67,000 people have already signed up for this one-time opportunity from NASA …I have done Today !!!

This is onetime opportunity… Your Name could fly aboard NASA’s Mars Mission….

natarajan

 

Natarajan

Source….

Natarajan

Message for the Day…” Go Every Moment One Step Nearer to God…”

Sathya Sai Baba

Step by step, you reach the end of the road. One act followed by another leads to a good habit. Listening, over and over you get prodded into action. Resolve to act, to engage only with good company, to read only elevating books, and to form the habit of remembering the Lord’s Name(Namasmarana), then ignorance will vanish automatically. The Divine Bliss that will well up within you with the contemplation of the Ananda Swarupa (Bliss Personified) will drive out all grief and all worry. Develop bliss and joy, then evil impulses and tendencies will vanish, for they will not get any foothold in the heart. Move forward towards the Light and the shadow falls behind; you move away from it and you have to follow your own shadow. Go every moment one step nearer to the Lord, and then the shadow maya (illusion) will fall back and will not delude you at all. Be steady, be resolved.

 

20 Incredible Facts About Indian Railways That You Probably Did Not Know …

Do you know everything about the next train you will catch? Or the next station you will visit? Here are 20 facts about the Indian Railways you might not be aware of.

Indian Railways – the lifeline of transport system in our country, is evidently a huge setup, and an organization with numerous branches. With a dedicated ministry and budget in its name, railways help large portions of the country’s population in running their daily businesses successfully. However, there are a few things you probably don’t know about our trains and how the entire system works. Read on, and maybe you can remember them; or simply be awed every-time you pass by something even remotely related to the railways.

1. Indian Railways is the largest railways network to be operated by a single government and is the world’s third largest network with a total length of 127,760 kms. 

tumblr_mu06alqQ8Q1qlatf4o1_1280

Photo Source: able2know

The annual tally is 8421 million passengers on 9991 trains connecting 7,172 stations across the country. The number of daily passengers on the railways is said to be larger than the population of some countries. It also carries 1014.15 million tons of freight annually.

2. Indian Railways owned the longest railway platform in the world at Kharagpur with a length of 2,733 feet. Now, breaking the record, Gorakhpur station has recently taken its place with a span of 4,430 feet.

dsc03443

Photo Source: indiarailinfo

3. Two historical railway elements are included in the UNESCO’ World Heritage site list – the Chhatrapati Shivaji Terminus, and the Indian Mountain Railways.

DHR_780_on_Batasia_Loop_05-02-21_08

Photo Source: Wikipedia

The Indian Mountain Railways includes three railways – the Darjeeling Himalayan Railways, Nilgiri Mountain Railways and Kalka Shimla Railway. All three trains have been functional for some 100 years. The Chhatrapati Shivaji Terminus is a classic fusion of Gothic art with Indian architecture.

4. Indian Railways has five luxury trains.

luxury-trains-of-india-golden-chariot3

Photo Source: Indian Transport Portal

These are:

  • Royal Rajasthan on Wheels,
  • Palace on Wheels (Rajasthan),
  • The Golden Chariot (Karnataka and Goa),
  • The Maharajas’ Express (begins in Delhi but the itinerary differs) and
  • The Deccan Odyssey (begins in Maharashtra but itinerary differs).

They are the pride of Indian Railways as they hold an eminent position among the luxury trains of the world. Palace on Wheels is the oldest one of them.

5. The Vivek Express (Dibrugarh to Kanyakumari) travels a distance of 4273 km, which is the longest run in the railways. The shortest run is taken by a few scheduled services between Nagpur and Ajni – a total of 3 kms. –

INDIA-VIVEKNANDA- EXPRESS-TRAIN India Vivekananda Express Train at Burdwan Rail Station at Burdwan in Eastern India ------ WN/BHASKAR MALLICK

Photo Source: kochigallan

6. Srirampur and Belapur are two different stations in Ahmednagar district of Maharashtra. They are both situated at the same point on the railway route, but are located on opposite sides of the track.

