How Savithri Has Been Playing Mother to Destitute Elderly Women for 37 Years …

In 1978, Savithri Vaithi started an old age home, Vishranthi, for abandoned and destitute elderly women in Chennai. Thirty-seven years later, and at the age of over 80 now, Savithri still spends her time taking care of these women who have no one else to rely on. Here’s her story.

Savithri Vaithi’s wrinkled face hides hundreds of stories about the homeless elderly women she has taken care of and their painful days that she has tried to ease. With no family to take care of them, these destitute women have landed up at Savithri’s doorstep and she has taken them in, with kindness and compassion, one by one.

“It is not an old age home where kids can drop their mothers off. It is a home only for those who have no one and nowhere to go,” explains Srilekha, Savithri’s niece, brought up by her.

Several hundred women have knocked on the doors of Vishranthi in all these years, looking for some help and rest in their twilight years. Savithri has given them the dignity they deserve.

Savithri (center) along with Srilekha (right) at the CNN IBN awards.

Savithri is 80 and not in very good health now. “But she is still worried about all those ladies living in Vishranthi. She still has the final say and she will always be the soul behind this initiative,” says Srilekha.

Savithri started working in the social sector when she was just 16. She worked in the slums of Choolai in Chennai, as part of a group called ‘Barefoot Walkers’ who would take care of the health, education and other needs of the slum dwellers.

Later, she started a book bank, educated underprivileged kids, and worked for the homeless and needy.

Savithri with one of the earliest Governor of Tamil Nadu Late Shri Prabhudas Patwari who laid the foundation of Vishranthi for the buidling on which it stands tough to this day

Savithri with one of the earliest Governors of Tamil Nadu, Late Shri Prabhudas Patwari, who laid the foundation of the building on which Vishranthi stands to this day –

But it was Vishranthi that gave Savithri’s life a new purpose. She started it in the late 70s with support from Help Age India and Dr. Natrajan, a geriatrist at the General Hospital in Chennai.

“The idea was to bring together some housewives who wanted to do something in their free time and leverage their energy to do something good for the elderly. Savithri started identifying abandoned women at the railway stations, roadside, etc., and bringing them to her old age home. Gradually, the news spread and hundreds of women started coming to Vishranthi,” says Srilekha.

Wife of A.V. Meiappa Chettiyar donated an acre of land in Palavakkam and Help Age India raised funds for the construction of the building. And this is how Vishranthi moved from a small rented house to bigger premises that now house over 150 elderly women and a staff of about 50.

For all of them now, Savithri is the family that they had once hoped would give them respect and peace in their old age.

From providing them with healthy food to having them undergo regular medical checkups, Savithri makes sure that they lack for little. And eventually, she performs their last rites with the dignity and grace they deserve.

Savithri is a new family for the abandoned destitute women.

We have welcomed new women here and even seen their deaths. We get attached to all of these ladies. It is very difficult to see them die,” says Srilekha.

“In earlier times, women were not allowed to go to the cremation ground. But Savithri went there every time one of the ladies from our old age home was taken there. She received strong opposition but she stood against that boldly. Thanks to her, those challenges are not being faced by us now because she raised her voice against them back then,” she adds.

After a woman dies in the old age home, the staff at Vishranthi arrange to donate the organs of the deceased. They try to trace the family to participate in the last rituals. But if the family cannot be found, the women are cremated with due respect.

“These old age homes are full of stories of hundreds of women — each one more heartbreaking and thought provoking than the other,” says Srilekha.

Though Savithri is very sick and immobile to take care of the home by herself now, the administration of Vishranthi is being ably carried out in the same standard that she had set, by a Board of Trustees which changes every two years.

She is leaving behind a legacy that we all will cherish. Her dream is our dream now and we will make sure we keep growing and taking care of these needy women,” concludes Srilekha.

To know more about their work, contact them at – vishranthi.trust@yahoo.com or lekha.shri@gmail.com

Source…www.the betterindia.com

Natarajan

There Is Something Unique at This Year’s Global Investors Meet. And You Must Check It Out….

The Global Investors Meet in Chennai has begun, and this time, it has something unique. Some great products made by jail inmates of Tamil Nadu will also be at display during the event to showcase the amazing talent of the inmates.

The two-day long Global Investors Meet (GIM) in Chennai kick-started on Wednesday, Sept. 9, and is expected to attract investments of about Rs. 1 lakh crore for Tamil Nadu.

But this year, GIM is bringing a lot more to the table than just crores of investments. The global meet is also displaying products manufactured by jail inmates in Tamil Nadu.

The meet which is being organised at the Chennai Trade Centre has textile products, soaps, phenyl, tags, wax, boots and other products which have been manufactured by the prison inmates, on display.

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Photo for representation only. Source: www.prisons.tn.nic.in

The prisoners in the Tamil Nadu jails are given training in many things. These include LED bulb making, candle making, bread making, four-wheeler and two-wheeler repair, computer hardware training, sanitary napkin making, music, information and communication vocational technology, paper manufacturing, fashion designing, tailoring, cooking, carpentry, screen painting, drawing, wiring and much more.

Additional director-general of police, J K Tripathy talked about the amazing products made by the jail inmates at the event.

He also said that the products are competitive and cheaper when compared with those of other leading manufacturers.

In case you are in Chennai, and want to check out these awesome products, be a part of GIM. Read more about the event here.

Source….Shreya Pareek….www.the betterindia.com

Natarajan

 

Pepsi CEO Indra Nooyi explains how an unusual daily ritual her mum made her practice as a child changed her life….

In 2006, Indra Nooyi became PepsiCo’s first female CEO, as well as its first CEO not born in the US.

At a “Women in Leadership Panel” at 92Y in New York on Tuesday, Nooyi said she’s always pushed back against adversity and her confidence is built upon an unusual daily habit her mother made her and her older sister, Chandrika, practice when they were just 8 to 11 years old.

Nooyi grew up in the socially conservative city of Madras (now Chennai), India. Her motheradhered to some traditional beliefs — she stressed the importance of seeking a good husband early — but she also instilled in her two daughters the belief that they could grow up to become whoever they wanted.

“Every night at the dinner table, my mother would ask us to write a speech about what we would do if we were president, chief minister, or prime minister — every day would be a different world leader she’d ask us to play,” Nooyi said to the 92Y audience. “At the end of dinner, we had to give the speech, and she had to decide who she was going to vote for.”

The winner of the debate then signed a piece of paper that stated they had become whatever the world leader of the day was. The girls and their mum would laugh and have fun with it, but Nooyi said she and her sister came to appreciate it, even after they became too cool for the ritual when they hit adolescence.

“Even though my mother didn’t work and didn’t go to college, she lived a life vicariously through her daughters,” Nooyi said. “So she gave us that confidence to be whatever we wanted to be. That was an incredibly formative experience in my youth.”

That confidence was reinforced by her paternal grandfather, a charismatic judge. If he asked her to do a job as a child and she later told him that she was unable to do it the way he wanted, he would make her write “I will not make excuses” 200 times on a piece of paper. She became grateful for this punishment when she grew older.

Nooyi’s confidence and work ethic helped her achieve an MBA from the Yale School of Management in 1980 and to start building a successful career. Early on, she said men wouldn’t make eye contact with her in meetings and would consistently check her answers with one of her male colleagues. But rather than wilt under the pressure, she began to call men out on their actions, and it wouldn’t take long for them to realise she was highly adept at her job.

“In my heart I said, ‘I can do this better than anyone else can, and if everything else fails, they’re going to come to me and say, ‘Fix it,’ because I know I’m that good,” she said. “Remember, I could be president of India!”

