The Go-Getters of Dharavi , Mumbai….

Even as plans to redevelop Dharavi continue to gather dust in government files, its young residents have chalked their own course and chosen to fly high. Hepzi Anthony recounts a few inspiring tales.

Other slums may have laid claim to its tag of being Asia’s largest slum, but within Dharavi are stories of India shining despite its squalor, of grit, determination and fighting against odds to overcome barriers.

Transformation is in the air in Dharavi today, and it is not just physical.

Change is manifest not just in the form of the superficial replacement of slums with buildings or in terms of better quality roads, improved hygiene or even the ATMs coming up there; it is evident from the sharp rise in the socio-economic profile of the average Dharavi resident that has seen a massive upsurge.

Indeed, the story of Dharavi today is of not just buildings replacing the slums but the rise of a new generation that is clearly more educated, more informed and more affluent, too.

As a new generation comes up, the success stories from India are now being replaced by stories of its residents working, studying and even settling down in foreign shores.

From being a symbolic representation of the daily struggle for survival of the urban, migrant and Indian poor in Hollywood films, many people raised there now literally crisscross continents for work or study.

Some, like Jasmine Jacob, discovered that her humble origins and surroundings could not clip their wings of ambition.

Her fascination for the scientific world saw her do research in Nanotechnology and take off to countries like the United States and France.

After completing her post-graduation in chemistry from the Institute of Science, Mumbai, she was for a Department of Atomic Energy scholarship that enabled her for a doctoral study of nanosciences at the Bhabha Atomic Research Centre.

Her superior performance there further earned her a government-funded post-doctoral research study trip to Paris for 15 months.

From there on she moved on to do another course at the University of Notre Dame at Indiana, US. Incidentally, her entire higher study was done entirely with the help of scholarships.

Having found her dream, Jasmine Jacob now inspires the children of Dharavi to dream big and pursue their ambitions.

“Money is not everything. I am a good example of how if you are prepared to work hard, and you have it in you, nothing can stop you,” says Jacob.

Her father, who worked in a private firm and was the sole bread earner in her family, could not afford to pay her fees for higher studies.

“But my teachers ensured that my studies were not affected. They knew of my background and went out of their way to help me. They supported me by finding out and recommending me for scholarships,” she says.

Currently, she is doing research in nanotechnology and continues to reside in Dharavi, though her family has now shifted to a building there.

“Till my third standard, we stayed in a tin house that would be roughly about 10×10 sq ft and then we moved into a brick house. There were lots of infrastructure issues at home and around. It was impossible to study at evenings as everyone would be watching television and there would be so many distractions around,” she recalls.

Having found her dream, Jacob now wants to inspire other students, especially from her locality, to dream big and pursue their dreams.

Not to convent schools where the rich children go, she prefers to go to her former alma mater Kamaraj Memorial School at 90-ft Road to deliver motivational talks to students. Jacob had studied here in Tamil medium till the fourth standard and thereafter shifted to English medium in the same school.

She tells her students to concentrate on their studies and not get scared of the roadblocks on the pathway to their dreams.

“I was so focused and good at my studies that I did not know many students in my class. But, my co-students knew me and wanted to befriend me for my notes. My locality did not matter to anyone,” she says.

Jacob says she never dreamt of working or staying abroad and did not fancy a high-paying job or the lifestyle there.

“I always wanted to be in India and am happy to be here,” she signs off.

Amolik Selvaraj is quite open to the idea of staying in Dharavi even now. But he is practical enough to know that it would not be that easy for his family.

Her view is shared by Amolik Selvaraj, who also crisscrossed the US and the United Kingdom before returning to Pune for work.

Brought up in Dharavi, 46-year-old Selvaraj started working as a data entry operator while graduating from the Dr Ambedkar College in central Mumbai’s Wadala locality.

Along with studies and work, he took to learning computer software languages like Clipper, Foxpro, VB.NET and C#.NET.

