Rasheeda Bhagat, Editor, Rotary News, gives an account of a Rotary journey in India like no other. The tête-à-tête with PRIP Rajendra K Saboo gives invaluable glimpses into his 55 years in service.
When asked if he is as active in Rotary as his father, Yashovardha
Saboo, elder son of PRIP Rajendra K Saboo, smiles and says, “The average
of Rotary in our family is ok.”!
I am enjoying the hospitality of the Saboos at breakfast in their beautifully
appointed house in Chandigarh. Despite nursing a bad cold, Usha is a gracious
hostess, gently pushing me to finish the delicacies piled on my plate. The chickoo is
incredibly sweet; “it’s from our garden,” smiles Saboo.
And the huge Rossagulla is so fresh and so soft, that it has to be devoured.
To an expression of guilt, Usha says supportively: “It is just sponge;
dig in!”
Saboo’s Rotary journey is so captivating, fascinating
and illustrious, and given his penchant for the smallest detail, the interview
stretches far beyond breakfast, through a session in their sitting room,
drive to his office, at his office, and later on telephone, as I have to
board my flight!
Saboo was born in a Kolkata suburb, but those who have admired his oratory
in English will be surprised to know that he underwent his early schooling
in Hindi till Class 3 and 4 in Rajasthan during World War II and then up
to Class 8 in a local suburban school near Kolkata. But in 1946, when his
father, a high ranking executive who worked closely with industrialist G
D Birla, was transferred to Kolkata, the son had to shift to the rather
uppity St Xaviers School. Understandably, the teenager was very nervous
at the interview and when the Jesuit priest, Father Van Buynder, asked for
his age, he blurted out “12 o’clock,” instead of 12 years!
The Jesuit Father made light of this blunder, perhaps took it as a challenge,
admitted Saboo, and eventually became a mentor. A badly needed one for the
young boy who felt totally out of place in the new school with his urbanised
classmates and their slick English.
After graduating in B Sc (Hons) from St Xaviers in 1953 in Kolkata, Saboo
joined Hindustan Motors, a part of the Birla empire, where both his father
T C Saboo, and father-in-law, Durga Prasad Mandelia, were top executives.
“My father had joined the Birlas as a clerk, and then rose to the
topmost level, and established Hindalco.” But the son’s dream
was to start his own business. After four years when he wanted to leave,
it was difficult because of the close relationship with the Birlas. “But
my mother was a very determined lady; she understood my earnest desire and
convinced my father,” he recalls.
This job taught him the value of hard work, team work and forthrightness;
he then started a venture to make industrial knitting needles, which evolved
into a joint partnership with German collaboration. This brought him to
Chandigarh in 1960 to set up one of the city’s first major industries.
In 1961, Saboo joined the Rotary Club of Chandigarh “not to be part
of service, but to meet more people in the new town.” He knew about
Rotary because his father was a Rotarian from the Rotary Club of Calcutta.
The Chandigarh club’s first project was a funeral van costing Rs 8,000
and each member gave Rs 200! “My salary, from my own company, was
then Rs 2,500!” Slowly he got drawn into service projects, but was
not interested in leadership roles “because my ambition was business.”
In the corporate world, he was making good progress and became chairman
of the northern region of the AIEI, which later became the CII. “Rotary
was fine, but it was the beginning of my career and I had other ambitions,
to go up the ladder in industry and business.”
But destiny had other plans for him. Suddenly his club president shifted
to Delhi and despite his extreme reluctance, he was made vice president.
He became the club president in 1970–71 and then chairman of the district
conference. The district included Delhi and extended from Srinagar, right
down to Western UP. For the district conference “I was able to get
the Vice President of India to Chandigarh to inaugurate our conference.
Bhichai Rattakul (who became RI President in 2002-03) was the RI President’s
representative and we had speakers of stature like Karan Singh and I K Gujral,”
says Saboo.
After that “everybody thought I was gunning for the DG’s post,
but when it was proposed to me I said: ‘No I’m not going in
that direction.’ Every time my club or friends tried to persuade me,
I continued to say a firm ‘no.’” His focus was business
and family.
Those days, governorship aspirants hosted lavish cocktail parties. “Addressing
our club later, Bhichai said: ‘I predict that RK — at that time
I was called Raja only in the family — has places to go in Rotary.
I hope he does not go the way I’ve seen here in the district.’
His indication was the parties and the canvassing!”
