A Priceless Lesson From A.P.J. Abdul Kalam On The Power Of Change…

 

Excerpted from a book by A.P.J Abdul Kalam:

Dear friends, I strongly feel that no youth today needs to fear about the future. Why? The ignited mind of the youth is the most powerful resource on the Earth.

Let me give you some examples of those who made a change in their lives and became true ignited minds.
A unique experience happened when I went to Madurai to inaugurate the Paediatric Oncology Cancer unit at Meenakshi Mission Hospital on 7 January 2011. After I completed the task, suddenly one person from the audience approached me and his face looked familiar. When he came closer, I found out that he was once my driver when I was the Director of Defence Research and Development Lab (DRDL) at Hyderabad in 1982–92. His name is V. Kathiresan, and he had worked with me day and night for those ten years. During that time, I noticed, he was always reading some books, newspapers and journals during his waiting time in the car. That dedication had attracted me and I asked him a question. ‘Why do you read during your leisure time?’ He replied that his children used to ask him lot of questions. Since he didn’t always know the answer, he would study whenever time permitted in order to give them the best answers. The spirit of learning in him impressed me and I told him to study formally through distance education and gave him some free time to attend the course and complete his 10+2 and then to apply for higher education. He took that as a challenge and kept on studying and upgraded his educational qualifications. He did B.A. (History), then he did M.A. (History) and then he did M.A. (Political Science) and completed his B.Ed and then M.Ed and he worked with me up to 1992. Thereafter he registered for his doctoral studies and got his PhD in 2001. He joined the Education Department of Tamil Nadu government and served there for a number of years. In 2010, he became an assistant professor in the Government Arts College at Mellur near Madurai.

When I was invited to address the students of UPMS School, Kovilpatti, I again met Professor Kathiresan who was sitting on the dais. I introduced Professor Kathiresan to the gathering and brought out how he, a native of that same town, has transformed himself, earned a doctorate and was teaching in a college after two decades of hard work. This incident cheered the entire young audience.

Friends, I visualize a scene. A school having about 50 teachers and 750 students. It is a place of beauty and for fostering creativity and learning. How is it possible? It is because the school management and the Principal selected the teachers who love teaching, who treat the students as their children or grandchildren. The children see the teachers as role models not only in teaching but how they conduct their lives. Above all, I see an environment in which there is nothing like a good student, average student or poor student. The whole school and teacher system is involved in generating students who perform to their best. And above all, what should be the traits the teacher should possess based on teachers’ life both inside the class room and outside the school? When good teachers walk among them, the students should feel the heat of knowledge and the purity of their lives radiate from them. This race of teachers should multiply.

As a child moves towards teenage and then adulthood, his carefree attitude is slowly taken over by many pressures. What will I do after my education? Will I get a proper employment?

Teachers and parents should preserve the happy smiles on the faces of their children even when they complete their school education. The student should feel confident that ‘I can do it’. He or she should have the self-esteem and the capability to become an employment generator. This transformation can only be brought about by a teacher who has the vision to transform.

I have always liked to sit in a class. When I visit schools and colleges in India and abroad, I like to see how teachers teach and students interact in the classroom. Recently, I was in Andhra Pradesh, in a one-teacher school classroom. The school had classes only up to the fifth grade. I was with the students and the teacher was teaching. How happy were the children? The teacher was telling the young students, ‘Dear children, you see the full moon, the beautiful scene in the sky brings smiles and cheers. Remember, as you smile the family also smiles. How many of you keep your parents happy?’ The whole class lifted their hands. They said, they would do it. I also lifted my hand along with the students.

