Joke of the Day…” What is your Second wish …”?

An Englishman, a German and a Frenchman are all in Saudi Arabia, sharing a smuggled crate of booze, when all of a sudden, Saudi police rush in and arrest them. The mere possession of alcohol is a severe offence in Saudi Arabia, so for this terrible crime they are all sentenced to 50 whip lashes each.

On the day of their punishment the Sheikh who will whip them announced: “It’s my wife’s birthday today, and she has asked me to allow each of you one wish before your whipping.” The German was first in line, he thought for a while and then said: “Please tie a pillow to my back.” This was done, but the pillow only lasted 20 lashes before the whip went through.

When the punishment was done the German had to be carried away bleeding and crying with pain. The Frenchman was next up. After watching the German in horror he said smugly: “Please fix two pillows to my back.” But even two pillows could only take 35 lashes before the whip went through again and the Frenchman was soon led away whimpering loudly.

The Englishman was the last one up, but before he could say anything, the Sheikh turned to him and said: “You are from a part of the world I really like. For this, you may have two wishes!”

“Thank you, your Most Royal and Merciful highness,” the Englishman replied. “In recognition of your kindness, my first wish is that you give me not 50, but 100 lashes.” “Not only are you an honorable, handsome and powerful man, you are also very brave,” the Sheikh said with an admiring look on his face. “If 100 lashes is what you desire, then so be it. And your second wish, what is it to be?” the Sheikh asked. The Englishman smiled and said, “Tie the Frenchman and the German to my back.”

Source……..www.ba-bamail.com

Natarajan

Clear Skies Over the United States… A View from International Space Station

Lights of the United States at night photographed from the International Space Station with HTV cargo vehicle in foreground

On Sept. 17, 2015, NASA astronaut Scott Kelly captured images and video from the International Space Station during an early morning flyover of the United States. Sharing with his social media followers, Kelly wrote, “Clear skies over much of the USA today. #GoodMorning from @Space_Station! #YearInSpace.”

Tuesday, Sept. 15 marked the midpoint of the one-year mission to the space station for Kelly and Russian cosmonaut Mikhail Kornienko. The average International Space Station expedition lasts four to six months. Research enabled by the one-year mission will help scientists better understand how the human body reacts and adapts to long-duration spaceflight. This knowledge is critical as NASA looks toward human missions deeper into the solar system, including to and from Mars, which could last 500 days or longer.

Image Credit: NASA

Source…www.nasa.gov

Natarajan

How a farm labourer became a CEO of a Company …. An Inspiring Story…

From earning Rs 5 a day as a farm labourer to starting an IT services company that is worth Rs 1.5 crore (Rs 15 million), Jyoti Reddy’s story of success is nothing short of an inspiring movie plot.

That night she decided to break the rules.

With a few friends, whom she referred as akka, she did not return to the orphanage till way past midnight.

It was Sivaratri, the great night of Shiva, when the planets are potently aligned to embrace his cosmic dance.

After visiting the Shiva temple in their village, they decided to do something really daring — go for a movie, a blockbuster love story.

She laughs, a deep throaty laugh, which betrays a teenager’s giggles at the memory of forbidden pleasure.

Anila Jyothi Reddy has travelled very far from that night and her obscure village in Warangal in Telangana.

Her memories though are as fresh as it were yesterday.

“When we returned late in the night, we got a good thrashing from the warden. But I was so enamoured by the movie that I did not much care for the repercussion. I thought I should also marry for love,” she tells me.

Jyoti Reddy

Not all dreams come true

But fate — the eternal party spoiler — intervened.

Jyothi was married off exactly a year later at the age of 16 to a man 10 years her senior.

Love did not figure in the arrangement that her parents made for her future.

All her hopes of a better life seemed to recede like the bullock cart in the rear view mirror of a speeding highway truck.

He was a farmer who had not even passed the intermediate.

She was thus doomed to a fate of a daily farm labourer slogging the whole day in the paddy field under the blazing hot Telangana sun.

For all her efforts, Jyothi earned a meagre Rs 5 a day. She did this for five years from 1985 to 1990.