Source….Richard Feloni  in  ….www.businessinsider.com

natarajan

” நான் அனுமனை சொல்கிறேன் …”

ராணி மைந்தன் எழுதிய, ‘சாவி – 85’ நூலிலிருந்து: பக்தவத்சலம் அப்போது தமிழக முதல்வராக இருந்தார். பதவியை துறந்து, கட்சி பணியாற்ற வேண்டும் என்ற, ‘காமராஜர் திட்ட’த்தின் கீழ், முதல்வர் பதவியில் இருந்து காமராஜர் விலகிய பின், முதல்வராக பொறுப்பேற்றார் பக்தவத்சலம். ‘தமிழக மக்களிடையே நல்ல பண்புகளும், பழக்க வழக்கங்களும் வளர வேண்டுமானால், நம் புராண இதிகாசக் கதைகளை கதாகாலட்சேபம், நாடகம் வாயிலாக, பட்டி தொட்டியெங்கும் பரப்பும் முயற்சிகளை மேற்கொள்ள வேண்டும்…’ என்ற யோசனையை, திருவையாற்றில் வெளியிட்டார் முதல்வர் பக்தவத்சலம்.
டில்லியில், காமராஜருடன் தங்கியிருந்த போது, பக்தவத்சலம் கூறிய இந்த யோசனை பற்றி சாவி குறிப்பிட்டு, ‘இதற்கு நீங்கள் தான் முயற்சி எடுக்க வேண்டும்…’ என்று கேட்டுக் கொண்டார். ‘என்ன செய்யலாங்கறீங்க?’ என்று கேட்டார் காமராஜர்.
‘நீங்க அனுமதி கொடுத்தால், தேனாம்பேட்டை காங்கிரஸ் மைதானத்தில், வாரியார் சுவாமிகளை வைத்து, ராமாயணக் கதை சொல்ல சொல்லலாம்; எஸ்.வி.சகஸ்ரநாமத்தை, அரிச்சந்திரா நாடகம் போடச் சொல்லலாம். அப்புறம், இதை தமிழகம் முழுவதும் கொண்டு போகலாம்…’ என்று, சாவி சொன்ன யோசனை, காமராஜருக்கு ரொம்பவும் பிடித்துப் போயிற்று.
‘சரி, நீங்களே செய்யுங்க; ஒரு கமிட்டி போட்டுக்குங்க…’ என்று, கணமும் தாமதியாமல் அனுமதி வழங்கி விட்டார் காமராஜர்.
சென்னை வந்ததும், இதற்கென ஒரு கமிட்டியை அமைத்தார் சாவி. ‘சத்திய சபா’ என்று பெயர் சூட்டப்பட்டது. அதன் தலைவராக இருக்கச் சம்மதித்தார் காமராஜர். செயலர் பொறுப்பை ஏற்றுக் கொண்டார் சாவி. வாசன் உபதலைவராகவும், ரத்னம் ஐயர், லிப்கோ சர்மா போன்றோர், கமிட்டி அங்கத்தினர்களாகவும் நியமிக்கப்பட்டு, அடுத்த நாளே வேலை வேகமாக ஆரம்பிக்கப்பட்டது.
திட்டமிட்டபடி, காங்கிரஸ் மைதானம் மேடு, பள்ளங்கள் திருத்தப்பட்டு, மின் விளக்குகள் பொருத்தப்பட்டு விழாக் கோலம் பூண்டது. ஏ.வி.எம்.செட்டியார், முகப்பு வாயிலை, பிரபல ஓவியர் சேகரை கொண்டு, அலங்கரித்துக் கொடுத்தார். அவ்வையார் படத்துக்காக உருவாக்கப்பட்ட, மிகப்பெரிய பிள்ளையார் சிலையை, ராமாயணக் கதை நடக்கும் இடத்தில் வைத்துக் கொள்ள அனுமதி வழங்கினார் வாசன்.
பக்தவத்சலம் கொடியேற்றி வைக்க, விழாவைத் துவக்கி வைத்தார், அப்போது சென்னை கவர்னராக இருந்த மைசூர் மகாராஜா. ராமாயணக் கதைகளை, கலகலப்பாக சொல்ல துவங்கினார் வாரியார். தொடர்ந்து, 40 நாட்கள்… இடையிடையே, சகஸ்ரநாமத்தின் நாடகங்கள், தினமும் கூட்டம் அதிகமாகிக் கொண்டே போய், மைதானம் நிரம்பி வழிந்தது. எவ்வளவு பேர் வந்தும் என்ன… கதை கேட்க, காமராஜர் வராமலிருக்கிறாரே என்ற குறை சாவிக்கும், வாரியாருக்கும், மற்ற கமிட்டி அங்கத்தினர்களுக்கும் இருந்தது.
ஒருநாள் திடீரென, ‘இன்று கதை கேட்க காமராஜர் வருகிறார்…’ என்று டெலிபோனில் தகவல் வந்தது.
இதை வாரியாரிடம், சாவி சொல்ல, வாரியாருக்கு மகிழ்ச்சி தாங்கவில்லை. அன்று, அனுமன் ஆற்றல் பற்றி, விஸ்தாரமாகப் பேசினார் வாரியார்…
‘தன்னிடம் எந்தக் காரியத்தை ஒப்படைத்தாலும், அதை வெற்றிகரமாகச் சாதிக்க கூடியவர் அனுமர். காரணம், அவர் ஒரு பிரம்மசாரி. பிரம்மசாரிகள் எப்போதுமே, தங்களிடம் ஒப்படைக்கப்படும் பொறுப்புகளை, வெற்றிகரமாக செய்யக் கூடிய ஆற்றலும், வல்லமையும் பெற்றவர்கள்…’ என்று, அவர் சொல்லிக் கொண்டிருந்த தருணத்தில், அரங்கத்துக்குள் நுழைந்தார் காமராஜர்.
காமராஜர் வரும் திக்கு நோக்கி ஆவலோடு திரும்பிப் பார்த்து, ஆரவாரித்தனர் கூட்டத்தினர். ‘நான் அனுமனைச் சொல்கிறேன்… நீங்கள் யாரை எண்ணி மகிழ்கிறீர்களோ…’ என்று வாரியார், தமக்கே உரிய பாணியில் ஒரு போடு போடவும், கூட்டத்தினர் செய்த ஆரவாரமும், எழுப்பிய கரவொலியும் அடங்க வெகு நேரமாயிற்று!

Source…www.dinamalar.com

Natarajan

வணக்கம் ஆயிரம் என் அன்பு ஆசிரியருக்கு …

A Tribute to my Dear Teacher BRO.ANSELM  on TEACHERS DAY…5th September

Natarajan

Bro.Anselm ….My Teacher ….a Friend , Philosopher and Guide to me ….

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Dear Brother..

Every year , on this DAY..5 SEP….Teachers Day… i used to talk to you over Phone and seek your  Blessings …. For the third year in a row , I miss that call today .  I MISS YOU … Brother…

I send my Regards and Respests  to You on this TEACHERS DAY, …. thro ” this Blog Post .  I am sure  Your Blessings and Good Wishes are  always available in plenty to me  and my family  on this Day …and for many more days to come ….

with affectionate Regards,

Your “Raja’ ….Natarajan.

 

BRO.ANSELM … My Teacher

….In 1965 at my age of 15 he handed over my SSLC BOOK in person to me and wished me well….The bond between me and my teacher however  continued  further… I was so emotionally attached to him that we used to be in touch with each other till the  Christmas in 2012. …When i talked to him after receiving his affectionate Christmas card in DEC2012, he was telling me that he would be meeting me  in Feb 2013, at chennai when he  comes down to Chennai from Yercaud for his medical checkup.

