” The Rise and Rise of Sundar Pichai….”

Pichai Sundararajan aka Sundar Pichai. Photo: Kamal Narang

Pichai Sundararajan aka Sundar Pichai. Photo: Kamal Narang   The Hindu

“Super excited about his progress and dedication to the company,” says Google co-founder Larry Page.

Google’s announcement on Monday that it would be subsumed within a new parent company called Alphabet had a bonus for people of Indian-origin world over: the company’s head of Products and Engineering, Chennai-born Pichai Sundararajan, was anointed the CEO of the new, “slimmed down” Google.

Underscoring his confidence in the man known as Sundar Pichai (43), Google boss Larry Page said of the restructuring in the company he co-founded with Sergey Brin, “A key part of this is Sundar Pichai.”

Mr. Pichai, who is a graduate of IIT Kharagpur and Stanford University, had “really stepped up since October of last year, when he took on product and engineering responsibility for our Internet businesses,” Mr. Page said in a blog post, adding that he and Mr. Brin were “super excited about his progress and dedication to the company.”

They may well have reason to feel fortunate that Mr. Pichai is the man to head their $66-billion revenue, $16-billion profit, company– by most accounts he combines a deep passion for engineering excellence with a rare managerial quality of attracting the best talent into the teams he works with.

Mr. Pichai started at Google in 2004, where he was known as a “low-key manager” who worked on the Google toolbar and then led the launch of the market-beating Chrome browser in 2008.

Following this his rise through the ranks of Google took on an increasingly meteoric tenor, and soon he became Vice President, then Senior Vice President, and ultimately was charged with supervising all Google apps including Gmail and Google Drive and finally given control of Android itself.

His promotion to Product Chief in October 2014 literally made him Mr. Page’s second-in-command with oversight of day-to-day operations for all of Google’s major products including maps, search, and advertising.

Some of Mr. Pichai’s colleagues describe him in the media as a skilled diplomat, including Caesar Sengupta, a Google Vice President who has worked with Mr. Pichai for eight years, and said to Bloomberg News, “I would challenge you to find anyone at Google who doesn’t like Sundar or who thinks Sundar is a jerk.”

Nowhere was Mr. Pichai’s easy blending of techno-diplomatic competence evident than in early 2014, when the fracas between Samsung and Google was reaching fever pitch, at the time over Samsung’s Magazine UX interface for its tablets, which Google felt may have been deliberately underselling Google services such as its Play apps store.

According to reports “Defusing the situation fell to Sundar Pichai, the tactful, tactical new chief of Google’s Android division. Pichai set up a series of meetings with J.K. Shin, CEO of Samsung Mobile Communications, [where] they held ‘frank conversations’ about the companies’ intertwined fates [and a] fragile peace was forged.”

Since then, Samsung has apparently agreed to scale back Magazine UX, and the two corporations have announced a broad patent cross-licensing arrangement to implement which they “now work together more closely on user experience than we ever have before,” according to Mr. Pichai.

Another apparent talent of Google’s new CEO – his thinking seems to be ahead of the curve. Although Mr. Pichai trained in metallurgy and materials science at IIT Kharagpur, and Stanford and did an MBA at Wharton, he was already deeply immersed in the world of electronics.

According to one of his college professors Mr. Pichai “was doing work in the field of electronics at a time when no separate course on electronics existed in our curriculum.”

The Google founders no doubt recognised that Mr. Pichai was a man on an evangelical-type mission for pushing the boundaries of technology.

Mr. Pichai most eloquently outlined this mission when he said, “For me, it matters that we drive technology as an equalising force, as an enabler for everyone around the world. Which is why I do want Google to see, push, and invest more in making sure computing is more accessible, connectivity is more accessible.”

Prime Minister Narendra Modi also congratulated Mr. Pichai on his appointment as Google CEO.

Source….Narayan Lakshman in http://www.the hindu.com

Natarajan

A Mini Punjab in Tamilnadu….

Workers from Punjab at Akal farm in Vallanthai village. Photo: S. James

Workers from Punjab at Akal farm in Vallanthai village. Photo: S. James..The Hindu

Hard working farmers from Punjab are greening dry tracts in the interiors of Ramnad district.

Ropar in Punjab or Ramnad in Tamil Nadu, it no longer makes a difference to Jaspal, Harpal, Gagandeep and Rajendra Singh. Wearing colourful turbans, long white shirts and pyjamas they are out in the fields doing what they love — tilling the land.

“If you love nature and understand the interconnectedness of life, you can do farming anywhere,” says the youngest in the group, Jaspal, in chaste Punjabi.

The sun shines bright in Vallandhai village in Kamuthi taluk of Ramnad district. The farmers, with smiles on their sun-tanned faces, move around pulling out bunches of groundnuts. A lady in salwar-suit walks into the fields with a thermos of chilled lassi (butter milk) and the men take a break.

The group of Punjabis have beautifully blended into the sun-blistered landscape of one of the driest districts in south Tamil Nadu and shown the locals how a farmer’s faith and hard work can yield amazing results.

Till about a decade ago the land here was covered with thorny bushes (kaattu karuvelam) and abandoned by the locals. Today, a big iron gate welcomes you into the area now called the ‘Akal Farm’ that boasts of lush green orchards and sustainable green farms. It has not only become the talking point in the district but also a model example of cultivation showcased to tourists, agriculturists and visitors.

