Thursday, May 19, 2011

PANCHAAMRITAM 211

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Vishwa Samvad Kendra, Chennai

PANCHAAMRITAM 211

Pancha is five in Samskritam, Amritam is nectar

Poornima / Kali Yugaabda 5113 / Kara Vaikasi 3 (May 17, 2011)

ONE

 Two samples of success in the field of education achieved by Hindutva-inspired social activists in Tamilnadu, Bharat have come to light. ONE: Sandhya, the student of Vivekananda Educational Society, (studying plus two in the CBSE stream in the Smt. Ramkumar Devi Fomra Vivekananda Vidyalaya, Chromepet, Chennai) scored the HIGHEST MARKS in Tamilnadu i.e. 1191/1200 marks. She took Samskritam as her language paper. (According to the State Government policy, Rekha, a student from Vijay Vidyalaya, Hosur who scored 1190/1200 marks has been declared as STATE FIRST as she took Tamil as her language paper). The then state minister Shri T.M. Anbarasan, Pallavapuram Municipal Chairman Shri E. Karunannidhi, VES Secretary Shri T. Chakravarthi, Vidya Bharati State Organising Secretary Shri Su. Viswanathan, School Correspondent Shri R.Ravindran school Principal Smt Prema were among those who felicitated Sandhya and other top scorers of the school. At a function in the school premises on May 11, 2011. TWO: N. Shyamkumar studied in Sevabharathi Vivekananda Free tution centre at Jain Nagar, Hasthinapuram, Chromepet, Chennai. He scored 1167/1200. He studied upto 10th in Tamil Medium and appeared for Plus Two exam in English Medium (Ahobila Mutt Oriental Higher Secondary School, Mambalam, Chennai).  Shyamkumar opted for Samskritam as First language. He scored 200 / 200 in Commerce as well as in.Accountancy. Based on a report by RPM in VIJAYABHARATHAM, MAY 27, 2011 - and an email from Shri  Sundaramahalingam of Chrompet.

TWO

Chintamani Jadhav and Sunil Pakdhare, constables attached to the Worli traffic police department (Maharashtra, Bharat), recently found Rs 28.5 lakh in a stolen vehicle that they recovered. On April 25, Jadhav and Pakdhare were patrolling the area and found an Innova parked in a No Parking zone.They towed the vehicle away to their chowky and started looking for the owner. Even two days after the vehicle was recovered, no one came forward to claim it. The constables broke into the boot to see if they could identify the owner and were stunned to see Rs 28 lakh stashed in a suitcase."The constables could have easily taken the cash. But they chose to trace the owner of the vehicle and surrender the amount with the department," said Shivaji Tazalpurkar, senior police inspector of Worli Traffic Division. DCP Nandkumar Chaughule has declared a cash award of Rs 1,000 each to Jadhav and Pakdhare. As it turned out, the car was registered in the name of Vidya Vinit Godambe, owner of a travel agency near MIG Club in Bandra (E). On April 23, Godambe had registered a complaint of a missing Innova, saying her vehicle was stolen from a parking lot in Lower Parel. From a report by Shri Vinay Dalvi MUMBAI MIRROR, April 28, 2011.

 

THREE

She was just three days old, when she was left to die in a lonely alley in the temple town of Haridwar (Uttarakhand, Bharat). Dumped and forgotten, she lay by the roadside crying and gasping for breath amid the ebb and flow of the Ganga nearby. But destiny had something else in store. Soma Sharan was picked by a good Samaritan. That was 1993. And from an orphanage in Haridwar to a heady Los Angeles to being the prestigious Gates Millennium scholar - it's been a giant leap of fate for the 18-year-old girl. Eight years later, it's homecoming for Soma Sharan. She has come to India to be with her 70 brothers and sisters. Well, she has a very large family at Sri Ram Ashram, Haridwar, where she grew up after being abandoned. The Sri Ram Ashram, where Sharan stayed till she was 10, was started by Baba Hari Dass Babaji - who, in 1970, had gone to America to teach yoga. Sharan will be studying International Development and hopes to do a PhD. She wants to start non-profit organizations around the world and help destitute children. She'll return to India every year. From a report by Smt Shreya Roy Chowdhury in THE TIMES OF INDIA, April 30, 2011.

