He was a man who saw the world as a conflict between the clever and the
foolish, and took the side of both to push his plans through. In his
final years, he became a lumbering patriarch with an illuminated face
and dark twinkling eyes, who was very aware of his greatness but chose
his words with care in a nation where humility is the only permissible
form of pride.
When he was young, a friend took him to an astrologer who discerned
people’s fate by measuring their shadows at noon. The shadow astrologer,
obviously, worked far from the Equator. Mr. Kurien recounts the
experience in his memoirs, “I Too Had a Dream,” which he wrote with the
journalist Gouri Salvi. The astrologer foretold an extraordinary
career.
It was an accidental career. He arrived in Anand reluctantly in the
summer of 1949 as a government clerk. Circumstances soon made him the
general manager of a farmers’ cooperative, the Kaira District Milk
Producers Union Ltd.
He swiftly increased the cooperative’s milk production, but to expand it
further he needed a scientific breakthrough. He had to find a way to
convert buffalo milk into milk powder, which the leading dairy experts
of the time said was impossible. But, with the help of a friend who was a
chemist, he achieved the seeming miracle. Mr. Kurien implied in his
memoirs that the supposed impossibility of converting buffalo milk into
powder was a myth created by the Western world, which had abundant cow’s
milk and wanted other nations, like India, to continue to import its
milk powder.
Over time, Mr. Kurien’s stature rose. Some of the most important
politicians in the country, including prime ministers, stayed in his
house when they visited Anand. The first time Jawaharlal Nehru stayed
with them, Mr. Kurien and his wife, Molly, refrigerated a rose so that
the prime minister could put the fresh flower in his buttonhole, as was
his style. But soon the couple got tired of all the fuss around
dignitaries. Once, a very tall governor was to visit, and his security
detail complained that the bed in Mr. Kurien’s guest room was too short.
In response, Mr. Kurien asked his excellency to sleep diagonally.
In the late 1950s, Mr. Kurien decided to market the produce of the
cooperative through a brand name, and that led to the creation of one of
the most enduring Indian brands, Amul Butter. Amul’s billboard
advertisements, which play on current affairs, are a parallel historical
record of modern India. So endearing is the brand that even The Times
of India, which does not grant any corporation free mileage on its
editorial pages and even blurs images of company logos in its editorial
photographs, carries images of Amul’s billboards when the brand is in
the news. Mr. Kurien’s obituary was, inescapably, accompanied by the
images of Amul’s billboards in several newspapers.
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