 

Perhaps this is the first time , he was not able to keep up his words ….One of Santhome Montford Brothers called me on the night of 7 Jan2013  and told me that our affectionate BRO.ANSELM has  left all of us in lurch and merged with JESUS on 7th evening at Yearcud Montford School.

He was not only my Teacher….but a Good Friend, Philosopher and Guide at all times ….I am sure many of his students would miss him a lot like me.. on this DAY….

 

Here is a Poetical Tribute to that Great Personality.

அன்பும்  அறிவும் பண்புடன் பாசமும்
 ஒன்றுக்கு  ஒன்று குறையாமல்
 என்றும்  எங்க வாழ்வில் இருக்க
 அன்றே வழி காட்டிய ஆசான்  அய்யா  நீ !!!
 பள்ளி கணக்கில் கூட்டலும் கழித்தலும் உண்டு
 ஆனால் வாழ்க்கையின் ஒழுக்க  கணக்கில் கூட்டலும்
  பெருக்கலும்  மட்டுமே என்று   சொன்னவன் அய்யா நீ !!!!
 உன் மாணவன் நான் …இன்றும் உன் மாணவன்தான் !!!!
 நீ சொல்லி கொடுத்த ஒழுக்க கணக்கில் இருந்து  சிறிதும்
 வழுக்காமல் நான் இருக்க நீதானே காரணம் அய்யா !!!!!
 அழகான உன் கையெழுத்து   எவ்வளவு  பேர்
  தலை எழுத்தை  மாற்றி இருக்கு …உனக்கு தெரியுமா அய்யா !!!
  எந்த வயசிலும் உன் கண்டிப்பும் கனிவும் உனக்கு ஒரு அடையாளம் !!!!
  வருடம் தப்பாமல் எனக்கு கிடைக்கும் உன்னுடைய கிறிஸ்துமஸ்
  வாழ்த்து அட்டை , எனக்கு ஆண்டவன்  பிரசாதம் !!!!
  ‘ராஜா  ..ராஜா ” என்று  நீ என்னை கூப்பிடும்போது  உன்
  அன்பு  சாம்ராஜ்யத்தின் ராஜாவாக  நான் இருப்பேனே அய்யா !!!!
   உன்னுடைய   Presence   எப்போதும்  இருக்கும் என்று நான்
   எண்ணிய  வேளையில்  காலத்தின் கரும்பலகை சொல்கிறது
   எண்ணிய  வேளையில்  காலத்தின் கரும்பலகை சொல்கிறது
   எனக்கு…   நீ    ABSENT     என்று   !!!!!
  நீ  இல்லாத இந்த உலகம்   வெறுமை  வெறுமை ..இது
  நிச்சயம்  கொடுமை  கொடுமை !!!!
  பளிச்சென்று  ஒரு பதில் வேண்டும்  எனக்கு ….நீ
  எப்போ மீண்டும்    PRESENT       ஆவாய்  அய்யா!!!!!
Natarajan

Over 2,000 Parrots Visit This Mechanic Every Day. The Story Behind This Is Fascinating…!!!

Sekhar from Chennai gets up at 4:30 am to feed over 2,000 parrots who arrive at his doorsteps everyday. It’s been 10 years and he has never failed to feed these parrots even for a single day. A mechanic by profession, he spends 40 percent of his salary on this cause. Watch the heart warming video.

He might have missed his own meal but has never failed to feed thousands of parrots every single day for 10 years now.

Meet Sekhar, the Birdman, who spends hours every day preparing a meal for the thousands of parrots who come to his house twice a day.

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It all started 10 years ago, when Sekhar started putting some rice and grains on the boundary of his house. Many birds, squirrels and other creatures would come and enjoy their meal. –

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But one day, during the horrific Tsunami in Chennai, Sekhar saw two parrots sitting on his house parapet wall. Since then, Sekhar’s house has become a regular spot for these parrots, and they come here every day.

Today, Sekhar feeds over 2,000 parrots every day. Sometimes, their number even reaches 4,000!

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He wakes up at 4:30 in the morning everyday to prepare a meal for these birds, who come at his house at sharp 6 in the morning. The same routine is followed in the evening. –

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The bond that Sekhar the camera mechanic has developed with these winged creatures is beyond beautiful.

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Watch the video to get awestruck by his work –

Source….Shreya Pareek ….www.the betterindia.com and http://www.youtube.com

 

natarajan

 

 

Easwari Lending Library …A Haven for Readers….

Easwari lending library: A haven for readers

Photo: Sharp Image/Mint

Technological advances have changed how books are consumed and distributed, but Chennai’s oldest lending library takes it in its stride

The scent of mildewed paper merges with that of fresh glue, shrivelled flowers and incense sticks, while nostalgia wafts out of nearly every shelf at the Easwari Lending Library on Lloyds Road. Memories of somnolent summers filled with raw mangoes, cricket, cousins and Blyton are crammed into the shelves of the children’s section.
A slightly battered copy of L.M. Montgomery’s Anne of Green Gablesis slipped between hardbound volumes of Dickens, Hardy, the Brontes, Dumas, Maugham and, of course, Austen. An entire rack of books with unapologetically suggestive titles such as Girl in the Bedouin Tent, King of the Desert, Undone by His Touch and Captive in the Castle need no explanation even without the trademark Mills and Boon logo (the M and the B, separated by an & symbol surmounted by a blossoming rose) on their spine.
There are places where you can relive those minor existential crises of youth (the stack of Woolfe, Plath, Rand, Nin and Sartre); spots that bubble with the ghosts of laughter past (Crompton, Durrell, Bond and Dahl); and corners crammed with chronicles of human nature (Reader’s Digest back issues, Chicken Soup for the Soul, anthologies of O’Henry and Guy de Maupassant).
T.N. Palani, the man behind one of the oldest lending libraries in Chennai, is slight and greying with horn-rimmed glasses and a large moustache. He appears as unassuming as the library itself, which is small, plainly furnished and a little stuffy. He isn’t very garrulous at first, but talk about books and his eyes light up, “I started this library in 1955,” he says. “I loved reading, but in Chennai, back then, only government libraries existed.”
Palani, who once owned a scrap business, started the library with a collection of Tamil books from his own personal stash. Over time, he added to the collection books bought from Moore Market. Today, the library, which runs from 9am to 9pm, six days a week, has 11 branches and about 450,000 books. It has helped put together libraries in clubs, gated communities and IT companies, has a strong online presence and has recently ventured into door-to-door delivery.
Vinodhini Vaidyanathan, a city-based theatre actor, says, “I have been visiting the Gopalapuram branch of the library since I was a child. It may be a dingy place but it has that lovely smell of books. It was and still is a ritual to go there. Every time I go, I bring at least seven or eight books back. And their Tamil collection is good too—I remember my parents borrowing all of Balakumaran’s books from Easwari.”
Palani, who runs all this with the help of his two sons, P. Satish and P. Saravanan, explains the operating model of the library: “We collect a refundable deposit from our customers of Rs500 and charge 10% of the cost of each book borrowed as reading cost,” he says. They also have some special packages for customers who read a lot—a rare enough species, he adds.
(from left) P. Satish, T.N. Palani and P. Saravanan. Photo: Sharp Image/Mint