Saboo studiously avoided contesting for the DG’s post till 1974, when
he accepted, but laying down strict conditions: He’d not host, nor
let anyone else host on his behalf, cocktail parties. No vote-seeking from
clubs, no transport for those accompanying him to intercity meets, etc.
These were accepted and he became DG at one shot, for 1976–77, creating
a record in his district.
But, he says with a sigh, “the price was family life. Our younger
son was just 12, and we took him to the International Assembly, then held
in Boca Raton, Florida, US, so that he could see the expanse and wonder
of Rotary… he was impressed but never forgot that Rotary took away
his parents when he needed them the most — during his adolescent years.”
In Rotary’s history, how many DGs can boast of having both the President
of India and Mother Teresa as speakers at their District Conference? Well,
Saboo pulled off this feat. Both Saboo and Usha decided that Mother Teresa,
being the epitome of service, should be invited. She was reached through
his younger sister in Calcutta, and responded: “If god wills, I will
come.”
With just three weeks to the District Conference, he could not take a chance,
and met and invited the then (Acting) President of India B D Jatti. He readily
agreed; but the same evening Mother Teresa too confirmed her participation!
His dilemma was solved with President Jatti, the chief guest, agreeing to
offer the Mother utmost courtesy.
Saboo says that when he took over as Governor, the District had 103 clubs
already “which was a very large geographic area. The roads were not
that good, the vehicles not as comfortable and the communication not as
we see now.” His focussed area was “voluntary blood donation.”
During his tenure he closed two non-functional clubs against the advice
of many PDGs but he wanted to run the district on the 4-Way Test.
Immediately after his tenure, Saboo was picked up as International Assembly
Discussion Leader (today’s Training Leader). While serving in the
second year, the then incoming RI President Rolf Klarich invited him to
be member of the RI 1981 Convention Committee.
Saboo and Usha were reluctant to get too many assignments, but he was persuaded
to accept. At the very first meeting, he suggested Mother Teresa’s
name as a speaker. “Everybody jumped at the name; it was accepted
unanimously and the President said: ‘Raja, you’ll have to get
her!’”
This time he went to her directly in Delhi, and again she said: ‘Child,
if god wills, I’ll come.’ “So I said, Mother there is
only one person who can communicate with God and that is you. So why don’t
you call him and confirm? She laughed and said give me some time.”
After many visits and the same answer, and only three months for the Convention,
he told her, “Mother, with the utmost respect and humility, I request
you to call him now. And she said, ‘Okay I will come.’ I said
I am delighted, but my RI President in Finland won’t believe me. ‘Oh
you want something in writing,’ she said, and tore a page from an
exercise book and wrote her acceptance!”
But the persistent Rotarian wanted more! “But how would anyone know
it’s your signature, I said. She said, ‘Oh you want a stamp,’
opened a drawer, took out a rubber stamp and put it on the paper and asked:
‘Are you happy now?’ I said yes, and sent it to the RI President.”
His only regret is that he didn’t keep a photocopy of it, though the
RI archives would have the paper somewhere. When he and Usha received Mother
Teresa and “asked for her baggage tags, she said: ‘Child, this
small bag I am carrying is all I have, with a few sarees. What more do I
need?”
Something significant happened in between. Saboo was invited by then RI
President Jack Davis to speak as part ofVoices of Asia panel at the
1978 Tokyo Convention. “These 7 minutes of speaking from the Convention
dais, along with top leaders of the Rotary world, was intimidating, but
perhaps gave me an exposure to the leadership of RI. I felt privileged,”
he says.From here to the RI Director’s position was “just a
matter of chance, but also a sad part of my Rotary journey which I’d
rather not talk about,” he sighs.
Saboo says that his two RI role models are RI Presidents Sir
Clem Renouf (1978–79) and James L Bomar (1979–80). Both pioneered
the crusade for polio eradication. “When President Jim (James) congratulated
me, I told him that I had mixed feelings. If with this image of my country
(his election as RID was challenged) I go on the RI Board, will I be taken
seriously? I’ll never forget his words. He said: ‘Raja, your
concern should be with what image of the country you will leave the Board!’”
So did it happen, I ask Saboo. “The day I attended the last Board
meeting after a two-year term, President-elect Bill Skelton, who had visited
India, was all praise for it, as also General Secretary Herbert Pigman,
and a couple of Directors. Everyone gave me a standing ovation at the Board,
and I felt totally overwhelmed remembering Jim Bomar’s words.”