“I became a mother at 17. I had to do all the household chores and then head straight to the fields.

“I would return home at dusk and get down to making dinner.

“We did not have any stove, so I had to cook on a wood fire chulha,” she tells me over the phone from Hyderabad, where she visits at this time of the year from her home in the US.

Today, Jyothi is the CEO of a $15 million IT company, Key Software Solutions, based in Phoenix, Arizona, US.

Her incredible story seems to be the stuff of fiction conjured up by a shrewd novelist inflicting numerous sufferings on his protagonist to eventually make her a winner.

Except here, Jyothi herself altered her destiny.

Unwilling to live a life that was preordained for her, she beat all odds to emerge a winner.

A forced orphan

Jyothi’s aspirations were slowly growing wings.

“I could not stand being poor. I was born poor and was wed into another poor family,” she says.

Those days her dream was to have four plastic boxes full of daal (lentils) and rice.

“I would dream of having more than enough food to feed my children. I did not want to give them the life I was leading.”

Having been married off at the age of 16, Jyothi became a mother at 17 with her first daughter, followed by another girl a year later.

“At 18, I was a mother to two girls. There was never enough money for either medicine or to buy them toys.”

When the time came to admit them in school, she opted for Telugu medium because the fees was Rs 25 a month, while for an English medium school it was Rs 50 per month.

I could educate both my girls at Rs 50 hence I chose to send them to a Telugu medium school.”

Jyothi is the second among her four siblings.

Because of abject poverty at home, her father admitted his two daughters into an orphanage saying that they were motherless.

“I lived in an orphanage for five years from class five to class 10. Life there was tougher. My sister could not manage and would cry the whole time. My father had to take her back home.”

But Jyothi stuck on.

Even though she missed her mother and needed her the most, she finally adjusted to remaining in the orphanage.

“I remember a wealthy man would visit the orphanage every year to distribute sweets and blankets.

“I was a very sickly child then, and I would imagine myself being rich one day and carry a suitcase with 10 new saris in it,” she laughs re-imagining her dreams those days, which she was afraid to share with her hostel mates lest they made fun of her.

Nobody’s children

Jyothi makes it a point to come to India every year on August 29.

It is her birthday and she celebrates it with children in different orphanages in Warangal.

She also sponsors a mentally challenged kids’ home where there are 220 children.

She says passionately, “Two percent of India’s population comprises orphans. They do not have any identification. They are uncared for and unwanted. The people who work in orphanages only work there for the money, and not to give care and love to the orphans.”

She has been pursuing the cause of orphan children for many years now and has met ministers in power to bring the plight of these children to their notice.

She is concerned that though the state government has released data for orphan boys till class 10 who are in child remand homes, there is no data for girl orphans.

Where are the girls? Why are they missing?” she asks and replies to her own question.

“Because they are trafficked; they are forced into prostitution. I visited one home in Hyderabad where six girls in their 10th class had given birth. In the same home, these mother orphans were living with their orphan children.”

Being in a position of power today, Jyothi is voicing her concerns at every forum and making sure that the plight of the orphans does not go unheard.

But there was a time when she had to be a mute spectator to the injustices meted out to her by her own husband and in-laws.

With many mouths to feed and little or no income, life was hard.

“My concern was my children. I had a lot of restrictions. I could not talk to any other men, could not go out besides going to work in the fields.”

But as they say where there’s a will, there’s a way.

Jyothi heard an opportunity knock on her door when she started teaching the other farm hands at a night school.

From a labourer, she became a government teacher.

“I would motivate them to learn the basics. That was my job. I soon got a promotion, and would visit every village in Warangal to train women and youth to learn to stitch clothes.”

She was now earning Rs 120 a month.

“It was as if I had got one lakh rupees. I could now spend on my children’s medicine. It was a lot of money for me.”

The American dream

She completed a vocational course from Ambedkar Open University and wanted to enroll for MA in English at Kakatiya University in Warangal.

“I had often dreamt of having a name plate outside my house with the words ‘Dr Anila Jyothi Reddy.'”