Another experience was during my visit to UAE. I inaugurated an Indian school in Dubai. When the preparation was going on for the inaugural function, I was moving from place to place in the school. I visited classrooms where students from class five and six were being taught. As soon as the teacher saw me, she asked me to take the class. So I started interacting with the students. Instead of loading them with the lessons. I asked them how many planets does our sun have? Many hands went up. One girl said, there are nine planets and some students said, there are eight planets. I said the right answer is eight planets, since the ninth planet Pluto has been removed from the list of planets, because it does not meet the criteria of a planet, in size, weight and orbital motion. I asked, ‘Tell me, which is our planet?’ There was a chorus in reply, ‘Earth’. Then I asked, ‘Who will talk about the Earth?’ One sixth class student got up and said, ‘Our Earth rotates on its own axis.’ Many students said, ‘It takes 24 hours for one orbit that’s how we get day and night.’ I was very pleased with the knowledge of the young on the solar system. Then I asked the class, what does the Earth do, there was pin drop silence. Again a fifth class student said, ‘Earth orbits around the sun.’ How much time it takes to complete the one orbit? Many hands went up, they said 365 days. Our sun belongs to which galaxy? Only one boy responded, ‘Milky Way’. How much time our sun takes for one orbit of our galaxy? No response. Of course, it is difficult. I gave the answer: 200 million years. The children had a great surprise. I was impressed with the class and greeted them and left.

I am giving you these examples to illustrate, how students can be encouraged to build their self-confidence. I am sure teachers may adopt several methods to make the class dynamic and creative for promoting sustained interest among the students.

(From Address at Villa Nazreth English Medium School and other schools, Aryanad, Thiruvananthapuram, 22 February 2015 and Address and interaction with the students of CRPF Public School, Hakimpet, Telangana, 20 March 2015)

 

Source….http://www.youthkiawaaz.com/2016/10/apj-abdul-kalam-life-lessons-for-youth/

Natarajan

WHY WE SAY “O’CLOCK”…?

 

The practice of saying “o’clock” is simply a remnant of simpler times when clocks weren’t very prevalent and people told time by a variety of means, depending on where they were and what references were available.

Generally, of course, the Sun was used as a reference point, with solar time being slightly different than clock time. Clocks divide the time evenly, whereas, by solar time, hour lengths vary somewhat based on a variety of factors, like what season it is.

Thus, to distinguish the fact that one was referencing a clock’s time, rather than something like a sundial, as early as the fourteenth century one would say something like, “It is six of the clock,” which later got slurred down to “six o’clock” sometime around the sixteenth or seventeenth centuries. In those centuries, it was also somewhat common to just drop the “o’” altogether and just say something like “six clock.”

Using the form of “o’clock” particularly increased in popularity around the eighteenth century when it became common to do a similar slurring in the names of many things such as “Will-o’-the wisp” from “Will of the wisp” (stemming from a legend of an evil blacksmith named Will Smith, with “wisp” meaning “torch”) and “Jack-o’-lantern” from “Jack of the lantern” (which originally just meant “man of the lantern” with “Jack,” at the time, being the generic “any man” name. Later, either this or the Irish legend of “Stingy Jack” got this name transferred to referring to carved pumpkins with lit candles inside).

While today with clocks being ubiquitous and few people, if anybody, telling direct time by the Sun, it isn’t necessary in most cases to specify we are referencing time from clocks, but the practice of saying “o’clock” has stuck around anyway.

Bonus Fact:

  • The word “clock” is thought to have originally derived from the Medieval Latin “clocca,” meaning “bell,” referencing the ringing of the bells on early town clocks, which would let everyone in a community know what time it was.
  • Contrary to popular belief, the clock tower in London commonly called “Big Ben” is not named “Big Ben.”  Rather, it is named “Elizabeth Tower,” after Queen Elizabeth II; named such during her Diamond Jubilee (the 2012 60th anniversary of her accession to the throne).  Before that, it was just called “Clock Tower.” So why is it so often called “Big Ben”?  That is due to the great bell inside the tower that chimes the hour out and goes by that name.  Over time this has morphed into many calling the clock tower itself that even today, despite the recent, very public, name change.
  • The Tower of the Winds in Athens, which lies right under the Acropolis, is thought to be the first clock tower in history, constructed sometime between the 2nd century BC to 50 BC.  It contained eight sundials and a water clock, along with a wind vane.
  • If you’ve ever wondered what a.m. and p.m. stand for, wonder no more: a.m. stands for “ante meridiem,” which is Latin for “before midday”; p.m. stands for “post meridiem,” which is Latin for “after midday.”
  • The International Space Station orbits about 354 kilometers (220 miles) above the Earth and travels at approximately  27,700 km/hr (17,211 mph), so it takes about 92 minutes to circle the Earth once. For this reason, every 45 minutes the astronauts on-board see a sunrise or a sunset, with a total of 15 – 16 of each every 24 hours.