(from left) P. Satish, T.N. Palani and P. Saravanan. Photo: Sharp Image/Mint

“We used to have an equal number of children, women and men visiting us when we started,” Palani says. “Now, 60% of our customers are women, 30% children and only 10% are men; men don’t read any more, I think,” he says with a smile.
Also, while children still read, their reading tastes have changed considerably, adds Satish. “Children today read books that their peers talk about. The Geronimo Stilton and Wimpy Kid series are very popular, as are the fantasy novels of Percy Jackson and The Hunger Games series. Not too many children read Enid Blyton anymore; and they opt for a classic only if it is part of a school assignment,” he says.
The decline in reading itself is not the only issue a library faces, says Saravanan. “Property prices and rentals in the city have escalated. We had planned to create reading rooms but we can’t afford to with these rentals,” he says, “We were really lucky that most of the library spaces in the city are owned by us.”
Staff is another issue, says Satish. “It isn’t an easy job and not everyone is cut out for it. It isn’t enough to just sit here and check out books. You need to analyse customers, understand their reading tastes, help them choose books,” he says, adding that their older staff is better suited for this role than the younger lot.
Natasha Sri Ram, a human resources professional who has been a member of the library for over 10 years, seems satisfied with the staff at the branch she frequents. “They are very helpful—they know exactly what I like reading and let me know whenever they get new books by my favourite authors.”
Ram Kumar, who works for Ford India, agrees that the staff is competent. “I used to visit the library long ago, when I was still in school. The staff always remembered my name and face, managed to find all the books I asked for, and would let me stand and browse without shooing me away. They were very kind,” he recalls.
The library has seen the who’s who of the city visiting it, says Palani. “Rajinikanth, V.V. Giri, Vairamuthu, Kamal Haasan, they’ve all come here,” he says. A testimonial by actor Kamal Haasan, stuck on one of the shelves, backs his claim. “Easwari lending library is where I really started my reading habit,” says the testimonial, “I read many books at a time. Reading is now at a low end since I am writing Marmayogi, my next film.”
“Easwari is an icon,” agrees Ram Kumar. Evelyn Jeba Jonathan, a content writer, adds, “Not only is the variety they have excellent, but the condition of the books is good too. This is important to me—I hate reading something that is torn or tattered.”
“We used to buy a lot of books secondhand from Moore Market,” says Satish, “But today we prefer to purchase new books. We work with several distributors, buy books online and also import them sometimes.”
Advances in technology may have caused a distinct shift in the way books are consumed and distributed, but Satish takes it in his stride. “ Yes, the fact that now people can purchase books over Flipkart and read them off their Kindles does make it more difficult for us. However, they may not get the sort of variety we have here,” he says.
He plans to invest more time and effort on making the library more accessible through technology—connecting branches, storing customer information and predicting their reading patterns. “We have families who have been coming here for decades. We hope that this will continue,” he says.
Source….Preeti Zachariah…..www.mintonsunday.livemint.com
Natarajan

அன்பாசிரியர் – சித்ரா: அஞ்சல் அட்டை முதல் யூடியூப் வரை அசத்தும் ஆசிரியை!

உற்சாக மாணவர்களுடன் ஆசிரியை சித்ரா.

உற்சாக மாணவர்களுடன் ஆசிரியை சித்ரா.

| மாணவர்கள் மீதான அன்பாலும் அக்கறையாலும் அர்ப்பணிப்புடன் தனித்துவமாக கற்பிக்கும் அரசுப் பள்ளி ஆசிரியர்களின் நல்லடையாள அணிவகுப்புத் தொடர் இது. |

“பெரிய அளவில் பணம் சம்பாதிப்பதற்குப் பதிலாக, பெரிய மாற்றத்தை விதைக்க ஆசைப்பட்டேன். அதனாலேயே ஆசிரியர் ஆனேன்!”- தகவல் மற்றும் தகவல் தொடர்பு தொழில்நுட்பத்தில் சாதித்ததற்காக குடியரசுத் தலைவரிடம் தேசிய விருது, அப்துல் கலாமின் பாராட்டு, மைக்ரோசாப்ட்டின் உலகளாவிய மன்ற, தேசத்தின் சாதனையாளர் விருது, நல்லாசிரியர் விருது மற்றும் ஏராளமான தேசிய, மாநில, ஊரக விருதுகள் பெற்ற சித்ரா என்னும் அரசுப் பள்ளி ஆசிரியரின் வார்த்தைகள் இவை.

இனி சித்ராவின் பயணம், அவரின் வார்த்தைகளிலேயே…

“1996-ம் ஆண்டு விக்கிரவாண்டி ஊராட்சியின் வாக்கூர்பகண்டை என்னும் ஊரின் தொடக்கப் பள்ளியில், என் ஆசிரிய வாழ்க்கை தொடங்கியது. அப்போது நான் ஒன்றாம் வகுப்பு ஆசிரியை. வழக்கமான அ, ஆ தானே என்றிருந்த எனக்கு, மாணவர்களே பாடம் சொல்லிக் கொடுத்துவிட்டார்கள், அவர்கள் எழுதிய ‘அ’வையும், ‘ஆ’வையும், படிக்க கூடுதல் முயற்சி தேவைப்பட்டது.

அப்போது பேருந்தில் பள்ளிக்கு வந்து சேர ஒன்றரை மணி நேரம் ஆகும். அந்த சமயத்தில் குஜராத்திய எழுத்தாளர் ஒருவர் எழுதிய ‘கனவு ஆசிரியர்’ என்ற புத்தகம் கிடைத்தது. அதில் கூறப்பட்டிருந்த வழிமுறைகளையும், அறிவுரைகளையும் எனக்கு ஏற்றாற்போல மாற்றிக் கொண்டேன். மாணவர்களுக்குச் சொல்லிக் கொடுக்க, அரசு நடத்திய பயிற்சி முகாம் அதிக உதவியாக இருந்தது. ‘விளையாட்டு வழி’ கல்வி முறையைப் பின்பற்ற ஆரம்பித்தேன்.

மாணவியிடம் கற்ற பாடம்

குச்சி, புளியங்கொட்டைகளை வைத்து கணக்கு சொல்லிக் கொடுத்தேன். மாணவர்களை அருகில் இருந்த வயல்களுக்கு அழைத்துக் கொண்டு போய் அறிவியல் சொல்லிக் கொடுப்பதும், வகுப்பறையிலேயே விதைகள் இட்டு செடிகள் வளர்ப்பதும் வழக்கமாய் இருந்தது. மாலை நேரங்களில் பாட்டு மூலம் பாடம் கற்றுக் கொடுக்கத் தொடங்கினேன்.

ஒரு முறை ஆர்வமிகுதியில் மூன்றாம் வகுப்புக் குழந்தைகளுக்கு மினி கிரைண்டர் மாதிரி செய்து எடுத்துக் கொண்டு போனேன். “இது எதுக்கு டீச்சர்? இதுதான் எங்க வீட்டுலயே இருக்கே!” என்றாள் ஒரு மாணவி. அப்போதுதான் சிரமப்பட்டு கடினமான எதையும் செய்து காட்டுவது தேவையற்றது என்பதை உணர்ந்தேன்.

மனம் நெகிழ்ந்த தருணம்

மெல்ல மெல்ல கற்றலின்பால் குழந்தைகளுக்கு ஆர்வம் ஏற்பட்டது. பள்ளி மாணவர்கள், மாவட்ட ஆட்சியர் அலுவலகத்தில் நடைபெறும் விழாக்களில் ஆவலுடன் கலந்து கொள்ள ஆரம்பித்தனர். சுதந்திர தினம், குடியரசு தினம் என அரசு விழாக் கொண்டாட்டங்களிலும் திருக்குறள் ஒப்பித்தல், பாட்டுப் போட்டி மற்றும் விளையாட்டுப் போட்டிகளிலும், பங்குபெற்றனர். குக்கிராமத்தில் இருந்து வெளியே கூட சென்றிருக்காத அக்குழந்தைகள், முதன்முதலாக ஆட்சியர் அலுவலகம் போய் பரிசுகளுடன் திரும்பி வந்தனர்.