With apt knowledge, experience and some experimentation, about two-dozen farmers from Moga and Sangrur districts in Punjab are now successfully growing mangoes, water melons, papaya, guava, cucumber, pumpkin, amla, carrot, ladies finger, oranges, sapota and custard apple. “We are gradually acquiring more land and increasing our farm produce,” says the soft-spoken Darshan Singh, one of the two group leaders-cum-supervisor who can speak a smattering of Tamil and was invited by the District Collector last month to address local administration staff and farmers from the region.

 

Workers from Punjab at Akal farm in Vallanthai village. Photo: S. James

“It was my first attempt at public speaking and I felt humbled,” says Darshan Singh, “to share tips because I know every farmer anywhere shares a special relationship with the real food.” “I managed to convey my points as I was asked to motivate the people who had rejected the same land for farming,” he adds.

Sab rab di meherbani hain (everything is God’s grace),” says Darshan Singh, who feels the yield is not yet as high as desired. But we all are happy to have turned the infertile and fallow lands into lush green orchards and fields, he adds.

It all began when Darshan Singh and his friend, Manmohan Singh, left behind their families and chose to travel more than 3,000 kms to this backward belt seven years ago. They followed the suggestion of a retired agriculture officer to explore cultivation in the arid lands of south Tamil Nadu.

“We migrated for farming beyond our home State lured by the cheap land that was in short supply back home,” says Sarabjeet Singh, another senior member in the group. “We were discouraged by the locals who were always grudging against the long dry spells. But we did not mind experimenting because the land was being sold at a throwaway price – Rs.10,000 per acre,” he adds.

The friends pooled in money and jointly bought 300 acres. They also took a house on rent in nearby Virudhunagar and travelled everyday to the hamlet. It took three years to clear the land, dig two dozen borewells, instal drip irrigation and make it ready for plantation.

“We toiled round-the-clock as cleaners, gardeners, farmers, night guards…initially the locals were hostile to us,” says Darshan Singh, “but everybody’s hard work and patience is bearing fruits now.”

“The results took time but we did not lose hope,” asserts Sarabjeet Singh.

Life has taken a new turn inside this mini-Punjab in Vallandhai. The Akal farm now encompasses 600 acres and also has a neatly fenced campus with small cottages, dormitory, a common kitchen, dining area and meditation room. “We no longer feel we live outside Punjab,” says Darshan Singh.

The farmers and their families celebrate Lohri, holi, baisakhi, rakhi, teej and diwali. The women cook the daily dal-chawal and roti-subzi together and even feed the visitors. They also join in pongal and Tamil new year celebrations with their local friends. “The villagers have become friendly now,” says Darshan Singh.

In fact with the Punjabi farmers setting a trend, some local farmers have joined them as workers in the Akal Farm. Some have even returned to them offering to buy the green fields at a higher rate.

A retired Village Administration Officer, Syed Segana, has been with them for the past six years helping in administrative work and translations. “I am trying to teach them Tamil,” he smiles, “but our friendship is beyond language, food and boundaries now.” “Nature and greenery binds us together and it does not matter where we belong to and where we stay and work,” he adds.

Workers from Punjab at Akal farm in Vallanthai village. Photo: S. James

The Akal Farm yields

Amla and guava on 40 acres each, mixed dry fruits like cashew nuts and almonds on five acres, papaya on 10 acres. The farmers have planted 5,000 mango trees on 80 acres besides coconut and timber-value trees on 10 acres each and an assortment of other fruits and vegetables. They also cultivate inter-crop and this season harvested 15 tonnes of pumpkin, five tonnes of cucumber and 20 tonnes of water melon on a daily basis.

Source…..Soma Basu in http://www.thehindu.com

Natarajan

 

Lessons from Sundar Pichai’s rise: Meritocracy, not mediocrity, is way forward….

The elevation of Sundar Pichai to CEO of tech giant Google marks a triumph for four ideas we in India are uncomfortable with: giving meritocracy its due, allowing people to rise regardless of age, valuing diversity, and inviting talented immigrants to work for the country.

Stuck as we are to politically-driven social justice systems where quotas and reservations dominate the agendas of political parties and have become an end in themselves, we have paid inadequate attention to meritocracy. Any society that places such a low value on getting the right talent into the right job and giving him or her opportunities for growth will pay a huge price on several fronts – innovation being one of them.

Mediocrity, whether in government or in corporations or in academics, can provide only incremental gains for society. Multi-bagger gains come from promoting meritocracy.

It should thus come as no surprise that India has invented almost nothing since the humble “lota” of centuries ago, even while Indian techies dominate Silicon Valley’s startup culture, accounting for 15 percent of the total. Our belief in “jugaad” may be useful when resources are scarce, but “make-do” is a poor substitute for “make something new.”

Support for meritocracy, effective mentoring, and an ability to discriminate in favour of talent (as opposed to just seniority and age) is vital for innovation.

Consider Sundar Pichai (the name is actually a shortened version of his original name Sundararajan Pichai). He joined Google in 2004, and in 11 years he is holding the top job at age 43. It is difficult to visualise any Indian company giving this kind of opportunity to a talented foreigner. To be sure, we do have the occasional foreign talent heading Indian companies (the Tata group has some examples in this area), but the cases are few and far between as most Indian companies tend to be family-dominated or narrowly based in terms of their talent pool. And the talent we get from abroad is usually past its prime.

