed by Ivor Wood. Click the title link for other BAA winners.
Aardman Workshop
Any budding animators out there? Among the many events at Somerset House this month is an Aardman Model Making Workshop on Saturday 24 March. There will be three one-hour sessions run by Aardman model maker Jim Parkyn between 11am and 5pm. Jim has worked on Gromit as well as on innumerable bunnies. This event is free and is likely to be oversubscribed. Tickets will be issued on a first-come-first-served basis on the day (title link). Go early in the morning to avoid disappointing your cherub. Or yourself.
Gulnaz's Lawyer
Last December I wrote two posts on the high-profile case of an Afghan woman known as Gulnaz, who had been raped by her cousin's husband and had been sentenced to two years in prison - increased to 10 years on appeal - for the "moral crime" of being a rape victim (CLICK). President Hamid Karzai came under enormous international pressure and pardoned Gulnaz on condition she marry her rapist (CLICK). Shown is a photo of Kimberley Motley, Gulnaz's lawyer, who was a US beauty queen before moving to Afghanistan four years ago. She is the country's only foreign defence lawyer and gained the pardon for Gulnaz. BBC News Magazine has posted an interesting article about Kimberley (title link). A brave woman.
Royal Visit Today
If you were thinking of visiting Dulwich Picture Gallery today, forget it. The gallery will be closed to the public all day for a royal visit in recognition of its educational and outreach work (title link). The Prince of Wales will be visiting in his capacity as President of The Prince's Foundation for Children & the Arts. He'll be bringing the wife, Duchess of Cornwall, and Kate, Duchess of Cambridge, to view the kiddie artwork on display.
Thirunakkara Utsavam Festival
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Photo © Tewfic El-Sawy- All Rights Reserved |
Note: These are members of a family on a pilgrimage to Sabarimala Temple, some 150 kilometers from Kochi, and they're adherents of Ayyappa.
Labels: India, Photo Tours, TTP Show Off
Turner Inspired
Today the National Gallery in London opened its spring biggy: Turner Inspired: In the Light of Claude. The title refers to Claude Gellée, who was born in the Duchy of Lorraine, and is better known as Claude Lorrain (Claude of Lorrain). Turner was inspired by Claude's brilliant use of light in his paintings. Above is Turner's Keelmen Heaving in Coals by Night (1835). The bad news, as always, is the cost of admission: adults £12, silver surfers £11 (91.6%). Pensioners ripoff! There are so many free exhibitions in London that paying over the odds is foolish. Click the title link if you feel silly!
Crisis Commission
Today a pre-auction exhibition by some of the worst artists in Britain opened at Somerset House. They have kindly donated their tripe to a sale in aid of the homeless charity Crisis. BBC News has posted a slide show of some of the appalling rubbish on offer (title link). Gillian Wearing's sculpture of Craig O'Keefe just about passes muster, but needs a placard to tell his story. Jonathan Yeo's The Park Bench is outstanding, capturing the essence of homelessness in a most artistic way; his subjects have dignity. But the rest...! Clearly there is a crisis in British art as well in its housing. The Crisis Commission shuffles along until 22 April. The charity auction takes place at Christie's on 3 May.
Correction: Somerset House, NOT Christie's (CLICK).
Medical Artists
The Royal College of Surgeons' Hunterian Museum at Lincoln's Inn Fields in London has jumped on the Olympics bandwagon. Today it opened Anatomy of an Athlete: Elite sport, surgery and medical art, which runs until 29 September (title link). Four top medical artists from the Medical Artists’ Association of Great Britain have created new artworks. Shown is artist Emily Evans standing beside one of her Hurdles illustrations (2012). CLICK for a BBC slide show.
Holes in Vasari
A research team sponsored by the US National Geographic Society has been drilling holes in Giorgio Vasari's fresco The Battle of Marciano in the Museo di Palazzo Vecchio, Florence, in hopes of finding Leonardo da Vinci's unfinished work The Battle of Anghiari. Project workers claim a black pigment found through the holes is the same as that used in the Mona Lisa and unique to Leonardo (title link). BBC News has published a video on the subject (CLICK).