FOUR

RASHTRA Sevika Samiti added another feather to its crown, when the Akhand Suryanamaskar Yajna conducted by it during the birth centenary year celebration of Vandaniya Saraswati Apte, joined the Limca Book of Records. The 100 hour marathon Surya-namsakars were conducted by 10,000 Sevikas of Goa and Maharashtra. The event was organised by Paschim Kshetra unit of the Rashtra Sevika Samiti in 2009.The news to this effect has been published in the latest edition of the Limca Book of Records which was released on March 29, 2011 in New Delhi. (Akhand Suryanamaskar Yajna began at 6 am on June 25, 2009 and concluded at 10 am on June 29. The exercise was performed continuously during day and night (with short intervals of five minutes) at 100 different places of Maharashtra and Goa. The performance was open for persons of aged between 3 to 90 years including physically challenged. The message was `Healthy Mind in a Healthy Body'). From ORGANISER, May 1, 2011.

FIVE

Large stretches on the highway between Koraput and Malkangiri districts in southern Odisha remain isolated. This highway has been the target of large number of blasts from Maoists. As a result, it is now dotted with camps of the Border Security Force and the Central Reserve Police Force. It is not too difficult to spot the contrasting images here. In pockets, adivasi women wearing vermillion marks on their foreheads can be seen ferrying their children to school. For a long time, Christian missionaries and NGOs were the only entities that reached out to adivasis in Odisha, Chattisgarh, Jharkhand and Northeastern states, apart from the limited engagement of state governments. But, now another juggernaut is rolling in this ideological melting pot, where the security forces and insurgent groups, like Maoists, have taken well-defined positions. It is well known that the Sangh parivar has been trying to establish itself in the tribal areas for a long while. But, the pace at which it is growing has become phenomenal. The most successful of its projects is the Ekal Vidyalaya Foundation that runs 34,343 schools which, collectively, have 9,62,485 students. VHP's Sewa Trust has 3,266 educational projects spread across the country. An astonishing element about the Sangh parivar's rapid mobilisation drive is their reach into the regions that have well-rooted ideological opponents. From a report by Shri G Vishnu in TEHELKA, April 20, 2011.

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Saturday, May 14, 2011

PANCHAAMRITAM 210

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Vishwa Samvad Kendra, Chennai

PANCHAAMRITAM 210

Pancha is five in Samskritam, Amritam is nectar

Amaavaasya/ Kali Yugaabda 5113 / Kara Chithirai 19 (May 2, 2011)

ONE

Famed to be one of the Samskrit villages in India, Mathur village in Shimoga (Karnataka, Bharat) will add another feather in its cap for soon becoming the first village in the country to be completely illuminated by Light Emitting Diodes (LED) lamps. Karnataka Renewable Energy Development Limited (KREDL) is the agency which will light up this village. "KREDL has chosen this village because of its uniqueness, where everyone in the village speaks Samskrit. At least 250 houses and 75 streetlights will switch over to LEDs. "The project is likely to bring down the consumption by 50%," sources said. H Nagana Gouda, assistant general manager, KREDL said: "We chose this village because of its uniqueness of being called a Samskrit Village." Based on a report by Smt Jayashree Nandi & Senthalir S in THE TIMES OF INDIA, June 12, 2010.