பரிசுகளை வென்றதாகக் கேட்ட தருணத்தில் எங்கள் கால்கள் தரையிலேயே படவில்லை. ஒவ்வொரு விழாவிலும் போட்டிகளில் கலந்து கொள்வது வழக்கமானது. நீர்ப்பிரச்சினைகள், உடல்நலப் பிரச்சினைகள், சுகாதாரம் குறித்த விழிப்புணர்வு குறித்த கார்ட்டூன் கதைகளை ஒவ்வொரு வாரமும் சொல்லிக் கொடுக்க ஆரம்பித்தேன். பாண்டிச்சேரி வானொலி நிலையத்திலும் எங்கள் மாணவர்கள் ஏராளமான நிகழ்ச்சிகளில் பங்கேற்றனர்.

எனக்காக போராடிய கிராமத்தினர்

‘பள்ளிக்கு யார் வந்தாலும் பயப்படக்கூடாது. இயல்பாக அவர்களை வரவேற்று, பள்ளியைச் சுற்றிக் காண்பிக்க வேண்டும்’ என்று சொல்லியிருந்தேன். ஒரு முறை மாவட்ட ஆட்சியர் எங்கள் பள்ளிக்கு திடீர் வருகை தந்தார். மாணவர்களே அவரை வரவேற்ற விதத்தைப் பார்த்து அசந்து போனவர், அடுத்த நாளே எங்களுக்கு விருதளித்துச் சிறப்பித்தார்.

ஒரு முறை நான், விடுமுறை காரணமாக வெளியூருக்குப் போய்விட்டு, திங்கட்கிழமை காலையில் பள்ளிக்குத் திரும்பினேன். சைக்கிளில் வேகமாக வந்து கொண்டிருந்த என்னைப் பார்த்து கிராம மக்கள் புன்முறுவல் பூத்தனர். எனக்கு எதுவுமே புரியவில்லை. பின்னர் தான் அந்தச் சிரிப்பின் பின்னால் இருக்கும் அன்பும், நம்பிக்கையும் புரிந்தது.

இரண்டு நாட்களுக்கு முன்னால், நான் மாற்றலாகி வேறு ஊருக்குச் செல்ல உத்தரவு வந்திருக்கிறது. ஆனால் கிராம மக்கள், என்னை அனுப்பக்கூடாது என்று தொடர்போராட்டம் நடத்தி, உத்தரவைத் திரும்பப் பெற வைத்திருக்கின்றனர். நான் வாங்கிய எல்லா விருதுகளின் ஆனந்தத் தருணத்தை விட, இந்தத் தருணமே என்னை அதிகம் சந்தோஷப்படுத்தியது” என்கிறார்.

கற்பித்தலில் எளிமைகளும் புதுமைகளும்

கற்றலிலும் கற்பித்தலிலும் எளிமையையும், புதுமையையும் விரும்பினார் ஆசிரியை சித்ரா. ஆரம்பப் பள்ளி மாணவர்கள் எழுதிப் பழக வேண்டுமென்பதற்காக, தமிழ் மற்றும் ஆங்கில எழுத்துகளை அச்சிட்டு, முத்திரையாக்கினார். அதை ஒவ்வொரு குழந்தையின் நோட்டுப்புத்தகத்தில் அச்சு வைத்து எழுதக்கற்றுக் கொடுத்தலில் புதுமை படைத்தார். வகுப்பில் கல்வியைத் தாண்டி நல்ல பழக்கங்களையும் கற்றுக்கொடுப்பதை வழக்கமாகக் கொண்டவர், கழிவறைகள் தேவையைக் குறித்த விழிப்புணர்வை ஏற்படுத்தியதற்காக, மத்திய அரசின் சுகாதாரத்துறை விருதையும் பெற்றிருக்கிறார்.

கலாம் தந்த வியப்பு

பள்ளியில் ‘கடிதம் எழுதுதல்’ பகுதியை நோட்டிலே எழுதித்தான் பழக்கப்பட்டிருப்போம். ஆனால் ஆசிரியை சித்ரா, அருகில் உள்ள தபால் நிலையத்தில் இருந்து அஞ்சல் அட்டைகளை வாங்கி கடிதம் எழுதக் கற்றுக் கொடுத்திருக்கிறார். அதன் நீட்சியாக, மாணவர்கள் சிலர், குடியரசு தின மற்றும் பொங்கல் வாழ்த்துக் கூறி, டெல்லி ஜனாதிபதி மாளிகைக்குக் கடிதம் எழுதி அனுப்பியிருக்கின்றனர். சற்றும் எதிர்பார்க்காத ஆச்சரியமாய் டெல்லியில் இருந்து பதில் கடிதம் வந்தது. அதில் அப்போதைய ஜனாதிபதி அப்துல் கலாமின் கையொப்பம் இடப்பட்டு தமிழில் பதில் அளிக்கப்பட்டிருந்தது.

கணினி… சாதனையின் தொடக்கப்புள்ளி!

பள்ளி மெல்ல மெல்ல வளர்ச்சி அடையத் தொடங்கிய நிலையில், ஆசிரியை சித்ராவுக்கு வேறு ஊருக்கு மாற்றல் வந்தது. 2008-ம் ஆண்டில் காஞ்சிபுரம் மாவட்டத்தில் உள்ள அஸ்தினாபுரம் ஆரம்பப்பள்ளிக்கு வந்து சேர்ந்தார். கணிப்பொறியின் ஆக்கிரமிப்பு தொடங்கியிருந்த காலம் அது. ஆர்வமாய்க் கணினி கற்கத் தொடங்கினார் சித்ரா.

நினைத்த வேலைகளைக் குறுகிய நேரத்தில் செய்துவிட முடிகிற உலகத்தினுள் நுழைந்ததாய் உணர்ந்தார். தான் கற்றதை மாணவர்களுக்கும் சொல்லிக் கொடுக்க ஆசைப்பட்டார். ஆனால் அது மிகப்பெரிய சாதனையின் தொடக்கப்புள்ளியாக இருக்கும் என்பது அப்போது அவருக்குத் தெரிந்திருக்கவில்லை.

பள்ளியில், மதிய உணவு இடைவேளைகளில் விருப்பமுள்ள மாணவர்கள் கணினி கற்றுக் கொள்ளலாம் என்று அறிவித்தார். கணிப்பொறியை எப்படித் திறப்பது, இயக்குவது, மேலும் அடிப்படையான எம்.எஸ்.ஆபிஸ் குறித்தும் மாணவர்களுக்குக் கற்றுக் கொடுத்தார்.

தனது பயணம் குறித்து மேலும் பேசுகிறார் சித்ரா.

“2010-ல் இணையத்தில் உலவிக் கொண்டிருந்த போது, சோலார் குக்கரின் செயல்முறையைப் பார்த்தேன். விளையாட்டாய் மாணவர்களிடம் காண்பித்து, அதை முயற்சித்துப் பார்க்கச் சொன்னேன். அவர்களும் சில முறைகள் முயன்றனர், ஆனால் அரிசி வேகாமல் அப்படியே இருந்தது. அடுத்தடுத்த நாட்களில் திரும்பத் திரும்ப அவர்கள் முயற்சிக்க, சோலார் குக்கர் வெற்றிகரமாக இயங்கியது.