Source…..www.today i foundout .com

Natarajan

DO YOU KNOW …?

 

 

வாரம் ஒரு கவிதை …” பொம்மைகள் “…!!!

 

பொம்மைகள்
…………
மண் பொம்மை  மர பொம்மை  நாங்க எல்லாம் இன்று
உங்க   வீட்டு கொலு படியில் … எந்த படியாய் இருந்தாலும்
எப்படியும் ஒரு இடம் உண்டு எங்களுக்கு உங்க வீட்டு கொலு
படியில்…பேசா  பொம்மை நாங்க என்று நீங்க  நினைத்தாலும்  நாங்க
பேசிக்கொண்டேதான்   இருப்போம்  எங்களுக்குள் கொலு படியில்!
பேசும் மனிதர் நீங்கதான் இப்போ பொம்மை மாதிரி !
அலை பேசியும் கையுமாய் அலையும் நீங்க பேசுவது அதனுடன் மட்டுமே !
உங்க குழந்தை கையில் கூட   ஒரு அலை பேசி இப்போ !
கையில் அலை பேசி இல்லாத நேரம் உங்களுக்கு மௌன விரதம்
உங்க மடிக்கணினியுடன் மணிக் கணக்காக !
பொம்மை எங்களை “ரோபோ “வாக  பேசவைத்து  வேலையும் செய்ய வைக்கும்
சாதனை செய்யும்  நீங்க உங்க வீட்டில் உங்களுக்குள் பேச்சை
குறைத்து சொந்த பந்தம் தொலைப்பது ஒரு  பெரும்  வேதனை !
பொம்மைகள்  நாங்க காத்திருக்கிறோம்  உங்களை எல்லாம்
கொலு படியில் பொம்மைகளாக உட்காரவைக்கும் ஒரு காலத்துக்கு !
காலம் மாறும் நிச்சயம் !…காட்சியும் மாறும் அச்சமயம் !
Natarajan
My Tamil Kavithai appeared in http://www.dinamani.com  on 10th Oct 2016

2 lakh to 3300 crore: The BYJU’s Classes success story…Meet Byju Raveendran!

 

‘A business cannot be driven by the passion to make money, the passion to change society is far more important.’
‘After a certain point, what value has money to a person?’

30byjus-classes-2

A son of teachers, teaching never fascinated Byju Raveendran when he was young. His passion was sports.

After working for a couple of years as a globetrotting service engineer for a shipping firm, Byju became a teacher by accident.

On holiday, he helped some friends pass the Common Aptitude Test entrance examination.

From then on, requests started pouring in from friends of friends, and their friends. In no time, ‘Byju’s classes’ became so popular that he quit his job and flying from one city to another to take classes.

His classrooms grew from a single room, to a hall, and then an auditorium and at one point even a stadium!

He launched the BYJU’s Learning App for school students in 2015. The learning app also coaches for CAT, the civil services examination, the Joint Entrance Examination (JEE), the National Eligibility and Entrance Test (NEET), the Graduate Record Examination (GRE) and the Graduate Management Admission Test (GMAT).

The idea appealed to many investors and in 2016 alone, venture capital firm Sequoia Capital and Belgian investment firm Sofina invested $75 million (approximately Rs 500 crore/Rs 5 billion) into the firm. This was the largest fundraising in the education start-up segment in India.

The latest investment into Byju’s firm (September 2016) is the $50 million (Rs 332 crore/Rs 3.32 billion) from the Chan Zuckerberg Initiative, the philanthropic organisation created by Facebook founder Mark Zuckerberg and his wife Dr Priscilla Chan in 2015.

