Sunday, April 19, 2015

PANCHAAMRITAM 271

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PANCHAAMRITAM 271
(pancha is five in samskritam; amritam is nectar)
Amavaasya / Kali Yugabda 5116 / Manmatha Chithirai 6 (April 18, 2015)

ONE
 India’s rescue efforts in Yemen, codenamed Operation Raahat, haven’t gone unnoticed. According to April 6 reports, 23 countries have requested Indian assistance in evacuating their citizens from Yemen. A tweet by Syed Akbaruddin, spokesperson for India’s Ministry of External Affairs, gave the list of countries comprising Bangladesh, Cuba, Czech Republic, Djibouti, Egypt, France, Germany, Hungary, Iraq, Indonesia, Ireland, Lebanon, Malaysia, Nepal, Philippines, Romania, Slovenia, Sri Lanka, Singapore, Sweden, Turkey, the United States, and Yemen. Recently, before the current crisis in Yemen, India demonstrated this with its swift naval deployment to the Maldives after a water shortage crisis. By answering calls for assistance from nearly two dozen states in Yemen, India can prove that it’s up to the task. (From thediplomat.com, April 7, 2015).
TWO


Male, the capital of Maldives, has been facing a shortage of potable water after a fire at the water treatment plant left more than 1,00,000 people of the island without access to clean water. The government of Maldives declared a water emergency and appealed to several neighboring countries like India for help. Indian officials say External Affairs Minister Smt Sushma Swaraj worked the phones after a distress call from her Maldivian counterpart Duniya Maumoon around 10 pm on December 4, 2014. By morning, an IL-76 loaded with 20 tonnes of fresh potable water, landed in Male, that has seen restive crowds and long queues over the water crisis. Maldivian President Abdullah Yameen cut short his visit to Malaysia to deal with the problem. A Maldives government official said that restoration of proper water supply would cost about $20 million (Rs 120 crore). India dispatched also a Navy ship holding 1,000 tons of fresh water. The ship also has the capability of producing 20 tons of clean water everyday even while anchored. (Based on a report in THE HINDU, December 5, 2014 and other media reports).
THREE


It was on March 30 that during his morning walk on the banks of Sukhna Lake in Chandigarh (Punjab, Bharat), that Justice Shri M. Jeyapaul, a judge of the Punjab and Haryana High Court, observed a commotion with several people shouting for help. He noticed that a girl was drowning in the water. He immediately ran to her rescue and dived into the lake. Justice Jeyapaul’s security officer, Shri Yashpal, also followed him into the waters. Both of them swam towards the girl who had by now gone under the surface. Yashpal is learnt to have gone under water and pulled the girl to the surface. She was then brought to the shore by him and Justice Jeyapaul. Though the girl had been rendered unconscious, she was revived and taken to a hospital. It was later revealed that she had attempted suicide as despite her securing good marks, her father had expressed his inability to support her studies due to his poor financial condition. Upon learning this, the Judge gave the family some money towards her studies. He has also recommended his security officer for a cash reward and promotion. (From  a report by Shri Gaurav Vivek Bhatnagar in THE HINDU, April 6, 2015).

FOUR


Shri N.S. Venkatraman is a successful businessman without the airs of one. He travels by Chennai’s MTC buses. He heads Nandini Consultancy Centre Private Limited, which is well known among chemical engineers and has its operations in Singapore too. He founded Nandini Voice for the Deprived in 1995, a non-governmental organisation in Besant Nagar, Chennai (Tamilnadu, Bharat) with an aim to help the poor. “My company is doing well. So it is essential that I share my income with someone who is less privileged,” says Venkatraman. “Nandini Voice for the Deprived doesn’t accept any monetary donation. If someone comes forward to donate money to any deserving student, we ask them to hand over the money directly to the beneficiary. Because, I want them to feel the happiness of sharing their money with someone who badly needs it,” he says. The NGO also conducts training programmes in the fundamentals of computer science for senior citizens. “Many of those who have enrolled for the programme are retired officials. We don’t accept any fee, even if they can afford it. The reason is that we want them also to help others in whichever way they can,” adds Venkatraman. (From a report by Smt L.Kanthimathi in THE HINDU, February 21, 2015).
FIVE