This helped him get offers to work as a systems programmer and got him a breakthrough in Maryland, US, in 2007 for about two years. Thereafter, he shifted to quality assurance that kept his career on a high and helped him move to other countries.

In 2011, he moved on to work in Didcot, Oxfordshire, in the UK for a little over a year.

Recently, he shifted to Pune where he works as a senior consultant at Systems Plus Technologies.

Despite staying abroad for many years and having visited places like Washington, London and Oxford, Selvaraj says that he is quite open to the idea of staying in Dharavi even now.

In fact, he continues to emotionally connect with the place and to date his passport and Aadhar card still bear his Dharavi address.

“One of the things about Dharavi is that one would end up running into so many people just like that. Abroad, people never turn up impromptu at your place. They would almost always turn up only after fixing an appointment. The doorbell never rings without one knowing who would be at the door.

“Also, I have lost my spiritual connect after I shifted out of Dharavi. There, I could just walk over to the open church nearby almost any time of the day,” says Selvaraj.

But he is practical enough to know that it would not be that easy for his family.

“Were it not it for factors like my children’s education and good influence, I would have happily shifted back to Dharavi. Things have changed so much now. ATMs are accessible there and the facilities are much better now,” he says.

 

Reverend Samuel Christudoss, ex- parish priest of Good Shepherd Church, Dharavi, who has resided in and has been observing the area for over a decade, notices: “It is almost routine to hear old people talking about their children being in the US or Germany these days. Apart from those settled abroad, many people travel abroad regularly for work or for study projects. The new generation has lapped up higher education like never before with the result that almost everyone is literate here now.”

The prosperity has percolated downwards too.

“Long back, when I had to live in Dharavi around 1991, I recall being provided with just mats to sleep with bricks for pillow by the church because the people there themselves lived with such basic, primitive means.

“I would be hauled up even if I took a cab for travelling (autorickshaws are not allowed in Dharavi) and questioned as to why I did not walk the distance. Today, when I am re-posted in this place, I see a marked difference here. The very same church now allows me the option of travelling by air-conditioned cabs, a direct result of the younger generation being exposed to a higher standard of living,” he observes.

So, while the much-touted Dharavi Redevelopment Plan continues to gather dust in the files or drawing boards of the Maharashtra government, the people of Dharavi have chalked their own course and risen to fly up high beyond the boundaries of the nation.

Input….Hepzi Anthony in Mumbai  ….www.rediff.com

Natarajan

 

“” Burn Ego…Not just Crackers…Be Sweet …not just eat Sweets …Wear New Values…not just new clothes…”

Celebrate Life ..Not just Diwali day…
Burn Ego..Not just Crackers…
Be Sweet ..Not just eat Sweets…
Meet and greet Hearts..Not just People…
Wear new Values ..Not just clothes …
Experience Joy and Peace..Not just Play and Fun…
Light Self Knowledge..Not just Lamps…
BE HAPPY…HAVE A GREAT DAY!

 4th Day of DIWALI
“NEW YEAR ”
The Fourth day is called Padwa or VarshaPratipada that marks the coronation of King Vikramaditya and Vikaram-Samvat was started from this Padwa day.
The day after the Lakshmi Puja, most families celebrate the new year by dressing in new clothes, wearing jewellery and visiting family members and business colleagues to give them sweets, dry fruits and gifts.
On this day, Goverdhan Pooja is performed. As per Vishnu-Puran, the people of Gokul used to celebrate a festival in honour of Lord Indra and worshipped him after the end of every monsoon season. But one particular year the young Krishna stopped them from offering prayers to Lord Indra who in terrific anger sent a deluge to submerge Gokul. But Krishna saved his Gokul by lifting up the Govardhan Mountain and holding it over the people as an umbrella.
This day is also observed as Annakoot and prayers are offered in the temples. In temples especially in Mathura and Nathadwara, the deities are given milkbath, dressed in shining attires with ornaments of dazzling diamonds, pearls, rubies and other precious stones.