Byju spoke with Rediff.com‘s Shobha Warrier about his wonderful journey from mechanical engineer to successful entrepreneur.

Growing up in a village in Kerala

I grew up in Azhikode, a small village in Kannur, Kerala, the bastion of Communism.

I do not know whether it was the influence of Communism or the face of any typical village, the social fabric was very closely knit and people were politically and socially active.

Both my parents were teachers at the school I studied. My father Raveendran was a physics teacher and my mother Shobhanavalli taught maths. I grew up in a joint family where my father’s brother and sister and their children also lived.

Normally, children of teachers are pressured to concentrate on academics, but my parents were so open minded that they let me participate and excel in sports which was my major passion as a student.

Other than life skills, they never gave me any coaching in any subject. Though some of my teachers used to complain to my parents that I was missing a lot of classes due to my sports activities, they supported me to pursue what I liked.

In Kannur, football is a passion for everyone, but I played almost every sport available when in school, and football, cricket and table tennis at the university level.

‘I had my education in a Malayalam medium school and I learnt English on my own, mainly by listening to cricket commentary.’

It was quite common that many students who studied in Malayalam medium schools felt inferior in front of those who studied in English medium schools while in college.

My father’s influence was tremendous in my life as he let me be free of the confinement of classrooms and I feel you learn a lot more outside the classrooms than inside.

The biggest lessons I learnt from my sporting days were how to lead a team, teamwork, and how to perform under pressure. All these helped me immensely when I became an entrepreneur.

In addition, I learnt the value of controlled aggression, how to be extremely positive and that losing and winning are both part of the game.

We played games for fun and not in the structured way most kids play these days. Unlike children who play video games inside their homes, those who run around and played outdoor games learn a lot more life skills.

There is no substitute for playing outdoor games with other children.

Though I played sports well, I did not have any ambition to be a cricketer or a football player. I played games because I enjoyed playing them. In fact, I enjoy every moment of my life; I do not do anything expecting anything in return. Maybe I inherited this attitude from my father who is super cool about everything in life.

The choices in front of all the students at that time were either be an engineer or a doctor, and I chose to study engineering. One reason why I chose engineering was I knew I would get more time to play as medicine students hardly got time to play sports.

From a village in Kerala to travelling around the world

After studying mechanical engineering, I got a job in a multinational shipping firm and started travelling all around the world as a service engineer.

It was a very challenging and exciting job and as I travelled to new places, I became more and more aspirational.

If anyone had asked me at that time whether I would be an entrepreneur in the future, I would have said, no. The desire to be an entrepreneur never even crossed my mind.

After two years of working, I was on holiday in Bangalore, where many of friends worked. It so happened that they were preparing for the CAT exam then and as I was good at maths, they asked for my help.

While I helped them prepare, I also wrote the exam just for fun and see how I fared. To my surprise, I scored in the 100th percentile, but I had no plans to do an MBA in an IIM. My friends also did well and some of them even got admission at the IIMs.

I was back in India again in 2005 on holiday. This time, more friends of my friends came to me for help to prepare for the CAT exams. I was in Bangalore for six weeks and I might have trained more than 1,000 students during the period.

‘As the numbers grew, the venue moved from the terrace of a friend’s house to a classroom, and then to an auditorium.’

The initial workshops were free and students paid for advanced workshops once they liked it.

Because of the enormous response to my teaching, I didn’t go back to my job after that.

Once I started teaching, I realised that I enjoyed teaching tremendously which I was not aware of till then.

Becoming a full time teacher

When I decided to resign from my highly paid job and start teaching, my parents supported me. Never once did they question me. They supported all the decisions I took, like not joining an IIM, quitting my job to start teaching while there were many people who questioned my parents’ indulgence of me.

In those days, I taught CAT aspirants on weekends while I prepared myself on weekdays by trying to come up with innovative ways to solve problems.

I travelled to Pune, Delhi, Chennai and Mumbai during the weekends and in no time I had to add five more cities on weekdays due to constant demand.

Wherever I went, I addressed packed auditoriums; a few times, I ran classes in a stadium. As time passed by, I even took maths workshops for 20,000 students at one time.

