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For 30 years, Sasikala Natarajan was known for her association with the most powerful woman in Tamil Nadu. Described by many as Jayalalithaa’s friend, a ‘shadow’ by some, it was the late Chief Minister, who saved the kindest words for Sasikala, describing her to be “almost like a sister”.
Today, Sasikala Natarajan comes into her own, as the AIADMK passes the torch to Jayalalithaa’s best friend, shadow and adopted sister.
Having lived the last three decades in Jayalalithaa’s shadow, very little is known about Sasikala Natarajan. Her relationship with the former AIADMK supremo has fed rumour mills, where the duo was the target of the opposition’s scorn as well. But having never given an interview to the media, Sasikala is a mystery that is yet to unfold.
Born in 1957 to an agriculturalist couple, Vivekanandam and Krishnaveni, Sasikala grew up in Mannargudi with five siblings. Although Sasikala’s family was not rich, they did belong to the influential Kallar community.
In 1973, she was married to M Natarajan, who was an employee in the state’s Directorate of Information and Public Relations, with DMK chief and then Chief Minister, M Karunanidhi, even presiding over their wedding.
But the couple went through trying times early in their marriage. In an interview with Shobha Warrier for Rediff, V Chandralekha, who was collector of South Arcot in the early 1980s, said Natarajan lost his job during the Emergency and remained unemployed for four years between 1976 and 1980.
While he was eventually reinstated and posted as Chandralekha’s PRO following a court case, it was presumably during the intervening period that Sasikala started a video rental shop in Chennai.
Soon, the video rental business turned to videography after Sasikala went to Singapore to purchase video recorders to film marriages and other functions. It was then that Sasikala turned to her husband’s boss, Chandralekha, to help boost her fledgling business.
Chandralekha said, “One day, Sasikala wanted me to put in a word with Jayalalithaa as she was the propaganda secretary of the All India Anna Dravida Munnetra Kazhagam then and attended a number of important functions. Sasikala requested me to put in a good word for her. I recommended her name to Jayalalithaa and told her that I knew Sasikala and her husband was my PRO.”
Chandralekha’s introduction was enough to seal the start of a lifelong friendship. After Sasikala and her team filmed several of Jayalalithaa’s functions, “some good association developed,” said Natarajan to NDTV.
While Sasikala and her husband moved into ‘Veda Nilayam’ - Jayalalithaa’s Poes Garden residence soon after MGR’s death, Natarajan was kicked out in 1990 for trying to “dominate” Jayalalithaa.
From then on, Sasikala remained the lone figure in Jayalalithaa’s life, sharing her moments of triumphs and defeat.
When Jayalalithaa catapulted to power in 1991, Sasikala’s influence in the party and in government grew. In the eyes of the public, every step and misstep Jayalalithaa took in her early years as a state administrator, Sasikala was not far behind.
They attended the Mahamaham festival at Kumbakonam in 1992 together, with Sasikala pouring holy water on her friend, even as a stampede broke out just metres away, killing more than 50 people, as the crowd pushed and shoved to catch a glimpse of the Chief Minister.
But the trust and faith Jayalalithaa placed in her was even more pronounced when she adopted Sasikala’s nephew Sudhakaran as her foster son. The extravagant wedding that Jayalalithaa conducted for her foster son, who she later disowned, saw the friends dress like twins – in red silk sarees with matching gold and diamond jewellery. If pictures from the wedding were anything to go by, some may even say that Sasikala was in many ways, Jayalalithaa’s equal.
When Jayalalithaa was routed in the 1996 assembly elections following her first term in power, many placed the blame squarely upon Sasikala and her family. The public display of wealth at Sudhakaran’s wedding shocked and angered the electorate that decided to vote for the DMK. But the electoral defeat was only the beginning of their troubles.
With arch-rival Karunanidhi back at the helm, Jayalalithaa found herself embroiled in a number of corruption cases. She soon announced that she was keeping a distance from her friend. But Sasikala too was named in 39 cases and was arrested in June 1996 for alleged illegal foreign exchange transactions.
Spending 10 months in jail, Sasikala was reportedly under tremendous pressure to turn into an approver and implicate Jayalalithaa in the cases, writes R Ramasubramanian in Rediff.
Jayalalithaa crafted the ‘Amma’ image, “a leader for the people and by the people”, having disowned and distanced her own family.
“They are everywhere,” said a seasoned IPS officer to The News Minute some months ago, “very manipulative, and trying to manage everything. Their men are everywhere from Jaya TV to ministers’ offices, and have stooges in police and IAS top to bottom…And they don’t leave out anything, even the cycle-stand contracts next to the bus-stands are taken in by them.”
Accusations such as “extra-constitutional authority” and “exploitation” did the rounds even as the “Mannargudi Mafia”, as Sasikala’s clan came to be known, became synonymous with corruption.
Turbulence, however, returned to their friendship in 2011. Reports of Sasikala conspiring against Jayalalithaa reached the Chief Minister’s ears. In a swift move, the AIADMK leader threw out her companion and her relatives from Poes Garden and from the party.
But Sasikala was back in Poes Garden within 100 days of her expulsion. A moving letter she had written was beamed on Jaya TV. She stated:
Sasikala did keep her promise, remaining with Jayalalithaa all through her 75-day hospitalisation until her death. And now she emerges from the shadows to claim her leader’s legacy.
(With inputs from Rediff, NDTV, The Hindu and India Today)
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