Rehan Qayoom is a poet and author of English and Urdu. Educated at Birkbeck College, University of London. He has featured in numerous magazines,
periodicals and performed his work across the world. His books include Seeking Betjeman Country
(2006), Prose 1997 - 2008 (2009), The Borders (2012) and About Time (2011) a collection of his poetry in English.
He is the editor of the prose and poetry of Morney Wilson, published as Martyr Doll, Remains and The Recordings (2011). He lives in London surrounded by books.

Friday, 20 November 2009

The Path of Memory: Michael Jackson, Aeronwy Thomas, Leela Naidu, Rajmata Gayatri Devi

Michael Jackson died on 25 June after suffering a cardiac arrest in California – America. He was known as the ‘King of Pop’ being one of the most successful artists ever. After his death many websites experienced a crash and shutdown due to huge amounts of people browsing them in search of the latest news including myself. His funeral service was held at the Staples Center in California on 7 July in which his family and friends paid tribute to his genius.

Later on coroners decided after thorough investigation lasting weeks to conclude his death to have been resulting from homicide, Jackson had been administered various lethal drugs before his death. He was interred on 3 September at Forest Lawn Memorial Park in Glendale, California following another memorial service.
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Aeronwy Thomas (Dylan Thomas’ daughter) passed away on 27 July from cancer. She was born on 3 March 1943 in London and was named after the river Aeron in Wales. She received her BA Hons in England and Comparative Religion. She was elected as Honorary Fellow of the University of Wales in 2003. She was a translator of Italian poetry, President of the Dylan Thomas Society and the Alliance of Literary Societies. She married Trefor Ellis and bore him a son and daughter (Huw and Hannah). The funeral was held on 6 August in the Parish Church of Holy Cross in New Malden, Surrey. Her son Huw read his own poem ‘Words about My Mum.’ She was creamted and her ashes were then scattered at the Boathouse in Laugharne. Aeronwy Thomas was a devoted and accomplished poet herself.
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Leela Naidu passed away on 28 July in Mumbai after a prolonged bout of influenza. She was born in 1940. She was Miss India in 1954 and featured in Vogue’s ‘World’s Ten most Beautiful Women.’ She was the daughter of the Nuclear Physicist Dr Ramaiah Naidu (Scientific Advisor to UNESCO for South East Asia) and Dr Marthe naidu – An Indianologist of Swiss-French origin. She married Tilak Raj Oberoi in 1956, scion of the Oberoi Hotel Chains, he was then 33. She bore him twin daughters: Maya and Priya (Priya passed away last year). This marriage ended in divorce. She then married the poet Dom Moraes in 1969 with whom she spent 25 years living in Hong Kong, New York, Dilli and Mumbai (he passed away on 2 June 2004). They separated in the mid nineties. I first saw her in the captivating role she played in The Householder (1963) with Shashi Kapoor, directed by Merchant Ivory Productions. Her other films are Anuradha (1960), Umeed (1962), Man of the World: The Frontier (1962), Ye Raste Hain Pyar Ke (1963), Baghi (1964), Channing: The Face in the Sun (1964), The Guru (1969), Trikaal (1985) and Electric Moon (1992). She is survived by Maya and her 2 grandsons Adam and Alexander.

She had a few spoons of porridge and then went to sleep and died in her sleep. Her funeral was held on 29 in Chandanwadi and was attended by her daughter, grandchildren and friends.
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Rajmata Gayatri Devi of Jaipur passed away on 29 July. She was born on 23 May 1919 to Prince Jitendra Narayan Bhoop Bahadur of Cooch Bihar and Princess Indira Raje Scindla of Baroda. The death of her paternal uncle, the Crown prince, led to her father ascending the throne. She was well educated and married His Highness Sarmad – e – Raja – e – Hindustan Raj Rajendra Sri Maharajadhiraja Sir Sawai Man Singh II Bahadur on 9 May 1940. She was his third wife. She bore him one son: Prince Jagat Singh of jaipur on 15 October 1949.

She was an particularly avid equestrienne. She was included in Vogue’s ‘World’s Ten most Beautiful Women’ list along with Leela Naidu who passed away a day before her. She started a girl’s school across India and revived the art of Jaipur blue pottery. In 1962 she ran for parliament and won the constituency in the Lok Sabha in the largest landslide victory confirmed by the Guinness Book of Records. She continued to hold this seat in 1967 and 1971 against the Congress Party – India’s Privy Purses were abolished in 1971 and Gayatri Devi was accused of violating tax laws and incarcerated for 5 months in Thar Jail. She wrote about this time in Memoirs of a Hindu Princess. She has had many books written on her and featured recently in Lucy Moore’s superb book Maharanis as well as the documentary film produced by Merchant Ivory, Autobiography of a Princess

 She was hospitalised in the King Edward’s Hospital on 17 July and then flown to Jaipur where she passed away. Hailed as the last surviving remnant of India’s royal past she was cremated on the evening of 30 July in Jaipur.