 source::::http://debu7370.blogspot.com/ 

natarajan

Message for The Day…” When a Genuine ‘Deepavali ‘ is in Sight …”

From this day onwards, you must win over everyone through love and compassion. Nara (man) falls intoNaraka (hell), through over-indulgence. Senses generally run wild and like raging floods, spell destruction. The festival of Deepavali is to express gratitude at the defeat of the demonic (Naraka) tendencies in humans, which drag them down from Divinity. Naraka is the name for hell, and the demon whose death at the hands of Krishna is celebrated today is called Narakasura, the personification of all the traits of character that obstruct the upward impulses of every person. The home (griha)where the Name of the Lord is not heard is a cave(guha), and nothing more. As you enter it or leave it, and while you are in it, perfume it, illumine it, and purify it with the Lord’s name. Light it as a lamp at dusk and welcome it at dawn as you welcome the Sun. That is the genuine Deepavali, the Festival of Lights.

Sathya Sai Baba

HAPPY DEEPAVALI….

OM SSRI GURUPYO NAMAHA.RESPECTFUL PRANAMS TO SRI KANCHI MAHA PERIVA

தீபாவளி
இந்துக்களின் தலையாய பண்டிகை இது. இந்தியா முழுவதிலுமுள்ள மக்கள் –

ஏழை, பணக்காரர் என்ற பாகுபாடின்றி வெகு உற்சாகமாகத் தீபாவளி

கொண்டாடுகின்றனர். பண்டிகை கொண்டாடும் முறையில்தான், மாநிலத்திற்கு

மாநிலம் சில வேறுபாடுகள் காணப்படும்.

தீபாவளி- தீபங்களின் வரிசை என்ற பெயருக்கேற்ப வட இந்தியாவில்

மக்கள் தங்கள் வீடுகளில் பளிச்சென்று விளக்கேற்றிக் கொண்டாடுவர். ஞானம்

என்ற விளக்கொளியால் மனத்தின் உள்ளே குடிகொண்டுள்ள அஞ்ஞானம் என்ற

இருளை விரட்டியடிப்பது என்பது தத்துவம். பொய் பித்தலாட்டம் வஞ்சனை

முதலிய அரக்க குணங்களை ஞான ஒளியால் வெளியேற்றி அக ஒளிபெற உதவும்

பண்டிகை, தீபாவளி.

நரகாசுரன் எனும் அரக்கனைக் கண்ணன் வதம் செய்ததையட்டி அமைந்த

பண்டிகை என்பது புராண வரலாறு. தேவர்களும் மனிதர்களும் கொடிய

அரக்கனாம் நரகாசுரனால் மிகுந்த தொல்லைகளுக்கு உள்ளாகித் துன்புற்றனர்.

தேவர்களின் தலைவனான இந்திரன் பகவான் கிருஷ்ணனிடம் முறையிடவே,

கிருஷ்ணன் நரகாசுரனுடன் போர்புரிய சத்தியபாமாவுடன் புறப்படுகிறார்.

சத்தியபாமா இப்போரில் சக்தியின் அவதாரமாகச் செயல்பட்டாள் என்பது

குறிப்பிடத்தக்கது. நரகாசுரன் என்ற தீய சக்தி கண்ணன் – சத்தியபாமாவினால்

அழிக்கப்பட்ட மக்கள் அசுரனின் கொடுமையினின்றும் விடுபட்ட நாளையே

தீபாவாளியாக கொண்டாடுகிறோம்.

