Word Matters

A HEART THAT WILL FOREVER BE WITH THE PLANTATIONS
Incorporated Society of Planters
Planter Stories
V. Ranganathan, 97, shared that his heart will forever be with the plantations that have granted him much gratification in the sunset of his life. In the hour-long phone interview, this astute nonagenarian lets on nothing of his age, methodically and meticulously laying down the colourful milestones that mark a career spanning eight decades. As he lists the career positions and living localities of his eight children, 16 grandchildren and 16 great grandchildren, one is left in awe at how Ranganathan has embraced life in all its glory and fullness.
A Daily Love
“By seven in the morning I am in my Jeep driving 40 kilometres to Ladang Mon Repose in Sabak Bernam, Perak. There, I walk two to three kilometres overseeing the harvesting, transporting of the palm oil fruits to the mill and other day-to-day activities such as spraying and weeding; and by noon, I make the hour drive back home to Teluk Intan,” said Ranganathan who enthusiastically laid out his daily routine from Mondays to Fridays.
Ranganathan is the Incorporated Society of Planters’ (ISP) oldest living member who turns 97 this year.
In the hour-long phone interview, this astute nonagenarian lets on nothing of his age, methodically and meticulously laying down the colourful milestones that mark a career spanning eight decades. As he lists the career positions and living localities of his eight children, 16 grandchildren and 16 great grandchildren, one is left in awe at how Ranganathan has embraced life in all its glory and fullness.
Eventful Beginnings
V. Ranganathan was born in 1923 in the Trichinopoly District in Madras India to parents T.M. Venkatesan and T.V. Ramarathanamal. His father left for Malaya to work at the rubber plantations, and thereafter made arrangements for the family to join him. At nine, Ranganathan began his schooling at the Anglo-Chinese School in Teluk Intan, Perak.
After obtaining his Senior Cambridge school certificate in 1939, Ranganathan joined the Cicely Group (estate) Hospital as a probationary dresser.
Soon after, the Second World War loomed; and the Japanese occupation in Malaya brought forth both challenging and uncertain days.
During this time, Ranganathan kept busy assisting wherever he could in the wellbeing of those around him. His initiatives were noticed by the Japanese who requested for him to accompany them when they visited other estates, and this he did, until he received a letter that threatened harm to him and his family if he did not stop. “The Japanese masters gave me a revolver for protection, which I politely declined, and wasted no time returning to Cicely Estate,” enthused Ranganathan.
After the war, Ranganathan was appointed hospital assistant at Gloucester Estate and gradually gained more administrative responsibilities. He vividly recalled the post war years 1948 to 1949; a period when the Communist threats were real and imminent. “One night we woke up to gun shots, and before I knew what was happening, a bullet had come through to the bedroom,” shared Ranganathan who explained that the Communists were firing at the house of the Estate Manager, a Scotsman, which was just next to his. “These near death experiences are hard to forget, but it made us so much the stronger having lived through them.”
