Indian mourners shave heads in show of respect for Tamil Nadu leader Jayalalithaa

Men wearing white dhotis lined up on plastic chairs beside hastily-erected police barricades around the grave to have their heads shaved, a Hindu mourning tradition usually reserved for the death of a close relative.

A supporter of India's popular politician and former film actress, Jayaram Jayalalithaa, weeps as she gets her head shaved to mourn the death of the leader in Chennai, India on December 7, 2016. Aijaz Rahi/AP Photo
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CHENNAI // Thousands of ordinary Indians flocked to the seaside grave of Jayalalithaa Jayaram on Wednesday, a day after a burial ceremony restricted to politicians, film stars and relatives of the reclusive but hugely popular leader.

Men wearing white dhotis lined up on plastic chairs beside hastily-erected police barricades around the grave to have their heads shaved, a Hindu mourning tradition usually reserved for the death of a close relative.

Many of the mourners were poor women who had travelled long distances in intense heat to pay final respects to the revered former chief minister of the southern state of Tamil Nadu, who died on Monday at the age of 68.

Among them was Vanita, 50, who ekes out a living rolling the cheap Indian cigarettes known as bidis.

Vanita, who like many people in southern India uses only one name, said she had travelled to the state capital Chennai to see Jayalalithaa many times, and once asked for her help getting treatment for a heart complaint.

“She made sure I got the operation I needed. She even gave me money for medicine. And the next time I met her, she remembered me and asked how I was,” said Vanita, pulling her sari to one side to reveal the scar from her surgery.

The former movie star, a populist champion of the poor, was buried on Tuesday alongside MG Ramachandran, her on-screen lover and predecessor as chief minister, at a ceremony attended by the stars of the film world and top political leaders including prime minister Narendra Modi.

Media reports said her nephew was among the few relatives who attended, and there has been intense speculation about who stands to inherit the vast wealth she accrued during her time in power.

An estimated one million people lined the streets to watch her glass coffin transported to the burial site amid tight security in a city that has seen outbreaks of violence after the deaths of past leaders.

One elderly woman screamed and beat her head repeatedly with her hands, banging herself against the police barricades around the grave.

“She took care of everything and we wanted for nothing,” said 47-year-old Paramashiva after having his head shaved.

* Agence France-Presse