Sundar Pichai Reuters

Even Infosys, our home-grown tech pioneer in offshoring, fell into the trap of giving the founders first right of refusal to the CEO’s job till bad performance and a changing operating environment finally forced them to get new blood in the form of a Vishal Sikka last year.

A Satya Nadella would have been languishing at some middle-level position in an Indian tech company if he had sought to make his career here, but at 46 he made it to the top at Microsoft as CEO in early 2014, a successor to Steve Ballmer.

Sundar Pichai was also not made by accident. Before he became CEO, he worked closely with CEO Larry Page, and played major roles in creating the Google Toolbar, the browser Chrome, and in managing the growth of Android, the world’s largest mobile phone operating system. Page did not hand over his job to Pichai because he liked the guy. He watched Pichai’s progress from close quarters, and after handing him one assignment after another, decided that he was the man to take over his own job. Page wrote in his Google blog yesterday (10 August): “I have been spending quite a bit of time with Sundar, helping him and the company in any way I can, and I will of course continue to do that. Google itself is also making all sorts of new products, and I know Sundar will always be focused on innovation – continuing to stretch boundaries. I know he deeply cares that we can continue to make big strides on our core mission to organise the world’s information.”

Note the degree of supervision and support Page gave Pichai. He also wrote this about Pichai: “Sundar has been saying the things I would have said (and sometimes better!) for quite some time now, and I’ve been tremendously enjoying our work together. He has really stepped up since October of last year, when he took on product and engineering responsibility for our Internet businesses. Sergey (Brin) and I have been super excited about his progress and dedication to the company. And it is clear to us and our board that it is time for Sundar to be CEO of Google. I feel very fortunate to have someone as talented as he is to run the slightly slimmed down Google and this frees up time for me to continue to scale our aspirations.”

Now, why wouldn’t a Pichai kill for such a strong vote of confidence, support and faith from the bosses of Google?

Unfortunately, the Indian DNA is about losing talent. India produces tech talent by the thousand, but still loses them by the hundred (if not the thousand) to Ivy League schools or tech companies in Silicon Valley. This is because we are unwilling or unable to give our talent the kind of support and mentoring, not to speak of challenge and opportunity, they need.

The recent incident, where IIT Roorkee had to expel 72 students for failing to make the grade, is instructive. Most students who get into IITs are, by definition, hard and talented workers. They would have spent years in coaching classes and worked hard to crack the IIT-JEE exams. The question is: why then would 72 of them fail to make the grade?

Answer: we fail to give them the support they actually need – or not enough of it – after they get into the institution. As this Indian Express story points out, “90 percent of the IIT-Roorkee students who were expelled were from reserved categories (SC, ST and OBC) and scored average to high ranks in their respective categories in the 2014 IIT-JEE (Advanced). Once on campus, however, several factors pull them back, prominent among them a lack of fluency in English.”

Consider the sheer loss of talent we face if students have to be turfed out not for lack of engineering talent, but lack of proficiency in English.

The problem is not the quotas themselves, but the assumption that quotas by themselves are enough. In fact, excessive dependence on quotas to deliver social justice does damage by, first, marking such students out as somehow untalented, and then ensuring their failure by not giving them the support they need to cope with the rigours of an IIT academic session. We have conveniently forgotten that quotas have to be supplemented by effective mentoring and help by mentors. Without this, quotas will become self-defeating and divisive. (Some IITs do this effectively, but not all).

One can be sure that the same thing is happening in other areas of reservations and quotas, where the successes are vastly outnumbered by failures due to the lack of mentoring, including in our government.

Quotas are useful only if they succeed in reducing the need for quotas, not if they end up perpetuating and extending it by promoting mediocrity and a sense of victimhood among the beneficiaries.

We need to learn how to do things right from the elevation of Pichai, a first-generation immigrant to the US who rose to the top because their system favours meritocracy even while encouraging affirmative action and social diversity in institutions and corporations.

For now, though, we should see Pichai’s and Nadella’s rise as slaps in the face of our mediocrity-driven culture.

Source……R.Jagannathan ….www.firstpost.com

Natarajan

“Sundar Pichai: Google’s new boss from humble roots…..”…. A Report From BBC

With Google creating its own parent company, Alphabet, there’s a bit of moving about in the Google boardroom.

Larry Page is now chief executive of Alphabet. Sergey Brin is its president.

And moving up to be in charge of Google is 43-year-old Sundar Pichai.

Sundar Pichai

Great news for Pichai, and good news too for India – his appointment makes him the latest Indian to earn a massively high-profile job in the US technology industry. Microsoft’s Satya Nadella is the other notable example.

Pichai’s life story is remarkable, and his rise to the top of Google is a glowing endorsement of India’s standing in the global technology industry, and equally, a reassuring reminder of the so-called “American Dream”.

Pichai was born and schooled in Chennai, India. He captained his school’s cricket team, leading it to win regional competitions.

He studied Metallurgical Engineering at the Indian Institute of Technology in Kharagpur (IIT Kharagpur). According to one of his tutors, quoted in the Times of India, Pichai was the “brightest of his batch”.