OLYMPUS DIGITAL CAMERA

Source: Indiarailinfo

7. Mathura junction has the maximum number of routes emerging from it.

DSC00944-640x480

Photo Source: snipview

7 of them include – Broad Gauge (BG) line to Agra Cantt, BG line to Bharatpur, BG line to Alwar, BG line to Delhi, Metre Gauge (MG) line to Achnera, MG line to Vrindavan and MG line to Hathras.

 8. The resonance frequency of the suspension for the coaches is kept as close as possible to 72 bpm or 1.2 Hz while designing.

IMG_9986

Photo Source: rcf.indiangovernment

The human body is most comfortable at 1.2 Hz frequency as it’s one of the most fundamental frequencies of our bodies (normal heartbeat) – which is why people sleep soundly in trains.

9. The railways functions on an operating ratio of 94%, that is, it spends 94 paisa on every rupee that it earns. –

1rupee2007

Photo Source: asianeer

The amount of Rs. 4 saved from every Rs. 100 earned is minuscule and the revenues of the railways have been suffering because of the negligible revision of prices.

10. The diamond crossing (dubbed so by railways themselves), in Nagpur, is one-of-its-kind, from where trains go East, West, North and South.

01.Diamond_crossing

Photo Source: IRFCA

11. The Indian Railways is constructing the world’s highest rail bridge over Chenab.

Source: consumersprotection

The  bridge will be 1,315 meters long and will use up to 25,000 tonnes of steel. The idea was initially conceived in 2008 but the project was paused due to safety concerns. The work, however, began in 2010 and it is expected to be completed this year.

 bridge

12. The longest tunnel in the country is Pir Panjal Railway tunnel in Jammu and Kashmir which is 11.25 kms long. –

27kashmir1

Photo Source: Kashmirlife

13. The busiest junction in the country is Howrah junction in Kolkata with as many as 974 trains stopping there daily.

hstation

Photo Source: trekearth

14. All the electric appliances (fans, lights) in rail coaches function at 110 volts instead of the Indian standard 220 volts. It is a very effective counter-measure against thieves!

cantt-railway-station-038

Photo Source: noisypilgrims 15. The mascot for Indian Railways is Bholu, or Bholu the guard elephant, which was designed by National Institute of Design. It was unveiled on 16th April 2002. –

200px-Bholu_Indian_railways_mascot

16. The oldest working Indian locomotive still in use is the Fairy Queen, which worked with a steam engine. –

fairy-queen-train

Photo Source: plustoursIndia

It was built in 1855. After retiring in 1909, it was relaunched in 1997 and operates as a tourist train between Delhi and Alwar. It travels at a speed 40 km/h.

17. The Indian Railways is the world’s eighth largest employer with a total of 1.4 million employees.

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Photo Source: Flickr

18. Computerized reservations began in New Delhi in 1986.

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Photo Source: Blogspot

19. Indian Railways launched an awareness campaign train on World AIDS Day, December 1, 2007, called the Red Ribbon Express.

Source: Kochiservnet

20. India has eight Railway Museums – in Delhi, Pune, Kanpur, Mysore, Kolkata, Chennai, Ghum and Tiruchirappalli. Out of these, the National Railway Museum in Delhi is the largest rail museum in Asia.

national-rail-museum

Photo Source: dadstheway.wordpress.com

Source….Surabhi  Katyal http://www.the betterindia.com

Natarajan

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

WHAT DOES GANGNAM STYLE MEAN?…..

Gangnam” is an area in South Korea, specifically a small area in Seoul, South Korea, home to about 1% of the population of Seoul and is about the size of Manhattan.  It is known for its wealthy, “new money”, inhabitants.  (The region has only very recently become extremely upscale, with a gradual upswing in the last half century or so. Before that, there really wasn’t much there but farmland.)

How wealthy do you have to be to live in Gangnam?  The average price of an apartment there costs around 3/4 of a million dollars per year.  For reference, the average South Korean household’s annual income is about $40,000.

So “Gangnam Style” simply is referencing this sort of elite, “new money”, wealthy culture and lifestyle that has sprung up around the region.  As pop critic Kim Zakka, who lives in Seoul, said “Gangnam inspires both envy and distaste.  Gangnam residents are South Korea’s upper class, but South Koreans consider them self-interested, with no sense of nobility.”