TWO

The latest spy saga between India and Pakistan that unveiled a few kilometres away from the Mohali stadium (Punjab, Bharat) while the two sides played the World Cup semi final has an unlikely hero — an Indian Army soldier from Kashmir Valley. According to sources, it was the quick reflexes of the soldier that led to the dramatic detention of a Pakistan high commission driver in Chandigarh, a few kilometres away from where Prime Minister Manmohan Singh and his Pakistani counterpart, Yousuf Raza Gilani, were meeting. The driver offered money to him for divulging military details. According to sources, the soldier used quick thinking to trap the driver. He told the Pakistani spy that though he may not have any valuable information, he could put him in touch with other Army personnel who could provide sensitive information. On the pretext of introducing him to other personnel, the soldier walked the Pakistani driver to his Army unit. When they were just metres away from the gate, the soldier caught hold of the driver and shouted for help. His colleagues then assisted him in overpowering the driver. In the scuffle, the driver was mildly injured. Sources indicated that the Indian soldier could be recommended for appropriate military commendation. Based on a report by Shri Josy Joseph in THE TIMES OF INDIA, April 18, 2011.

THREE

A farmer from Tandia village in Varanasi (Uttar Pradesh, Bharat) has a solution to India's burgeoning food crisis. Prakash Singh Raghuvanshi's innovation could work wonders. He has single-handedly developed a number of high yielding, nutritious and disease-resistant varieties of wheat, paddy, pigeon pea (tur dal) and mustard, which can also withstand adverse weather changes. Financial problems and falling crop yield prompted him to think about starting a seed bank of the best varieties of crops. It has been a relentless crusade of over five years, despite his lack of formal education, financial problems, illness, and weak eyesight to develop the best quality seeds in India. "I believe that God has given me the power to help other farmers and help my country be self-sufficient in foodgrain production. Every variety I developed has a yield of 20-40 per cent more than the ones available in the market. I can challenge anyone to grow a better variety of seed beside my plot," says 50-year-old Prakash Singh, who is ushering in a unique green revolution by supplying seeds free of cost to hundreds of thousands of farmers across India. As an indigenous creator of a seed bank, he has sent samples of seeds to the Prime Minister's Office, the Ministry of Agriculture and the rice research institute in Hyderabad. While he has applied for a patent for the different varieties of seeds, he has also distributed the seeds free of cost to over 20 lakh (2 million) farmers across Maharashtra, Punjab, Haryana, Himachal Pradesh, Uttarakhand, Gujarat, Chhattishgarh, Madhya Pradesh, Bihar and West Bengal. "In the Sangli district of Maharashtra, some poor farmers have become rich by using only my seeds. They are now selling the seeds to other farmers in the District." Prakash says. He also trains farmers in different aspects of plant breeding and farming techniques. You can send an e-mail to Prakash Singh at kudaratraghuvanshi@hotmail.com.  Mobile: 09956 941993. http://business.rediff.com , September 22, 2010

FOUR

World's oldest wooden warship afloat – now anchored in Portsmouth Harbour (UK) - is a worthy memorial to the golden age of Indian shipbuilding.  It entered Bombay Harbour in 1817. Since then, she has undergone a strict survey each year, and the experts say she is as sound in her timbers as the day she was built. The ship is regarded as a training vessel and British schoolchildren come on a course of instruction – including boat trips, climbing the rigging, exploring the decks below and picnics. From the '50 years ago' column of THE NEW SUNDAY EXPRESS, April 24, 2011.

FIVE

Shri Janardan Datar works as a Cashier in a Nagpur (Maharashtrra, Bharat) bank. One evening, as he was engaged in tallying the transactions of the day, he noticed an excess of three hundred rupees in the denomination of 100 rupee notes. He noted down the residential addresses of those who made deposits in that denomination during the day. He knocked at many doors. Thus he could locate the one - a college professor - who had paid in excess. Datar gave the three currency notes to the gentleman and then alone went home. Normally he reaches home at 5.30 PM. That day it was 8.30 PM when he reached home. To lessen the suffering of the one who had lost his money, Datar did not mind walking that extra mile, literally. Based on a report in TARUN BHARAT Marathi daily, reproduced in VIJAYABHARATAM (Tamil weekly),  June 18, 1993.

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