Roads named after celebrated social and political personalities are
common. Every city in the country has an MG road, named after the
Mahatma, a Nehru road, a Tagore road and the like. It is the norm and
rightly so. But a road named after a postman is quite the exception.
Postman Chacko road in Thoppumpady in West Kochi is perhaps the only
road in the State to be named after a postman.
But then there was a time, not so much in the distant past, when the
postman was like an extended family member. People waited longingly and
lovingly for his arrival.
Besides the letter or postcard, the telegram or the money order that he
brought, he also gave a round-up of the area. There had been a birth, a
death, a famine, a political meeting, rain and the like.
Postman P.M. Chacko was one such person. He became a part and parcel of
the lives of the people of his area, knocking on their doors not just
with a letter, but with help and guidance too. He became more than just
another postman. In 2004, the Corporation of Cochin decided to honour
his contributions by naming a road after him.
People’s postman
Who was P.M. Chacko and what made him so distinctive?
Eighty four-year-old K. M. John, a tally clerk at Cochin Port, remembers
Chacko lucidly. He talks about the pre-Independence times when the
Cochin Rajas’s postal service called anchal service existed
simultaneously with the British postal service. Chacko worked for the
British post and was called “runner”. “Nobody would see him walk for he
used to always run to deliver mail. He would easily run 40 to 50 km in a
day, his field of work extending from Chirakal in the South to
Karuvelipady in the North, areas in West Kochi. He covered distances up
to Edakochi , Mattancherry and Chellanam.”
The practice followed then was to clear mail twice a day, at 10 a.m. and
at 3 p.m. In between Chacko would help in social activities. In 1948
when the All India Post and Telegraph Union were being formed, Chacko
engaged himself in organising that.
“There were no modern public address facilities. He would speak through a
funnel and hold a public meeting,” says John, adding that Chacko was a
theatre man and loved drama. “His family was from Cherthala and as a
14-year-old, Chacko had got involved in freedom fighting activities for
which he was to be arrested. It was then that his brother Joseph, a
postman, brought him to Cochin and enrolled him in the service.”
John recounts another incident. “The Palluruthy post office under
British Cochin was moved inside the premises of the fishing harbour in
Thoppumpady. Chacko came in contact with a seasoned postman, Syed
Mohammed who was active in forming a union. Chacko began assisting Syed.
He soon got promoted from a runner to a postman but his activities were
mistaken as political and he was assaulted. Though Chacko had patriotic
leanings he was driven by a sense of duty. He was in fact torn between
duty and the country.”
Others from the area remember him as affable and helpful.
Suresh Rao, proprietor of Vasant Mahal Hotel and Lodge, a centre of
political activities of yore, remembers him for his punctuality. “We
knew it was 11 o’clock when we heard the mail land on our office table,”
says Suresh. “Chacko was a workaholic, a duty-bound man in khaki
uniform. He was not very tall, wore very thick reading glasses and had a
stern expression.” He was service-oriented, says 85-year-old Abraham
Puthussery, a well known social activist from the area. His sense of
service was keenly talked about even then.
Love for children
A. M. Jacob, a colleague who worked with Chacko in the sixties,
remembers him for delivering every single mail unfailingly to the right
address. “He never had ‘no returns’. He knew each and every address.”
Jose Thampi, his son, who runs a Cybercafe in Thoppumpady, smiles about
this distinction of his father. “Even today the police seek us out in
case of any confusion in address. He has left that impression.”
But something about Chacko that really touched the lives of the people
was his love for children and his concern for them, as his very own.
Jose recalls that his father would be very watchful about every child
and about them attending school. “He would scold shabbily dressed
children, as if they were all his own and he was responsible for their
welfare.”
When his father passed away in 1987 at the age of 71, the people of
Mundamveli where Chacko worked for a long time opened their doors to his
family. “We are welcome in their homes anytime,” says Jose with pride.
“There was an all round sense of loss among the people of the area when
Chacko died. It was as if some one of our own had passed away,” says
Sudhir Master from Palluruthy, who proposed naming the road on which
Chacko lived to be after him. K. J. Maxy the councillor then recalls,
“When this proposal came up at the division committee meet everyone felt
that Chacko’s contributions to the people here were significant and
that he was loved and respected. It would be only right to name a road
after a person whose sense of duty and brotherhood can be emulated by
coming generations.”
And so as most roads are named after our tall leaders there’s this one
named after an ordinary postman who left an impression in the hearts and
lives of the people of his area.
Source : http://www.thehindu.com/
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