New Delhi: "Go and stand in the economy class queue. This line is for business class travelers," a well-heeled lady told Sudha Murthy at the International Heathrow airport in London.
The chairman of Infosys Foundation was at the airport wearing a salwar kameez, which perhaps made her a misfit in the queue in question.
But, what eventually got Sudhas goat was when she was called a "cattle-class person".
That was when the otherwise calm 66-year-old wife of industrialist Narayana Murthy decided to give her fellow traveler a piece of her mind.
Taking from her personal experiences, Sudha, in her new book Three Thousand Stitches, sheds light on some of the prevailing biases in the society.
"Class does not mean huge possession of money. Mother Teresa was a classy woman. So is Manjula Bhargava, a great mathematician of Indian origin.
"The concept that you automatically gain class by acquiring money is an outdated thought process," she writes in the book.
In an interview to PTI, she said she could have shown her boarding pass and cleared all doubts about her "class" in no time, but she waited to find out how, according to the lady, she was not befitting for business class standards.
"Soon I realized it was because of my dress!"
Ironically, Sudha ran into the same lady later in the day.
From her Indo-Western silk outfit paired with an expensive pair of heels, and complemented with a Gucci handbag at the airport, the latter had slipped into a plain khadi saree to suit the theme of a meeting where Sudha was pitching Infosys Foundation to sponsor funds for the overhaul of a government school.
Needless to say, the lady was shocked to see Sudha chairing the meeting.
"The clothes were a reminder of the stereotype that is still rampant today. Just like one is expected to wear the finest of silks for a wedding, social workers must present themselves in a plain and uninteresting manner," she writes.
24/07/17 Manik Gupta/PTI/India Today
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The chairman of Infosys Foundation was at the airport wearing a salwar kameez, which perhaps made her a misfit in the queue in question.
But, what eventually got Sudhas goat was when she was called a "cattle-class person".
That was when the otherwise calm 66-year-old wife of industrialist Narayana Murthy decided to give her fellow traveler a piece of her mind.
Taking from her personal experiences, Sudha, in her new book Three Thousand Stitches, sheds light on some of the prevailing biases in the society.
"Class does not mean huge possession of money. Mother Teresa was a classy woman. So is Manjula Bhargava, a great mathematician of Indian origin.
"The concept that you automatically gain class by acquiring money is an outdated thought process," she writes in the book.
In an interview to PTI, she said she could have shown her boarding pass and cleared all doubts about her "class" in no time, but she waited to find out how, according to the lady, she was not befitting for business class standards.
"Soon I realized it was because of my dress!"
Ironically, Sudha ran into the same lady later in the day.
From her Indo-Western silk outfit paired with an expensive pair of heels, and complemented with a Gucci handbag at the airport, the latter had slipped into a plain khadi saree to suit the theme of a meeting where Sudha was pitching Infosys Foundation to sponsor funds for the overhaul of a government school.
Needless to say, the lady was shocked to see Sudha chairing the meeting.
"The clothes were a reminder of the stereotype that is still rampant today. Just like one is expected to wear the finest of silks for a wedding, social workers must present themselves in a plain and uninteresting manner," she writes.
24/07/17 Manik Gupta/PTI/India Today
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