Mithavaadi Krishnan

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Mithavaadi Krishnan
മിതവാദി കൃഷ്ണൻ
Born
C Krishnan

(1867-06-11)June 11, 1867
Kerala, India
DiedNovember 29, 1938(1938-11-29) (aged 71)
Alma materPresidency college chennai
Occupation(s)Advocate, social reformer, socialist, periodical publisher

Changaramkumarath Krishnan Vakkeel was a community leader, banker, social reformer, and journalist from Kerala, India.[1] He was a champion of implementing the revolutionary socialist reforms proposed by Sree Narayana Guru for the upliftment of the downtrodden people of Kerala. He was called Mithavathi―a minimalist―after the newspaper he published from 1913 to 1938 to spread the message of the reformist movement. He was well-educated and hailed from an influential family. Although he could have entered the government service and risen to higher positions with his education and wealth, he renounced all these for the liberation of the backward classes from the clutch of pathological social system. [2]

When the kings and the ruling class passed oppressive laws against the weak sections of the people, Mithavadi protested through its editorials that their judgments were against poor people. It also pointed out that the true owners of the land were the people and not the kings or the people in power. It reminded the King of Travancore of the Russian rulers who were overthrown by the revolutionaries and asked his highness to take this as an indication.[3]

Biography

C. Krishnan was born in Mullassery, Thrissur on 11 June 1867.[4] He took over the newspaper called Mithavadi ("Reformist") from Moorkoth Kumaran. Dr. Ayyathan Gopalan a great social reformer of Malabar, Kerala, during those times, was the one who gave C. Krishnan the impetus and advice to start this newspaper. Later on he is known by Mithavaadi C Krishnan. Mitavadi was the "Bible" of the socially depressed and it is also known as the "Magazine of Thiyya's".[5]

The Kochi metro entrance has the history of the Kerala press and C. Krishnan is listed amongst the first under 1907. It says "Mithavadi – From Tellicherry marks the next important milestone in the history of the press in Kerala. It published a daily news sheet featuring the latest news from the war front during the First World War. Separately, the Government of Kerala states "The Mitavadi was in the forefront of the movement for social reforms and the uplift of the weaker sections of society".[6]

C. Krishnan was a follower of

Sree Narayana Guru
to Malabar. The guru accepted the invitation and visited many places in Malabar.

C. Krishnan however did not support the freedom movement, and was against the Indian National Congress and Mahatma Gandhi. He supported the British rule because he believed that freedom for rule without freedom from serfdom was meaningless. He blamed Gandhiji for his failure to prevent the Malabar rebellion. He wanted the freedom of the oppressed classes to be attained before the nation achieved freedom.[7]

See also

References

  1. ^ शेखर, Dr Ajay S. Sekher डॉ अजय एस (10 June 2021). "Remembering Mithavadi Krishnan and his multi-pronged socio-cultural intervention in Kerala". Forward Press. Retrieved 8 March 2022.
  2. ^ "Mithavadi C. Krishnan | Kerala Media Academy".
  3. ^ "Mithavadi C Krishnan – Kranthadarsiyaya Karmayogi – Nastik Nation".
  4. ^ शेखर, Dr Ajay S. Sekher डॉ अजय एस (10 June 2021). "Remembering Mithavadi Krishnan and his multi-pronged socio-cultural intervention in Kerala". Forward Press. Retrieved 8 March 2022.
  5. ^ "Mithavadi C Krishnan – Kranthadarsiyaya Karmayogi – Nastik Nation".
  6. ^ "Ezimenus, menus and cooking tips".
  7. ^ "Mithavadi C. Krishnan | Kerala Media Academy".

External links