சமூக சேவகி கிரண் பிர் சேத்தியின் ‘டிசைன் ஃபார் சேஞ்ச்’ அமைப்பு சிறந்த கண்டுபிடிப்புகளை நிகழ்த்தும் பள்ளி மாணவர்களுக்கு ஒவ்வோர் ஆண்டும் விருது வழங்குகிறது. அதன் சிறந்த 20 கண்டுபிடிப்புகளில் ஒன்றாக எங்களின் கண்டுபிடிப்பும் தேர்வாகியது. அச்சம்பவம், அங்கீகாரத்தை எதிர்பார்க்காமல், மாணவர்கள், புதிது புதிதாய்க் கண்டுபிடிப்புகள் நிகழ்த்த ஏதுவாக அமைந்தது.

பல ஆசிரியர்கள் பாடப்புத்தகத்தை, பைபிளாகத்தான் பார்க்கின்றனர். அதைத் தாண்டி வேறு எதையுமே மாணவர்களுக்குச் சொல்லிக் கொடுப்பதில்லை.

தொழில்நுட்பம் அதன் போக்கில் வளர்ந்துகொண்டே இருக்கிறது. அதன் நன்மைகளை உணர்ந்து பயன்படுத்துவது எப்படி என்பதை மாணவர்களே எங்களுக்குக் கற்றுக் கொடுக்கின்றனர்” என்கிறார்.

ஆசிரியப்பணி தவிர, பள்ளிக் கல்வித்துறையின் சமூக அறிவியல் பாடத் திட்ட உறுப்பினராகவும் இருக்கிறார் சித்ரா. பாடத்திட்டங்களை உருவாக்கும் சமயத்தில் இரவு பகலாக உழைத்து, புத்தகத்தை வடிவமைத்ததில் இவரின் பங்கும் தவிர்க்க முடியாததாய் இருந்திருக்கிறது. மாணவர்களைத் தன் இரு கண்களாய் பாவித்த கலாம் மாணவர்களுக்குப் பதிலளித்த சம்பவம், தற்போது மூன்றாம் வகுப்பு சமூக அறிவியல் பாடத்தில் சேர்க்கப்பட்டிருக்கிறது.

ஆசிரியர்களை ஊக்குவிக்கும் பணி

சத்தமின்றி இன்னொரு முக்கியப் பணியையும் இவர் செய்து வருகிறார். தனக்கு ஏதோ ஒரு வகையில் தெரிந்த, அறிந்த அரசுப் பள்ளி ஆசிரியர்களில் எவரேனும் கற்பித்தலில் புதுமைகளைக் கையாண்டு வந்தால், அவரை அடையாளம் கண்டு பள்ளிக் கல்வித் துறையின் பாடத் திட்டக் குழுவில் இணைக்கும் வேலைதான் அது.

தனது கற்பித்தல் முறையையும், தன்னுடைய மாணவர்களின் திறமைகளையும் தமிழகம் முழுவதும் உள்ள ஆசிரியர்களிடம் கொண்டு சேர்த்து, அவர்களுக்கும் தனது உத்திகள் சென்றடைய யூடியூபை நாடியிருக்கிறார் ஆசிரியை சித்ரா. அவ்வப்போது அதில் வீடியோ பதிவுகளை அப்டேட் செய்து வருகிறார். அரசுப் பள்ளி மாணவர்களின் ஆக்கங்களைப் படம்பிடிக்கும் சித்ராவின் யுடியூப் பக்க இணைப்புhttps://www.youtube.com/user/chitra137

Source….க.சே. ரமணி பிரபா தேவி – தொடர்புக்கு: ramaniprabhadevi.s@thehindutamil.co.in      www.tamil.thehindu.com

Natarajan

Meet ‘Traffic Ramaswamy’ …80 Years Old…Still Standing Tall and Fighting against Wrong….

One would think this 80-year-old would have hung up his boots a long time ago. Why then is he, instead of reading a newspaper on the porch and playing with his grandchildren, busy keeping the local government, policemen and officials on their toes? Meet K.R. ‘Traffic’ Ramaswamy, a social activist who fears none.

“I want to see Chennai as one of the most livable and lovely cities in the country,” says 80-year-old Ramaswamy, with high hopes and a quavering voice. This man, who started his career as a mill worker, is one of the most popular names in Chennai today.

Traffic Ramaswamy

Born on April 1, 1934, Ramaswamy is no less than a hero who continues to fight for what is right in spite of many challenges.

From asking to remove the prefix ‘Amma’ from Jayalalitha’s name to filing over 50 PILs (Public Interest Litigations), Ramaswamy has always stood by what he believes in. He even walked out of his father’s house when he demanded dowry from the bride’s family.

Who is he?

A home guard by profession, his life as an activist started when he unofficially began directing traffic on Chennai’s busy Parry Corner. In appreciation of his dedication and efforts, the police gave him an identity card which earned him the name Traffic Ramaswamy.

“It was difficult. Many family members went against me for my ‘foolish’ acts of public service. But some friends provided me food and shelter,” he remembers.

Ramaswamy’s activism grew, along with his understanding of the public system, when he worked as PA to a minister in Rajaji’s cabinet.

What has he done?

He was imposed a fine of Rs. 25,000 by the Madras High Court in October 2014 for filing a vague PIL stating “party functionaries who swear allegiance to a criminal cannot form the government.”

He had also filed a PIL to prevent Jayalalitha’s picture from appearing on bus stands and buses.

He was responsible for bringing the ban on the use of motorised fish carts in Chennai in 2002. The fish carts, also known as Thattu Vandi, are motorised carts with a flat wooden plate at the back which causes a lot of damage and injuries if it accidentally hits people. Furious with his actions, the fish sellers attacked him and damaged his property.

Ramaswamy was also abandoned by his own family when he started receiving death threats. But today, even the fishermen acknowledge his efforts and accept that the ban was important.

“What is wrong should be addressed without fearing anything. That is what I have always done.”

– Ramaswamy

Another major change that he brought to the city was by going against unauthorised constructions. He managed to get a multi-storey building which was encroaching on the street at T. Nagar demolished. He also got a one-way road where a lot of lives had been lost due to accidents, converted into two-way

 

The 80 year old man is still standing tall and fighting against wrong.

Most of his actions are backed by the PILs that he files.

Cathedral Road in Chennai is one of the best kept roads in the city as it has the houses of  two of Tamil Nadu’s biggest political leaders on each side of the road. The entire stretch of the road used to be covered with party posters and banners. Ramaswamy filed a PIL to remove the posters and won the case too. Too scared to go against the powerful figures, the police and other officials were reluctant to remove these posters. So Ramaswamy went ahead and removed them himself.

Having spoken loudly against corruption, he has been attacked several times and today has court protection and lives alone due to several death threats given to his dear ones.

He also launched a  political party, Makkal Pathukappu Kazhagam in January 2014, which is open to anyone to join. “I want to invite people to get associated with it and feel free to raise their voice against what is wrong. The party already has thousands of people engaged with it,” he says.

What keeps him going?

ramaswamy

Having spoken loudly against corruption, he has been attacked several times and today has court protection and lives alone due to several death threats given to his dear ones.

“It is the love for my city and a dream to see it progress that keeps me going. I believe there will be a day when the entire nation will be corruption-free. But only if we all come together to fight for it.”

– Ramaswamy.

He believes that the real power lies with the people and they should use it. “I want citizens to be bold. They should not fear anything and come out in the open,” he says.