Hayley Okines Book
I first saw Hayley Okines in 2005 in Channel 5's Extraordinary People series. She suffers from progeria, a rare genetic condition that ages a child by about 8 years for every year of life. She was warned she wouldn't live beyond the age of 13. In December 2011 she reached her 14th birthday. Her body is now roughly 112 years old. She is such a terrific kid that she's become the poster girl for progeria. I posted a blog about her in 2008 (CLICK). She even has her own website (CLICK). And with the help of her mother Kerry she has now published a book: Old Before my Time (title link).
Sand Art Appeal
The organisers of the annual Weston-super-Mare Sand Sculpture Festival have issued an appeal for £50k's worth of sponsorship (CLICK). Due to Government cutbacks, North Somerset Council can no longer afford to pay for the event, although its name still appears on the official website (title link). Somebody should have applied for funds earmarked for the Cultural Olympiad, which promises to be a dreadful load of twaddle. The Sand Sculpture Festival attracts world-class figurative artists who produce very fine work, as you can see from this photo of a baby elephant resting on his mother.
Kara
If you have 7 minutes to spare on a Sunday evening, take a look at Quantic Dream's movie-quality animation Kara. Click the box in the bottom right corner of the YouTube screen to enlarge the picture, then click Esc when it has finished.
Kara's voice by Valorie Curry
The Operator's voice by Tercelin Kirtley
Written and directed by David Cage
Created by Quantic Dream (title link).
RI 200th Show
From 14 to 25 March the Mall Galleries in London will show the Royal Institute of Painters in Water Colours 200th Exhibition since it was founded in 1831. A wide range of methods and styles in water-soluble media by some of the country’s best-known painters will be on display (title link). The example shown is a detail from Anne McCormack's Moroccan Window. Admission is £2.50 adults, £1.50 silver surfers. A host of awards will be presented (CLICK).
Marilyn
Fans of Marilyn Monroe might like to know that the Getty Images Gallery in Eastcastle Street, London, is showing Marilyn until 23 May (title link). This free exhibition includes original dresses and costumes worn by the Hollywood icon, as well as photos from the Getty Archives. A smaller exhibition will also be held at Getty Images Gallery in Westfield Stratford City from 23 March until 3 June. Stratford is a city already! When I knew it, Stratford was an East End slum.
Zoffany Opens
I previewed the Royal Academy of Arts' exhibition Johan Zoffany RA: Society Observed in February (CLICK). Since then BBC News has posted an informative video about the show, which examines the paintings Zoffany made in India during the early days of the British Empire (title link). It's well worth a look, especially if you're thinking of lashing out £9 on the show. It opened today. Shown is Zoffany's Portrait of the Nawab Asuf ud Daula. His name was Johann, not Johan.
City of the Future
The CeBIT 2012 trade fair in Hanover, Germany, closes today. Its theme was City of the Future (title link). British artist Giles Walker designed this Pole-dancing Droid for Germany's Tobit Software. The firm doesn't intend to replace girls in pole-dancing clubs, but wanted to demonstrate its expertise in robotics. Point made. And it's a change from those boring robots that pour drinks without spilling a drop. The bad news for artists is that another robot on show, designed by the Fraunhofer Institute, draws human portraits, not very well. Yet. Security, not portraiture, is its purpose.
Portrait of London
Wandsworth Museum has opened Portrait of London, an exhibition of more than 60 historic photos from both the Museum of London and Wandsworth Museum, never before seen together (title link). Some of the photos show the grinding poverty of denizens of the Victorian East End. Others capture more picturesque views. The photo above was taken by Christina Broom, the first British female press photographer, and shows A suffragette stand at the Women's Exhibition of 1909. I had no idea that Britain had a female press photographer before women won the vote. (I've cropped and tweaked the image.) The exhibition runs till 12 August. CLICK for a Telegraph slide show.
Vision of Beauty
London Pictures
To complete a hat trick of dire "art" shows opening today, I bring you news that all three White Cube galleries in London - Bermondsey, Mason's Yard and Hoxton Square - have unleashed the fruits of Gilbert & George's crime spree across the metropolis: London Pictures (title link). The odd couple spent years stealing 3,712 newspaper billboard posters, which they couldn't obtain honestly, and finally turned them into 292 pictures (CLICK). They must be in good with the Met. Police. I wonder what Chinese punters will make of all this in the Hong Kong branch of White Cube.
