Honorific Prefix: | Professor[1] |
B. E. Vijayam | |
Honorific Suffix: | Ph.D. (Osmania)[2] |
Birth Date: | 1933 11, df=yes[3] |
Birth Place: | Giddalur under Madras Presidency (present day Andhra Pradesh) |
Death Place: | Secunderabad, Telangana, India |
Other Names: | Bunyan Edmund Vijayam |
Citizenship: | Indian |
Nationality: | Indian |
Fields: | Sedimentology |
Workplaces: | |
Patrons: | Fulbright Program |
Education: | B. Sc. (Andhra), M. Sc. (Andhra), Ph. D. (Osmania), Postdoctoral researcher (Northwestern) |
Alma Mater: | |
Thesis1 Title: | Sedimentation in the upper proterozoic near Kurnool[4] |
Thesis Year: | 1965 |
Doctoral Advisor: | Prof. S. Balakrishna[5] |
Academic Advisors: | Prof. C. Mahadevan,[6] Prof. U. Aswathanarayana |
Known For: | Teaching and research in applied Geology |
Awards: | Prof. Bal Dattatreya Tilak Endowment Lecture (1995), Indian National Science Academy, New Delhi[7] |
Website: | http://bevijayam.com/ |
Bunyan Edmund Vijayam (1933[3] –2019) was an Indian geologist with major contribution to the field of Geology. A 1958–1959 Technical Report of the Council of Scientific and Industrial Research heralded the news that new developments had taken place in scientific matters led by a team of researchers at the Andhra University,[8]
Even as a student of geology at Andhra University, Waltair, Vijayam and his fellow researchers were already carrying out research in the field.[9] During 1954–1958, Vijayam had carried out research on geology in parts of Kurnool district.[9] Vijayam's research articles began appearing in geological and other inter-disciplinary scientific journals for more than three decades and continue to be referred by the present generation[10] of Geologists.
Vijayam stood witness[11] to Christ[12] and inspired many. During the Fifth National Convention of the Christian Businessmen's Committee in 1987[12] held in Hyderabad, he spoke on the theme You shall be witnesses unto me and shared dais with Archbishop Samineni Arulappa,[12] Member of parliament, Lok Sabha Marjorie Godfrey and Policeman G. Alfred,[12] IPS. Vijayam also led honorary initiatives towards Christian missions by equipping[13] the Laity not only with knowledge of the Gospel, but also a means of livelihood was recognised by Theologians, comprising the Missiologist, Roger Hedlund,[14] SB, and Bishop Ezra Sargunam,[15] ECI. During the 2000s, the Christian artist P. Solomon Raj, AELC made an Empirical research highlighting the new and indigenous missions,[16] and Vijayam's effort falls in such line of indigenous missions to equip the grassroot Evangelists, which even the Old Testament Scholar, Victor Premasagar, CSI appreciated such initiatives.[16]
Vijayam was born in 1933[3] in Giddaluru in erstwhile Madras Presidency during the colonial era to Bunyan Joseph,[3] an Evangelist and grew up in rural India[3] in the drought-prone Rayalaseema zone in southern India. The Church made an impact in the life of Vijayam as those were the days' of early Christians in the Telugu hinterland where the Catholic[17] and the Protestant Missions had already set foot. Among the Protestant missions, the American Baptist Foreign Missionary Society, the London Missionary Society (LMS) and the Society for the Propagation of the Gospel (SPG) were the Christian missions at work in the Rayalaseema area. Vijayam grew up in a Christian household[2] in mission compounds of the Churches as his father was a Priest, Canon and later Bishop. When Vijayam moved to Waltair in the 1950s, he also took part in the fellowship gatherings of the Canadian Baptist Ministries[3] (Convention of Baptist Churches of Northern Circars).
After initial studies in schools across Andhra Pradesh, wherever his father (Bunyan Joseph) was transferred, Vijayam moved to Madras Christian College, Tambaram for a pre-University course (PUC). For undergraduate studies, he enrolled at Andhra University, Waltair, in 1953[3] and pursued graduate and postgraduate courses specialising in Geology. He was a direct student of Professor Calamur Mahadevan[6] and U. Aswathanarayana and imbibed the subtle nuances for research which infused[6] in him a flair for scientific research throughout his career in geological sciences. One of his companions during his study days at Waltair included the Theologian G. D. Melanchthon, AELC. Vijayam was awarded with an M. Sc. in 1957.[18]
Vijayam also pursued a Ph. D. programme during his early years at Osmania University, Secunderabad, on the topic Sedimentation in the upper proterozoic near Kurnool[4] under the supervision of Prof. S. Balakrishna[5] and was awarded a doctorate in the year 1965.[4] He also spent time at Northwestern University, Evanston (United States) as a Postdoctoral researcher through the benevolence of Fulbright Program and also published a research article, Tectonic framework of sedimentation in the northwestern part of the San Andreqa fault zone at Park field, California[19] on his return to India.