From a mill worker to a social activist, Traffic Ramaswamy’s life has been full of ups and down. But he has always stood by his decisions and raised his voice against what is wrong. Even in his twilight years, he shows strong will power and immense dedication towards a better city and, above all, a better India.

Contact Ramaswamy on his Facebook page.

Source….www.the betterindia.com

Natarajan

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Chennai’s Colonial Era LandMarks….

Chennai's colonial-era landmarks

Photo: Nathan G./Mint

The port city has drawn traders from far and wide to set up shop. Here are six pre-Independence establishments that are still thriving

On 22 August 1639, three square miles of land on the Coromandel Coast, where Fort St. George is located today, was handed over to the British East India Company by the local Nayaka rulers. It was from that shard of earth—flanked by ocean and dusted with blond sand—that Madras originated.

 

Now called Chennai, the city celebrated its 376th birthday on Saturday. Here are the profiles of some of the city’s most iconic institutions.

 

Victoria Technical Institute
Photo: SaiSen/Mint
Photo: SaiSen/Mint
The sepulchral atmosphere at the Victoria Technical Institute (VTI) is deepened by a marble statue of the puritanical monarch in full court dress—crown, cloak and sceptre—glaring beadily at you. The pretty young lady on the phone, however, doesn’t seem to be bothered. She has lined up a selection of baby dresses and is discussing the specifics with someone at the other end of the line, possibly a friend or relative who has recently had a baby girl. “I’m sure it will fit her,” she says, “She is still very small.”
This is perhaps one of the few places where you get frocks of this sort in the city: light-as-air smocked cotton in pastel shades with little flowers embroidered all over it. Other remnants of a time gone by can be found here: lace-edged doilies, plump tea cosies, wicker baskets, household linen with cut-work embroidery, multicoloured knitted napkin holders.
Most of the embroidery is done by women’s self-help groups in South India,” says C. Israel, CEO-IC (chief operating officer, in charge) of VTI. “We support them by giving them this platform to showcase their work.”
VTI, which was established as a public charitable trust in 1887 to commemorate the golden jubilee of Queen Victoria, was registered as a society in 1889.
“A few citizens of the Madras Presidency came together to start an organization to help the craftspeople of this country,” says Israel. “They wanted to preserve Indian handicrafts this way.”
VTI’s importance and reach grew as the society’s councillors began persuading craftspeople to route their products through the institute. Scholarships were offered to artisans and more art colleges were established in the Madras Presidency. In 1909, VTI got its first permanent exhibition centre: the Victoria Public Hall on Pantheon Road, Egmore.
When World War II erupted in Europe, British troops chose to occupy the Victoria Public Hall and the institute was moved to a rented store on Mount Road. In 1956, a new flagship showroom was opened in the same area.
The institute, which is spread across three floors and employs around 42 people, has craftspeople from all across the country supplying goods. Finely moulded statues of various Hindu gods in bronze, stone and rosewood can be found on the ground floor and in the adjoining gallery; the brightly coloured enamel work of Rajasthan and equally brilliant wares of Channapatna are balanced by the more subdued Bidriware and Dhokra art, while exquisitely carved and painted wooden furniture takes up an entire floor.

