A viral video on social media has
put the spotlight back on Ramu S, who has been selling simple, home-style meals
at his tiffin centre for less than ₹10 for over five
decades
At 85, Ramu S is unstoppable. He
wakes up early to ensure that his Valli Tiffin Centre near Anna bus stand opens
at 7 am sharp. His customers will be waiting to enjoy piping hot idlis, fluffy uttapams, and
ghee-laden pongal with coconut or tomato chutney, and sambar for ₹10 each. After 10 am his focus shifts to preparing the
afternoon meal consisting of rice, sambar, rasam, butter milk, a poriyal,
and pickle. Not less than 300 people drop in daily between noon and 3.30 pm to
either take away or sit in the eight-seater food shack and eat the simple and
homely meal.
In a city like Madurai with a
vibrant food culture, Ramu Servai stands tall with his hole-in-the-wall eatery
located in a commercially prime area dotted with fancy hotels and restaurants.
It is so because only in his eatery, you get a wholesome afternoon meal just
for ₹10.
And Ramu thatha — as he
is fondly called — has a heart of gold. He has no intention of making money by
selling food to those who cannot afford a good healthy meal a day. “My wife and
I started by selling idlis and vadais for ten Paise each in
1965. Then, she started cooking full meals and we had two regular customers. We
sold it for ₹1.25 and offered the same for free to
the needy,” he says. Soon, their customers swelled in numbers.
The death of his wife in 2015 has
shattered thatha. “I promised Puranathammal that I will continue to run
the eatery, come what may,” he says with moist eyes. His friend, trained by his
wife, cooks the food now and Ramu thatha continues to sell it at the
same nominal price. But the promise he made to his wife is not easy to keep. “I
don’t buy the ration rice but purchase it in the open market for ₹43 a kilogram,” he says.
“Nowhere else will you get a full
and tasty meal for ₹10,” says S Shakthivel from Karur who
regularly visits Madurai for work and rarely misses an opportunity to eat
here. People who can’t pay ₹10 for the meal
are requested to pay at least ₹2. “This way, they respect the food they eat,”
says Ramu. Many eat without paying at all, and he usually refrains from
charging senior citizens unless they insist on paying. “I only want to
see satisfied faces leave my place.” His story has spread wide, prompting well
wishers to donate in kind. “Acts like these strengthen my will to keep going,”
he asserts and remembers his landlord, who has kept the shop’s rent at ₹500 per month for more than three decades now, with gratitude.
“Other shopkeepers around me pay at least ten times more,” he informs us.
His customers are an interesting
mix. Medical college hostellers and other students from the vicinity, patients
and their attendants, police personnel, and travellers in transit turn up in
equal numbers, as do farmers and hordes of petitioners who come to meet the
Collector, migrant labourers, loaders and rickshaw pullers, and the
homeless.Staff from the Collectorate nearby and other offices regularly drop in
for a take away. Many, he says, also offer to pay ₹50 instead
of ₹10 for the meal. Despite his difficulties, Ramu refuses to take extra rupee
from anyone.
Every day, he gets 30 kilograms
of rice, five litres of sambar, four litres of rasam, 2.5 kilograms of
vegetables cooked. Ramu thatha spends from his pocket on days there
are no donors and if there is a shortage of items. And he distributes extra
food among the disadvantaged who line the temple nearby. There is a silent
determination and compassion in what he does.The world has begun to take notice
of thatha. Several YouTube videos have been made on him but he remains
unaffected by the attention.
What affects him is that he has
outlived two of his sons and a grandson. And also for the first time in 54
years, he was forced to close his eatery last week. “I had fever and many
customers came enquiring,” he says. June 9 was also his wife’s fifth death
anniversary. “I renewed my promise to her: That I will continue to sell the
cheapest meals possible and serve all without discrimination.”
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