Or, as Park Jae-sang (PSY, who himself was from a wealthy family and grew up close to Gangnam) said, Gangnam residents are seen as “good-looking because of plastic surgery, stylish because they can splurge on luxury goods, and slim thanks to yoga and personal trainers.”  Sounds a bit like wealthy people from Los Angeles…

He further states,

People who are actually from Gangnam never proclaim that they are—it’s only the posers and wannabes that put on these airs and say that they are “Gangnam Style”—so this song is actually poking fun at those kinds of people who are trying so hard to be something that they’re not.

“Oppan Gangnam style” literally means “Older Brother has Gangnam style”.  He’s not talking to his little sister, though.  The “oppa” / “older brother” usage here is common in South Korea, not unlike “daddy” in certain parts of the US, but in this case specifically being a term  that shows respect and affection- used by women about certain older men.  Basically, it just means “boyfriend” or “close, guy friend who is older than you” in this sense, though can also be used to literally mean an older brother in your family.

Koreans also have a similar moniker for males to use instead of “oppa”-  namely, “hyung”, meaning “older brother”, which can again be used to refer to your literal older brother or be used figuratively to refer to a slightly older male who you aren’t related, but you are close to.  Similarly, there is an “older sister” nickname, “nuna”.  These titles can also be used in addition to the person’s name itself, such as “Park oppa” or “Bong Cha nuna”.  Again, this is all meant as a way to show affection and respect.

As to the name of the region, “Gangnam”, it literally translates to “South of the River”.

The Gangnam Style music video itself on YouTube seems destined to be the first video posted there to pass 1 billion views.  As of the publishing of this article (December 7), it has received just over 900 million views, up close to 200 million views from about three weeks ago.  So by the end of 2012, the Gangnam Style video should cross the 1 billion views threshold.

Probably the most amazing thing about this Gangnam Style fad is that, given that the video is 4 minutes and 12 seconds long, if all 900 million times it’s been viewed it was viewed to its completion (not even considering all the spinoffs and re-postings), that means approximately 63 million man-hours (or about the number of hours 30,288 workers spend working full time-40 hours a week, 52 weeks a year, with no holidays or vacation) have been spent watching a video of a guy mimicking riding a horse to a beat, with the vast majority of those who’ve watched it not understanding much of anything he’s saying.

Bonus Facts:

  • Gangnam Style has reportedly made Park Jae-sang (PSY, short for “Psycho”) over $8 million so far from digital downloads and YouTube advertising alone, but it has only made him about $60,000 from South Koreans buying the song.  Despite the apparent lack of overt popularity in South Korea, PSY has been given a 4th Class Order of Cultural Merit by the South Korean Ministry of Culture for “increasing the world’s interest in Korea”.
  • Even more amazing than the Gangnam Style man-hours is that videos on Justin Bieber’s YouTube channel have been watched about 3.2 billion times.  Even if we assume a very conservative average length of video of 2 minutes, on the Bieber channel alone (let alone all the spinoffs posted on YouTube and the Bieber videos posted elsewhere), we could well be looking at 106+ million man hours spent watching Bieber
  • At its peak, there were about 400,000 people working on the Apollo program, which ran from 1961 to 1972 and put a man on the Moon in 1969.  We can get an approximate upper bound on man-hours during the Apollo program up to the Moon landing if we assumed all 400,000 people worked 40 hours a week every week from 1961 to Armstrong stepping on the Moon (which is a gross over exaggeration, as the program started with just 10,000 people and many involved had significantly lesser roles. Of course, I’d imagine many involved put in a lot more hours per week than 40, but it’s still probably a gross over estimate… work with me here people ;-)). This upper bound comes out at about 6.7 billion man hours.  The real number is probably significantly less, but with this upper bound number and the Gangnam Style + the conservative estimate on Bieber’s YouTube channel man-hours watched, that would account for about 3% of the man hours needed to go from just barely being able to put a man in space, to putting a man on the Moon. If only we could harness the power of Bieber for good… ;-)
  • Incidentally, PSY just recently signed on with Schoolboy Records, the same label Justin Bieber is under.  If they ever appear in a YouTube video together…

Source…www.todayifoundout.com

Natarajan

Message for the Day…” Get Yourself Acquainted with the outlines of Dharma …”