He has evidently used his talent to great effect at Google, a company he joined in 2004. Products under his watch include Google’s web browser, Chrome, as well as the Android mobile operating system.

Android is by far the world’s most popular mobile OS – a fact made perhaps more startling by the fact Pichai’s family did not possess a telephone until he was 12 years old.

Challenges

According to a profile in Bloomberg magazine, Pichai’s upbringing was humble. His family lived in a two room apartment. Pichai didn’t have a room – he slept on the living room floor, as did his younger brother.

The family didn’t own a television, or a car.

But Pichai’s father planted the seeds of technology into his boy’s mind, partly thanks to his job at British conglomerate General Electric Company (not to be confused with the American General Electric).

“I used to come home and talk to him a lot about my work day and the challenges I faced,” Regunatha Pichai told Bloomberg, adding that Sundar had a remarkable talent for remembering telephone numbers.

After graduating from IIT Kharagpur, Pichai was offered a scholarship at the ultimate breeding ground of tech geniuses – Stanford. The plane ticket to America cost more than his Dad’s annual salary.

At Google, Pichai is described as soft-spoken, and well liked. He is also very popular among developers – he runs Google’s annual developer event, I/O.

“Sundar has been saying the things I would have said (and sometimes better!) for quite some time now, and I’ve been tremendously enjoying our work together,” wrote Larry Page in his blogpost announcing all the big changes.

Larry Page and Sergey Brin have been hands-off with Google’s day-to-day running for sometime, and so, in Pichai’s life, today’s announcement is simply making it official: he’s in charge.

His remit is best summed up as Google’s core products – the bits that make the real money. That includes things like search, advertising, maps and YouTube.

He has challenges to navigate, like YouTube’s increasingly intense battle with Facebook in the video space. The social network has dramatically increased the amount of video being watched on its site – but YouTube still holds the title of most popular, for now at least.

Follow Dave Lee on Twitter @DaveLeeBBC.

Source….Dave Lee in http://www.bbc.com

Natarajan

 

Here are 8 Things You should know about Sundar Pichai….New CEO of Google…

Sundar Pichai: Here are 8 things you should know about the new Google CEO

Sundar Pichai talking about Android at the conference. Reuters

We saw this coming, didn’t we? A major shake-up at Google last year had put Sundar Pichai at the fore-front and in-charge of all products, except YouTube that was headed by CEO Susan Wojcicki.

Over the years, India-born Sundar Pichai has slowly yet steadily become a fore-runner at Google. After a leap from heading Chrome to in-charge of the core Google products including  Google Research, Google+, Google Maps, search, ads and more, he is now set to become the Google CEO. Over the last one year, he has been on stage demonstrating most Google products including the Android Pay lately.

In a surprise move, Google announced on Monday the launch of Alphabet Inc as its parent company with co-founders Larry Page as its CEO and Sergey Brin as president. This has paved way for Pichai to become the next CEO of Google, which will be the new entity’s largest fully owned subsidiary, a trimmed version of what it is known now. The new structure, which will take shape over the next few months, was announced by Page in a blogpost and in a filing to the Security and Exchange Commission.

Google’s main business will include search, ads, maps, apps, YouTube and Android and all related technical infrastructure.

“Alphabet is mostly a collection of companies,” Page said in the post, adding: “Our model is to have a strong CEO who runs each business, with Sergey and me in service to them as needed.”

43-year old Pichai Sundararajan, popular as Sundar Pichai joined Google in 2004. We’ve encompassed this decade of his journey and rise to fame in our timeline below:

Education and background
Pichai was born in Chennai, India and completed his schooling from Padma Seshadri Bala Bhavan. He later earned the Bachelors of Technology (BTech) degree from IIT- Kharagpur, and further went in for an MS from Stanford University. He also holds an MBA degree from University of Pennsylvania.

Before joining Google
Sundar Pichai has earlier worked for McKinsey & Company in management consulting. He has also worked in engineering and product management at Applied Materials.

Google and pre-Chrome era
Pichai joined Google in 2004  and is known to have worked on popular products like Toolbar, and also others like Google Gears and Google Pack, before Chrome was launched. However, it was the success of the Toolbar that helped Pichai pace through his career as Google noticed that it was significantly increasing the number of  user searches. This eventually made Google believe that it should have its own browser.

Rise of Chrome and Pichai
At Google, Pichai is popular for having led product management and innovation of Google’s client software products such as Google Chrome and Chrome OS. Pichai is believed to be the man responsible for driving Google’s Chrome OS and browser forward. In 2008, he was appointed as VP of product development and introduced Chrome browser. It was soon followed by Chrome OS in 2009. It was from 2008 that people started seeing more of Pichai at Google presentations and he soon became a known Google face. By 2012, he was the Senior VP of Chrome and apps.

Appointed as Android chief
Though Pichai had spent almost a decade at Google, it was only in 2013 that he became a well known figure worldwide after stepping into the shoes of Andy Rubin. Interestingly, Pichai joined Google in the same year that Rubin brought Android to Google via acquisition. Though Rubin helped develop Android to a great extent for almost a decade, Larry Page soon felt that Pichai would help give it a further push.

Ties with Samsung and Android One
Sundar Pichai is believed to be the man responsible for keeping smooth ties with partners like Samsung. He recently also launched the Android One initiative in India by teaming up with local manufacturers like Micromax, Spice and Karbonn.

