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Kamal Haasan has a history of humanitarian work in rehabilitating HIV-affected children, blood donation drives, and as the face of Swachh Bharat. But his visit to the Kosasthalai river by the Ennore creek, on 27th October, is tinged with political foresight.
The MET department has announced incessant rains for two days, warning of continuing monsoons. It has been raining intermittently, from a few days ahead of the forecast. Social media is rife with 'Stay Safe', 'Not Again', 'Chennai you deserve it', and a dozen other profile updates that act as bitter reminders of the 2015 floods.
Kamal Haasan was one of the first superstars to use his fan clubs to carry out social work. He brought them all together under the Kamal Narpani Iyakkam (Kamal welfare association), through which his fans continue to conduct blood donation drives, eye donation camps, and distribute education material to the poor.
He is also known to pledge monetary support for various causes. The most publicised example, is the Rs 50 Lakh he won in the Tamil version of KBC, that he pledged to the Petralthan Pillaya initiative, that he co-founded to rehabilitate HIV affected children. He later donated Rs 16 crore - that he earned through his first ever brand endorsement (Pothys) - to the same cause.
Mayyam, the magazine of his welfare association was the chief broadcaster of his political views on various subjects, until of course, he debuted on Twitter on 26th Jan, 2015.
The monsoons are no more a thing of beauty and joy in Chennai. The 2015 floods threw the entire city, and all of its people into weeks of destitution, huge losses and a general fear of water. Last year's Vardha cyclone only rubbed salt into the still fresh wounds, as the storm razed tens of thousands of trees to the ground, and cut off power supply. Many areas in Southern Chennai went under again.
Kamal Haasan's visit to the Ennore creek - which is as much a hotbed of political apathy, as it is an environmental disaster - and his subsequent rant/warning on Twitter has gotten the city's attention.
So begins the post, which warns the people that:
That the city is unprepared to face another flood, is evident, thanks to the PWD's refusal to come clean on the progress of the Rs 633 crore major drainage project.
According to Arappor Iyakkam, construction of most of the major drains is yet to start, and many won't be ready in time, or even in the near future. Nithyanand Jayaram, Chennai's go-to environmental activist links the abuse of Ennore Creek and Kosasthalai river, to the 2015 floods, and says there is every possibility that Chennai will see another flood.
While Kamal Haasan may be pandering to popular public fear, he's not entirely off the mark factually. But then, his statement takes a political turn.
He rubs the government's raw nerve, which he touched in 2015, with his tweets against the insufficient relief work carried out by the then CM J Jayalalithaa:
In one fell swoop, Kamal Haasan not only rallies public sentiment towards himself, but also gets an 'I told you so' moment aimed at the government. Such a publicised visit barely a week from the 'big announcement' scheduled on his birthday on 7th November does raise a pertinent question.
While Kamal Haasan's intentions may be altruistic and honest, this is also his first visit to a cause he believes in. Like the man himself, and like the movies he makes, Kamal's visit behooves just one question (inspired from his cult hit Nayakan) :
Neenga Nallavara Kettavara? (Are you a good man or a bad man?)
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Published: 31 Oct 2017,08:26 AM IST