A Little Piece of Me
Another load of unbelievable tosh opened in London today at The Outsiders Gallery: Antony Micallef A Little Piece of Me (title link). Shown is A Little Piece of Me 19. I assume visitors have the bright prospect of viewing little pieces of me from 1 to at least 19. The Outsiders specialises in art that is affordable. Sorry, guys. I wouldn't put this pathetic imitation of Francis Bacon on my wall if you gave it to me and paid for delivery.
Vietnam: Photo Expedition & Workshop
I am pleased to announce the Vietnam: North Of The 16th Parallel Photo Expedition/Workshop™ during which we are planning to explore the street life of bustling Ha Noi, the colorful villages and ethnic minority tribes around Sapa and the Sunday market of Bac Ha, the daily life in the ancient port city of Hoi An, the beauty of the Forbidden City in Hue and the fishing village of Lang Co, as well as spending a night on Halong Bay.
All the details, including a link to register interest in joining, for this exciting photographic expedition and workshop are on this website.
I will be assisted on this photo expedition by Maika Elan, a talented Vietnamese photographer and photojournalist.
I normally don't feature details of my photo expeditions on this blog until they are fully subscribed, but as I am flying to India today and returning home at the end of March, I thought it would be more practical to put it out there now.
I've already received a number of outright registrations and indications of interest, as a result of my newsletter.
Labels: Photo Tours, Vietnam
Mark Coughlan: Maha Shivatri
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Photo © Mark Coughlan-All Rights Reserved |
Well, I'll be on my way to India in about 24 hours...and what better way to start the trip than by featuring Mark Coughlan's Maha Shivatri's photo gallery?!
A warning though...and perhaps in time of breakfast for my US-based readers. If you have no stomach for viewing ash-smeared sadhus with their testicles lifting piles of stones. look elsewhere. For instance, Mark's Portraits Of A Saint photo gallery, which is much tamer in comparison and consists of the sadhus' portraits. Not a testicle in sight there.
Maha Shivratri is a Hindu festival celebrated every year in reverence of Lord Shiva, and in common with many Hindu religious festivals, sees pilgrims and devotees bathe at sunrise, preferably in the Ganges, and carry pots of water to the temples to bathe the Shiva "linga", and offer prayers to the sun, Vishnu and Shiva. Unmarried women pray for a husband like Shiva, considered to be the ideal husband.
Mark Coughlan is a documentary travel photographer specializing in global social issues and world events/festivals, who traveled diverse countries such as Myanmar (Burma), Mongolia, Bangladesh, India, Nepal, China, Cambodia and Bolivia amongst others. He photographed some of the world’s greatest festivals and events including two Maha Kumbh Mela festivals (India), Maha Shivaratri (India & Nepal), and Nadam (Mongolia).
Labels: Festivals, India, Photographers: Travel
The Big Picture: Lathmar Holi
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Photo © Adnan Abidi/Reuters-All Rights Reserved |
The Big Picture photo blog featured 22 of these photographs....each one better than the other.
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Photo © Kevin Frayer-All Rights Reserved |
Labels: Festivals, India, Photographers: Photojournalists
Mary Calvert: Bhutan: The Art of Archery
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Photo © Mary Calvert-All Rights Reserved |
In Paro, I witnessed a couple of these archery contests, some impromptu and others more elaborate, in the valley where one could see the famous Tiger's Nest monastery. Apart from these contests being raucous, and during which I was told that opponents were fond of distracting each other by insulting each other, they are taken very seriously by participants and spectators.
There are two targets placed over 100 meters apart and teams shoot from one end of the field to the other. Each member of the team shoots two arrows per round. Traditional Bhutanese archery is a social event and competitions are organized between villages, towns, and amateur teams.
