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Anthony Parakal, the man who wrote 4,000 letters to editors, dies in Mumbai

Anthony Parakal began writing letters in 1955 and his last one was published on 12 December 2005 in the Time magazine. 

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New Delhi: Anthony Parakal, the man who became popular by writing over 4,000 letters to the editors of esteemed publications, died earlier this week in Mumbai’s Malad.

The 89-year-old, who passed away Tuesday, was a “mini-celebrity” of sorts among mediapersons of the pre-internet and SMS era. He was seen as a prolific man, who wanted to change the world through his letters to the editors, written over a period of six decades.

Parakal began writing in 1955 with a letter to The Times of India before calling it quits in 2005, to devote his time to “pick arguments with his wife”.

But the TOI had received another letter from Parakal in 2012. It was written in longhand and said: “Having lost my vision and memory, I am reduced to a used match-stick.”

His letters have been kept carefully in more than a dozen files.

Tributes have poured in for this letter-man. Journalist Naresh Fernandes took to Twitter Thursday to pay homage. “For generations of newspaper readers in Bombay, this man was a legend,” said Fernandes.

Sharing Fernandes’ tweet, India Today anchor Rajdeep Sardesai wrote: “Wow, Naresh you have revived a lot of fond memories from early TOI days; he would badger me with a letter a week (if not more)!! The nicer, more innocent world of letter writers before social media took over! RIP Anthony Parakal.”

Another Twitter user, Vijay Sankaran, said: “I still remember Anthony Parakal and many other regulars from a time when reading letters to the editor was still a thing.”


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Last letter published in Time

Parakal, a former railway employee, had come to Mumbai from Kerala in 1954. He soon got into the habit of visiting the People’s Library at Chhatrapati Shivaji Terminus to improve his proficiency in English and began writing letters to newspaper editors.

A 2006 profile of Parakal in the DNA, states that his files have personal replies from Morarjee Desai, Gulzarilal Nanda and Rajiv Gandhi.

In 1993, Parakal’s name found its way into the Limca Book Of Records. The All India Press Writers Association had also honoured him with the ‘Knight of Conscience’ award in 1999.

His last letter was published on 12 December 2005 in the Time magazine.


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2 COMMENTS

  1. Sanpada resident and freelancer for 50 years, C.K. Subramaniam had a chance to celebrate his 70th birthday with a celebrity like Mahendra Singh Dhoni. Shri Subramaniam is the freelance journo of the satellite city, who is considered a journalist of the millennium by many. Wishing a happy birthday to Mahi and Sanpada’s C.K. Subramaniam. His writings found pages in all magazines and newspapers including The Cricketer International (London). His 50 plus albums really speaks volume of his writing skills. He is a cricketer, coach, umpire, statistician, scorer, cartoonist a freelancer.
    His first letter published in the year 1971 – Valiant Venkat’- in the year 1971 and he never looked back. please encourage him.

    JAYANTHY SUBRAMANIAM A-8 MILLENNIUM TOWERS FLAT 5 SECTOR 9 SANPADA NAVI MUMBAI MOB 7977825401 AND 7889416305

  2. Here is another enthusiastic letter writer from first in Ghaziabad followed by Chennai then Coimbatore and now in Navi Mumbai. TOI first published my letter in the year 1971- Valiant Venkat- in Delhi issue and never looked back. In 50 years he preserved all his writings in 50 scrapbooks and I am called scrapbooks Subramaniam from Sanpada Please promote my writing ability on my 70th birthday on 7/7- Sharing my birthday with MS Dhoni. Thanks Regards

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