However, she could not pass her course and all her dreams of doing a PhD in English came to an end.

But a chance meeting with a cousin from the US fired her imagination and she knew it in her heart that if she had to escape this vortex of poverty she had to go to the US.

“This is too much, right? This is crazy,” she laughs again with joy in reply to my question on how she managed to go to the US.

Talking about her NRI cousin who inspired her, she says, “She had style. It was so different from my ‘teacher look’. I did not leave my hair loose, I did not wear goggles or drive a car. I asked her can I come to America.”

Her cousin told her, “An aggressive woman like you can easily manage in America.”

Jyothi did not waste any time and enrolled for computer software classes.

She would commute to Hyderabad daily because her husband did not like the idea of her living away from home.

She was determined to go to the US. But it was hard to convince her husband.

“I was really greedy to go to the US. That was the only way I thought I could give my children a good life.”

She took the help of relatives and friends to apply for a US visa.

“I make use of every resource and time that I can manage. I never wasted time even while teaching.

“I used to run a chit fund for the other teachers. My salary in 1994-95 was Rs 5,000, I used to earn Rs 25,000 from the chit fund — all this when I was only 23-24 years old.

“I tried to save as much as I could so that I could go to the US.”

Jyothi’s biggest desire was to drive a car, and she knew only if she went to the US, she could drive one.

“There were too many restrictions at home. But one good thing my husband has done is given me two children to fight my life,” she says with a chuckle.

“My girls are like me. They are hard workers and do not waste time.”

Her daughters are software engineers. They are both married now and live in the US.

From poverty to abundance

The American dream is not an easy one.

Though Jyothi fought her fate and reached the land of opportunities, it was a rough ride.

“There was no support for me there. I did not know English very well, and it was a struggle each day.”

She found a PG accommodation with a Gujarati family in New Jersey at $350 per month.

“I did not have a cell phone. I used to walk three miles daily to work.”

She worked as a sales girl, then as a room service person in a motel in South Carolina, as a baby sitter in Phoenix, Arizona, as a gas station attendant, and software recruiter in Virginia.

Finally, she started her own business.

“When I returned to my village after two years, I went to the village temple for Shiv puja and the priest told me, ‘You will not get a job in the US, but if you do business you will become a millionaire.’

She took the help of relatives and friends to apply for a US visa.

“I make use of every resource and time that I can manage. I never wasted time even while teaching.

“I used to run a chit fund for the other teachers. My salary in 1994-95 was Rs 5,000, I used to earn Rs 25,000 from the chit fund — all this when I was only 23-24 years old.

“I tried to save as much as I could so that I could go to the US.”

Jyothi’s biggest desire was to drive a car, and she knew only if she went to the US, she could drive one.

“There were too many restrictions at home. But one good thing my husband has done is given me two children to fight my life,” she says with a chuckle.

“My girls are like me. They are hard workers and do not waste time.”

Her daughters are software engineers. They are both married now and live in the US.

From poverty to abundance

The American dream is not an easy one.

Though Jyothi fought her fate and reached the land of opportunities, it was a rough ride.

“There was no support for me there. I did not know English very well, and it was a struggle each day.”

She found a PG accommodation with a Gujarati family in New Jersey at $350 per month.

“I did not have a cell phone. I used to walk three miles daily to work.”

She worked as a sales girl, then as a room service person in a motel in South Carolina, as a baby sitter in Phoenix, Arizona, as a gas station attendant, and software recruiter in Virginia.

Finally, she started her own business.

“When I returned to my village after two years, I went to the village temple for Shiv puja and the priest told me, ‘You will not get a job in the US, but if you do business you will become a millionaire.’

Jyoti Reddy with young kids

yothi recalls how she would walk bare feet even during the harsh summer months.

Curious, I ask her how many shoes she owns today?

“I now have 200 pairs. It takes me 10 to 15 minutes to find a matching pair with my clothes.”

And why shouldn’t she indulge.

The first time she bought herself anything was when she was working as a teacher.

“I had only two saris. I badly needed a third one. I bought a sari for myself for Rs 135 and believe it or not, I still have that sari.”

