Noronha’s ‘terminal illness!’
Soon after
joining the Training Academy at Bhopal in July 1982, we called with much trepidation
on Mr. R.C.V.P. Noronha (ICS: 1938), the Former Chief Secretary at his home in
Arera Colony. We were then young cubs taking baby steps in the mysterious jungle
of bureaucracy, and had heard about his fiery temper, acerbic tongue, and
penchant for hurling expletives in chaste Hindustani. A tiger who growled,
roared, and mauled.
He complimented
us on joining Madhya Pradesh, and hoped we would not disappoint or disgrace the
state which he loved and the cadre he was proud of. We dared not ask any
question for fear of saying something stupid. After the tea, when Mr. Noronha
seemed in no mood for further monologue, we thanked him and took leave. A few
months later, he passed away.
Yesterday, I
visited the same home again for a delightful chat with Mr. Noronha’s son Ashok
who shared a few memories of his illustrious father with me.
Narrating an
anecdote, he shared a pic of the following fading letter:
Here is the
reconstructed text:
CABINET
SECRETARY
NEW DELHI
November 5, 1969
My dear
Noronha,
Thanks for
your letter dated 31st October 1969.
We are all
very sorry that Doctors have advised you rather pessimistically in regard to
your disease. We all hope that the Doctors will be proved wrong.
I have shown
your letter to the Prime Minister and she has asked me to convey to you how
deeply touched she is about your courageous acceptance of your situation. I am
also to tell you that we would not like to disturb you from Madhya Pradesh in
view of what you have said.
On my own, I
hope that Doctors will be proved wrong in this case and you will have many
years of valuable work to the country in front of you.
With deepest
regards,
Yours
sincerely,
(B.
Sivaraman)[i]
To:
Shri R. P.
Noronha,
Feroze
Cottage,
Karbala
Road,
Bhopal.
Longest-serving CS
After about
five years as Chief Secretary (Nov 1963 – Aug 1968), Noronha served as Adviser
to Governor of Punjab during 1968-69. Upon his return to MP in May 1969, he availed of four months
of leave during which he was appointed as a Secretary to Government of India,
an assignment he was disinclined to accept.
‘Terminal illness’
Mr. Noronha
wrote to the Cabinet Secretary informing of his unwillingness to move to Delhi
owing to his ‘terminal illness.’ Cabinet Secretary replied to Mr. Noronha’s
letter dated 31st October, 1969, and assured that ‘we would not like
to disturb you from Madhya Pradesh’ because of the unfortunate condition. Mr.
Sivaraman’s wish for his ‘terminally ill’ dear colleague that he ‘will have
many years of valuable work to the country’ was fulfilled in due course!
R.P. Naik
(ICS:1943) served as Chief Secretary from 18 Nov 1969 to 6 Sep 1972 during
which Noronha was Chief Controller, Finance. Noronha was appointed as Chief
Secretary for the 2nd term, joined on 6 Sep 1972, and retired from
the post on 14 May 1975, famously riding away from Vallabh Bhavan on his moped.
Chitra
Mishra has written an excellent memoir for which the link is:
Remembering
Noronha (1916-1982), the Legendary Officer – Tryst with Dholpur House
(wordpress.com)
A Tale
Told by an Idiot by
Mr. Noronha is a must read for all civil servants. The book has been translated
by Mr. I. S. Dani into Hindi: Ek Anadi ki Kahani.
Noronha’s Fish Curry[ii]
On 26th January 1958, Mr. Noronha,
Commissioner, Jabalpur was on tour to Narsinghpur. Mrs. Noronha and their
children were also with him. They stayed in Barman Rest House. The
next day, Mr. Noronha was to inspect Gadarwara Tehsil.
Mr. Noronha
was very fond of angling. He caught a fish from Narmada, made a nice curry, and
invited Mr. Manohar Keshav (IAS:1953), Collector, Narsinghpur to dine with him.
The fish curry was delicious and eaten with much relish. Unfortunately, a
fishbone got stuck in Mr. Noronha’s throat and caused him much distress.
Assistant
Surgeon, Narsinghpur was called in. He was a Bengali. No problem, he said. Just
make a big ball of rice and swallow it at once. That’d fix the problem. Much
tried and tested, Sir, he said.
Mr. Noronha
tried the prescribed remedy more than once, but no sooner did he put the ball
of rice into his mouth than he began to chew vigorously as was his habit. He
failed since he had never swallowed a big ball of rice at once.
He abandoned
his proposed inspection of Gadarwara tehsil and rushed back to Jabalpur to have
the fishbone removed by a surgeon.
A fish from
Narmada ended up on the dining table but took sweet revenge by causing some
pain and distress to the angler and aborting the stern Commissioner’s
Inspection, much to the relief of the Collector, SDO, Tehsildar and the office
staff.
***
Interesting details on Mr Noronha.
ReplyDeleteNice one
ReplyDeleteSir, Good yo know about Mr Noronha former CS of MP.
ReplyDeleteRegards 🙏
Love the way you've woven together stories about Mr. Noronha's life and career. Engaging read!
ReplyDelete