தீபாவளி அன்று விடியற்காலையே எழுந்து தலைக்கு எண்ணெய் தேய்த்து,

புனித நீராடுவதை கங்கா ஸ்நானம் என்று கருதுகிறோம். இப்பண்டிகை நாளில்

எண்ணெயில் லட்சுமியும், நம் வீட்டுத் தண்ணீரில் கங்கையும் பிரசன்னமாகின்றனர்

என்பது ஐதிகம், வீட்டுக் கிணற்றின் நீரிலோ அல்லது குழாயில் வரும் நீரிலோ

கூட தீபாவளியன்று நீராடினால் புனித கங்கையில் நீராடிய பலன் கிட்டும் என்பது

ஆன்றோர் வாக்கு. அதனால்தான் இப்பண்டிகையன்று நீராடிப்புத்தாடை உடுத்து,

இறைவனைத் துதித்து இனிப்புப் பண்டங்கள் புசித்து மகிழ்ந்த பின்னர் அக்கம்

பக்கத்தில் வசிக்கும் உற்றார் உறவினரிடம், கங்காஸ்நானம் ஆயிற்றா? என்று

விசாரிக்கிறோம். பகவத் கீதா கிஞ்சித் அதீதா, பகவத் கீதையில் சிறிதளவு, ஒரே

ஒரு சுலோகம் மட்டுமாவது படித்தால போதும், கங்கா ஜல லவகணிகா பீதா –

கங்கை நீரில் ஒரு திவலை அருந்தினாலும் போதும், ஸக்ருதபியேன முராரி

ஸமர்ச்சா – விஷ்ணுவின் நாமத்தை வாழ்க்கையில் ஒரே ஒரு தடவை சொன்னாலும்

போதும் – பரலோக பயம் நீங்கும், மக்கள் பேரின்பமாகிய மோட்சம் அடைவது

உறுதி. இமய மலையிலிருந்து பெருகிவரும் அலக்நந்தா, மந்தாகினி, பாகீரதி,

என்னும் நதிகள் கங்கை எனப் பெயர் பூண்ட புண்ணிய நதிகள் மக்கள் அதில்

விளக்கேற்றி வழிபடுவது வழக்கம். அன்னை பவானியின் பூஜையாக

வங்காளத்திலும், தாம்பூலத் திருநாளாக மகாராஷ்டிர மாநிலத்திலும்

கொண்டாடப்படும் இப்பண்டிகை, குஜராத்தில் குபேர பூஜையாக புதுக்கணக்குத்

நாடெங்கும் புத்தாண்டாகக் கொண்டாடப்படுகிறது.

திருமணமான முதல் ஆண்டு வரும் மலை திபாவளியன்று

மாப்பிள்ளையைக் கோலமிட்ட மணையில் உட்கார வைத்து ‘கௌரீ கல்யாணமே,

வைபோகமே’ என்று மாமியார் பாடித் தலையில் எண்ணெய் வைப்பது தமிழ்

நாட்டவர் பழக்கம். பட்டாசு கொளுத்துவதன் மூலம் ஆயிரமாயரம் குடும்பங்கள்

பிழைக்கவும் இந்த திபத்திருநாள் வழிவகுக்கிறது. புத்தாடை உடுத்தும் வழக்கம்

நம்மிடையே இருப்பதால் நெசவுத் தொழிலும் செழிக்கிறது.

இப்பெருநாளில் இந்துக்கள் மட்டுமின்றிப் பிற மதத்தவரும் தங்கள்

வீட்டுப்பிள்ளைகளக்குப் பட்டாசும், ஏன் புத்தாடையும் கூட, வாங்கிக் கொடுத்த

மகிழ்கின்றனர்.

தீபாவளியன்று தொடங்கும் தீப அலங்காரம் கார்த்திகைப் பண்டிகை வரை

நீடிக்கிறது. தென் நாட்டில் ஒவ்வொரு வீட்டிலும் அகல் விளக்கு ஏற்றி வரிசை

வரிசையாக வைத்து அலங்கரிப்பது கண்கொள்ளாக் காட்சியாகும்.

தீப மங்கள ஜோதி நமோ நம:

SRI KANCHI MAHA PERIVA THIRUVADIGAL CHARANAM
SOURCE:- SRI KANCHI KAMAKOTI PEEDAM .org

Read more: http://periva.proboards.com/thread/10532/deepavali#ixzz3r2Q7tXFE

Natarajan

 

A Special Gift For You on This Day of Festival of Lights ….!!!

