Tamil Nadu

Bigil podu for these fans: 2 farmers’ loans settled

They say, the good old days of compassion and kindness are dead. If you are thinking on the same lines, think again.

S Raja

THENI: They say, the good old days of compassion and kindness are dead. If you are thinking on the same lines, think again. Meet the fans of movie actor Vijay who made a difference by paying up the loans of two farmers.

The occasion is the celebration organised by the fans in connection with the success of the actor’s latest flick, Bigil. In the humble ceremony organised in a coconut grove at Karuvelnayakkanpatti where crackers, milk abishegams, poojas and hoardings were all absent, the fans honoured the two farmers — Arumugam of Jayamangalam and Muniyandi of Mariyaipatti village near Pallapatti — and handed over to them the settlement receipts. 

This deviation from the ‘usual track’ is the brainchild of District Deputy Secretary of Thalapathy Vijay Makkal Eyakkam (People’s Movement) Tamilselvan who is serving Indian Army in Assam, president Pandy, district treasurer Nanthakumar, district organiser Vembu and district advisor Kasi Prabu. 
Once they finalised the celebration plan, they selected the two from the list of farmers, having pending loans at various primary agriculture banks, handed over to them by farmers’ association leader Kannan.  
Arumugam, who has 90 cents of land, has cultivated plantains after taking a loan of `46,000 from

Jayamangalam Primary Agriculture Cooperative Credit Society on March 7. 
Meanwhile, Muniyandi has taken two acres of land on lease and has raised maize after getting a loan of `60,000 from Koduvilarpatti Primary Agriculture cooperative bank on March 21, 2017. Though he repaid two installments (`6,000 each), he could not pay the other installments due to his poor financial background. 

Despite the financial crisis he is in, Muniyandi provided for the education of his four daughters and married off three of them. His youngest daughter Vidhya, a civil engineer, is at his house at present.  
Talking to Express, Muniyandi said that he was planning to repay the loan after selling the maize crops. “Now I am able to enjoy the harvest,” he added. “This will make other fans also to serve the society better,” said Pandy of Theni.

Hindu man stabbed, set on fire in Bangladesh, escapes by jumping into pond; fourth attack in two weeks

Did candle held close to wooden ceiling spark blaze? Swiss ski resort town reels as dozens feared dead

RBI says economy resilient, banks stronger but warns of rising risks from unsecured loans, stablecoins

Four arrested at Indo-Nepal border in Bihar for illegal entry, fake currency recovered

Drop in terror attacks in Pakistan since Afghan border closure, 2025 most violent in decade

SCROLL FOR NEXT