I became a popular teacher and I was doing this all by myself. It was an overwhelming experience when thousands of students wait eagerly in various cities for your classes.

Sometimes I wondered whether I deserved the kind of respect and importance they gave me.

Funnily, a person who had never addressed any group of even ten during my school or college days was taking classes to thousands of them in auditoriums.

‘When you take classes in stadiums, teaching gets elevated to become almost like a performance art.’

Soon I started making lots of money, much more than I ever thought I would make as a teacher. As I was a one-man army then, I didn’t have to spend any money on anything except my own efforts.

In 2009, I made videos of my lectures and used V-SAT to beam them to students in 45 cities where I could not travel to.

Byju’s Classes becomes a brand

My classes were referred to as Byju’s Classes from the time my classes became popular.

In 2007, without me knowing, the brand name Byju’s Classes was created by my students and I decided to capitalise on the brand name later. I didn’t want to lose the popularity and the good name the brand had achieved.

In 2011, the idea to form a team came from some of my students who contacted me after finishing their courses at various IIMs. We started the company Think and Learn with 25 to 30 people, but the team grew in numbers every month to more than 1,000 today.

The product our company planned to create was content for school students and the decision to move from CAT to creating content for school students came from my observation of the students I taught.

I felt that most of the students lacked conceptual clarity and a proper foundation. I found that there was a huge gap in how the subjects could be learnt and how they were taught. That is why I wanted to create something that could fill the gap.

Looking back, I feel I excelled in exams because I wrote exams for fun, the same way I played games.

‘Exams never intimidated me. There was no stress or pressure to perform well in the exams. I looked at exams as a part of the learning process.’

Instead of memorising stuff, I used to learn the concepts well, something I found was lacking in many of my students. So, I decided to target the crucial years in a student’s life from the 8th to the 12th standard.

Today, my classes begin for 4th standard children; they are in maths, physics, chemistry and biology.

Maths and science are two subjects for which I had special attitude and I enjoyed both, especially solving maths problems. I never learnt maths and science to write exams. I loved learning on my own and understanding the concepts.

I noticed then and even now that majority of the students learn a subject to score good marks. You lose the pleasure you derive from solving, say a maths problem, by studying for the exam. These students don’t realise the fun they are losing out on by studying only to score high marks.

I was a Maths Olympiad winner in school only because I enjoyed solving maths problems.

The problem with our education system is that it gives more importance to breadth than depth.

We tend to create many generalists and very few specialists.

They tell you to work hard on your weaknesses.

On the contrary, I would argue that you should also build on your strengths!

Asking questions is the key to a student’s success. You see 2-3-year-olds learning things by asking questions all the time, but as they grow, adults discourage them from asking questions.

‘I feel all schools should encourage students to ask questions. Your thought process is alive only when you ask the right questions.’

I love maths and sports equally and it’s tough for me to choose one. My love for maths has helped me a lot in life. For example, I used my strength in solving maths problems to start my own company, attract investors and on a lighter note, even impress the girl I loved to become my wife.

From 2011 to 2015, we immersed ourselves in creating content mainly for school students from classes 6 to 12.

Our content is very contextual and visual. Instead of focusing on the whats of learning, we pay attention to the whys and hows as well.

We created each chapter in a subject like a movie. And it’s not just me; a lot more teachers take classes these days.

We have a 150 strong content team, a 200 member media team to make it into interesting videos and a technology team of 150 to personalise it. In all, we are a 500-member product development team now.

By August 2015, Byju’s Learning App was ready to be launched, and in one year, we have had 5.5 million downloads with 250,000 plus students using it on an annual subscription basis.

We have also found that students spend an average of 40 minutes per session and more than 90 per cent of the students who came on board last year renewed their subscription, acknowledging the fact that they benefited from the learning programme.

Investment over the years

 

 

We didn’t invest much initially; the Rs 2 lakh (Rs 200,000) I invested first came from what I made from my classes.

The first investment came in 2013 when Mohandas Pai and Ranjan Pai decided to invest Rs 50 crore (Rs 500 million) in Byju’s Classes.