Finding the right gift to give to a friend for any kind of occasion can sometimes be a problem, so today, I’m sending someone special, something different. After spending time running around in search of the perfect gift, I’ve finally found it. I am giving my dear friend seven gifts that cannot be bought – though they may be a simple gift, they surely come from a deep place within my heart.

7 Gifts

I give you The Gift of Love…

 

 

Love is a special gift that you can give over and over again and is completely within your power.

 

May you find love in your family and your friends. And may you share the love you have to give. When you share your love, it comes back to you in many forms.

“Love is a fruit in season at all times, and within the reach of every hand.”
– Mother Teresa
7 GiftsI give you The Gift of Laughter…

 

Laughter is infectious and the more you laugh, the more other people will join in with you.

 

May laughter fill your home, relieve your stress, and strengthen your friendships. Do not let a day go by without laughing; it is good for your health.

“Laughter is a tranquilizer with no side effects.”
– Arnold Glasow
7 GiftsI give you The Gift of Living Each Day to the Fullest…

 

Every day is a gift, and may you use this gift by living life to the fullest. You will never have this day again. What will you do with it?

It is a day that you can squander, or a day that will be marked as unique. You have within you the ability to make each day worthy of note; a day that will form a significant contribution in your best-selling book of living.

“Yesterday is history. Tomorrow is a mystery. And today?
Today is a gift. That’s why we call it the present.”
– Babatunde Olatunji
7 GiftsI give you The Gift of No Worry…

 

Worries are wasted emotions, and remember that circumstances have no emotional component unless you give it to them.

 

May your days be worry-free. If you find yourself worrying about something then fix it. If it is beyond your control, then there is no sense in worrying about it. Ninety percent of what you worry about will never happen, so why worry!

“I’ve seen many troubles in my time, only half of which ever came true.”
– Mark Twain
7 GiftsI give you The Gift of Positive Thinking…

 

May you find the good in all situations, even if you have to look for it – look because it is there. No matter what happens in your life, find the good. Your life will be a happier one.

 

“Every problem has a gift for you in its hands.”
– Richard Bach

7 Gifts

 

I give you The Gift of Balance…

 

Too much of one thing can end up creating stress; this is something that no one needs in their life.

 

May you find the balance of life, time for work but also time for play.

 

“Live a balanced life – learn some and think some and draw and paint and sing and dance and play and work every day some.” 
Robert Fulghum
7 GiftsI give you The Gift of Dream Fulfillment…

 

Goals will help you accomplish things you may have thought impossible.

 

May all your dreams turn into goals.

 

“If you have a goal in life that takes a lot of energy, that requires a lot of work, that incurs a great deal of interest and that is a challenge to you, you will always look forward to waking up to see what the new daSource………………….Words by Catherine Pulsifer via Inspirational Words of Wisdomwww.ba-bamail.comNatarajan

” The Best Classroom in the World is at the Feet of an Elderly Person …”

Andy Rooney, a famous radio and television writer, once said, “The best classroom in the world is at the feet of an elderly person.” If you’ve ever sat down with a grandparent, an older mentor, or just an elderly friend, you know this quote to be true. While they might not know how to work Skype, they have endless amounts of wisdom to offer and hundreds of stories to share.

YouTuber Riyadh K wondered what he could glean from walking around the streets of Ireland asking old folks what their best advice was…the results will definitely put a smile on your face.

This makes me want to visit my grandmother and ask her all the questions. I know she has so much to tell. Who will you phone first to ask about their best advice?

Source…Amanda Black in http://www.viralnova.com
Natarajan

Image of the Day…. ” Children of the Sun ” …

They say we’re all made of stardust…….

Posted to EarthSky Facebook by Fotograf Göran Strand.

