In 1998, a strange thing happened. A young couple from Hyderabad, both software engineers, came to Srikakulam. They had conceived a child via IVF. The embryo had been implanted on a specific date in May. They asked Krishna Murthy: “What is the Janma Nakshatra of our unborn child, according to the date of implantation?”
“One hundred years,” she said to the assembled family, priests, and villagers. “The Sun has completed a hundred journeys through the twelve Rashis . Jupiter has completed one and two-thirds cycles of sixty years. The Moon has waned and waxed 1,236 times. And yet, the Panchangam remains. Not because the stars compel us, but because we choose to dance with them.” telugu panchangam 100 years
But in 1935, a crack appeared. A young man from Madras, educated in the English system, returned to Srikakulam. He stood outside Venkataraya’s house and laughed. In 1998, a strange thing happened