It was after Ranjan Pai saw how students at the Manipal Institute of Technology attended our video classes in large numbers. We used the money to scale up the team and accelerate product development.

The latest and the most publicised investment was the $50 million invested by the Chan Zuckerberg Initiative. I do not know how we came on to their radar. I assume it must be through some reference.

Two things got them excited in our company: The first was how we use technology to personalise learning and the second was the impact our app has had on students not just in cities, but also in small towns.

Naturally, I was very excited to be noticed by one of the world’s most dynamic young entrepreneurs.

Social impact

With a father who is a Communist, and having grown up in a village in Kannur, money is not really important to me. I am more concerned and interested in seeing our app make a strong social impact.

I didn’t have any drive or passion to start a business, but when I started teaching, I realised that it was my passion and it gave me a lot of satisfaction and enjoyment.

When my classes started creating an impact, it became a business proposition.

‘In the sector that we are in, the real fun is not in creating a billion dollar company but changing the way millions of students learn.’

The most satisfying aspect for me is that we are able to reach out to tens of thousands of students.

I always say I am a teacher by choice and an entrepreneur by chance.

Making money has never been a priority for me, but giving something back to society is. That’s why I take care of the education and healthcare of the underprivileged in my village.

I grew up there and I feel it is my duty to help others come up in life.

I am of the opinion that a business cannot be driven by the passion to make money. The passion to change society is far more important.

After a certain point, what value has money to a person?

Shobha Warrier / Rediff.com

Natarajan

 

வாரம் ஒரு கவிதை …” எழுத்து “…!

 

எழுத்து
……….
எண்ணங்களின் பிரதி பலிப்பே
ஒருவன்  எழுதும் கவிதையும்  , கதையும் !
உறங்கும் மக்களையும்  நாட்டையும் உலுக்கி
அவர்தம்  உரிமைக்கு குரல் கொடுக்க வைப்பதும்
அந்த  எழுத்தின் சக்தியே !
ஒருவன் தலை எழுத்தை மாற்றும் சக்தியும் உண்டு
அந்த எண்ணுக்கும் எழுத்துக்கும் !
ஒரு கையெழுத்தின் மதிப்பைக் கூட்டுவதும்
அதே எண் , எழுத்தின் சக்திதான் !
எழுத்தாணி காலம் முதல் இன்றைய மின்னஞ்சல்
யுகம் வரை எண்ணும்  எழுத்தும், இமையும்
விழியுமே  ஒரு  மனிதனுக்கு !
Natarajan  in http://www.dinamani.com dated 3rd Oct 2016
Natarajan

வாரம் ஒரு கவிதை…” நீதியைத் தேடி …”

 

நீதியைத்  தேடி …
…………..
அன்றைய அரசன்  சொன்னது நீதி ..செய்தது நீதி !.அவன் நடந்து காட்டிய வழியும்
நீதி வழியே !  …அரசனும் அவனே …நீதிமானும் அவனே !
நீதி தேடி அவன் மக்கள் வேறு எங்கும் சென்றது இல்லை
மன்னன் அவன் தீர்ப்புக்கு   மறு  கேள்வி இல்லை !
இன்று அரசே நீதி தேடி ,ஓடி , அலையும் அவலம்  …ஒரு நதி நீருக்காக !
ஒரு  அரசுக்கே கதி இது என்றால் , எனக்கும் உனக்கும்
விடிவு காலம் எப்போது ? தேசிய  நதி நீர் பங்கீட்டு விதி என்று ஒன்று உதித்து
அதை அரசும் மக்களும் மதிக்கும்  அந்த நாள் எந்த  நாள் ?
Natarajan
http://www.dinamani.com  dated 26th sep 2016

Laughter …the Best medicine…!!!