Mary F. Calvert is an award winner photographer who worked as a staff photographer for eleven years on the award-winning staff of The Washington Times. She will be teaching Intermediate photojournalism at the Corcoran College of Art + Design in Washington D.C. In addition to being a guest faculty member of Momenta Workshops, the Western Kentucky University Mountain Workshops, the NPPA’s Flying Short Course, and the Eddie Adams Workshop, she has been a member of the faculty for the Department of Defense Worldwide Military Photographers Workshop in Ft. Meade for the last fourteen years.
She was honored with the Robert F. Kennedy Journalism Award in International Photography for her project, “Lost Daughters: Sex Selection in India” in 2008, and was awarded the White House News Photographers Association Project Grant to document sexual violence in the Democratic Republic of the Congo. Some of her clients include The New York Times, The Los Angeles Times, AOL, The New York Post, Inside Counsel Magazine, McClatchy-Tribune Photo Service, The International Herald Tribune, Le Monde, Mother Jones, and The Christian Science Monitor.
Labels: Bhutan, Photographers: Photojournalists
The Ashe Murder case
While I started out on this article considering it to be relatively straightforward, I found a number of twists and turns in the story, which kept me fully engaged. So let me now take you along, to those days when the Indians were staging a feeble revolt against British tyranny. Interestingly you will find that every single person connected to this story had violent events impacting their own lives. While one was stabbed, two others were killed by bullets; a third was stuck by a temple elephant. As we can see, their stars were crossed during that period and it was so fated. Curiously all of them except one Irishman were Brahmins, not otherwise associated with violence. But in the end this research turned out to be a bigger mystery than it was when I started out.
There are some who would wonder who Sir CP is. To answer them in a few lines, in describing a volcano of a character that shaped the Travancore scene between 1931 and 1950, will be pretty difficult, but I will give a simple introduction. CP Ramaswami Iyer, an up and coming barrister of the Madras Bench had already obtained an insight into the governance of neighboring Mysore during his school vacations. Later he worked with Annie Besant and the IN Congress and as advocate general of the Madras High court was instrumental in many reformative measures in the state of madras. In 1931 he caught the eye of the Travancore monarchy and after that he was closely aligned to them and shaped the future of that Southern state, now part of Kerala. But how did he get involved with the Thirunals of Travancore? Therein lay the connection to the murder case of historical repute, otherwise known as the Ashe murder case. So let us now turn our sights at the Ashe story. As is said, Sir CP’s ability marked him for the Madras High Court at a very early age, but when the offer of a judgeship came he wrote, in refusing it, "I prefer, Mr. Chief Justice, to talk nonsense for a few hours each day than to hear nonsense every day and all day long." A caustic character, hated by many, loved and trusted by a few in high office, Sir CP did more good than bad in hindsight. In the course of time, I will write a few more articles on him, and that is another story. Now who was Ashe? For that we now leave Madras and go to the southerly Coromandel Coast and zoom in at Tuticorin and Tinnevelly (Tirunelveli).
Chalapathy in the Hindu (See link under references) explains - In 1894 Robert William Escourt Ashe passed fortieth among 61 successful candidates in the Indian Civil Service (ICS) examination. On December 4, 1895, he arrived in India, where he began his career as an Assistant Collector and rose up to be District Magistrate and Collector. In 1907, Ashe found himself posted in the southernmost corner of the Presidency, in Tirunelveli. After a period of long leave he rejoined duty on February 17, 1908. The two months he spent officiating in the Tuticorin division were to be fateful. Tuticorin, a major port in the Presidency, also had a major spinning mill, the Coral Mills, managed by the European firm A. & F. Harvey. The Harveys were also the agents of the British India Steam Navigation Company BISNC, which had a virtual monopoly over the trade between Tuticorin and Colombo. After the eventful months in Tuticorin, Ashe was posted out to Godavari. He took charge of Tirunelveli district on August 2, 1910, as Acting Collector.
