Thursday, January 14, 2021

End of an Era


Dr PC Shejwalkar (1929-2021)

Welcome to Yuvahit .............................................. 

With Dr Shejwalkar's departure on 8 January 2021 - just a week before he would have completed 92 -, an era has ended.

My association with him goes back to 1967, when I entered BMCC as a student.  He was the Vice Principal then and had introduced an idea of a Thinkers Club, in which students would give a talk on a subject of their choice and the club would meet once a week.  I made my first speech there. It was managed by the students.  It went on well for some time before the Exam Fever caught on and then it couldn't be revived.  But the impression on my mind was that here was a teacher who was interested in doing something outside the curricula, he was on the move and would trust and support the students.  And importantly, he was always smiling.

A little over a decade later, I returned to Pune having worked in the textile industry in Mumbai after my MMS from Bajaj.  Dr MD Apte suggested my name to Dr Shejwalkar as a visiting faculty.  I was only 28 then, but he trusted me and thus began my teaching career.  Sometimes he would call me to accompany him on long walks and explain to me very many things associated with academic life.  These used to be told through anecdotes and tales mostly experienced first hand by him.  After months of such an informal orientation, he asked me to consider joining a full time position.  I was enjoying doing industry work, especially project management.  It took quite some time for me to make up my mind and I finally joined IMDR in Dec 1982.  

I enjoyed teaching because there was total academic freedom and I liked conceptual work.  Dr Shejwalkar would informally discuss things at times and would ask me to pay attention to both administrative and academic aspects of work in an institution.  People who worked closely with him have always remarked about several of his exemplary work habits.  I must mention two of those here.  He was extremely prompt in responding to mails, invitations and calls.  No letter ever remained unanswered on his desk.  No article or book sent to him by anyone and especially a first time author, remained unacknowledged.  It was no wonder that whatever he undertook moved at great speed to completion, besides enlarging his social circle.  His responsiveness earned him many admirers and collaborators.

 The second of his exemplary habits pertained to payment by due date.  Employees would get their salaries on the due date and one might ask if it is something out of ordinary.  There are many institutions today who cannot keep up the date of payment of salaries.  But that's a different story today.  Back then, it wasn't unusual to get the salaries a couple of days after the due date.  But that wasn't the case with Dr Shejwalkar, who was fanatical about keeping the date of such payments to employees, visiting faculty and everyone else.  It earned him loads of goodwill aand gratitude.  He knew what that monthly bunch of notes meant for a household.

This combination of industriousness, simplicity and sincerity ran through everything he did.  It enabled him to reach out to people, sense their concerns and address them in an innovative way, by carrying a whole lot of people with him.  The scale of his acheivements grew over time to be stupendous: the number of doctoral scholars who earned their Ph D under him, the number of years for which he ran his monthly feature in Prasad, the Marathi magazine and the number of years he spent in academia.

Building IMDR as an autonomous institution outside the University framework was his outstanding achievement and to use Gopal Krishna Gokhale's words, in IMDR he has left behind the best work of his life.  IMDR became autonomous more than four decades ago when the term 'autonomy' wasn't part of the academic parlance.  He had to gradually evolve the curriculum, teaching-learning system and the assessments.  The whole idea was to make academia more open to the world outside and to engage with it actively without getting overwhelmed.  If he found either the academician or the manager pushing things too far in their chosen direction, he would step in decisively to check it, so that the equilibrium between academic requirements and industry demands was not upset. Had  he  not been adept at maintaining the equilibrium, IMDR could have easily lost its academic character and become another job fair venue.

Another notable achievement of his is not easy to discern.  He made many innovative advances, thanks to the autonomy that he had nurtured.  IMDR was the first to run a course for Defence Personnel who were seeking resettlement in industry.  IMDR was also the partner of LIC in training its sales personnel in Life Insurance marketing, as LIC was preparing to meet the challenge of privatization.  It is no secret that LIC  withstood the challenge of privatization in a creditable way, thanks largely to its vigorous presence in the market, among other things.  The point to remember is that Dr Shejwalkar did not have to set out to innovate.  It came naturally to him riding on the back of the tremendous goodwill he had generated in industry.  He was open to ideas and he was open to the world.  The world found a willing ally in him who would step out to solve the problems.  He would adroitly craft solutions to seemingly intractable problems.

Working with him gave me a unique opportunity to understand the way he looked at people, processes and institutions both in academia and in industry.  In a way he was orienting me to be the Life Member and eventually his successor.  Life Member system of the DE Society is a unique institution, whose real nature is so very elusive of neat conceptualization.  It is democratic, decentralized and extremely adaptive, if understood in the right sense. He was fully conversant with the organizational dynamics of this unique institution and was able to successfully situate an autonomous institution within the overall institutional framework of DE Society.  The success of IMDR led to many autonomous endeavours within the institutions of DE Society and it was indeed fortunate that the transformation of our flagship Fergusson College into an autonomous institution happened during Dr Shejwalkar's life time.

The other equally great achievement of Dr Shejwalkar was that he made Management a household word in Maharashtra.  He wrote, lectured and spoke at many places and fora in both Marathi and English.  He addressed industrialists, managers and also workers.  He was involved with the Productivity movement and also Workers' Education scheme.  He was accessible and open to such invitations and spoke with his characteristic simplicity reaching out to his audience in a manner they could relate to the experiences he shared.  In that sense, he made his vast reservoir of knowledge available to the general public.  It did not lay in locked cabinets of his study.

The more I think of him, the greater is my amazement at the many dimensions of what he has left behind for us.  Thank you, Dr Shejwalkar, for what you taught us and have still left for us to fathom, figure out and learn for ourselves!


 

18 comments:

Neeti Karanjkar said...