Illupur, a small town panchayat in the Pudukkottai district (Tamilnadu, Bharat) has achieved cent per cent tax collection, a trend it has been maintaining in the last 17 years.  It is noteworthy the achievement has been made when all the residents in the town panchayat are in the farming activities. Of the 8 town panchayats in the disrict, Illupur is the only town panchayat to achieve 100 percent tax collection and also among one of the few town panchayats across the state that have achieved for several years consecutively. The Illupur town panchayat with a population of 13,595 in 10 wards has 4,938 property assessments and 407 profession tax assessments. During 2014-15, the panchayat collected Rs 17 lakh as property tax and Rs 3.90 lakh as profession tax. It is the first town panchayat in the district which was brought under cent percent online tax collection network. The executive officer Shri Sulaiman Sait and president Shri Guru Rajamannar felicitated the panchayat officials for the achievement recently. (Based on a report by Shri S Kumaresan in THE NEW INDIAN EXPRESS, April 6, 2015).
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Sunday, April 5, 2015

PANCHAAMRITAM 270

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PANCHAAMRITAM 270
(pancha is five in samskritam; amritam is nectar)
Poornima / Kali Yugabda 5116 / Jaya Panguni 21 (April 4, 2015)

ONE
P Duraipandi (55), runs a flower shop for nearly 40 years near the old bus-stand in Virudhunagar (Tamilnadu, Bharat). He leaves four garlands behind at the shop after business hours to help families looking for garlands to pay last respects to their beloved one, who died at night. Duraipandi has thus been leaving four garlands for the past 15 years after he happened to overhear a conversation between two persons on a bus that they couldn’t find garlands at night for their kin who passed away, as it was an unearthly hour. Says Duraipandi: “When I was travelling by bus one day 15 years back, I heard the two speaking about how difficult it was to find a garland during the night to pay respect to their relative who had passed away. Though I own the flower shop, I was not aware of the trouble people faced looking for garlands at night. From that day, I started keeping four garlands in my shop at night as they would come in handy to those who wished to pay their last respects to their deceased family member or relative.” He said he had not told anyone about the garlands kept during the night time as he did not wish to publicise the service he was doing. Even the people who owned shops near his flower shop did not know about this practice, Duraipandi added. From THE NEW INDIAN EXPRESS, March 30, 2015.
TWO



Nisar Ahmed (45), in all his 22 years as an autorickshaw driver, has always made sure he has returned unclaimed property to the rightful owner. It was during one of his early morning rides that he once chanced upon a briefcase on the road in Cox Town, Bengaluru (Karnataka, Bharat). It was 4 am and there was hardly anyone around. Ahmed headed straight to the police commissioner’s office with the briefcase, without unlocking it. H T Sangliana, the then commissioner, had the briefcase opened and they found a few personal articles and a bunch of credit cards in it. The police were able to contact the owner, who arrived and collected the briefcase. The commissioner immediately honoured Ahmed with a certificate, recognizing his honesty. On another occasion, Ahmed found a young woman sobbing at the Bangalore City railway station. On making enquiries, he learnt that she was married just a week ago and headed for her husband’s house in Kuppam in Andhra Pradesh from Chennai but slept through the journey. On waking up, she found herself in Bangalore. Fellow auto drivers managed to pool in enough money for the ticket. Ahmed asked the police that a policewoman accompany her to Kuppam and insisted on an acknowledgement that the woman was handed over to her family. Ahmed, the father of three, who lives in a rented house, said, he doesn’t take articles left in his auto back home. “If I tell my children someone left it in my auto, they’ll then begin to think it is alright to take other people’s things,” he said. (Based on a report in THE NEW INDIAN EXPRESS, December 19, 2013).