Sathya Sai Baba

Beautiful fields and groves run wild with neglect and soon become unrecognizable bushland and thorny jungle; fine trees are hewn by greedy men and the shape of the landscape is changed. With the passage of time, people get accustomed to the new state of things. This has happened to Dharma also. Misunderstood by incompetent intelligence, unbridled emotion and impure reasoning, the scriptures have been grossly diluted and their glory has suffered grievously. Just as the raindrops from the clear blue sky get colored and contaminated when they fall on the soil, the unsullied message of the ancient rishis, the example of their shining deeds, and the bright untarnished urges behind their actions are all turned into ugly caricatures of the original grandeur, by uncultured interpreters and scholars. Hence, every one of you must acquaint yourselves with the outlines of Dharma, expounded in the Vedas, Sastras and the Puranas.

Jokes for the Day… Whole Day You Will Laugh …!!!

With no malice or prejudice towards any one!

Today is Jim’s birthday,
so his wife decides to surprise him, she takes him to a Strip Club.

At the club –

DOORMAN: Hey Jim! How are you? Smiling face with smiling eyes

WIFE: How does he know you? Pouting face

JIM: We play Golf together! Disappointed but relieved face

BARTENDER: The usual beer Jim? Smiling face with smiling eyes

WIFE: And how does he know you? Pouting face

JIM: He’s on the Bowling Team! Face with open mouth and cold sweat

HOT STRIPPER: The special Lap Dance again, Jim?

The Wife storms out…… dragging Jim with her, into a taxi! Face with look of triumph 🚖

TAXI DRIVER: Hey Jimmy boy….You picked an ugly one this time…Same Hotel? Flushed faceFlushed face

Smiling face with open mouth and tightly closed eyesSmiling face with open mouth and tightly closed eyesSmiling face with open mouth and tightly closed eyes

Today is Jim’s funeral. 

………………..

n a ladies KITTY PARTY MEETING :
The host asked a question !
When did u last say I LOVE YOU to your husbands ??
One said..today..
other said…2 days back…..someone said…1 week back…

Host said ” Now, all of u send  I LOVE YOU .. SMS to your husbands.                                                          Whoever gets AWESOME reply will get a SURPRISE GIFT..”.

Everyone sent I LOVE U msgs to their husbands.

After sometime, HUSBANDs’ replies are as below…..

1) SWEETY…. Is your health condition Ok??? Face with stuck-out tongue and tightly closed eyesFace with stuck-out tongue and tightly closed eyesFace with stuck-out tongue and tightly closed eyesFace with stuck-out tongue and tightly closed eyes

2) Haven’t you cooked today too?Smiling face with smiling eyesSmiling face with smiling eyes

3) Darling, are you out of balance for money given for home maintenance?

4) What is the matter??

5) Are you dreaming or am I?

6)Did you like someone’s Jewelry in the function you attended today?RingSmiling face with open mouth and smiling eyes

7) I am already tensed up in Office and now you are sending msgs like this… do u have brain?? Disappointed but relieved faceDisappointed but relieved faceDisappointed but relieved faceDisappointed but relieved face

8) How many times did I tell you not to watch those serials ?? 😛😛😛

9) Oho..did you meet with an accident again? Flushed faceFlushed faceFlushed faceFlushed faceFlushed face

10) Should I pick kids from school today also?? 😀😀😀😀

and last one who won SURPRISE GIFT, msg is……..

11) who is this sending msg from my wife’s mobile???

Flushed faceFlushed face..Man and woman holding handsPerson with folded handsPerson with folded handsPerson with folded hands dont laugh alone pass it on.

………………….

I don’t think you will stop laughing at this one..??
Face with tears of joyFace with tears of joyFace with tears of joyFace with tears of joy

A man ordered for a voice automated robot car that does anything he tells it to do correctly without any error.

He got the car and started sending it on errands. He became very proud of what the car could do without mistakes.

One day, he was home and his wife told him to tell the car to go and pick the children from school as she was very tired.

The man agreed and said to the car…
Car, go and bring my children from school.

The car went and didn’t return in time as expected, they knew something must be wrong.

Several hours later and no car, the man became apprehensive.

He dressed up and got ready to lodge a report at the police station.

