” This Ola Auto Driver from Bengaluru is a Social Media Sensation today….”…How ?

Ghasamfar Ali K. and his wife, with Ranjani Shanker

Ghasamfar Ali K. and his wife, with Ranjani Shanker

One man can make a difference. Read to know why Ghasamfar Ali K. made the news

Less than a month ago, auto driver Ghasamfar Ali K., picked up a passenger in Bangalore at 8.30 p.m. and drove her to her destination.

Just another journey, as far as he was concerned. Except, by the next morning, he had become a social media celebrity. In less than a week, people were recognising him on the street. And last weekend, the same passenger travelled from her hometown in Chennai to Bangalore, turning up unexpectedly at his home to say ‘thank you.’

Back in Chennai, the passenger, Ranjani Shanker, a marketing consultant and musician, talks about how that seemingly ordinary journey made an impact on not just her, but thousands of people across the country. In Bangalore for a short holiday, she found herself stranded in the city at night. “I needed to go to Kanakpura Road, about 38 km away, and I just could not get a cab.” She finally tried the Ola Auto app on her phone and Ghasamfar Ali accepted the ride.

Before he began driving, however, he warned her that a large part of the route would be through deserted roads. “He said, “the light is very low and it will be lonely — I need to tell you that. But don’t worry.” Despite being nervous, she decided to get into his auto anyway, instructing him to stick to a route she picked via Google Maps. “About 15 minutes into the ride, the roads got dark. I was worried — but he kept checking on me, saying ‘Are you ok, madam? Don’t worry’.”

When she reached Kanakpura, where a friend was to pick her up, she jumped out of the auto in relief. “It was not a city road, but at least there were tea shops, and some light.” However, her friend was delayed — stuck in traffic. “Ghasamfar then insisted on waiting with me for 20 minutes till my friend arrived. And it was those 20 minutes that made me write that Facebook post.”

She wrote the story as soon as she got back to her hotel that night. “I’ll be honest — I did have a feeling it would be popular, but I did not expect it to become the sensation it did.” In an hour, there were 400 Likes. By morning, there were 2,000. “I was like, whoa, I’ve never seen so many Likes on a post,” Ranjani laughs. “Then 4,000, 5,000… now it’s at 17,500.” With almost 2,800 shares. But that’s not all. It’s also gone viral on a number of online news sites.

Why did this post get so popular? “That’s something I’ve been thinking about,” Ranjani says, “I feel it’s the lack of positive news that’s made it stand out. We hear so many negative stories — especially about cab and auto drivers. Men who are rude, who are offensive and dangerous.” She talks about how women, in particular, related to her post. “I think women understand that fear of a dark, lonely road, because they’ve all felt it.”

Meanwhile, Ghasamfar has been making waves in Bangalore. Says Ranjini, “He’s a local hero now: he’s been on radio stations, three newspaper articles and television. The local Commissioner of Police also felicitated him and posted the picture on their Facebook page.”

Ola finally got wind of the story and wanted to reward Ghasamfar. “They decided to pay off his autorickshaw loan. And they called to ask me if I’d like to join in and surprise him at his home,” says Ranjini.

She agreed enthusiastically, and Ola flew her Bangalore last weekend. “He was so surprised when I walked into his house!” She says, “My family was insistent that I give him something as well, as a token of our appreciation and respect.” So she gave him a watch, after which he introduced her to his wife and five-year-old son.

Ranjani then says with a smile, “As we were all sitting together and drinking tea, he said, “Madamji, I don’t even know why I’m famous. I hear it’s because of Facebook. I know what Facebook is… But what is a ‘Like’?”

Source….Shonali Muthalaly in http://www.the hindu.com

Natarajan

Incredible Works Of Art By The Bangalore Crocodile Artist…

Recently, Baadal Nanjundaswamy, an artist from Bangalore, made headlines for planting a life-sized crocodile in the middle of a road after civic authorities failed to repair a pothole.

Nanjundaswamy’s efforts paid off and the Bangalore municipal corporation covered up the pothole in just a day after the pictures went viral.

Read this: How A Bengaluru Artist’s ‘Crocodile’ In The Middle Of A Busy Road Got A Pothole Fixed

But, this isn’t Nanjundaswamy first has used his art for civic activism. The artist who covers streets with his 3-D painting has been making a mark for a while now. Here’s a look at some of his other work.

Indian artist Badal Nanjundaswamy uses the opening of an unattended manhole in the middle of a road as a canvas to depict the Hindu God of death ‘Yama’ waiting to gobble up unwary pedestrains or motorists in Bangalore. (Manjunath Kiran/AFP/Getty Images)

The 3-D artist creates an impression of holding a box in this picture. (Baadal Nanjundaswamy/Facebook)

Sometimes, he sits on his painted car. (Baadal Nanjundaswamy/ Facebook)

This is one of Baadal’s new 3-D work. (Baadal Nanjundaswamy/Facebook)

Baadal’s artwork has also fixed uneven road dividers in Bangalore. (Baadal Nanjundaswamy/Facebook)

Is that a real elephant? No, it isn’t. It is one of Baadal’s life-like paintings. (Baadal Nanjundaswamy/Facebook)

Last year, he drew a cobweb around a manhole in Kanakanagar main road to get the civic authorities’ attention. That too was fixed. (Baadal Nanjundaswamy/Facebook)

Source….Adrija Bose in http://www.huffingtonpost.in

Natarajan

” ‘Ugly Indian’ is Cleaning up Dirty Cities….”…An Inspiring story…

Bangalore is inspiring people across India to transform the cities they live in, one mile at a time, finds Indulekha Aravind.