So what were the events occurring in Tuticorin? The country was stirring in revolt against the British and the seeds were taking root at any place the British became autocratic. In the 1890s and 1900s India’s independence movement and the Swadeshi movement, initiated by Bal Gangadhar Tilak and Lala Lajpat Rai of Indian National Congress (INC), were at their peak.Many a young soul joined in this outcry against the white man who ruled him and took away his grains while he was struggling for food. There was a specific thorn in the British flesh , a lawyer named VO Chidambaram Pillai a.k.a VOC or Kappalottiya Tamizhan, he was the champion for the oppressed. Soon he started the Swadeshi steamship navigation company flouting the monopoly of the British. VOC had great difficult in starting up the company and leasing ships, but finally he had two and went head to head with the BISNC offering cutthroat fares. Even though free tickets with umbrellas were offered, people used the Sawdeshi ship plying the Sri Lanka route. The British tried to buy him out, but VOC would not agree. Next he incited a strike at the Coral mill. VOC was later convicted by Pinhe and sent to Coimbatore, imprisoned for life. An appeal resulted in reduction of the sentence. He was later moved to Cannanore. The shipping company went bankrupt and the ships were taken over by BISNC. The people of the South were angrier with all these rapidly evolving events.
VVS Aiyer enters the scene around this time – then in Britain, V.V.S. Aiyar came into contact with VD Savarkar, an Indian revolutionary, at the India House. Under Savarkar's influence Aiyar began to take an active role in the militant struggle for Indian independence. Aiyar's militant attitude prompted the British Government in 1910 to issue a warrant for his arrest for his alleged involvement in an anarchist conspiracy in London and Paris. Aiyar resigned from the Lincoln's Inn and escaped to Paris. Aiyar landed in Pondicherry, the hotbed for such anti British revolutionaries around December 1910 disguised as a Muslim to escape arrest and remained there as exile. Poinditry or Pondicherry, North of Madras, was then a French colony. This was where a number of Anti British revolutionaries were holed up, acting with impunity and living under French political asylum. Aiyar remained in Pondicherry for over ten years. Aiyer started revolver practice for young Indians in certain gardens and preached the necessity of violence and assignations to free the country. As later events were to show, he trained them well and was also involved in hatching the plot to murder Ashe.
Meanwhile a conspiracy against the British Government was being worked up in the Madras Presidency by Nilakanta Brahmachari (the first accused in the Tinnevelly conspiracy case of 1911). He had been going round Southern India both in 1910 and in previous years in company with Shankar Krishna Aiyar, preaching swadeshi and sedition, and induced various persons in the Presidency to take a blood oath of association for the purpose of obtaining swaraj. In June 1910 Shankar introduced Nilakanta to his brother-in-law, Vanchi Aiyar. Vanchinathan was born in 1886 in Shenkottai to Raghupathy Iyer and Rukmani Ammal. Raghupathy Iyer worked with the Travancore dewaswom. Vanchi’s actual name was Shankaran. He did his schooling in Shenkottai and graduated in M.A. from Moolam Thirunal Maharaja College in Thiruvananthapuram. Even while in college, he married Ponnammal and later obtained clerkship in the Travancore forest department.
On the 9th of January 1911 Vanchi Aiyar took three months' leave and visited Pondicherry, where he associated with V. V. S. Aiyar and indulged in revolver practice under his instructions. Evidence was given in the Tinnevelly conspiracy case that Vanchi had told one of the witnesses that English rule was ruining the country, that it could only be removed if all white men were killed, and suggested that Mr. Ashe should be first killed as being the head of the Tinnevelly district and an officer who had taken a leading part in the events of 1908. Vanchi returned to Tinnevelly and closely shadowed the target, he was in a bad state of mind, and his infant daughter had died recently. The original intention was to kill Ashe on 11th June 1911, synchronizing with the Coronation of George the V. But Ashe was not to be seen on that day. He thus escaped death but just by a week. The fateful day arrived on 17th June, 1911. By then Ashe had been promoted as acting collector of Tinnevelly.
