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V.Balasubramani
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For some ‘Chennaities’ age is not a barrier to fight for good causes. Chennai has more such doyens.
“Carrying forward Besant Nagar’s causes

Eighty-seven-year-old Kamakshi Subramaniyan is best known for her struggle for the revamping of Schmidt Memorial
CHENNAI: Octogenarian Kamakshi Subramaniyan takes her favourite window seat in her house and gazes out at the roadside park she helped develop on Fourth Avenue in Besant Nagar.
“I am now the watchdog for this park. I make sure that it is watered every day, and the fencing is intact,” she says.
The park was developed by the Chennai Corporation on her 80th birthday, seven years ago. “After eight years of struggle to get the park set up, it felt like a birthday gift,” she says.
It is difficult to tell that she is 87 years old; although her face is lined, her voice and demeanour belie her age. “There are so many causes to fight for, so I do not have the time to think about my age,” she says.
Known to the neighbourhood as ‘Kamakshi Paati’, Ms. Subramaniyan has spent the last 15 years helping Besant Nagar’s residents. She is best known for her struggle to renovate the Schmidt Memorial on Elliots Beach.
Her journey started in 1985, when she moved to Chennai after 30 years in New Delhi. “A group of us got together to try and preserve the area on which Rajaji Bhavan was set up, and use it as a park,” she said. She spearheaded a signature campaign, and the matter went to court. “Even though we lost, it was a starting point for me,” she adds.
Read more at: Carrying forward Besant Nagar?s causes - The Hindu