CEO candidate at Microsoft
He was also rumoured to be one of the key candidates being considered for top position at Microsoft, which later went to India-born Satya Nadella.

 

Products head
Last year, Larry Page promoted Pichai to oversee core products including search, maps, Google+, commerce, advertising and infrastructure and more. This means, the heads of these departments will now report to Pichai. This puts Pichai at a very key position at Google, as the company’s main services such as search and advertising units help generate major chunk of the revenue.

 

Tags: , , , , , , , ,

Source…..www.rech.firstpost.com

Natarajan

Meet Alphabet, Google’s New Corporate Boss As Sundar Pichai Takes Over The Search Company…

Google just rocked the world with some light news on a Monday. It has restructured the company and everything will now report up to “Alphabet Inc.” a new corporate name. That includes Google, which will now be CEO’d by Sundar Pichai (one less Twitter CEO candidate).

Its site? https://abc.xyz/. Strangely enough, Google doesn’t own Alphabet.com (yet?).

BONUS: Click this period and the site links to hooli.xyz (a Silicon Valley reference)

The CEO of Alphabet will be Google CEO and co-founder Larry Page. His missive on Google’s blog (headlined G is for Google) explains what the new holding company is:

What is Alphabet? Alphabet is mostly a collection of companies. The largest of which, of course, is Google. This newer Google is a bit slimmed down, with the companies that are pretty far afield of our main Internet products contained in Alphabet instead.

Sergey Brin, co-founder of Google, will serve as Alphabet’s president (which includes the X lab), and Eric Schmidt will be chairman. In fact, he digs the new name:

Page went on to say:

Our company is operating well today, but we think we can make it cleaner and more accountable. So we are creating a new company, called Alphabet. I am really excited to be running Alphabet as CEO with help from my capable partner, Sergey, as President.

I guess we don’t want to have a Google+ or Glass kerfluffle again, where a product drags the mothership through the mud. Page basically confirms this by saying:

…the whole point is that Alphabet companies should have independence and develop their own brands.

If they fail, they die. But they do less damage to the umbrella.

The stock will be changing over from Google to Alphabet, but still trading under GOOGL and GOOG (which were set up after its stock split). The company says this will allow them to focus on Google as a product even more than before, and at the same time, Google will also be able to regain its focus on its own products.

Google’s main business will include search, ads, maps, apps, YouTube and Android and the related technical infrastructure. Nest will report up to Alphabet.

It didn’t seem that Pichai, who heads up all of Google’s most important products, had a chance at becoming Google’s CEO (ahead of Page) anytime soon. Pretty creative way to work around that, I’d say.

It looks like the stock market is reacting favorably to the announcement. Google’s…er Alphabet’s stock is up over 6 percent after hours.

Source…. ,

Sundar Pichai …Now CEO of Google …

Sundar Pichai is Google CEO

Sundar Pichai is Google CEO

Google announces formation of new umbrella firm Alphabet

In a significant restructuring at Google, India-born Sundar Pichai has been named the new CEO of the technology giant as the company co-founder Larry Page today announced the formation of a new umbrella firm Alphabet, of which Google will be a part.

Page, in a blog post, announced the formation of the new parent company Alphabet, of which he will be the CEO and Google co-founder Sergey Brin will be its President.

Chennai-born Pichai, 43, has been named CEO of the new Google, which Page said will be a “a bit slimmed down.”

“Our company is operating well today, but we think we can make it cleaner and more accountable. So we are creating a new company, called Alphabet. I am really excited to be running Alphabet as CEO with help from my capable partner, Sergey, as President,” Page said.

He said Pichai will be a “key part” of the new structure that will “allow us to keep tremendous focus on the extraordinary opportunities we have inside Google.”

He has really stepped up since October of last year, when he took on product and engineering responsibility for our internet businesses. Sergey and I have been super excited about his progress and dedication to the company. And it is clear to us and our board that it is time for Sundar to be CEO of Google,” Page said.

“I feel very fortunate to have someone as talented as he is to run the slightly slimmed down Google and this frees up time for me to continue to scale our aspirations. I have been spending quite a bit of time with Sundar, helping him and the company in any way I can, and I will of course continue to do that,” Page added.

Source….www.thehindubsinessline.com

Natarajan

இக்கட்டான தருணத்தில் திருச்சி மாணவிக்கு கிடைத்த அரிய உதவி….

ஏழை மாணவிக்கு மனிதநேய அடிப்படையில் கலந்தாய்வின் போது உதவி வழங்கி, கல்வி என்பது கற்போருக்கு வழங்கும் மிகப் பெரிய சேவை என்பதை நிரூபித்துள்ளது தமிழ்நாடு வேளாண் பல்கலைக்கழகம்.

திருச்சி மாவட்டம், முசிறியைச் சேர்ந்த ராஜேந்திரன் – தங்கப்பொண்ணு தம்பதியினரின் மகள் ஆர்.சுவாதி. அரசுப் பள்ளியில் பயின்று பிளஸ் 2 தேர்வில் 1,017 மதிப்பெண்கள் எடுத்துள்ளார். பி.எஸ்சி. வேளாண் படிப்பு படிக்க வேண்டும் என்ற விருப்பத்தில், தமிழ்நாடு வேளாண் பல்கலைக்கழகக் கலந்தாய்வுக்கு விண்ணப்பித்திருந்தார்.