“There are over a hundred different sorts of handicrafts here,” says Israel. “And we constantly meet new craftsmen and invite them to display the best of their workmanship here.”
The Old Curiosity Shop
There is something decidedly Dickens-esque about the red-brick building on Mount Road that houses the Kashmir Art Palace. Step inside and you will understand why it is also called ‘The Old Curiosity Shop’. A line from the inimitable author’s novel, by the same name, flashes unbidden across the mind as you step inside, “the place… was one of those receptacles for old and curious things which seem to crouch in odd corners of this town and to hide their musty treasures from the public eye”.
Mohammed Lateef, whose father started the store in the mid-1940s, says, “The struggle for Independence was at its peak back then and there was a lot of turmoil in the north of India. My father (Ghulam Mohammed) came down to Madras for a visit and liked the relative peace and simplicity of the people here.”
Mohammed Lateef. Photo: SaiSen/Mint
Mohammed Lateef. Photo: SaiSen/Mint
So, Ghulam went back to Kashmir, sold his existing business and used the money to set up the shop on Mount Road. “Back then, people didn’t understand the concept of antiques,” says Lateef. “This used to simply be a gift shop for the English officers who needed to pick up things to take back to their homeland.”
It was his clientele who named the shop, laughs Lateef, turning on a cassette player. Don McLean’s Vincent wafts through the store. With a satisfied expression, Lateef leans back and says, “My style has always been vintage and I don’t sell anything I don’t like. I suppose this store reminded (clients) of the original Old Curiosity Shop.”
Currently, he says, his shop has a mix of both old and new things, “A lot of my clients are in the IT sector—they like to spend money on their house. And I like educating them,” says Lateef, who claims that Jawaharlal Nehru, former chief minister M.G. Ramachandran and actor Sivaji Ganesan visited the store during their lifetime.
“I can make you go back in history,” he promises, picking up a large lump of quartz that gleams gently in the dim light. Holding it up, he remarks, “This is at least million years old.”
There are other things in the store, perhaps not so primeval, but rare and unique nevertheless: finely embroidered, ancient pashmina garments, sepia-hued letters written by Indian statesmen, black-and-white photographs and the cameras that took them, gramophones, radios, typewriters, telescopes, compasses, sundials, five-decade old comics, century-old etchings and sketches, toys, vinyl records, coins, stamps, vintage jewellery, old movie posters, books produced by the Gutenberg press.
“After the British left India, this changed from a gift store to an antique one,” he says, “I talked to my clientele, understood their hobbies and started sourcing things for collectors all over the world. Some of the things I have here once belonged to royalty.”
Gem and Company
It is a small, unpretentious store on NSC Bose Road opposite the Madras high court. Clunky old buses trundle past, shoving pedestrians off the road and raising whorls of dust that find their way into the store, coating furniture and clients with a fine layer of dirt.
Behind the glass shutters of the wooden shelves, however, the pens are safe enough: the little-girl fountain pens with Disney princesses and fairies emblazoned on them, the slender metal cylinders that glint in the sun, the hand-crafted ebonite canisters of swirly brown and streaky black, the packets of cheap and convenient ball pens, the multicoloured gel pens.
“I have a passion for pens and love them,” says M. Pratap Kumar, owner of Gem and Co., which exclusively sells pens. “That is why I do what I do.”
M. Prabhat Kumar. Photo: SaiSen/Mint
M. Prabhat Kumar. Photo: SaiSen/Mint
It began a little less than a century ago, in the late 1920s, when Kumar’s grandfather N.C. Cunnan and his friend Venkatrangam began Gem and Co. Back then, all pens had to be imported from England, he says, adding that today, besides the regular brands such as Parker, Reynolds, Cello, Waterman, Sheaffer and Cross, he also sells the shop’s own brand of pens, Gama. “We sell our pens all over India and abroad,” he says.
Though he stocks a variety of pens, Kumar admits that he has a penchant for the good old fountain pen. “I always advise children who come here to use fountain pens. They are cheap, long-lasting, eco-friendly, don’t stress either the paper or your fingers and give you a much more legible and neat script,” he says, admitting that he is thrilled that schools in the city today are now insisting on their students using fountain pens.
In addition to selling pens, he also focuses on pen servicing, “The fountain pen is a very technical instrument; our exclusive service station for old pens can help you revive even your grandfather’s pen.”
From a shelf below, he takes a slender, velvet-padded box and opens it to reveal an amber-coloured pen. The cap is shattered and the nib cracked, but he picks it up almost reverentially and remarks, “This is an antique pen—once I am done with it, it will write better than any new one.”
Higginbothams
The air-conditioning isn’t working and shimmery, gossamer cobwebs hang like decidedly unlovely birthday streamers off long-stemmed grubby white fans. But the stained glass through which sunlight filters in leaving behind tiny pinpricks of bright light on the smooth black and white Italian tiles is beautiful, as is the sweeping wooden staircase that leads to the gallery above.
The pendulum of the tall grandfather clock must have oscillated for nearly 170 years, but time continues to sit lightly on Higginbothams, the oldest surviving bookstore in India. Unlike most other popular bookstores in Chennai, which have diversified their offerings over the past decade or so (in a few cases, books are no longer even stocked there), Higginbothams is unabashedly what it claims to be—a bookstore in the truest sense of the word.
Photo: Nathan G./Mint
Photo: Nathan G./Mint
M. Hemalatha, a senior customer relations manager who has been with the company for more than 33 years, says, “We are a conservative place and our environment may not be fancy. But when it comes to books, we have all that you require here. We have books across all subjects—technical and academic, bestsellers, classics, non-fiction, regional language publications…”
Labelled shelves of books cover the nearly 12,000 sq. ft store, while notice boards mounted on the wooden railings that bind the mezzanine floor celebrate the power of the written word. “Finishing a good book is like leaving a good friend,” declares one notice, attributing the comment to American publisher and author William Feather. Joseph Addison’s observation that “Reading is to the mind what exercise is to the body,” is printed on another. Then there is Pulitzer Prize-winning historian and writer Barbara Tuchman’s simple but lucid comment, a personal favourite—“Books are the carriers of civilization.”
Started by Abel Joshua Higginbotham, a former librarian, in 1844, the bookstore has grown into one of the key attractions of the city. It was frequented by the who’s who of the day, from publisher John Murray to Madras governor Charles Trevelyan and British prime minister Clement Atlee; it became the official book supplier of most government-owned or managed institutions of the time, including the Connemara Public Library.
In 1891, Abel’s son C.H. Higginbotham took over and began expanding the business—building the large high-ceilinged white building where the store is now located, taking it to other large cities in South India and also establishing capsule versions of the store at most railway stations.
“In addition to our larger stores in South India, we also have stores in college campuses, railway stations and the Chennai airport,” says Hemalatha.
In 1925, the store was bought by John Oakshott Robinson and merged with his existing printing unit, Associated Press, to form Associated Publishers.
Black-and-white portraits of the various stakeholders in the business smile enigmatically at you as you enter the store. Between the two portraits of founder Abel Joshua Higginbotham and his son C.H. Higginbotham is one of the late S. Anantharamakrishnan, founder of the Amalgamations Group.
“The bookshop was taken over by the Amalgamations Group in 1945,” explains Hemalatha, adding that it has been with the group ever since.
Despite it being a weekday morning, there are a few children crouched on the floor, examining the bottom shelf of the children’s section. “Reading is increasing among young people in spite of multimedia influences,” says Hemalatha. “Earlier, we were afraid that physical stores would go as the online market was able to give discounts we could not match. However, people who truly love reading still enjoy browsing in a bookstore for the touch and feel of books. And because we are a serious bookstore, they continue to come here.”
Poppat Jamal and Sons
The last year of the 19th century saw a terrible famine spread across Western and Central India. Poppat Jamal, whose family had a wool-exporting business in Gujarat, decided to escape it by leaving home. After a brief stint in Rangoon and then Bombay, he decided to explore the south of India and landed up in Madras.
“My grandfather came here and found a job working with Ibrahim Peer Mohammed and Company, a crockery company in Broadway,” says Mahmud N. Jamal, who has taken care of the business since the early 1970s.
Mahmud Jamal. Photo: SaiSen/Mint
Mahmud Jamal. Photo: SaiSen/Mint
In 1901, Poppat Jamal’s employer decided to sell the business, “He asked my grandfather what he thought the stock in the store was worth,” says Mahmud. “My grandfather said Rs50,000, which was a fortune in those days.”
Though he didn’t have that sort of money, Poppat Jamal agreed to take it over. “The former owner told my grandfather to pay him back after selling the goods. There was a lot of trust in those days,” adds Mahmud.
The large blue-and-white cup and saucer at the entrance of the store may proclaim the name of the business in its current avatar, Poppal Jamal and Sons. But it was not always named so, reveals Mahmud.
“My grandfather started the business with his brother, so it was initially called Poppat Jamal and Brothers,” he says. “When his brother passed away in the 1920s, the name changed to Poppal Jamal and Sons.”
Prior to Independence, the wares were imported from the UK and Japan, he adds. However, as better Indian brands came into the market, they started sourcing more products locally.
From bright melamine dinner sets to Cristal d’Arques glasses, neatly packaged lunch boxes, ceramic cups, airtight storage boxes, electronic gadgets and finely carved silverware, the range is extensive and attractive.
“We stock both local and international brands; we also have Taz, our in-house brand,” says Mahmud, adding that baking equipment is currently hugely popular. “We have a cross-section of buyers and our price range extends from Rs10 to Rs40,000.”
The store has changed locations (in 1958, it moved from Broadway to Mount Road) and the business has expanded (the company now has four stores in the city, as well as stores in Coimbatore and Vijayawada) but what the brand stands for remains essentially the same: PQR—Price, Quality, Range.
Mathsya
They say that when the Battle of Kurukshetra was fought, the king of Udupi refused to take sides, opting instead to cook and serve food to the soldiers gathered on the battleground. As with most stories from the epics, divine intervention came into play: the king would meet Lord Krishna every day to determine how many soldiers would survive the battle that day, thereby deciding the quantity he had to cook.
Little wonder indeed that the little town of Udupi in South Kanara, Karnataka, produces some of the finest vegetarian food in the country. Once upon a time, Madras was filled with hotels serving Udupi cuisine; unfortunately with the changing times, many of the old Udupi hotels were forced to shut down.
Mathsya, located at the corner of Halls Road in Egmore, has managed to hold its own since the turn of the last century. Ram Bhat, a partner of the popular restaurant, says, “To understand Mathsya, you have to understand Udupi philosophy. At the Udupi Sri Krishna Temple, food is served as prasadam to all.”
His grandfather Ramanna Bhat, who set up the restaurant in the early 1900s, was affiliated to that temple and set up the restaurant when he moved to Madras. “Back then, it was called Madras Café,” he says. “When my uncle Shama took over, he called it the Udupi Sri Krishna Bhavan.”
The name changed again after Independence, it was then called Udupi Home, he says, adding that “During the Indo-China War in 1962, there were constant power cuts, the trains came in late and people were stranded without food. So, the government gave Udupi Home permission to serve food post-midnight.”
And that holds good even today. The bells that decorate the hand-crafted wooden door of the restaurant jingle into the wee hours of the morning, while a wooden statue of Mathsya (the piscine avatar of god Vishnu) in the centre of the room welcomes all who enter—middle-aged homemakers, runny-nosed children, mustachioed businessmen and mini-skirted party-goers—equally graciously.
“In the late 1970s, we changed the entire set-up and gave it a more modern look and menu,” says Bhat. “While the rasam vadai, Raja Raja Cholan dosai, onion rava dosai, Manglore bondas and filter coffee continue to be all-time favourites, we also have things like cheese toast, bread-peas masala, aloo parotta and pav bhaaji,” he says, adding that “we are the first restaurant to introduce authentic Punjabi and north Indian cuisine to the south”.
Source…..Preeti Zachariah…..www.mintonsunday.livemint.com
Natarajan