Chalapathy adds - In a sense, Ashe was an unlikely target of the conspiracy. There were no casualties in Tuticorin, while four persons were shot dead in Tirunelveli. In any case, Wynch, as the Collector of the district, was in charge. Even in the press it was Wynch rather than Ashe who was the target of criticism. Ashe was criticized in the press but not so much as Wynch. Another railed figure in the whole affair was A.F. Pinhey, who sentenced VOC to two terms of life imprisonment. But was there another reason? Perhaps… read on…
On June 17, 1911, Ashe boarded the 9-30 a.m. Maniyachi Mail at Tirunelveli junction. With him was his wife, Mary Lillian Patterson, who had arrived from Ireland only a few days earlier. They had married on April 6, 1898, in Berhampore; Mary was about a year older than Ashe. They were on their way to Kodaikanal where their four children, Molly, Arthur, Sheila, and Herbert, lived in a rented bungalow. The whistle blew after they were seated in their first class compartment. Just then a skeletally thin man, later identified as Vanchi Iyer dressed in a green jacket, white dhoti and forehead smeared with vibhuti jumped into the compartment and shot Ashe point blank with a Belgian made browning. Ashe died soon after in the lap of his wife. Chased out by bystanders and police, the young man shot and killed himself in the platform lavatory. The police found a note in his pocket.
The mlechas of England having captured our country, tread over the sanathana dharma of the Hindus and destroy them. Every Indian is trying to drive out the English and get swarajyam and restore sanathana dharma. Our Raman, Sivaji, Krishnan, Guru Govindan, Arjuna ruled our land protecting all dharmas and in this land they are making arrangements to crown George V, a mlecha, and one who eats the flesh of cows. Three thousand Madrasees have taken a vow to kill George V as soon as he lands in our country. In order to make others know our intention, I who am the least in the company, have done this deed this day. This is what everyone in Hindustan should consider it as his duty.sd/- R. Vanchi Aiyar, Shencottah
Quoting Chalapathy again - A massive manhunt followed the assassination, this being yet another collector’s assassination after Arthur Conolly at Calicut many decades ago ( there were a few more). Raghupathy Iyer even refused to perform his last rites. The investigation showed that Vanchi had been a forest guard in Punalur and had been to Baroda (now Vadodara) and Pondicherry (now Puducherry) in the recent past. In Senkottai, Ottapidaram and Tuticorin, seized correspondence indicated the existence of a secret society, complete with blood oath and Kali puja. Also found was extremist literature, especially two pamphlets printed in the Feringhee Destroyer Press, calling on Indians to kill Europeans. Investigations also indicated that the assassination had a direct link (did it?) with the political events in the district in 1908. Madasamy, widely believed to be Vanchi's accomplice and who was seen running away after the assassination, was never traced.
In the April number of Madame Cama's paper called Bande Mataram which was published in Paris about the end of May, there was some indication in one of the articles that a crime of this nature was in contemplation. It concluded with these words: "In a meeting or in a bungalow, on the railway or in a carriage, in a shop or in a church, in a garden or at a fair, wherever an opportunity comes. Englishmen ought to be killed. No distinction should be made between officers and private people. This article and the letter found on the murderer seem to show that the murder was designed to take place on the day of the Royal Coronation ceremonies. Madame Cama and V.V.S. Aiyar correspond regularly, and she would have no difficulty in sending him the automatic pistols which she is rumored to have done on two occasions in the last two years.
Fourteen persons were arrested and charged with conspiracy to murder Ashe. Two others committed suicide - Dharmaraja Aiyar took poison, while Venkateswara Aiyar slit his own throat.
Because an Englishman was killed, a three-judge bench, led by the Chief Justice, conducted the trial. White, Ayling, and Sankaran nair were the judges. Anyway the case went on for many months and while Ayling and white delivered an unanimous judgment against all accused, Sankaran Nair set himself apart with a brilliant brief which is used by students even today and considered a masterpiece. Justice Nair came to the conclusion that the charge of murder had not been legally proved against the accused, but he held that the charges of waging war against the King were proved against Nilakanta and another but not the rest. Finally, the Court, by a majority decision, awarded Nilakanta seven years’ rigorous imprisonment and Sankar¬a¬krishnan four years. The remaining accuseds were sentenced to varying terms of lesser imprisonment.