Posted to EarthSky Facebook by Fotograf Göran Strand. Visit Göran on Facebook

Swedish astrophotographer Göran Strand calls this photo Children of the Sun.

You can buy Göran’s photos as prints in his webshop.

https://instagram.com/Astrofotografen

https://twitter.com/Astrofotografen

Source….www.earthsky.org

Natarajan

Message for the Day…”Instead of rotating round the earth in the higher realms of space and planning to land on the moon or Mars, if only one plans and prepares to travel into one’s own inner realm, what sublime joy and peace can be attained!”

Sathya Sai Baba

The human being is a composite of man, beast and God, and in the inevitable struggle among the three for ascendency, you must ensure that God wins, suppressing the merely human and the lowly beast. Man must know the Universe as basicallyBrahman or Divine. You and the Universe are one; all are subsumed in the same unique entity. The cosmic vision can be acquired either by watching the Universe or one’s own inner Cosmos. One has only to discover oneself. In the citadel of the body, there is the lotus temple of the heart, with subtle akasha(space) within. In it are contained heaven and earth, fire and air, sun and moon, stars and planets – all that is in the visible world and all that sustains it, and all into which it submerges. Instead of rotating round the earth in the higher realms of space and planning to land on the moon or Mars, if only one plans and prepares to travel into one’s own inner realm, what sublime joy and peace can be attained!

Indian Student in London Designs Low Cost Baby Incubator with Cardboard ….

Malav Sanghavi, an Indian student studying in London has developed the prototype of a low cost baby incubator that has the potential to save many lives across the world.

It is a cardboard incubator called BabyLifeBox. Malav is studying for his innovation Design Engineering (IDE) Master’s dual degree course at Imperial College London and Royal College of Art.

malav

A graduate from the National Institute of Design (NID), Ahmedabad, he participated in a start-up competition held at St James’ Palace in London and won the 3rd prize for his innovation.

The incubator can be used in developing countries like India which lack adequate grassroots-level infrastructure for neonatal care of premature and underweight infants. It provides basic functions necessary for child’s survival in their first days of life.

The bottom part of the incubator can be given to the parent of the child after birth as a make-shift cot.

incubator

Malav showed his BabyLifebox invention to the Duke of York during the Pitch@Palace Bootcamp –

According to reports, more than 300,000 babies die within 24 hours of their birth every year in India. And the cause of these deaths are preventable like complications during birth, prematurity and infections. More than half of all Indian women give birth without the help of skilled health care professionals, thereby leading to complications.

Malav came up with this idea a few years ago after his cousin’s daughter had to be kept alive in an incubator. While she had all the facilities available in a modern Indian city, Malav thought about all those infants who fail to get immediate care in remote villages of India. As of now, he is looking for initial seed funding to expand his team and bring more experts on board, develop minimal viable prototypes and start clinical trials.

He put his idea out at the Pitch@Palace event hosted by Queen Elizabeth II’s younger son, Prince Andrew – the Duke of York. Pitch@Palace supports UK entrepreneurs by connecting them with potential investors. There were about 200 entries this year at the fourth Pitch@Palace event. The theme was Internet of Things and Smart Cities. All start-ups, whose products are aimed at creating a smarter world and empowering people, could participate.

“According to our initial research, we found that India’s healthcare service has facilities to deal with a standard birth at sub-centres, primary health centres and community health centres but it lacks infrastructure for neonatal care of premature and underweight infants,” Malav told PTI.

All pictures: Facebook

Source…Tanaya Singh…www.the betterindia.com

Natarajan

Plant This Paper and Watch It Grow!!!…Amazing !!!

One young lady from Jaipur came up with an interesting idea – to create a paper that could be planted. Skeptical about her own idea, Kritika didn’t know that it would one day become a successful project. She started a company called Tomato & Co. that designs a paper which can grow into beautiful saplings.