It is perhaps the best kind of uprising – without banners, newsroom debates or vehement netas.

Instead, what it does have is a simple but effective slogan: “Kaam Chalu, Mooh Bandh!” (roughly translated as ‘Stop Talking, Start Working’).

The residents of Bangalore might be familiar with the work of The Ugly Indian, an anonymous group born in 2010 with the aim of making the city cleaner.

When you pass a recently painted red wall near a surprisingly clean pavement, for instance, you know it is their handiwork. Four years after the movement kicked off, it seems to be inspiring similar “risings” in other cities and spin-offs in Bangalore itself.

Image: A subway cleaned and decorated with paintings. Photograph, courtesy: The Ugly Indian

On August 15 this year, a group of 200-odd volunteers turned up at MG Road in Bangalore to create a ‘model mile’ by cleaning up the pavement, planting saplings and painting road dividers.

The volunteers were employees of various companies in Bangalore who had come forward to take part in Adopt A Mile, an initiative launched by five friends working in tech companies.

“We were wondering what we could do to change things in the cities. So, we decided to take a stand in their transformation at an individual level by bringing about change one mile at a time. We talked to the companies where we work as well as CEOs of other firms to get their employees involved in adopting a mile,” says A Ramachandran, one of the founders and an executive in an IT company.

They are currently in talk with few companies to include them in the movement . They could either beautify and maintain the mile or even build skywalks and other infrastructure in partnership with civic agencies.

“We are not talking about picking up garbage or filling potholes, which is the job of the Bruhat Bengaluru Mahanagara Palike,” says Ramachandran.

By involving companies, the group also hopes to bring in the rigour of the corporate sector into the programme by publishing quarterly results on the website www.adoptamile.in and by conducting audits of the adopted stretches of road independently.

“For instance, if a company is found to have failed in its responsibility in maintaining that “mile” the agreement with it can be cancelled,” explains Ramachandran. The volunteering could also become a team-building exercise for the employees who participate. The entire effort, he says, has been in partnership with The Ugly Indian.

And it’s not just Bangalore. On Friday, photographs appeared on The Ugly Indian Facebook page about ‘Rajahmundry Rising’, where a ‘spot’ in the Andhra town filled with garbage, near a decrepit wall which was being used as a urinal, has been transformed into a clean, bright quarter with a bench and potted plants.

The Facebook page of the Andhra Pradesh group chronicles its efforts through at least a couple of other ‘spot fixes’ and it would warm the cockles of even a cynic’s heart.

In August, it was Mumbai’s turn, when a bunch of enthusiasts got busy on a Sunday morning and spruced up, what seems to have been, an eyesore in Worli. Bhubaneswar too has a group that calls itself “Stopp Us”, reports Times of India.

It has already cleaned up four walls in the city and have plans for many more. “Risings’ have also taken place in Vijayawada, Meerut, Salem, Gurgaon, Kanpur and Visakhapatnam, among others.

The Ugly Indian started off with a simple enough premise. If you want to make a change, begin by doing something instead of just sitting back and blaming the government or “the system”.

The modus operandi is ‘spot fixes’, where a particular area in a city is chosen and a group of volunteers, usually brought together via email, turn up to clean and beautify it. People in the vicinity are asked to monitor it to help ensure it is maintained. As a volunteer at two such spot-fixes a couple of years ago, I can vouch that the emphasis is on working, not socialising.

 

The entire operation was supervises by a small group of people, who also chipped in.Volunteers are given gloves, masks, paint and brushes and roll up their sleeves and plunge in.

After cleaning and painting, small dustbins, or TereBins, are placed so that litterbugs no longer have an excuse. The materials are bought with Rs 100-200 contributed by each volunteer at the spot fix, usually numbering 10 to 15.

Unfortunately, The Ugly Indian’s “moo bandh” principle also extends to media queries and email requests for interviews were met with “we do not respond to the media”. This would also be in keeping with its principle of anonymity and no single person taking centre stage.

 

A wi-fi hotspot & pavement cafe at a former dirty spot on MG Road, Bangalore

But the group does add: “All we can say is that all the growth around the country is totally spontaneous and ‘inspired’ – nobody from Bangalore is going to other cities, or even talking to anyone.”

The exception seems to have been an ‘Ask Me Anything’ on Reddit, where a volunteer clarified: “We are trying to move from an underground guerilla-type movement to one where citizens collaborate with elected officials.”

Requests for “spot fixes” and “risings” have been coming in even from Pakistan, Bangladesh, Indonesia and a few other countries, adding “Our only agenda is to convert despair to hope.”

To volunteer for a spot fix or learn how to organise one, send an email to theuglyindian@gmail.com. More details on www.facebook.com/theugly.indian

Indulekha Aravind ln  

Source…..www.rediff.com

Natarajan