The posting has a queer impression on me. In the end it looks as if we are pointing our finger towards the people of his state for their failure to remember him [and let me get it clear also that I am not from his state!]. What he did was not limited in its effect to the people of his state. It had national interest involved. That means he died for us, all of us. And all of us have forgotten him. He died for a particular principle, honesty in the barest form. So, if we need to honour him, apart from remembering him as a person, we should uphold his values also.In the recent championing of the meadia of the causes of so many of the common men/women, their silence too is deafening.