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Russy Karanjia, India’s tabloid guru, dies at 95

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Express news service

Posted: Feb 02, 2008 at 0035 hrs IST

Mumbai, February 1 India’s original tabloid guru, veteran journalist Russy Karanjia died at his Mumbai residence on Friday. He was 95.

Founder of Blitz, which captured popular imagination with its screaming headlines and campaigns, Karanjia faced bans and endless court cases but continuously courted controversy.

“He was just down with fever. He died in his sleep,” said his niece, Virginia Rai, who also worked as a journalist with Blitz. Karanjia had launched The Daily, a morninger, but that too had to shut down.

Karanjia is survived by his daughter Rita Mehta.

One of the first campaigns his Blitz undertook in pre-Independence India was against the order to hang Communist leader K P R Gopalan in a Kerala peasant uprising. “GOPALAN MUST NOT HANG,” screamed the headline. The government later revoked the High Court order. His newspaper ran campaigns on the Commander Nanavati case, collecting signatures for the mercy plea of the naval officer charged with murder, and the Haridas Mundhra-LIC Conspiracy, which rocked Parliament.

At Karanjia’s Framrose Court residence in South Mumbai today, relatives and a few friends gathered in the afternoon to remember a man who defined a new stream of journalism in India.

V Gangadhar, who was a columnist with Blitz for several years, said: “He always encouraged me to write bold columns, a complete opposite of other editors of those times, since many did not accept satire.”

Calling Karanjia, a “human journalist” as opposed to an intellectual one, Gangadhar said he believed in constant change. “He was prepared to do anything new, untested. Even though he was accused of yellow journalism, he exposed many scandals.”

Gangadhar recounted an anecdote. “He strongly believed in Yoga. When a yogi walked into his office and claimed that he could walk on water, Russy without fearing about the goodwill of the paper encouraged the yogi and put up a banner of Blitz at the event. After two steps on the water, the yogi sank. That is Karanjia for you. He was not worried about reputation, he laughed out loud with those present at the event. But one thing was clear—this man had the guts to try something new.”

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