JRD's
words inspired me in philanthropy: Sudha Murthy
Indian Express - October 23, 2002
Did
anybody know that there was a strong Tata connection
to Infosys? Meet Ms Sudha Murthy, the better half
of the Infosys chairman, NR Narayana Murthy. On
a down-the-memory-lane visit here after 25 years,
Ms Murthy, who is now heading the Infosys Foundation,
said it was a chance association with the house
of Tatas when after topping the graduating class
in computer science from the Indian Institute
of Science, Bangalore, she came across a job advertisement
in February 1974, which said Telco (Tata Engineering
and Locomotive Company) wanted bright young graduates.
However, much to her disappointment, she found
in the footnote it was written "female candidates
need not apply." Her ego deeply hurt, she
shot off a 'postcard' to JRD Tata asking him how
a leading and progressive house like the Tatas,
"which always thought ahead of time, could
put such a restriction." "After posting
it I forgot about it," she said. A pleasant
surprise awaited her. A telegram soon arrived
asking her to appear for an interview "with
a promise of reimbursement of first class fare
both ways," she said.
Selected as a GT (graduate trainee) and as the
first lady technical officer at Telco, she was
first posted to Pune and was later shifted to
Telco Jamshedpur "for a short stint."
She was thereafter shifted to Bombay House, She
had later learnt that JRD had himself intervened
in the matter following her letter and had instructed
the board that "if she was found up to the
mark in her subjects, she should be taken."
She recalls how after having put in her papers
in February 1982, after having served Telco for
eight years, she wanted to meet JRD to convey
her gratitude.
"It was again a chance meeting as I was going
downstairs and he was climbing upstairs in Bombay
House," she told reporters here Monday. "I
told him I was leaving the job. He said "you
fought so much for the job and nowyou are quitting
it?" I told him that my husband wanted to
start the Infosys Adventure. And then JRD turned
almost a soothsayer to say, "If you make
lots of money you must give it back to society
as you have received so much love from it."
"That was the last time I saw him,"
the lady, clad in simple clothes, said regretfully.
This was to be the source of the inspiration for
Infosys Foundation which she today manages to
run in Karnataka, Andhra Pradesh, Tamil Nadu and
Orissa "with only six hands." So strong
has been the influence of the Tatas that when
asked by her colleagues as to what she wanted
on her retirement, she could only say: "A
black & white portrait of Jamshetji Nusserwanji
Tata and another of JRD Tata in his famous blue
suit."
"At Infosys, we have the two biggest and
the most expensive boardrooms (of a total of 17)
where world leaders like Tony Blair, etc, are
felicitated, named after these two great personalities,"
she says proudly. The Infosys Foundation focuses
on two basic things: education and health. "We
provide infrastructure to the states for building
government hospitals," she says. Asked, how
was it helping the poor, given the poor state
of affairs at government hospitals, Ms Murthy
says: "The poor have no other place to go
other than to a government hospital."
The foundation, among other things, also donates
books to libraries of schools for the less privileged.
"The creation of wealth by legal and ethical
means is one part," she maintains. "The
distribution of wealth is the other part. The
Infosys Foundation focuses on the poorest of the
poor." Recipient of several international
and national awards for outstanding philanthropic
work, the chairperson of Infosys Foundation feels
that Indian corporates should "do much more
for the society," particularly in health
and education. Anybody in her place would be having
a I high-flying lifestyle.
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