I had to ask her which is the most expensive sari in her wardrobe.

“I spent Rs 1 lakh, 60,000 on a blue and silver sari for my younger daughter’s wedding,” she tells me with a nervous laugh.

She owns six houses in the US and two in India. And yes, she finally made her dream of driving a car come true.

She drives a Mercedes-Benz, sports dark glasses and keeps her hair loose.

Drive to succeed

Such has been her journey that Kakatiya University’s second degree English lesson has a chapter on her.

“Believe me, once I had begged the same university to give me a job and they had refused. Today, a lot of village children read about me and want to know who this living person is.”

She has been speaking to me for more than an hour while she is on her way to a meeting in Hyderabad.

She is going to Delhi the next day to take her case about missing orphan girls to the ruling party.

Life for her is no longer looking into the rear view mirror and following rules made by other people. She is stepping up the accelerator at full speed ahead.

All photographs: Kind courtesy   jyothireddy.com

Source…Dipti Nair…www.rediff.com

Natarajan

” An Adorable Chase …”

One day while out for a swim, one man’s dedicated pack of dogs decided that where he goes, they go. And the result is the most darling school of swimmers we’ve ever seen. When he jumped in the water, this man’s 12 (yes, 12) golden retrievers seemed alarmed: what was their human doing splashing about in the water? Well, they seemed to collectively decide that they’d better go in after him and make sure he was not, in fact, drowning.

“Human? Human?! Is that a good idea?”

"Human? Human?! Is that a good idea?"

YouTube / ViralHog

"Human, wait for us!"

YouTube / ViralHog

Watch this overprotective pack here:

 

“Human, head back to land! These waters are treacherous!”

"Human, head back to land! These waters are treacherous!"

(via The Dodo)

The human in such obvious peril here naturally made it back to land, where his devoted pack followed. The man in the video remains anonymous for now, but we are curious…how does one end up with 12 golden retrievers, and are there any more videos of their adorable antics?

Source…..www.viralnova.com and http://www.you tube.com

Natarajan

These Rickshawallahs Know More About Birds Than You Do. For Sure.

There are some 100 odd men plying these quaint three wheeler cycles in Bharatpur. From identifying the near extinct Siberian cranes, to guiding photographers to the best spots within the sanctuary, to speaking at length about the breeding habits of painted storks, these rickshawallahs will amaze you with their stupendous knowledge.

The Keoladeo Ghana National Park, formerly known as the Bharatpur Bird Sanctuary, in Bharatpur, Rajasthan, is a famous avifauna sanctuary that plays host to thousands of birds, especially during the winter season. Over 230 species of birds are known to have made this national park their home. It is also a major tourist centre with scores of ornithologists arriving here in the hibernation season. It was declared a protected sanctuary in 1971. It is also a declared World Heritage Site.

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What is impressive about this sanctuary is the way it is managed. There are many people – foreign tourists, nature lovers, bird watchers, and weekend travellers who visit often as Bharatpur is not very far from Delhi and Jaipur. The place is off-limits for vehicular traffic unlike many other zoo-parks where you can buy a ticket and take the vehicle inside. However, you don’t need to walk long distances to get around in Bharatpur. There are cycles on hire and guides with rickshaws, who charge a very reasonable sum of Rs.100 per hour.

6

These rickshaw guides have acquired their knowledge of the birds over many years. But it isn’t just experience that makes them such amazing ‘ornithologists.’ Most of them have attended a three-month rigorous course conducted by the forest department of the park and are authorised to be guides.

5

Amarchand is one such rickshaw guide. He can identify 230 species of birds and he gives a running commentary of the surroundings to his passengers as he ferries them around.

