Read the book ‘Three Thousand Stitches’
by Sudha Murthy. It is a beautiful
collection of many interesting incidents (actually, 11 anecdotes) in Sudha
Murthy’s life as a young girl, as a college student, and as Chairperson of
Infosys foundation.
The book starts with the story
“Three Thousand Stitches” which talks about how Sudha helped a group of women
to leave their wretched profession and turn into ladies with respectable jobs
and income. However, the path of helping 3000 women was not a bed of roses.
Sudha got hit with chappals and tomatoes when she tries to approach the women
first. Later, with a little mentoring and help from her dad, she broke ice with
the ladies. During the rehabilitation phase, Sudha receives death threats and
acid is thrown over some women who leave their old jobs. At the end of 15
growing years and three years of starting and running their own banks with 80
lakhs deposit, the ladies want to celebrate. They request Sudha Murthy to be
the chief guest of the function. It is there they hand over Sudha an
embroidered bedspread with stitch designs by all the 3000 women. That is how
the first story and the book get their name. The takeaway from this story is perseverance
against all odds exhibited by both Sudha and the women. The book cover has a
pictorial representation of a bedspread. Recently, i read that it is the photo of the actual shawl.
Sudha later moves on to other
incidents in her life. She explains her travels around the world with joy. She
gets free food and discounts at many places abroad when she tells that she is
from the land of Bollywood heroes and heroines. She feels Bollywood people have
been our brand ambassadors across the world. She also lets us in on her secret
of watching 365 movies in one specific year (that is one movie per day) as a
young girl. It is funny to note how young kids were allowed only censored
versions of the movie and how she becomes bold enough to voice her own
interests about movies.
She explains how she gets to know
about Alcoholics Anonymous (AA) and how they help and mentor people. The story
of each alcoholic is different, but a common thread is how they move from being
casual social drinkers to hopeless addicts. But, they do revive and live a life
with dignity.
There is a story about how her
doctor father helps an unwed mother to pursue a career as a nurse. Later, the
nurse educates her daughter to be a doctor. Due to a chance meeting after
several years, Sudha’s father R.H Kulkarni finds that the daughter of the nurse
has built a hospital named R.H diagnostics.
There is also a story about Indian
vegetables and their actual country of origin. She explains how tomato which is
considered very Indian did not have its roots in India but in Mexico.
She also narrates about a typical
day as a Chairperson of Infosys foundation. It shows how she manages both
genuine and limp requests for grants and help. For some
requests of help, she believes that an initial disappointment is better than a
disagreement at the end.
Yet another story describes her
challenges and accomplishments as the only female engineering student in her
college. It is yet another story of how she overcame social taboos against
women and set out on a career path she dreamt of.
Of course, there is the famous
‘cattle class’ story that has been making wild rounds online. There are few
more interesting stories all told in her unique and simple style. Her
observations about the incidents in her life are noteworthy. The book has 179 pages and costs Rs.250.
Amazon India offers it at Rs.151. Go for it.
Peep into the world of ordinary people who have extraordinary lives.
2 comments:
Class review...
you did justice to your read and the author.
Thank you, Sathish Kumar. So glad you liked the post :)
Post a Comment