The Travancore kingdom had unwittingly entered into the high profile case. The plotters and killers were from Travancore. Vanchi Iyer worked for the Travancore forestry department, his father worked for the temple Dewaswom. The ruling family wanted to be sure that they were not sullied or implicated in anyway, I suppose. Anyway the high court deployed barrister CP to Shenkota, I presume to find out some of the details and exonerated any involvement of the state in the sordid affair. The trip is still a mystery. How did Shankaran Nair confirm in his judgement that…. The murder of Mr Ashe was a direct consequence of this bitter hostility. [T]hat Mr Ashe's conduct at Tuticorin with reference to the conviction of Subramania Siva and Chidambaram Pillai and with reference to the [Swadeshi] Steam Navigation Co. was one of the main causes of the murder". Did something else happen in Shenkottai? Anyway the judgment had connected Vanchi to the events of Tinnevelly and patriotic fervor. And with the excellent fashion in which CP handled the issue, he became a trusted fellow in the eyes of the Travancore Raja Moolam Tirunal. His future was set in Travancore….and how… we will see in forthcoming articles.
Now enters the next important man in the case. It was none other than Subramanian Bharati, who was also holed up in Pondicherry. Bharatiyar as he is more popularly known, was born in Ettayapuram, a palace I covered at length in my article about Kattabomman, and a place of much ,musical repute. After a trip to Benares, his spiritual and nationalistic fervor increased. By 1904 he was a active journalist espousing the causes of the downtrodden and writing against authority. He was soon aligned to the Tilak brand of militancy and sometimes engaged with VOC at nearby Tuticorin. When Ashe took up the cudgels against VOC, Bharati testified in support of VOC. This put him also into the bad books of the British and soon, faced with imminent arrest, he fled to Pondicherry. He continued his strident tone in an immense volume of literary output from Pondicherry. While there he got involved with Aurobindo & VVS Iyer and teamed up in many anti British activities. It so happened that two of the pamphlets he authored were found in the house of Vanchi Iyer after security guards ransacked it for evidence. The government suspected Bharati and VVS Iyer of having had a direct hand in the planning of the murder. Officials of the Secret Police Service were posted near the house of Subramania Bharathi to watch his movements. Though not directly connected with the Ashe murder, the police perhaps believed that he knew what was going on.
The French police report stated - Lettres du C.I.D.I.F. - Lettre n°37 - In 1911, shortly before the murder of Mr Ashe on 17th June, two seditions pamphlets entitled ‘ A word of advice to the Aryans’ and ‘oath of administration into the New Bharata Association’ were distributed in the Tinnevelly and Madras district, and it has since been ascertained that they were published and printed by Subramania Bharathi in Pondicherry. He also issued about the same time two other seditious tamil pamphlets entitled “Kanavu“and “Aliropangu“. All four pamphlets have been proscribed by Government. He is one of the principal members of the anarchist gang and is a constant companion of V.V.S. Aiyar.
Arron Raman states it well - Deprived of an outlet for his political writings, Bharati turned inwards. The years of exile in Pondicherry from 1908-1918 that constituted the third main phase of his life define Bharati for posterity; when his genius burst forth in song, poetry and prose. Some of the greatest works to flow from his pen happened between 1911 and 1913. …Despite days filled with activity, it seems likely that his confinement within Pondicherry, the ever-present surveillance by British agents, gnawing poverty and also ostracism from the orthodox sections of his own community combined to place enormous psychological stress on Bharati. He had always possessed a latent ascetic streak, and he now began to keep company with local siddhars—mendicants. From them he took to the habit of using psychotropic substances that weakened his already frail constitution.
In November 1918, in an act of final desperation, he broke exile and entered British India at Cuddalore. He was promptly arrested and lodged in Cuddalore jail from where he wrote to Lord Pentland, the Governor of Madras, seeking his release: “I once again assure your Excellency that I have renounced every form of politics and I shall ever be loyal to British Government and law abiding.” He was imprisoned in the Central prison in Cuddalore in custody for three weeks from 20 November to 14 December.
It is at this juncture that CP Ramaswamy Iyer intervened together with A Rangaswamy Iyer and Annie Besant and got Bharatiyar released from jail on 14th December. He had spent less than a month in custody, but the collective events of the previous decade had impacted the poet. He returned to Tirunelveli and spent his next years in Kadayam. From a letter that he wrote to Iyengar soon after his arrival, it is clear that Mrs. Annie Besant, Dr. Subramania Iyer, and CP Ramaswamy Iyer had helped to secure Bharati's release. It was a few days after the end of the First World War.
