Kalki Sadasivam
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Thiagaraja Sadasivam (4 September 1902 – 21 November 1997
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Life

Kalki Sadasivam was born in a Brahmin family on 4 September 1902 at Aangarai in Tiruchirapalli District, the third of 16 children of Tyagarajan and Mangalam Iyer. Impressed by the fiery speeches and writings of Lala Lajpat Rai, Bipin Chandra Pal, Lokamanya Tilak and Aurobindo Ghosh, Kalki Sadasivam joined the Indian Independence Movement, freedom movement at an early age and being a disciple of Subramaniya Siva desired to kill an Englishman and court imprisonment for the sake of it. As a result, he quit school and enlisted in the Bharata Samaj, serving Subramaniya Siva who was afflicted with leprosy and ardent involving himself in the Swadeshi Movement. On listening to speeches by Rajaji, Rajagopalachari and Mahatma Gandhi he later adopted non-violence. Sadasivam had two daughters named Radha and Vijaya from his first wife, Smt. Apithakuchambal, who died in 1938. In July 1936, Sadasivam met M.S. Subbulakshmi, who subscribed to his ideological and political views. The two eventually married on 10 July 1940 after his first wife died. Radha later became a popular musician in her own right. Sadasivam worked for the Tamil publication Anand Vikatan in 1930s. He was a close friend of journalist and writer Kalki Krishnamurthy, with whom he co-founded the popular magazine Kalki in 1940. Sadasivam's nephew (sister's son) Ramachandran, known as Ambi in music circles, married Krishnamurthy's daughter Anandi. Sadasivam's two daughters, Radha and Vijaya, were married on the same day. Vijaya was married to Rajendran, son of Kalki Krishnamurthy. Sadasivam died in 1997, at the age of 95, and his final rites were carried out in Chennai by his adopted son, S Thyagarajan.


References

{{DEFAULTSORT:Sadasivam, Kalki 1902 births 1997 deaths Journalists from Tamil Nadu Indian independence activists from Tamil Nadu Tamil-language writers People from Tiruchirappalli district 20th-century Indian journalists