Rudra Nath was a pioneer in education, entrepreneur

Dear Editor,

Happening to be in New York earlier this year I was asked to offer some remarks at  the 40th anniversary of Indo Caribbean Federation –which had launched its flagship activity, the annual “Indian Arrival Day” commemoration, at Smokey Park in 1984. I took the opportunity to honour Mr Rudra Nath who was one of its founders, first president and guiding light. Mr Nath, like so many who were forced to flee the Burnhamite dictatorship, replicated  in New York their indentured forbears’ inestimable role in building the Guyanese nation, into which they had arrived.

He was born in 1929,  the eldest of three brothers and an  older sister to parents who had arrived  at the logies of Plantation Uitvlugt WCD, via Trinidad from Kanpur, India earlier that decade. His father, who was a noted wrestler, moved his family to Pln Tuschen, EB Essequibo around 1940. He established a grocery and a bicycle repair shop. His sister and brother in law  also established a shop nearby, along with  a milk distribution business. Mr Nath and his siblings all inculcated their father’s entrepreneurial bent. Taught Hindi by his father, which formed the core of the five subjects he passed at the Cambridge Exam through self-study, he became a teacher at the Guyana Oriental College (GOC). This had been launched in 1955 in Georgetown by Indian national Mr Shruti Kant, who had been sent by the Arya Samaj.

On a motorcycle trip to Corentyne, he saw that even though Corentyne High School had been established since 1938 as JC Chandisingh, it was comparatively expensive and demanded high marks at the Common Entrance. Mr Nath grasped the opportunity; quit his job at GOC in 1957 and converted the  disreputable “Rock Diamond Hotel”  into the Rose Hall High School (RHHS). A more salubrious locale in the then village was sourced by local businessman Alim Shah for a new RHHS,  which was constructed by 1959 with a local Board. Mr Nath insisted that all who wanted an education must be admitted at comparatively low fees. One of the teachers he hired was Julius Nathoo, who became inspired to move to De Kinderen, EBE not far from Mr Nath’s Tuschen and established Saraswat High School, which made secondary education available in that rural community. All the while, Mr Nath was a staunch supporter of the PPP.

A disagreement with the Board over education versus profits, however, led to him taking the students to the Port Morant Race Course pavilion in 1964. By then, Corentyne Comprehensive High School in Port Morant Free Yard had run into difficulties with its administration and asked Mr Nath to become Headmaster. He accepted and his students all followed him there. But once again his focus on students’  welfare caused a break with this Board and Mr Nath refused to violate his principles. In 1966, he established National High School  in Portuguese Quarter of Port Morant at the home of his extended family, who he had persuaded to follow him to Berbice. They had taken their entrepreneurial bent with them and had established a slew of businesses of which the famous “Spready’s” in Port Morant is one. Mr Nath finally thought of his own happiness and the next year got married.

He  ran National High School until 1975 then  left for Canada from where his wife had remigrated and then onto the US in 1978, where one of his younger brothers had migrated. He and that brother continued their entrepreneurial drive and operated a gas station in Brooklyn. But as the trickle of Indian Guyanese immigrants to New York City became a wave, most of them gravitated to Richmond Hill in Queens and gradually spread into the surrounding neighbourhoods, Mr Nath saw another entrepreneurial opportunity. He tinkered in his basement and came up with equipment to mass produce Guyanese snacks like “Sal Sev”, fried Split Channa, Mittai etc which he packaged and  sold to the Guyanese and West Indian groceries springing up.

As usual Mr Nath was always thinking about his community’s needs and facilitated by the pioneering Guyanese real-estate  entrepreneur Ramesh Kallicharran, Mr Nath then became the president of “Indo-Caribbean Federation” which roped in many of his former students and teachers from Guyana. I had invested in real estate via Kali and joined the ICF to help launch the first Indian Arrival Day celebration.

In 1989, Mr Nath moved to Florida with his  family which had increased with the birth of his son. He passed in 2003.

Sincerely,

Ravi Dev