ஏனைய போட்டி மாணவர் களைக் காட்டிலும் கட்-ஆப் மதிப் பெண் குறைவாக இருந்ததால், உடனடியாக அவருக்கு இடம் கிடைக்கவில்லை. காத்திருப்போர் பட்டியலில் வைக்கப்பட்டார். கலந்தாய்வின்போது இடம் கிடைத்து வேளாண் படிப்பைத் தேர்வு செய்த மாணவர்கள் சிலர், வேறு படிப்புக்குச் சென்றுவிட் டதைத் தொடர்ந்து, காத்திருப்போர் பட்டியலில் இருந்த சுவாதிக்கு இறுதிக்கட்ட கலந்தாய்வில் கலந்து கொள்ளுமாறு பல்கலைக் கழகம் சார்பில் அழைப்புக் கடிதம் அனுப்பப்பட்டது.

தவறுதலாக சென்னைக்கு..

அழைப்புக் கடிதத்தில், கோவை, தமிழ்நாடு வேளாண் பல்கலைக்கழக அண்ணா அரங் கில் 8-ம் தேதி காலை 8.30 மணிக்கு நடைபெறும் கலந்தாய்வில் கலந்து கொள்ளுமாறு தெரிவிக்கப்பட் டிருந்தது. ஆனால், கோவை யில் உள்ள வேளாண் பல்கலைக் கழகத்துக்கு வருவதற்கு பதிலாக, மாணவியும், அவரது தாயாரும் சென்னையில் உள்ள அண்ணா பல்கலைக்கழகத்துக்கு 8-ம் தேதி காலை 6.30 மணி அளவில் சென்றபோதுதான் தவறுதலாக மாறி வந்தது, அவர்களுக்கு தெரிய வந்துள்ளது.

கலக்கத்துடன் அங்கு நின்ற அவர்களை சந்தித்த மனிதநேய மிக்க ஒரு நபர், விவரங்களைக் கேட்டறிந்தார். வேளாண் பல்கலைக் கழகத்தின் மக்கள் தொடர்பு அலுவலகத்துக்கு அழைத்து பதிவாளர் சி.ஆர்.அனந்தகுமார் தொலைபேசி எண்ணைப் பெற்று விவரத்தைக் கூறியுள்ளார். அந்த மாணவியை விமானத்தில் அனுப்பி வைப்பதாகவும், ஒரு மணிக்கு பல்கலைக்கழகம் வந்துவிடுவார்கள் என்பதால் கலந்தாய்வுக்கு அனுமதிக்கு மாறும் கோரியுள்ளார்.

விமான டிக்கெட்

இதனை ஏற்றுக்கொண்ட பதிவாளர், மாணவியின் விவரங்களைப் பெற்று கல்லூரி முதல்வருக்கு தகவல் தெரிவித் துள்ளார். இதையடுத்து, சென்னை யில் இருந்து விமானம் மூலமாக கோவைக்கு நேற்று முன்தினம் பகல் 11.30 மணிக்கு வந்தடைந்த மாணவியையும், அவரது தாயா ரையும் பல்கலைக்கழகத்தின் காரை அனுப்பிவைத்து அழைத்துவரச் செய்துள்ளார் துணைவேந்தர். பின்னர், பிற்பகலில் நடைபெற்ற கலந்தாய் வுக்கு நேரம் ஒதுக்கித் தரப் பட்டது.

மாணவி ஆசைப்பட்ட பி.எஸ்சி. வேளாண் படிப்புக்கு இடம் கிடைக்கவில்லை. இருப்பினும், வேளாண் பல்கலைக்கழகத்தில் பி.டெக். உணவுத் தொழில்நுட் பவியல் படிப்பில் இடம் கிடைத்துள்ளது. மனிதாபிமானம் உள்ள ஒரு நபர், தனது சொந்த செலவில் விமான டிக்கெட் எடுத்துக் கொடுத்து அனுப்பி வைத்ததன் மூலமாகவும், பல்கலைக்கழகம் தகுந்த நேரத்தில் வழங்கிய உதவி காரணமாகவும் மாணவியின் வேளாண் படிப்பு ஆசை நிறைவேறியுள்ளது.

இதுகுறித்து வேளாண் பல்கலைக்கழக பதிவாளர் சி.ஆர்.அனந்தகுமார் கூறும்போது, “அன்றைய தினம் காலையில் ஓர் அழைப்பு வந்தது. அந்த மாணவியின் நிலை குறித்து கூறினர். அந்த மாணவிக்கான கலந்தாய்வு பதிவு எண், விவரங்களை குறுந்தகவலாக பெற்று, கல்லூரி முதல்வருக்கு அனுப்பி வைத்தேன்.

அவர்கள் கூறியபடி உரிய நேரத்தில் வந்து கலந்தாய்வில் கலந்து கொண்டு படிப்பைத் தேர்வு செய்தனர். நான், எனது பணியைத்தான் செய்தேன். எனக்கு அழைத்த அந்த நபரின் எண்ணை பதிவு செய்யாமல் விட்டுவிட்டேன்” என்றார்.