3

The park management has also arranged for professional binoculars, guide books and more, that are a must to fully understand, watch and enjoy Amarchand’s commentary. –

2

The rickshaw guide idea is a novel one and definitely needs to be replicated in other sanctuaries too. However, there is a downside to it. There is hardly any work for the rickshawallahs in the summer months. They have to then ply their rickshaws in town or look for alternative employment. –

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They would like to become permanent employees of the park. As it is, they say, they pick up trash left by the visitors and help keep the place clean. These rickshawallahs are not just guides, they also help preserve the environment in the parks. –

Nevertheless, whether the park gives them employment or not, these enterprising rickshawallahs have carved a niche for themselves. Besides improving their English speaking skills, they have even learnt some broken French and German to converse with the tourists who come here. These guides may not have been given the status they deserve by the Rajasthan tourism department but those who regularly visit the park have complete faith in their knowledge and even ask for their assistance when making documentaries or researching and writing about migratory birds.

4

There are very few places like this sanctuary and its unique rickshawallah guides – not just in India but in the world. So the next time you are anywhere near Delhi or Jaipur, please visit this place while it still stands and plays home to several rare migratory birds. Taj Mahal can wait, but beautiful birds cannot! –

About the author: Tejaswi Bhagavatula is a Hyderabad-based writer, poet, painter, biker, photographer, corporate profile-writer, on-the-way-CA, part-time tax consultant – all to fund his passion for travelling! He wishes to work for change through bringing out stories and his dream is to ride to Ladakh on his dear old Bullet, while learning and writing about people he meets all along the way and someday, maybe make it a storybook. Inputs by: Nishi Malhotra –

Source….www.thebetterindia.com

Natarajan

 

Cute& Eco-Friendly Pillayar for Ganesh Pooja at Brisbane Australia….Made out of Clay….

 

Credit ….Photo as well as the Clay Model ….By my Son Senthil Natarajan  Brisbane Australia

Senthil Natarajan deserves a pat on his back for his artistic creation of the clay model pillayar as well as an  eye catching photographic image of the art he created thro his photoshoot this day.. REf his facebook page .

This Pillayar is going to be kept in the Ganesh Pooja Tomorrow.@ our Home in Australia

Natarajan

 

 

‘Nature’s great masterpiece, an elephant; the only harmless great thing.’….

baby elephants

baby elephants

An elephant calf is around 250 pounds or 115 kgs in weight when born. Females mature at about 11 years and stay in the group, while the males, who mature between 12 and 15, are usually expelled from the maternal herd.

baby elephants

baby elephants

baby elephants

The elephant trunk, a specialized nose, is analogous to an octopus tentacle in terms of dexterity. It allows them a high degree of manipulation of objects and elephants are adept tool-users. Elephants have been taught to paint with their adroit trunks and produce some fascinating artwork. In captivity, elephants easily learn how to open simple locks and many master more complex ones, something impossible for most other animals due to a lack of dexterity and intellect.

baby elephants

baby elephants

baby elephants

baby elephants

baby elephants

baby elephants

baby elephants

baby elephants

baby elephants

baby elephants

Source….www.ba-bamail.com

Natarajan

This Lecturer-Turned-Cop Just Scaled a 7,077m High Himalayan Mountain …

Meet G R Radhika, the lady who has achieved the incredible feat of becoming the first woman police officer from the states of  Telangana and Andhra Pradesh to scale the 7,077 metres high Mount Kun of Kashmir. We salute her spirit of adventure.

On Sept. 7, 2015, G R Radhika, the Additional Superintendent of Police (Admin) from Adilabad district of Telengana, scaled the 7,077 metres high Mount Kun in the Zanskar mountain range of Kashmir.

This 35-year-old former lecturer, is the first woman police officer from the states of Telangana and Andhra Pradesh to achieve this feat.

coptel

Source: Youtube

She was the only Indian to reach the peak from among the eight other participants who attempted the climb. Other than her, an American and three Sherpas were able to achieve success. Nun (7,135 metres tall) and Kun are the two highest peaks in the Zanskar range.

“I felt on top of the world when I reached the peak. It was a challenging task but once I got there I felt the sky is not the limit if we have the determination,” she told The New Indian Express.

Radhika’s hometown is Anantapur in AP. She was posted as the DSP of Nellore city between 2009 and 2011. After that she worked in Karimnagar in 2012 and was then promoted to the post of ASP in January 2015.

