Son of legendary barrister from Bihar Syed Hasan Imam, Syed Askari Hadi Ali Augastien Imam or Tootoo Imam, as he was famously known in India and abroad, died at a private hospital in Jharkhand's Hazaribagh on January 4, his son said.
Born in 1920, Imam was famed for his fitness and continued to be active even in his twilight years.
"He was a fit man even in his late 90s and walked and swam. This year he would have completed his 98 years and we were expecting him to complete his 100, but so is fate.
With his demise, the last direct link with the great Imam brothers -- his father Hasan Imam and uncle Sir Ali Imam -- has also vanished.
Also Read
"It is indeed an end of an era. He was the last surviving member from the immediate generation after the Imams, the one who saw them and grew up in their care. And, his own life was nothing short of extraordinary, making a name for himself as a motor racer, then a big game hunter, and also as an author and filmmaker," Bulu Imam, (75), a renowned environmental activist, said.
He is survived by wife Shahbat Imam, and another son Syed Hasan Francis Imam (named after his grandfather) and Nattie Yadav (named after her grandmother).
Tootoo Imam earned his reputation of living a flamboyant and rather quixotic life, and to his last days, dressed up as an aristocrat, an inheritance from his Imam lineage, and guests came to him from near and far, for big game hunting, till it remained legal in India.
"My father was born in a place called 'Hillside' in North Darjeeling. And, he used to spend time in Patna at the palatial 'Hasan Manzil' on Fraser Road and used to go to Darjeeling during summer holidays, where Hasan Imam, also had a property," Bulu Imam said.
Younger son, Syed Hasan Francis Imam, recalling his father's legacy said, "In 1956, he won the Indian Grand Prix in Calcutta, at a young age and shot to fame. And, his books 'The Brown Hunter', his love for horses, and other books will be remembered for long."
Condolences poured in on social media following the news of his death. The family said they will soon hold a memorial service in Hazaribagh.
With Tootoo Imam's death, a lot of the stories of his era, of the beautiful houses, 'Hasan Manzil' (now dismantled) and 'Rizwan Castle' (in shabby condition) in Patna built by his father, have also been consigned to oblivion.
In an interview to PTI, a few years ago, Tootoo Imam had shared the life and career of his father Hasan Imam, who, after the creation of the Bihar province, had shifted his practice to the Patna High Court.
Disclaimer: No Business Standard Journalist was involved in creation of this content