Kritika Parwal, a young lady from Jaipur, was in the middle of a course at Kellogg when, for a particular branding assignment for a coffee chain, the students were required to come up with ‘out of the box’ ideas.

Having grown up in the handmade paper hub of the world, Jaipur, Kritika came up with the idea of creating paper that could be planted.

Kritika, the brain behind the interesting idea.

For this idea, Kritika says, “I received a lot of appreciation in my class. But, though I had done enough research on the subject before I announced the idea, I was sceptical about how it would actually turn out once I put it in practice.”

On coming back to India, Kritika happened to meet the Brand Manager of a multi-national FMCG company, and she spoke to him about her idea of making plantable paper. On an impulse, he asked her to implement it for his brand. This time, the still sceptical Kritika made a trip to Sanganer, a suburb of Jaipur, which is the home of the handmade paper industry.

She worked hard on her theoretical idea and, over a period of fifteen days, experimented with different organic materials, pigments and seeds.

“After a lot of trial and error and desperately waiting for saplings to grow out of the paper, we were successful in developing ‘tomato paper’ from tomato seeds, and we decided to name our company ‘Tomato & Co.,’ says the proud entrepreneur.

Kritika is now receiving many orders for this special paper.

‘Seed paper,’ which is another name for the handmade paper made by Tomato & Co, is made through a rather tedious and complicated process. The basic ingredients are organic cotton shreds, few naturally existing bio-binders, resins, and of course seeds.

“A homogeneous pulp of cotton shreds, seeds, binders, and resins of required consistency is made and is flattened out on screens of a specific thickness using muslin membranes. After the paper is semi-dried, it is taken through a few processes to preserve the germination of the seeds used. The sheets are then air dried and shaped into the required products,” explains Kritika.

For printing on the paper, organic and naturally existing pigments like indigo, cochineal, weld, and cutch are used.

Preparing this special paper is a long process.

It has been over a year since Tomato & Co came into being and the company has made successful attempts in using the seeds of tomato, lavender, chillies, carrot, jasmine, basil, lemon mint, lettuce, marigold, sunflower, wheat, parsley, and orange to make plantable paper.

Some of the brands that they have worked with are Unilever, Kissan, Tedx, and Mindshare. For their customers they have created product tags and little cards that carry the name of the brand.

She has delivered her products to many renowned brands.

They have also created calendars, postcards, greeting cards, wedding invites, and visiting cards. Bookmarks, door hangers, coffee cup sleeves, wristbands, seed coins, and coasters are some of the other interesting products that have made it to their list.

Anyone who interacts with Kritika is indeed impressed with her plantable paper. Naturally, most people do not take her seriously until they see, touch and ‘grow’ the paper.

Kritika has been using different seeds in these papers for over a year now.

Kritika has been using different seeds in these papers for over a year now. Raghav Sharma is one such person who has first hand experience of planting the paper and seeing it germinate. In his words, “When I first heard about Tomato & Co, I could not believe that such paper could exist. Being a resident of Jaipur, it was not hard for me to visit Kritika and learn more from her. I picked up the paper from her and once home, I followed the instructions given by her. I planted the paper in a flowering pot and would water it every day. Finally, after around 11 or 12 weeks, little sprouts were seen shooting out of the mud…..well, the seeds did germinate in my very own back yard!” –

The paper gets converted into a beautiful sapling in just 10-12 weeks.

Until now, the company has been working only with corporates and individual customers, customising the products of ‘seed paper’ for their specific requirements. According to Kritika, “The concept of a plantable paper echoes very beautifully with the common people and almost every day, someone or the other asks us when we will get into the retail market. We are presently working on a few retail products that will soon be in the market.”

Hopefully it won’t be too long before we can all buy greeting cards, postcards, coasters, diaries, pads and folders made of this unique paper and then plant them to see the seeds germinate in our very homes.

To know more about Tomato & Co. or order from them, visit their website.

Source…..Aparna Menon….www.thebetterindia.com

Natarajan