This is not Radhika’s first adventure. Her journey as a mountaineer began in 2013 and this was her second attempt to conquer Mount Kun. It started when former Additional Director General of Police (ADGP), Rajiv Trivedi, who is now the principal secretary for Home in Telangana, recommended that she join the basic mountaineering course at the Jawahar Institute of Mountaineering and Winter Sports in Jammu and Kashmir. She completed the course with distinction and was then nominated for an advanced course at the same institute.

It was on Sept. 20, 2013, that Radhika first tasted success by scaling the 5,980 metre Golep Kangri peak, located in the Zanskar range of the Western Himalayas.

In addition to an adventurous spirit, Radhika has a philanthropic mindset as well. She is one of the police officers who have adopted different villages under the Grama Jyothi scheme of the Telangana Government. She has adopted the Ponnari village in Tamsi Mandal of Adilabad district and is working for its development.

This adventure lover is now planning to scale Mount Everest as well. “I will start preparing to climb Everest and will undergo training for the same. Mountaineering is not an easy task,” she says.

Radhika has received praise from various officers of the police department. The state police is also considering helping her financially, besides giving her special leave so she can pursue her mountaineering expeditions.

– Source….Tanaya Singh…www.the better india.com

Natarajan

 

 

Tired of Just Complaining, This Retired RBI Employee Now Decongests Traffic Junctions in Bangalore !!!

Everyone, but everyone, has heard about Bangalore traffic. People complain about it in drawing rooms, write about it on Facebook and joke about it on WhatsApp. There are very few though who will step out to get down and dirty and do something about it. Ajit Lakshmirathan, 65 years old and retired from the Reserve Bank of India (RBI), is one such man.

“You can start a conversation about the troublesome traffic of Bangalore with anyone in India. Residents here are always complaining about the horrible traffic situation and how nothing is being done about it, ” says Ajit.

Therefore, at an age when many people like to relax and spend time at home with their families, Ajit Lakshmirathan decided that it was time to end the continuous cribbing about traffic.

ajit1

He wanted to start taking action in order to solve the ever-increasing problem. Today, he is seen at some of the most crowded and chaotic traffic signals of Bangalore, trying his best to help vehicles move as smoothly as possible.

“We see a lot of people complaining — ‘this is not right,’ ‘that is wrong.’ There are also many armchair activists, people on Facebook and WhatsApp who keep whining about various issues in the country. But I believe that if you have a complaint, you have to work on it,” says Ajit, who lives in the Whitefield area of the city, a locality known for two reasons – for being the IT hub of Bangalore and for being a very difficult region to reach or cross because of the traffic.

Ajit retired from RBI in 2010, after 40 years of service. Since he was always interested in working at a personal level to bring change rather than give armchair advice, he soon joined a group called Whitefield Rising. This group helps people from the locality come together to devise solutions for issues concerning them — water pollution, broken footpaths, unhygienic garbage disposal habits, and a lot more. (Read more about Whitefield Rising here)

“I made many friends in the group and we realised that in Whitefield a major area of concern for most people is the traffic. So, a couple of us thought that we should be doing something about it,” says Ajit.

Initially, he began by speaking with traffic officials in the area close to his house, to find out what the problems were and how they could be dealt with.

ajit4

After speaking with the officials, Ajit felt that some formal training would help him and others who wanted to contribute to solving the problem. They required a much better understanding of the issue at hand.

Hence, he joined the Traffic Warden Organization (TWO), which is a wing of the Bangalore Traffic Police. The Bengaluru City Police Traffic Warden Organisation came into existence in 1985 with a view to having citizens assist the traffic police in Bangalore. Since then, members of TWO have been sharing the load of the increasing vehicle population and traffic woes with the officials. The duties of the wardens include assisting the police in regulating traffic, along with educating road users, including pedestrians, about road safety. Headed by former Traffic DCP M.T. Naik, TWO has trained numerous wardens coming from various fields of employment, including doctors, engineers, lawyers, teachers, industrialists, and more.