And that was how the Swadeshi movement affected the people we talked about. But a look at the entire story still does not show why Ashe was selected as the target. A Christian reverend Dr Ravikumar Stephen provides this interesting but ‘rumored’ tidbit and I have no idea if it is the truth, for it does seem a bit farfetched to be a motive for a capital crime.
Ashe's wife Mary was a social worker. One day during her visit to Shencottai, along with her husband, spotted a Dalit (socially marginalized) women suffering in labor pain. She arranged a bullock-cart for this dalit lady and the bullock-cart carried her through the Agraharam (street where Brahmins alone can reside), the shortest route to the hospital. The Brahmins demanded an apology from Ashe for supporting his wife in sending the dalit woman in a bullock-cart through the Agraharam and the Brahmins believed that the act of Mrs Ashe brought sacrilege to them. Ashe refused to apology and justified the act of his wife. This infuriated the Brahmins and led to the plan to assassinate Ashe.
The new Indian express article adds - Vanchinathan was peeved by the collector's interference in the local affairs. Ashe expressed his dismay over people of a dominant caste refusing to let a pregnant woman, belonging to a lower caste, being taken through their street for medical treatment, said Josephine Jeyashanthi, Professor in the Department of Tamil, Loyola College.
Was that what Sir CP went to investigate at Shenkottai? What was his report? Nothing is known about the trip, all we know that it was a sensitive and secret issue being investigated by the High court. It is unlikely that the above angle warranted it, but then again, they may have wanted to crush the Swadeshi movement and get rid of minor issues like caste rivalry. Anyway we do know that Sir CP was instrumental in getting Bharatiyar quickly released from a British jail.
And so, Ashe died from the bullet; Vanchi died from another bullet from the same gun that Madame Cama perhaps sent from Paris, Bharatiyar died some years in Triplicane, Sir CP was stabbed by another Iyer Mani after the Punnapra Vaylar episode. VVS Iyer died mysteriously while saving his daughter from drowning at the Papanasam falls. Madame Cama lived in Paris until 19355 and after a stroke, returned to Bombay and died soon after. All tragedies that befell people who should have been leading peaceful lives…
Chalapathy concludes - Mary and her children returned to Exeter, her hometown, in April 1912 on a decent government pension. She never remarried. Their four children were aged 12, 10, eight and six at the time of Ashe's death. Arthur went on to become a colonel in the Indian Army and retired in 1947. It is curious that he should have chosen to work in a country that had claimed his father's life. Robert said his father had a deep love for India even though he or his family never visited Maniyachi or Tirunelveli. Herbert died in combat during the Second World War. The girls remained unmarried. Janet thought that their spinsterhood had much to do with Mary. Apparently, Mary, who died in 1954, never let people forget the tragedy she had suffered, of seeing her husband being shot at point-blank range right in front of her eyes.
Ex Prime Minister Rajiv Gandhi renamed the Maniyachi junction after Vanchinathan. But railway tickets apparently do not bear the name of Vanchi and not many trains halt at the station
As for me, I used to live for a couple of years not far from where Bharatiyar lived, in Triplicane on Pycroft’s road or Bharatiyar salai, but now sit back and enjoy some of Bharatiyar’s poetry – like the simple one below…
theertha karayinile therku moolayin..shenbaga thotathilee..paarthirunthaal varuven vennilavilor..
paangiyodendru sonnaall..vaarthai thavari vittai adi kannamma..maarbu thudikkuthadi..paartha idathilellam unnai polave…paavai theriyuthadi
and extend a small thanks to Sir CP for getting him released from jail..
References
All too human at the core – Aroon Raman in Hindu
Frontline – An Irish link – AR Venkatachalapathy
Vanchi Assassinates Ashe –Bharatiya vidya bhavan
Aurbindo ashram documents – The political situation in Pondicherry 1910-1915
The press in Tamil Nadu and the struggle for freedom, 1917-1937 - By A. Ganesan
Ashefamily website
pics - Hindu,Deccan Herald - thanks
Labels: Personalities