Sir this writeup is amazing and gives every detail of multifaceted personality of Shejwalkar Sir. 🙏Very well captured from your association with him. We could experience many a nice ways of working and systems in place during your tenure. Sir this needs to be widely shared. 👍

Neeti Karanjkar said...

Sir this writeup is amazing and gives every detail of multifaceted personality of Shejwalkar Sir. 🙏Very well captured from your association with him. We could experience many a nice ways of working and systems in place during your tenure. Sir this needs to be widely shared. 👍

Dr. SANJAY KANDALGAONKAR SAYS, said...

Thanks a lot Dr. Bhupatkar Sir for sharing your feelings and impressions about Honble Dr. Shejwalkar Sir !
Though I did not have the opportunity to be his student at BMCC , I have attended his several sessions and have gathered lot many tips to become a Commerce Teacher !
Dr. Shejwalkar sir knew my entire family in two generations and had attended all the family functions with lots of blessings !
Most importantly, he was the first to give pat on my back , while i was taking up the new assignment as Principal at CCCS ! He continued his full support and contributed his thoughts on Commerce Education for our Golden Jubilee Souviner !!!
Sir was always eager to know about my career, ups and downs ; when Iwas100 % sure about the secrecy and his proper guidance ! Recently, Sir readily accepted our invitation to visit TMV campus , took a round in the Business Laboratory and addressed our students and faculty members !!! Again , it was an extremely elderly and supportive experience of all of us !!!
Even on a personal note , Dr. Shejwalkar Sir was always kind and supportive in my career path , listen to my personal issues and boost me for taking new academic challenges !!!
Dr. Shejwalkar Sir is a unique example of Commerce teachers who developed and maintained excellent rapport with the world of business and industry ! Poona Merchants Chamber and the MCCIA are the two solid pillars in testimony to that !

I bow my head and bend my knees to pay deep homage to Dr. Shejwalkar Sir , as he really lived Commerce Education !!!

Unknown said...

So smooth free flowing write up to indeed a great modern educationalist. Thank you Sir.

Pinak Kulkarni said...
This comment has been removed by the author.
Pinak Kulkarni said...

A great walk down the memory lane!

Unknown said...

Very well written!! True expressions of words of the great management guru will be an inspiration to the persons like you could not meet him. Dr. Bhopatkar you have unfolded his exemplary qualities in a very simple and affectionate words!!

Unknown said...

Excellent, sir. I am really touched by the beauty of your write-up.

Leon said...

Though I never knew Dr. shejwalkar, I do faintly remember he making an unexpected visit to IMDR campus while I along with a couple of other students were in your office. I remember you were delighted to meet him and seeked his blessings ( not sure but perhaps it was your birthday). He quickly spoke for a couple of minutes and left. I realised that you both shared a special bond in that interaction.
RIP dr. Shejwalkar

Tapan Kandalgaonkar said...

Very well written. Candid glimpse of the persona of the great man. May the soul RIP.

Unknown said...

Sir,it is really the end of an era.. An era of intellectual and academic activism in a way ! The concept of an autonomous IMDR itself showed his vision and capacity to take risks .And as you have rightly described he made it as an icon of sucess because of his extraordinary managerial capacities...so in a way his own life should become a case study..a learning opportunity for the students of management ! As far as I am concerned I have always considered IMDR as a life changing experience for me bringing a much required conceptual clarity and crystallization of thoughts...As a great institution builder he created such proactive ventures during our course which were uncommon in the milieu existing at that time...one such example of independent mindset is involvement of intellectual stalwarts like you...Prof Anand Karandikar..Prof Mrs Dhanak in not only teaching but also in various sharpening exercises as part of the curricular activity not as cocurricular one ! I too have witnessed the intellectual freedom he had deliberately created for the faculty and it's immense benefits to us...My deep condolences on his passing away...Many generations of managers would always remain indebted to him...and am sure would make him proud by carrying his legacy forward...our heartfelt salutes to the first management Guru of Maharashtra ! Regards.Pramod Phalnikar

रमेश said...

Sir, read your article more than once to understand the magnitude of Dr Shejwalkar’s persona. We were fortunate enough to be learning our ropes under his guidance during the most formative years of our lives. Those two years at IMDR gave us truly a lifetime of education. As you rightly pointed out, much before the word ‘autonomy’ was in vogue, he had created the institution with absolute clarity of thought and the processes involved. We were too naive to understand it then, but over the years, as we became experienced in our corporate lives, we gradually understood the nuances of ‘management’ learnt at IMDR. The freedom of thinking (as a student) beyond the books was something we were not used to then, but that certainly helped us develop our thinking process on a wider canvas. In retrospect, we feel really privileged to have studied at IMDR.
There are people who remotely control your conscience and not let you fall. He was one such person for sure. With just two years of direct association with Dr Shejwalkar, we feel the void deep within us. You being so close to him and so trusted by him over so many years, one can understand your feelings too, which you have penned so well. My heartfelt tributes and Pranam to Dr Shejwalkar. May his pious soul attain Moksha.

Unknown said...

Sir, after reading the article saw how some of the decisions you took and why you took them at IMDR. The orientation was like the solid building block. My Respect and Tribute to Dr. Shejwalkar. Really thankful to him to provide me with an opportunity to learn Management the correct way

Abhijeet said...

Sir,

It is really a nice article on Shejwalkar Sir's life and way of functioning.

Abhijeet said...

True
I do.

NDK said...

Dear APB .. We always heard of Dr Shejwalkar as an eminent educationist and felt his principles in an invisible way embedded in the walls of IMDR.
It is indeed a great tribute written by you and brings forth the greatness of such a simple man. Somewhere when we try and live a life with similar principles we feel connected with him.

Abhimanyu said...

Thank you for your beautiful note Sir.
Warm regards,
Abhimanyu

Unknown said...

Gratitude