முகம் தெரியாத நபரின் மனிதாபிமானம்

பல்கலைக்கழக துணைவேந்தர் கே.ராமசாமி கூறும்போது, “மனிதநேயம் இல்லாத வாழ்க்கை நல்ல வாழ்க்கை கிடையாது. மாணவியின் நிலையை அறிந்து சமயோசிதமாக செயல்பட்டு அனுப்பி வைத்த முகம் தெரியாத அந்த நபருக்குத்தான் எல்லா பெருமையும் சேரும். இருப்பினும், பிளஸ் 2 படித்த மாணவி, தனக்கு வந்த கடிதத்தை சரியாகப் படிக்காமல் இருந்ததை நினைத்து வருத்தம் கொள்கிறேன். அந்த மாணவிக்கு உரிய நேரத்தில் அந்த நபருடைய உதவி கிடைத்ததால் தான் வர முடிந்தது. இல்லையென்றால் நாங்கள் நினைத்தாலும் இடம் வழங்க முடியாது. சமூகத்தில் வாய்ப்புகள் நிறைய உள்ளன. அதை நாம்தான் சரியாக பயன்படுத்த வேண்டும். அனுமானத்தில் ஒருபோதும் செயல்படக்கூடாது” என்றார்.

source….ம.சரவணன்  in http://www.tamil.the hindu.com

natarajan

Meet Siddharth Jayakumar Whose Life Changed after a Meeting with ” People’s President”…

Siddharth Jaykumar (left) says Dr Kalam "taught him to be a good human being"

Siddharth Jaykumar (left) says Dr Kalam “taught him to be a good human being”

Former Indian president APJ Abdul Kalam died on Monday at the age of 83. He was known for his humble and friendly nature and touched many lives during his illustrious career. BBC Monitoring’s Vikas Pandey speaks to Siddharth Jaykumar, whose life changed after meeting the former president.

Mr Jaykumar still remembers every detail of his first meeting with Dr Kalam on 2 December, 2005.

The president had written to him after reading his story of “grit and determination” in an article on web portal Rediff.com.

Mr Jayakumar has cerebral palsy, but he overcame the odds to get a degree in economics and become an executive in a private bank.

Dr Kalam, who was the president at the time, was impressed with his story and wanted to meet him.

Start of friendship

The banking executive vividly remembers how he was mesmerised with Dr Kalam’s humble nature when they met for the first time in the southern Indian city of Chennai (Madras).

“I did not feel even for a second that I was meeting the president of India. He told me he was proud of what I had achieved. He encouraged me to continue doing well in life,” Mr Jaykumar says.

That was the start of a “friendship” that lasted for more than a decade.

“I really don’t know what to say. All the memories of the times spent with him are coming back to my mind and heart,” he says.

The 35-year-old still remembers that he was surprised and amazed when Dr Kalam shared his story with the world in a speech on the International Day for Persons with Disabilities in December 2005.

The two interacted several times after their first meeting, but Mr Jaykumar fondly remembers one “unplanned encounter” three years ago.

“I had gone to listen to him at an event in Chennai. He recognised me from the stage and broke the protocol to come and meet me in the crowd,” he remembers.

He adds that the incident explains why people loved him so much, earning him the unofficial title of the “people’s president”.

‘Great human being’

He broke protocols to meet people, specially children, wherever he went and always wore his infectious smile.

This was in stark contrast with most Indian politicians who usually follow strict rules and stay behind layers of security.

He is also known as India’s “missile man” for his contributions to the country’s satellite programmes, guided and ballistic missile projects and nuclear weapons programme.

He loved sharing his experiences and knowledge with young minds through his books and speeches.

And that is what he did until his last moments. He suffered a cardiac arrest while giving a lecture at a management institute in Shillong, Meghalaya.

He inspired a generation of Indians and Mr Jaykumar feels proud that he knew him personally.

“He was a beautiful human being. He inspired me to share my experiences with the world,” he says.

Mr Jaykumar suffered great difficulties in his childhood. Doctors had “diagnosed him as mentally retarded”.

He also faced problems in getting admissions at schools and colleges. But he says he loves winning against difficult situations.

Dr Kalam too liked this quality and encouraged him to study further and inspire others.

Mr Jaykumar today is a well-known motivational speaker, but he never forgets to thank Dr Kalam.

Mr Jaykumar has given more than 130 motivational talks in different parts of the country

Mr Jaykumar has given more than 130 motivational talks in different parts of the country

 

“I always mention him and his stories in my talks. I became a better human being after meeting him. I also became more visible after he mentioned my story in his speech in 2005,” he says.

He adds that Dr Kalam taught him a valuable lesson in life that “no matter who you are, you must be a good human being above everything else”.

Mr Jaykumar says that he will now honour “his friend’s” wish and write a book.

“I think I will definitely write a motivational book in honour of a great president, a great scientist, but above all, a great human being and a friend,” he says.

 

The banking executive adds that he still takes refuge in Dr Kalam’s teaching whenever he faces difficult situations.

“He changed my life in so many ways. Professional success aside, I give him more than 100% credit for making me the person I am today. He taught me to dream,” he says.

Many agree that Dr Kalam’s legacy lies in the people he inspired and nurtured.

It’s hardly surprising that there are many like Mr Jaykumar who are feeling that “one of their own” has died.