THREE


Farmer Shri B. Ramaraj became the Chairman of Kombai Panchayat Union, district Theni (Tamilnadu, Bharat) in 1996. Viilage Kombai, lies on the rain shadow or the leeside of Western Ghats; thus it is a dry area as the mountains block the passage of rain-producing clouds. The only possible crops were dry crops like cholam (jowar), kambu (millet) and ragi (finger millet). Ramaraj, now 74, managed to build over 400 check dams in the area, sourcing help from the state government schemes. That resulted in raising subsoil water level over the years; in turn, wet crops including vegetables could be reared additionally. What had pained Ramaraj was the scene of farmers of the village quitting the place and moving to other districts in search of livelihood. He saw to it that Kombai is included in the River Scheme. Kombai was mapped with the aid of remote sensing satellite. Canals along the foothill were identified and 240 check dams were built across them during the tenure of Ramaraj. Over 1500 acres of rain fed forests were provided mud bunds to save water. After his term, he did not seek re-election. Instead, he got the horticulture department to add 5 check dams a year. In a decade, 400 check dams dotted the landscape. With an improved subsoil water level, even coconut and banana are grown there. As a result, a relieved Ramaraj informs that farmers who had deserted the village have returned. (Based on a report in THE HINDU TAMIL, March 18, 2015).
FOUR



The 68-year-old Sindhutai Sapkal hides many stories behind her strong personality. Being an unwanted child, she was nicknamed “Chindhi” which means a torn piece of cloth. Born on November 14, 1948 at Pimpri Meghe village (Wardha district, Maharashtra, Bharat) she was keen on completing her education and used Bharadi tree leaves to write as the family could not afford a slate. Her early marriage put an end to her desire to study. She got married at a tender age of 10 to a 30-year old man. Her abusive husband beat her up and threw her out of the house when she was 20 and nine-months pregnant. She gave birth to a baby girl in a cow shelter outside their house the same day and walked a few kilometres in that condition to her mother’s place, who refused to give shelter to her. She started begging at railway platforms for food to look after her daughter. As she spent more time begging, she realized that there are many orphans and children abandoned by their parents. She could feel their pain and she decided to adopt them. Over a period of time, she emerged as the “mother of orphans”. Till date she has adopted and nurtured over 1,400 orphans, helped them get an education, got them married and supported them to settle down in life. The children are not given up for adoption. She treats them as her own and some of them are now lawyers, doctors and engineers. To eliminate the feeling of partiality among children she gave away her biological daughter to Shrimant Dagdu Sheth Halwai, Pune. Her daughter herself runs an orphanage today.             (http://www.thebetterindia.com/12867/sindhutai-sapkal-mother-of-orphans-pune-inspiring-women/#sthash.wQxqoWBC.dpuf)

FIVE



West Delhi's Mayapuri police station has won the best police station award.  Inspector Raman Lamba, Station House Officer of Mayapuri police station, is what we wish our 'friendly neighbourhood cop' would be. His initiatives are now being copied by several police officers across the capital. You will not fail to spot the words 'Hotline to the SHO' written in bold above a mobile phone with a headphone permanently stuck to the wall, near the women's helpdesk. Push the button near the mobile phone and you get directly connected to Lamba. "It is frequently used by women complainants Thousands of labourers who work in the Mayapuri industrial area live in the slums, and their children often go missing. Lamba has found a simple way to ensure none of the missing children remain untraced. Earlier this year, all children below 15 years living in the slums were asked to come to the police station and their photographs were saved in police records along with their names and other details. Experience has taught Lamba that when slum children go missing, the biggest hindrance in tracing them is the absence of a photograph. A total of 138 motor vehicles, including two trucks, lying there for several years, had occupied a major portion of the police station area. Within months of taking charge of the police station, Lamba disposed of all the vehicles. A few days later, a volleyball court was built at the spot.  While most sub-inspectors take 12-15 years to become an inspector, he had managed to become one in just five years by solving the Lajpat Nagar bomb blast case. (Based on a report by Shri Prawesh Lama in THE INDIAN EXPRESS April 28, 2013).
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Even before dawn breaks in the coastal town of Kanyakumari, loudspeakers in churches are blaring sermons. "We must guard against those trying to divide us along religious lines," warns an ominous sounding priest. "We must safeguard our faith."

A stone's throw from the church rests the Vivekananda Kendra, an organisation set up to propagate the teachings of the Hindu seer Swami Vivekananda. "There has been a positive change i ..