As he and his wife stepped outside they saw the car coming with an overload of children.

The car parked right in front of them and said… “These are your children sir..!”

In the car were their Landlady’s two daughters, his wife’s best friend’s daughter, his secretary’s son and their neighbour’s two sons.

The Wife said in full angerPouting face
Don’t tell me all these are your children..??

The man asked her calmly…
First you tell me why our children are not in the car..Pouting facePouting facePouting face??

Source…input from a friend of mine

Natarajan

“கடி” தான் ….இருந்தாலும் சிரிக்கலாமே ….!!!

 

ஒரு தலைக்கு கட்டிங் செஞ்சா பத்து தலைக்கு இலவசம்னு அந்த சலூன்ல போட்டிருந்தாங்களே போய்ப்பாத்தியா?

பத்து தலையும் ஒரே உடம்புல இருக்கணுமாம்.


பிச்சக்காரன்: ‘பணம் சம்பாதிக்க ஆயிரம் வழிகள்’ என்ற புத்தகத்தை எழுதியது நான் தான்
.
ஒருத்தன்: பிறகு ஏன் பிச்சை எடுக்கிறாய்..?
பிச்சக்காரன்: அந்த ஆயிரம் வழிகளில் இதுதான் முதல் வழி..


 


“தலைவரே என்ன யோசனை…?”

“மெட்ரோ ரயிலை மறியல் பண்ண முடியுமா…முடியாதா…?”

“தலை எல்லாம் பாரமா இருக்கு… காது ரெண்டும் அடைக்குது டாக்டர்…!!”

“மொதல்ல உங்க ஹெல்மெட்டைக் கழட்டிட்டுப் பேசுங்க…!!


டாக்டர் : உங்க மாமாவுக்கு, உடல் எடை குறைய ஒருமாதம் நடக்கணும்னு சொன்னேனே, இப்ப எப்படி இருக்காரு?

மற்றவர்: இப்போ தான் திருச்சி பக்கமா நடந்து போய்க்கிட்டிருக்கேன்னு ஃபோன் பண்ணிச் சொல்றாரு சார்..!


ஒருவர்: எவ்வளவுதான் விலைவாசி உயர்ந்தாலும் “சீப்’பாத்தான் வியாபாரம் செய்வேன்னு சொல்றீங்களே… நஷ்டம் வராதா..?

மற்றவர்: நான் செய்யறது வாழைப்பழ வியாபாரம்..!


வெள்ளிக்கிழமை
என் அம்மா வெள்ளிக் கிழமை மட்டும்தான் வறுவல் பண்ணுவாங்க!

ஏன் அப்படி?

அன்னைக்குத் தானே “ஃப்ரை” டே!”

Source….input from a friend of mine

Natarajan

He could be working at a dhaba, but is now at IIT!…. Meet BrijeshKumar Saroj…

In a special series, Rediff.com looks at India through the lives of its people.

Today: Brijesh Kumar Saroj, the son of a poor weaver, who overcame every hardship to make it to IIT-Bombay. When he cleared the IIT entrance exam, villagers threw stones at his home because he is Dalit. This has only hardened his resolve to ‘make it in life.’

Brijesh Kumar Saroj with Aamir Khan

IMAGE: Impressed with Brijesh’s achievement, Aamir Khan met him after he arrived in Mumbai. The actor has asked him to get in touch if he needs help. Photograph: Kind courtesy, Brijesh Saroj

 

I heard about IIT (the Indian Institute of Technology) in Class 8. The boys in Class 10 would talk about IIT all the time.

So I asked a senior, ‘Bhaiyya, yeh IIT kis bala ka naam hai? (What is this thing called IIT?)’

He said after you finish IIT you can earn a salary of Rs 25 lakh per annum.

I thought kya baat hai! Pachhees lakh ka package! Phir to hum zaroor karenge. (Wow! A salary of Rs 25 lakh! I will definitely do it).

And here I am and believe me it’s like a Hollywood film.

There are projectors in the classrooms, everyone speaks in English, people look different, they are so open-minded … And you can take second, third helpings of food and even order for eggs in the canteen. The toilet even has a flush.

When I told my father I had got into IIT, he said, ‘Theek hai. Acchha hai (OK, Good).’ He was happy that I would be able to earn money soon.