Another highlight was the holding of the Presidential Goodwill Conference
in Delhi in 1981 under the leadership of then RI President Stan McCaffrey,
with the aim to promote peace and goodwill in the region. It saw huge participation
from India’s neighbours — Pakistan, Bangladesh, Sri Lanka and
Nepal. “We had to restrict participation from India and give district
quotas, so that other countries could have sufficient representation,”
he adds.
External Affairs Minister P V Narasimha Rao inaugurated it; Prime Minister
Indira Gandhi attended the reception at Hyderabad House, top political and
other personalities from our neighbouring countries participated. It was
such a high-profile event that “we did not have to lobby for media
coverage; on all the three days it hit the front pages of newspapers,”
smiles Saboo. “It put Rotary right on top in people’s minds,
leading General Secretary Pigman to exclaim: ‘Raja, you’ve set
international convention standards in a regional conference!’”
The Delhi Declaration was drafted and adopted at the concluding session
and the conference became a historic occasion. Setting up of the Rotary
International South Asia Office in Delhi was another milestone.
Saboo continued to invest his energy and time in polio eradication. His
name as a candidate in 1988 for RI President was put up, but he did not
regret the outcome because his friend Paulo Costa from Brazil was selected.
The next year, he didn’t want to put in his name, but was persuaded.
Benny Santos from Philippines (who later became an RI Director), “a
saint of Rotary and service personified, said, you have to put in your name
now. Benny made Past RI President MAT Caparas also agree.”
But after putting his name, he was not enthusiastic or hopeful because traditionally
it was the turn of an American. On D-day, he forgot all about it and was
out of the house when the call came. His daughter-in-law Anuradha had to
drive around the town to find and tell him that the RI headquarters was
waiting for his call. He came home, received the call again, said, yes to
the Nominating Committee Chairman and then Usha and his daughter-in-law
cried as Usha and he would be away for two years!
His year as RI President was filled with action and international travel,
particularly to Eastern European countries, where grateful heads of state
admitted that Rotary coming to them was a certificate of their democracy!
“It was a great year but I promised myself I wouldn’t build
a statue for myself, and in this decision Usha was with me.”
His one “lurking apprehension” was that since he hailed from
a country/ region that was still considered “third world”, how
would he be perceived. He knew that Rotary being a “disciplined”
organisation, he would always be respected “but would it be spontaneous”,
was the doubt, which disappeared, when at the 1991 Assembly he declared
his theme: Look Beyond Yourself. “This was received with a standing
ovation that gave me the confidence that I had nothing to fear.”
The reinforcement came at the Mexico Convention when as the incoming President
he introduced as his family both his father and parents-in-law. “Usha
and I sought their blessings on stage, and this was received with a standing
ovation.” Never before had parents been introduced as part of the
family. To Saboo, the head of the family were his elders.
A high point of his year was a UNICEF conference at UN which he addressed,
along with Jimmy Carter, UN Secretary General Javier Pèrez de Cuèllar,
Audrey Hepburn as compère! It celebrated 80 per cent universal immunisation
of children worldwide.
There he painted one eye of the large Daruma doll; in Japanese folklore,
a child paints one eye of the doll while making a wish and paints the second
eye when that wish is realised. His wish was, of course, total eradication
of polio. “That Daruma doll is still waiting for its second eye, and
I hope very soon an RI President will be drawing the second eye on it,”
he says.
A highlight of his year was Presidential conferences on Co-operation and
Development “for more understanding on pressing issues such as hunger,
economic development, literacy and sustainable agriculture. Other initiatives
Saboo took were the ‘Service above Self’ award; a 5-year PR
plan; greater focus on leadership, including PETS and more focus on retaining
members.
Orlando, Florida as a Convention destination had its own challenges; Disneyworld
and other attractions would compete. This was overcome by building these
attractions into the programme! Meetings in the morning; entertainment,
leisure in the evenings. “We got excellent rates for Disney World,
which was exclusively reserved for Rotarians. And Universal Studios did
the same. Even the fireworks were customised for Rotary,” adds Saboo.
As Trustee Chair Elect of TRF, he mooted the idea of Rotary Peace Centres
to commemorate 50 years of Paul Harris’s death. “We had a very
strong ambassadorial scholarship programme but it was not known like Rhodes
or Fulbright scholarships.” A programme was envisaged for mid-career
professionals with leadership capacity and eventually seven Centres for
Peace and Conflict resolution were set up in reputed universities.
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