These wardens volunteer their time to help fight traffic troubles in the city.

ajit6

In order to become a traffic warden, interested candidates with a minimum educational qualification of Class 12, are required to fill an application form, which is followed by police verification and a day of rigorous training. The training includes information about the various traffic rules, awareness programs, traffic violations, rules for violators, and other traffic management details. Wardens also have to file monthly enforcement sheets and submit them to TWO, detailing the kind of work done in the month. They do not get any salary for this role.

After the training, applicants receive certificates from the Commissioner of Police, post which they can begin their duties.

Ajit received his certificate in December last year and since then, he spends three to four days on the road every week helping with the traffic.

“Every traffic signal in the Whitfield area is always jam packed. So thinking about which signal I should go to help out that day is not much of a task,” he laughs. As Ajit lives near the Kundalahalli Gate signal, he usually chooses to go there and works from 9:30 am to 12:00 noon.

“The priority for us is the smooth movement of traffic. We also stop violators at times but that is not the first thing we do; the number of violators anyway comes down when there is a person in a uniform standing at the signal,” he says.

He takes down the numbers of the vehicles that break rules, such as people who jump the signal, cabs that stop at bus stops, buses that don’t stop at the bus stops, etc. He also helps conduct trainings for BMTC (Bangalore Metropolitan Transport Corporation) drivers.

Ajit has some really amusing stories about the excuses framed by traffic violators: “People give some ridiculous excuses for driving on the footpath. A few will tell you that they are related to some prominent personality in a position of power. There are others who request that I should let them go because they have to use the toilet urgently.”

Ajit is active on other fronts besides traffic and Whitefield Rising. This 65-year-old is a member of a group called the 50+ Bulleteers of Bangalore.

ajit3

This group of people, over the age of 50, who have a passion for riding Royal Enfields, get together once every three months to ride for a cause. They take up social issues on the way — such as teaching English to village kids, picking up plastic waste and clearing garbage, donating clothes to the needy, etc.

Ajit lives with his wife, while his two sons live in Mumbai. This inspiring man is very humble about the work he is doing.

ajit5

“It is not a very strenuous job like people think it is. You just have to stand in the open for some time. But the respect you get is mostly because you are wearing a uniform and, in my case, also because of the age. My idea of relaxing is to do something which makes me personally happy and if that means working for community welfare, it’s right up my alley! Being part of the wonderful Traffic Warden Organisation and Bangalore Traffic Police gives me immense pleasure. Seeing people much older than me relentlessly pursuing difficult goals continues to inspire me,” he concludes.

You can contact Ajit by writing to him at ajitlakshmiratan@gmail.com.

Know more about Bengaluru City Police Traffic Warden Organisation here.

Source….Tanaya Singh….www.the betterindia.com

Natarajan

 

” தப்பாமல் வந்து விடு பிள்ளையார் அப்பனே …”

 

pillayaru

தகப்பன் சாமிக்கு அண்ணனே என் அப்பன் பிள்ளையார்

அப்பனே ….அப்பமொடு அதிரசம் அவல் பொரியும்

உன் மனம் மகிழ மோதகமும் தப்பாமல் உனக்கு

நான் தருவேன் அப்பா …..

தப்பு என் மீது எது இருந்தாலும் …. நீ

தப்பாமல் என் வீடு வந்து அப்பமெல்லாம் சப்பு கொட்டி

சாப்பிடு அப்பா !!!!! என் அப்பனே பிள்ளையாரப்பா…

இப்போ  என் பேரப்பிள் ளையும்  உனக்காக

சாப்பிடாமல் என்னுடன் காத்திருக்கிறான் உன்னைப்பார்க்க

அப்பனே… தப்பாமல்  நீ வர வேணும் இன்று …

அப்பம், அமுது எல்லாம் என் பேரனுக்கும்  இன்று நீ ஊட்டி , நீயும்

சாப்பிட்டால்  வேறு என்ன பேறு வேண்டும்  எனக்கு ?…அப்பனே

தப்பாமல் வந்து விடு பிள்ளையார் அப்பனே …!!!

 

நடராஜன்

16 செப் 2015

Camp…Brisbane , Australia