Mummy is angutha chhap (illiterate). She said you must be doing something worthwhile if you are going so far away to study. I think she was happy just to watch my brother and me being interviewed on TV. (Brijesh’s brother Raju, 18, secured the 167th rank in the IIT entrance exam and is at IIT-Kharagpur.)

My parents may not understand the significance of getting into an IIT, but they have always been supportive. We are five brothers and one sister, all good students.

In Class 5, our teacher in the village school told my father, ‘Eat just one meal a day, wear one pair of clothes, but educate your children.’ That’s the funda my father held out to.

In my entire extended family, only we children are educated. All my cousins, elders in the family… everyone is illiterate.

Going to a Navodaya Vidyalaya was the turning point of my life. I too would have been a Chhotu, Motu, Pinku, working in a dhaba, but for Navodaya and my maths teacher Sunil Mishra.

I was in Class 5, late for class that day. Mishra Sir was solving a Simple Interest problem on the blackboard. The answer was wrong and I told him so. He said I should go to a better school, a Navodaya Vidyalaya, but warned me there was very little time to prepare for the entrance exam.

Most people in the village demotivated me. They would tell my father, ‘Why are you educating them? Kaam pe lagao (Make them work).’

Brijesh Kumar Saroj with his family

MAGE: Brijesh and his brother Raju (in a white shirt) with their family in Rehualalganj village in UP. Raju also cleared the IIT entrance exam and is in IIT-Kharagpur. Photograph: Kind courtesy, Brijesh Saroj.

 

My father works as a weaver in a Surat mill and earns between Rs 8,000 to Rs 10,000 a month which is not enough for us six children, my parents and my grandparents.

I took up a job in a garage in the village as a helper to a mechanic, ‘get the wrench, get the spanner. Yeh karo woh karo (Do this, do that).’ I learned nothing there, but earned Rs 3,000 in two months.

As Mishra Sir suggested, I filled out the Navodaya form and studied hard. I passed. I studied at the school from Class 6 to 10. It was a residential school and it was my foundation.

I got three meals a day. I learnt judo-karate and basketball and I’m a regional level player. I also ate paneer for the first time.

The Navodaya school had 40 students in a class, while the village school had 100 students in a class, different age groups all studying together. The teachers gave each student undivided attention.

People ask me what is the difference between life now and before IIT. Zameen aasman ka fark hai (the difference is as wide as heaven from earth). We had no electricity because we couldn’t afford it. We had no TV, no fan or running water, or a toilet or a gas cylinder.

In Class 10 during my final exams, the thatched roof of our house fell down. We had to spend a few days in the open. It was only because of the BPL card (Below Poverty Line ration card)]and the milk from our eight goats that we could survive.

When the media found our story, the life that we knew changed. As did the life of the village. Five hundred families in the village who had kachcha houses (made out of mud), got pucca ones (made of brick) with toilets, solar lights and hand pumps.

Tarred roads are being built, there are plans for a hospital and an ITI (Industrial Training Institute), as well as a coaching class for IIT entrance exams.

Yet, the villagers threw stones at our house when the results were announced because we are Dalits. They have threatened to throw acid on our family, they said we won’t allow your children to get jobs in this village. And it’s only because our father tried to push us towards the promise of a better life.

I get upset when people use the word ‘higher’ caste to describe these narrow-minded, uneducated, uncivilised people.

Whatever little I have achieved today is because of my opponents. What they said dil pe lagti thi aur jab dil pe lagti thi toh baat ban jati thi (It hurt me and it pushed me to realise my goals). They always told me you won’t be able to do it because you are Dalit.

If there is one thing I want ended in India, it is the caste system.

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IMAGE: The family home. Brijesh had no TV, fan, running water, toilet or a gas cylinder. When the thatched roof collapsed, the family lived in the open for 5 days. Photograph: Kind courtesy Brijesh Saroj.

 

There is nothing like this in IIT or Mumbai. Two weeks ago, I met Aamir Khan. He called me after a newspaper report about us and told me to meet him when I came to Mumbai. I did, for one-and-a-half hours! Just him and me.

You know, 3 Idiots is my favourite film. He told me I should get in touch with him if I ever needed any help.