Vijayam joined the ranks of Geological Survey of India in 1961.[20] He then moved to academics and joined Osmania University, Secunderabad, A State-run university, where he also pursued a Ph. D. programme. In 1965[4] and became a lecturer in the same university. Over the years, he rose to the ranks of a reader and professor and in 1984,[3] he became head of the Department of Geology and chairperson of the board of studies.[3]
During the three decades, beginning with the 1960s, Vijayam researched together with his fellow geologists and brought out different aspects of the Earth's rich resources to the fore. He was also managing editor of Journal of Indian Academy of Geoscience during the 1970s.[21]
In addition to his academic pursuits, Vijayam was involved in founding entities as a means to bring in development in rural areas. Vijayam himself hailed from a rural family[3] and his career pursuits brought him to an urban setting. In spite of it, he chose to better the lives of those in special circumstances. Towards this end, he drew talent from universities as a matter of service[22] and also sought the partnership of United Nations Development Programme,[23] Government of India,[24] and other[25] funding agencies.[26] In 1982,[23] he also went to Bangla Desh to see the work of Social Entrepreneur and Nobel laureate Muhammad Yunus.[23] In 2012, two sets of researchers working independent of each other had written about the work of Vijayam beyond the portals of learning.
A University of Hyderabad researcher, Gadde Peda Rattaiah referred to the work of Vijayam in the context of partnerships with United Nations Development Programme and writes,[23]
Similarly, a group of Earth Scientists regarded the work of Vijayam in connecting Geology with development and write,[27]
During 1978[28] Vijayam founded[29] Mission to Encourage Rural Development in Backward Areas (MERIBA)[3] as an entity to bring forth development in select areas of drought-prone Rayalaseema area of Andhra Pradesh amidst caste-ridden hegemony. The work of MERIBA was taken up in Kurnool district in the villages of Balapanuru, Kouluru, Neravada, Bhimaram and Yerraguntla.[23] For organising Dalits[29] through participatory management initiatives through Sarvodaya Sanghams,[23] Vijayam's entity was also locked in horns with those oppressing the Dalits. There was indeed some resistance to the reformation that MERIBA ought to bring in and even the State executive was found to be in tandem with those oppressing the Dalits. It took judicial intervention[3] to get the oppressors behind bars, but in no time they were freed and were ready to seek vengeance, but for the timely presence of Vijayam who sought reconciliation, an act which stunned the oppressors.[3] Incidentally, Nagi Reddy,[23] an advocate by profession, became MERIBA's first project director, and there was renewed activism in taking legal recourse in curbing atroticities on Dalits through SC/ST (Prevention of Atrocities) Act.[23]
By 1982,[30] Vijayam founded Peoples Research Organization for Grass-root Environmental Scientific Services[31] (PROGRESS)[32] as a platform to share the benefits of technological advancement[33] with the rural[34] poor.[35] Select case studies and stories relating to the success of PROGRESS had been documented in 1994 by National Afforestation and Eco-Development Board[36] and there also had been significant contribution by scientists working in PROGRESS to the environmental studies. In 1996,[37] P. Sita Janki and K. Sumalini contributed a paper entitled Enhancement of seed germination in Amla (Emblica officinalis Gaertn.) by different growth regulator treatments[38] that appeared in the Journal for Tropical Forestry.[39] A 2007 report of the University Grants Commission (UGC) listed PROGRESS among those NGOs [40] supported by it in advancing Rural development. PROGRESS was a member in the National Institute of Hydrology, Roorkee.[32]
The Theologians, F. Hrangkhuma and Sebastian Kim had recognised the efforts of Vijayam towards Tentmaking.[41] At the same time, Roger Hedlund had acknowledged Vijayam's efforts towards founding TENT in equipping individuals with means of livelihood as well as basic theological principles.[14] It was in 1985[42] that Vijayam founded[43] Training in Evangelism Needs and Technology (TENT), intertwining technology with theology for ministerial advancement, which the notable Entomologist P. Judson has also been associated.[44]