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Kalam’s Burial Place Remains Neglected, 5 Months Since His Demise

Work for the proposed memorial to be built on the on APJ Abdul Kalam’s burial ground has not begun.

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“All his life Dr Kalam worked for the country. Is this any way to treat a great leader?” asks Salim, the grandson of Dr Kalam’s elder brother.

It’s been almost five months since the demise of former President Dr APJ Abdul Kalam. He was buried at Pei Karumbu in Rameswaram in Ramanathapuram district of Tamil Nadu. Prime Minister Narendra Modi attended the ceremony himself.

However, Kalam’s kabr or burial place remains neglected. No work for the proposed memorial to be built on the site has started.

At present, a make-shift shelter has been set up around Kalam’s kabr, which is protected by the local police.

Anantha Krishnan, a senior aerospace and defence journalist, has now started a Facebook campaign called Justice4GuruKalam, seeking “a befitting memorial built at ‪#‎GuruKalam’s resting place”.

Rameswaram is a cyclone prone area and the temporary structure can fall apart anytime. Why is there a delay in even building a decent structure on his kabr? It is not rocket science.
Anantha Krishnan, Senior Aerospace and Defence Journalist
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People’s President Resting Under a Tin-Shed

The Tamil Nadu government has allotted 1.5 acres of land to construct a memorial for Kalam on the burial site, and several Union Ministers met last month to discuss various proposals for the memorial. However, no final decision seems to have been made on this issue yet.

“Five months after his death, the ‘People’s President’ is resting under a tin-shed,” says Krishnan.

There are cats and dogs defecating near the spot, visitors who sneak through barricades and take photographs near the grave. There’s absolutely no system in place and no decorum either.
Anantha Krishnan, Senior Aerospace and Defence Journalist

The temple town of Rameswaram attracts a significant flow of visitors, especially during the weekend. And with the House of Kalam, and now his burial site in the area, Krishnan says, it has almost become “like a tourist package” for people.

Krishnan spoke to both the MP and MLA from Ramanathapuram, but says they are playing the “blame game” and that there is “politics involved” in it.

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Blame Game

MP Anwar Raja told OneIndia that the TN government had done its bit by allocating the land for the memorial, and that now it is the Centre’s job to build it.

According to MLA Dr MH Jawahirullah, the site “should not be just a memorial alone”. He said that “besides the kabr, there should be a library, science centre and healthcare centre” as well. He too said that the Centre needed to start work on it.

The family of Dr Kalam is also disappointed at the sheer negligence of the government.

Several members of his family have been buried at a private place which is maintained by the family. It is only because he was a public figure that they agreed to have him buried at a spot which people could visit, and pay their respects. The family can’t guard it, the government has to do it.
Anantha Krishnan, Senior Aerospace and Defence Journalist

According to Salim, the Centre announced a memorial for Kalam in Rameswaram in October following which officials from the defence ministry visited the spot to take measurements. But no development has been made so far.

“The place is not even being maintained properly with plastic and paper strewn all over the spot. We just hope that the government builds the memorial as soon as possible,” he says. Krishnan, however, wonders what exactly is causing the delay for the government to build even a basic structure over Kalam’s kabr. “We are hoping that the issue gets some attention and the government works on it. We need to respect our dead,” he says.

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