Sometimes, when I walk around the IIT campus, I can’t believe I’m here. Socho Bombay aaaya aur woh bhi flight se aaya! (Imagine, I came to Mumbai, and that too I flew in!). It was sponsored, of course.

Nobody knew I hadn’t flown before; I just copied what everyone else did. If there is one thing I don’t lack, it is self confidence.

Arre, we don’t even speak Hindi in my village, we speak Awadhi. Everything is padhbya(padhna, studies), jabya (Jana, to go), khabya (khana, to eat). Here everything is in English. People think in English. I understand the language, but never spoke it. I thought I would be embarrassed, but I am not. It’s not my mother tongue, I’ll learn it. It’s just a matter of time.

But I have to get used to life in a city like Mumbai. In the beginning I was shocked to see so many people. In the village, when we went to graze our goats, there is just vast emptiness everywhere. Marathi is a problem.

Once I went and sat next to a woman in a bus because it was the only vacant seat. Another woman came and told me to get up. It was reserved for women apparently and I did read something that said striyam sathim or something (striyan saathi, For Ladies), but I couldn’t figure it out. But these incidents should happen. How will I learn otherwise?

Another thing about this city is that people hardly walk. In the village we used to hop and skip 5 km to watch Shaktiman (the superhero television series of the nineties), here people take a bus or auto for even 1 km.

And it is expensive, a plate of patties costs Rs 60 to Rs 70; do time ka khaana ho jata hai gaon mein (we can eat two meals for the same amount in the village).

But money is not such a problem now. We used to have two bank accounts — my brother’s had Rs 504 and my mother’s account had Rs 2,000. I don’t know about my father’s account since he lives in Surat.

After we got into IIT, the HRD ministry waived off our tuition fees, mess fees, hostel fees. We got funding of Rs 8 lakh (Rs 800,000) from private donors as well as the state government and politicians.

The government has also given us a plot of land. But that land is now under litigation since my neighbours claim it belongs to them. So we are using some of the funds to fight the case.

IMAGE: From the monetary help received, the brothers have set up a trust fund for deserving children in their village. Photograph: Kind courtesy, Brijesh Saroj.

 

We have received so much love from strangers; we want to return the favour. From the Rs 8 lakh we received, we set up a trust fund of Rs 2 lakh for 10 deserving children between 12 to 13 years from our village.

We will be funding their education and will shore up the money once we begin earning. The rest of the Rs 6 lakh will be spent on the education of my two brothers and sister.

Before I got into IIT, I used to tell people in my village to educate their children and they would brush me off saying, ‘Bade aayen tips dene (who are you to give advice?).’ I want to be able to achieve such a stature that when you help people they don’t question your motives.

I want to help my village, my family, especially my elder brother Rajesh. My brother always pulled me back into the straight and narrow when I strayed. I had started doing drugs in school and my brother found out and beat me up. Thank god for that. He is doing his MSc in Maths and he started giving tuitions to support the family.

After I finish my IIT, I want to do IAS so that I can be part of the system and change it. I idolise Swami Vivekananda and I have tried to follow what he said, ‘Arise and awake and stop not till the goal is reached.’

Brijesh Kumar Saroj

IMAGE: Brijesh at the IIT-Bombay campus. ‘Everyone speaks English,’ he says, ‘And you can take second, third helpings of food and even order for eggs. The toilet even has a flush’. Photograph: Reuben NV/Rediff.com

 

People warned me that I will be swept away by the glamour of Mumbai. But I have always been my own guardian. I went to the Navodaya school when I was just 10. If my friends here tell me to go out socialising with them, I will refuse. I don’t have the money, I can’t go out.

I have budgeted a personal expenditure of Rs 500 per month, otherwise I will be depleting the funds. Who doesn’t like going out? I will, when I can.