 

 

: NEW AGE KIDS
———————–
HUMOUR SANS UNIFORM (with due apologies to Reader’s Digest)
—————————— —————————— —————————–

Who are lizards?
Awesome answer by a kid….
They are
those poor crocodiles who forgot to have
Horlicks when they were young
➖➖➖➖➖➖➖➖
What is a Pizza..?
Awesome answer:
A Pizza.. is just a Paratha that went
abroad for higher education
➖➖➖➖➖➖➖➖
➖➖➖➖➖➖➖➖➖
A little boy was in a bus eating a chocolate,                                                             then he took another one and then another …
A man next to him said,
“Do you know that too much of it will damage your teeth??”
The boy replied,
“My grandfather lived for 132 years”
The man asked ,
“Was it because of eating chocolate?”
The boy replied,
No, he was always minding his own business!
➖➖➖➖➖➖➖➖
Son: Dad, there’s a small get together at school tomorrow !!!
Father: small get together.? ..how small.?
Son: only me…you…and the Principal …

➖➖➖➖➖➖➖➖➖
Digital India effect…
The young boy was suffering from loose motion.
He hesitated to say the word loose motion to the doctor.                                           So he explained in new generation style…….
“Doctor, since morning.. unlimited free outgoing, New ringtones have also started.
No balance in my stomach. If I recharge, within one minute balance becomes nil. Doctor, can you please disconnect the offer.!!
Source….Input from one of my friends
Natarajan

வாரம் ஒரு கவிதை…” தண்ணீருக்கு இரத்தம் ” …

 

தண்ணீருக்கு  இரத்தம் ….
………………..
என் நதி ஓட்டம் ! … இந்த மண்ணுக்கே  உயிர் ஓட்டம் ! …என்
நீர்  இந்த மண்ணுக்கும்  மண்ணில் உள்ள எல்லா உயிருக்கும்
சொந்தம் ! இந்த பால பாடம் தெரியாதா உனக்கு ?
நீர் இது “எனக்கு”  மட்டும் சொந்தம் என்று உரிமைக்குரல்
எழுப்பும் உனக்கு ஒரு  நதி மூலம் என்னவென்று தெரியுமா ?
இந்த மண்ணுக்கும் மண்ணில் உள்ள நீருக்கும் சொந்தம்
கொண்டாடும் நீ … விண்ணுக்கும்,  விண்ணில் உள்ள
நிலவுக்கும்,  பகலவனுக்கும் ,மழை மேகத்துக்கும்  தனி உரிமை
கோர முடியுமா சொல்லு ?
விதி விலக்கு எதுவும் இல்லை நதி எனக்கு இந்த மண்ணில்
என் வழி நான்  செல்ல !  நான் ஒரு விலை கேட்டேனா உன்னை
நான் கொடுக்கும் நீருக்கு ?  பதில் சொல்லு நீ! …வைத்து
விட்டாயே நீ  என் நீருக்கு ஒரு விலை …தண்ணீருக்கு
விலை  செந்நீரா ?… எல்லையே இல்லையா உன் மமதைக்கு ?
அன்று உன் முன்னோர் சிந்திய ரத்தத்தால் நீ சுவாசிப்பது இன்று சுதந்திர
காற்றை !..மறந்து விடாதே அதை ! இன்று தண்ணீருக்கு  நீ சிந்த வைக்கும் இரத்தம்
உன் சந்ததியர் , சகோதரர் , நல்லிணக்க நல் வாழ்வைக் குலைத்து தொலைத்திட
நீ போட்டிருக்கும் ஒரு சிவப்புக் கோடு !.. விவரம் அறியா பிஞ்சு நெஞ்சில்  நீ விதைத்து
விட்டிருக்கும் ஒரு நஞ்சு வித்து ! …நீ  போட்ட சிவப்புக் கோட்டை அழித்து விடு நீயே !
பிஞ்சு நெஞ்சில் நீ விதைத்திருக்கும் வித்தையும் களை எடுத்து நசுக்கி விடு நீயே..அந்த
வித்து ஒரு நச்சு மரமாக வளரும் முன்னே !
இதை நீ கட்டாயம் செய்ய வேண்டும் மனிதா …  நதி என் கண்ணீர்
செந்நீராக  உருமாறும்  முன்னே !
Natarajan
20th sep 2016