Source…..www.bbc.com

Natarajan

” இது துவைக்கற கல் இல்லை….லிங்கம் …சிவலிங்கம் …”

 

இது துவக்கற கல் இல்லே… சிவலிங்கம்! — மகாபெரியவா
clip_image001
சென்னை மீனம்பாக்கம் பகுதிக்கு வரும்போதெல்லாம், பழவந்தாங்கலில் தான் முகாமிடுவார் காஞ்சி மகாபெரியவா. அப்படித் தங்குகிறபோது, அந்த ஊரின் மையத்தில் உள்ள குளத்தில் நீராடுவதை வழக்கமாகக் கொண்டிருந்தார்.
ஒருநாள்… அதிகாலைப் பொழுதில், குளத்தில் ஸ்நானம் செய்வதற்கு மகாபெரியவா வந்தபோது, அங்கே சிலர் துணி துவைத்துக் கொண் டிருந்தனர். அவர்களில் ஒருவர், அங்கேயிருந்த கல்லில் துணிகளை அடித்துத் துவைத்துக் கொண்டிருக்க, அதைக் கண்ட காஞ்சி மகான் நெக்குருகியவராய், ‘இது துவைக்கற கல் இல்லே; லிங்கம்… சிவ லிங்கம். இதுல துவைக்காதீங்கோ’ என்று சொன்னார்.
அவ்வளவுதான்… குளத்தைச் சுற்றியிருந்தவர்கள் தபதபவெனக் கூடினர்; சிவலிங்கத் திருமேனியைச் சுற்றி நின்றனர். இதையறிந்த ஊர் மக்கள் பலரும் விழுந்தடித்துக்கொண்டு, குளக்கரைக்கு வந்தனர். அடுத்து காஞ்சி மகான் என்ன சொல்லப்போகிறார் என்று அவரையே மிகுந்த பவ்யத்துடன் பார்த்துக் கொண்டிருந்தனர்.
மெள்ளக் கண்மூடியபடி இருந்த மகாபெரியவா, விறுவிறுவெனக் குளத்தில் இறங்கிக் குளித்தார். அங்கேயே ஜபத்தில் ஈடுபட்டார். பிறகு கரைக்கு வந்தவர், சிவலிங்கத்துக்கு அருகில் வந்தார். “இது அர்த்த நாரீஸ்வர சொரூபம். சின்னதா கோயில் கட்டி, அபிஷேகம் பண்ணி, புஷ்பத்தால அர்ச்சனை பண்ணுங்கோ! இந்த ஊர் இன்னும் செழிக்கப் போறது” என்று கைதூக்கி ஆசீர்வதித்துச் சென்றார்.
clip_image002
clip_image003
பெரியவாளின் திருவுளப்படி, குளத்துக்கு அருகில் சின்னதாகக் குடிசை அமைத்து, சிவலிங்க பூஜை செய்யப்பட்டது. பிறகு கோயில் வளர வளர… ஊரும் வளர்ந்தது. பழவந்தாங்கலின் ஒரு பகுதி, இன்னொரு ஊராயிற்று. அந்த ஊர் நங்கைநல்லூர் எனப்பட்டு, தற்போது நங்கநல்லூர் என அழைக்கப்படுகிறது.
சென்னை, பழவந்தாங்கல் ரயில்வே ஸ்டேஷனில் இருந்து சுமார் 1 கி.மீ. தொலைவில் உள்ளது ஸ்ரீஅர்த்தநாரீஸ்வரர் திருக்கோயில். காஞ்சி மகாபெரியவாள் சுட்டிக்காட்டிய இடத்தில் அற்புதமாக அமைந் திருக்கிறது ஆலயம். சுமார் 50 வருடங்களுக்கு முன்பு, பெரியவா அருளியதால் உருவான இந்தக் கோயில், இன்றைக்கு ஸ்ரீநடராஜர் சந்நிதி, பட்டீஸ்வரத்தைப் போலவே அமைந்துள்ள ஸ்ரீதுர்கை, அர்த்த நாரீஸ்வர மூர்த்தத்துக்கு இணையாக, ஸ்ரீஅர்த்தநாரீஸ்வரி திருவிக்கிரகம் எனச் சிறப்புற அமைந்துள்ளது.
பிரதோஷம், சிவராத்திரியில் நவக்கிரக ஹோமம், புஷ்ப ஊஞ்சல், சுமங்கலிகளுக்கு மஞ்சள் சரடு, வசந்த நவராத்திரி விழா, சிறப்பு ஹோமங்கள், விஜயதசமியில் சண்டி ஹோமம் என ஆலயத்தில் கொண்டாட்டங்களுக்கும் வைபவங்களுக்கும் குறைவில்லை! இன்னொரு சிறப்பு… மகாபெரியவாளின் திருநட்சத்திரமான அனுஷ நட்சத்திர நாளில் (மாதந்தோறும்) சிறப்பு பஜனைகள், ஜயந்தியின் போது பிரமாண்ட பூஜை மற்றும் பஜனைகள் ஆகியன விமரிசையாக நடைபெறுகின்றன. நங்கநல்லூருக்கு வந்து ஸ்ரீஅர்த்தநாரீஸ்வரரை வணங்குங்கள்; குருவருளும் திருவருளும் கிடைக்கப் பெறுவீர்கள்!
–நன்றி சக்தி விகடன்
Source…..www.knramesh.blogspot.in
Natarajan