Bhatlapenumarru (AP): Even the history books do not have much on Bhatlapenumarru, a tiny village amid lush green fields in Krishna district of Andhra Pradesh, though it was where a national legend, Pingali Venkaiah, was born. A two-story building built a few years ago with money pooled by the villagers and some philanthropists, which is used mostly as a community hall, is the only memorial' that stands in the name of Pingali Venkaiah, the architect of the Indian National Flag.
A life-size statue of Venkaiah, along with that of Mahatma Gandhi, greets visitors at the village centre. Venkaiah was a close follower of the Mahatma and it was the latter who approved the national flag designed by him, at the Indian National Congress session in Vijayawada in 1921.
Venkaiah's family and other kin left the village for other places decades ago and their connection with Bhatlapenumarru is now only nostalgic. For the villagers too, Venkaiah was generations apart, though he is still revered with pride and devotion.
On August 2, the 146th birth anniversary of Venkaiah was celebrated on a grand scale in the village, with the locals displaying patriotic fervour and paying glowing tributes to the legendary son of the soil. The villagers carried a 300-ft tricolour round the village while the district administration organised flag hoisting and cultural events.
"Bhatlapenumarru is like any other village, except that it is now rather known by its legend. The village, with a population of about 3,500, basks in the glory only of Pingali Venkaiah's name," observed a local citizen Koteswara Rao. A few years ago, the then MP from Vijayawada, Lagadapati Rajagopal, organised a Tiranga Run in memory of Pingali Venkaiah and to give Bhatlapenumarru a pride of place on the national map.
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