It was my birthday on August 10. I turned 19. Nobody wished me because nobody here knows it was my birthday. I called my parents and they blessed me. We have never ever celebrated birthdays because we never had the money. Actually I don’t even know what you are supposed to do…

Sometimes, it is a little lonely here. I find it difficult to connect with my batch mates because of the language barrier, so to keep my spirits up, I wrote these lines…

Jab tootne lage hausla
Toh itna yaad rakhna
Bina mehnat ke haasil
Takhto taj nahin hote
Dhoond lete hain andhere me bhi manzil ko
Jugno kabhi roshni ke mohtaj nahin hote

When you lose hope
Remember this thought O my friend
No scepter or crown ever came to one who did not work hard
There are some who find their destination even in darkness
Just like fireflies that are never scarce of light.

I know I will make it.

Brijesh Kumar Saroj, 19, is the son of a daily wage labourer from Rehualalganj village in Pratapgarh district, Uttar Pradesh. He scored the 410th rank and is now doing Engineering Physics at IIT-Bombay.

He spoke to Swarupa Dutt/Rediff.com after his classes at the IIT campus.

Source….www.rediff.com

Natarajan

Take a look inside India’s brand new Ghost Airport ….Jaisalmer Airport….

India Abandoned Airport Jaisalmer

Located in northwestern India, Jaisalmer Airport was completed more than two years ago at a cost of $17 million. At a time when the spanking new facility should be welcoming hundreds of thousands of passengers per year, it sits abandoned. In fact, the airport has yet to operate a single day.

According to Reuters, Jaisalmer is one of more than 200 no-frills airports planned by India’s previous government. They were meant to encourage travel and commerce in far-flung parts of the Indian sub-continent.

However, in many cases, local political greed won out over reason and airports were placed in locations where there simply isn’t enough demand for air travel to warrant a full-scale airport.

In fact, Jaisalmer is one of eight airports the Indian Government has constructed over the past decade at a cost of more than $50 million to have never entered service, Reuters reports.

Why aren’t airports such Jaisalmer in business? According to Reuters, one reason is because airlines can’t open routes to these small under-developed areas. The domestic Indian market is incredibly competitive and for a route to have any chance of profitability, it has to either fly to or from one of the country’s mega cities.

This means that in order for an airline to open a route to Jaisalmer, it has to originate in a major hub such as Delhi or Mumbai. However, airports in these cities are incredibly congested and the precious space there is at these facilities are prioritized for more profitable destinations. As a result, the less populated locales remain perpetually underserved.

Here’s closer look at India’s brand new ghost airport.
It’s a desert town known for its tourism and natural beauty. However, it’s also sparsely populated.

It's a desert town known for its tourism and natural beauty. However, it's also sparsely populated.

According to the Economic Times, the airport was supposed to open for business in August 2013.

According to the Economic Times, the airport was supposed to open for business in August 2013.

ECONOMIC TIMES

But it never did.

But it never did.

Today, the abandoned Jaisalmer Airport sits as a reminder of the massive waste caused by poorly planned development.

Today, the abandoned Jaisalmer Airport sits as a reminder of the massive waste caused by poorly planned development.

Here’s what the airport looks like today

Here's what the airport looks like today.

The arrival and departure lanes are empty. They should be filled with buses, cars, and Taxis.

The arrival and departure lanes are empty. They should be filled with buses, cars, and Taxis.

This door leads to the check-in area.

This door leads to the check-in area.

No tourists here.

No tourists here.

This baggage carousel sits idle.

This baggage carousel sits idle.

As are these baggage carts.

As are these baggage carts.

No one has ever used these dusty seats.

No one has ever used these dusty seats.

These dusty bathroom sinks are also brand new.

These dusty bathroom sinks are also brand new.

Outside, the desert environment is taking its toll on the airport.

Outside, the desert environment is taking its toll on the airport.

The roads are in poor condition.

The roads are in poor condition.

The solar panels lay dormant.

The solar panels lay dormant.

The airport’s only visitor on this day is a stray dog.

The airport's only visitor on this day is a stray dog.

Bones from a dead animal sit on a road leading to the airport.

Bones from a dead animal sit on a road leading to the airport.

Someone mounted satellite dishes to the outer wall of the airport.

Someone mounted satellite dishes to the outer wall of the airport.

However, Jaisalmer Airport is not beyond saving. In fact, from afar, it looks like quite a nice facility.

However, Jaisalmer Airport is not beyond saving. In fact, from afar, it looks like quite a nice facility.\

Source….

http://www.ndtv.com  www. stuff.co.nz

Natarajan