படித்து ரசித்தது …” கட்டாய வசூல் கூடாது …”!!!

பரந்தாமன் எழுதிய, ‘ராஜாஜி நூற்றுக்கு நூறு’ நூலிலிருந்து:
இரண்டாம் உலகப் போரின் போது, ஆங்கில ஏகாதிபத்தியம், தன் ஆட்சிக்கு உட்பட்ட நாடுகளிடமிருந்து உணவாக, பொருட்களாக மற்றும் பல வகையிலும் ஆதரவு திரட்டியது போல, இந்தியாவிலும் திரட்டியது. இப்பணியில், ஆங்கிலேய அதிகார வர்க்கம் வெளிப்படையாகவே ஈடுபட்டிருந்தது.
ராஜாஜியை பின்பற்றக்கூடிய தலைவர்களுள் ஒருவர், யுத்த நிதி வசூலை வெளிப்படையாக எதிர்த்துப் பேசியதன் மூலம், ‘ஜெர்மனிக்கு ஆதரவாக இருந்தார்…’ என்று குற்றம் சாட்டி, அவர் மீது வழக்கு தொடுத்தனர். ஆங்கிலேய அதிகாரிகள். அவர், அவ்வழக்கை எதிர்த்து, இரு வழக்கறிஞர்களை நியமித்த ராஜாஜி, ‘அரசுக்கு எதிராக ஜெர்மானியர்களை ஆதரித்து பேசினார் என்று சொல்வது சரி அல்ல; இது, அதிகாரிகளின் கற்பனை. மக்களாக வலிய வந்து, போர் நிதி தருவதை அவர் தடுக்கவில்லை; அவர் எதிர்த்ததெல்லாம், மக்களிடம் கட்டாயமாக வசூலிப்பதை தான்…’ என்று, அவர்களுக்கு பேச சொல்லி யோசனை தந்தார்.
இது, சாதாரண வாதம் போல தெரிந்தாலும், அவரது மதிநுட்பமும், ஆழ்ந்த சட்ட அறிவும், அதிகாரிகளை இதில் சிக்க வைத்து விட்டது. அவர் எதிர்பார்த்தபடியே அதிகாரிகள் மாட்டிக் கொண்டனர்.
அரசு சட்ட நிபுணர்களோ, ‘கட்டாய போர் நிதி வசூலிக்கவில்லை; பணமோ, பண்டமோ, மக்களாக விரும்பி முன் வந்து வழங்க வேண்டும் என்று தான் அரசு அறிவித்திருந்தது…’ என்று வாதிட்டனர். இப்படி அவர்கள் பதில் சொல்வர் என்று எதிர்பார்த்த ராஜாஜி, அதற்கு ஒரு பதிலையும் வழக்கறிஞர்களுக்கு சொல்லி தந்திருந்தார்.
அதன்படி வழக்கறிஞர்கள், ‘எல்லா அதிகாரங்களையும், தன்னகத்தே கொண்டுள்ள ஆட்சி, சாதாரணமாக வேண்டுகோள் விடுப்பது கூட, மறைமுகமாக கட்டாயத்தில் சேர்ந்தது தான். மக்கள், அதை சர்க்கார் உத்தரவாகத் தான் எடுத்துக் கொள்வர்…’ என்று கூறி,
வேலொடு நின்றான் இடுஎன்றது போலும், கோலொடு நின்றான் இரவு – என்ற திருக்குறளைச் சொல்லி,
‘மனித சஞ்சாரமில்லாத காட்டு வழியே, ஒரு மனிதன், தனியாக மூட்டையோடு வருகிறான்; எதிரில், கையில் வேலோடு வருபவன், ‘அந்த மூட்டையை கொடு…’ என்று அதிகாரமாக கேட்டாலே போதும், ‘கொடுக்காவிட்டால் வேலால் குத்துவேன்…’ என்று சொல்லத் தேவையில்லை. என்பதுதான் இக்குறளின் விளக்கம்…’ என்றதும், வழக்கு தள்ளுபடி செய்யப்பட்டது.

Source……..www.dinamalar.com

Natarajan

Power of One Rupee…

Students get the accumulated amount at the end of the year. Photo: Special Arrangement

Students get the accumulated amount at the end of the year. Photo: Special Arrangement

Lions Club of Central Chennai has been giving Re. 1 to every student at Brinda Primary School to reduce the dropout rate and absenteeism, reports K. Sarumathi.

What is the value of a rupee? A lot, if you ask Hari Narayanan, project coordinator of the Lions Club of Central Chennai.

When he read an article on how the Municipal Corporation of Thane checked the dropout rate in municipal schools in the region by distributing Re. 1 to every student every day, Narayanan was immediately attracted to the idea. He thought of replicating the method in Chennai Schools.

“The Thane Municipality was my inspiration and when I put forth the idea to other members of Lions Club of Central Chennai, they were more than happy to start the project,” he says. However, getting the go-ahead from the Corporation, they knew, would be almost impossible. Therefore, they selected a primary school run by the Gopalapuram Educational Society for poor children. At the Brinda Primary School, this initiative has been going on for seven years now.

“Most of these children are sons and daughters of maids, daily wage earners and others engaged in menial jobs. Through this small incentive, it has been ensured that these children attend school regularly,” says Malarvalli, the school principal, who is is going to retire this year, after 32 years in service. To start with, the programme was aimed at only girl students. “Though these children were given free uniforms and book and nourishing meals, they were hardly interested in coming to school. Also girls were held back for taking care of chores at home on most days. When we announced the project, parents ensured they sent their daughters to school every day. We have a fall in the dropout rate as well as absenteeism,” says Narayanan.

Though intake of students has been quite low in this school in Class 1, the management is happy that it is able to carry on with minimum dropouts.

“We want the school to survive for those who can’t afford English education and we want students to continue finishing their primary schooling here. That is the idea behind the initiative,” he says.

Regular attendance has also meant improvement in studies for these children. “Under the ABL method, they are assessed every day. Since they take fewer days off they are able to score better and learn more. Our teachers are totally dedicated as well. They have gone from door to door asking parents to send their wards to this school and benefit from the initiative,” says Malarvalli.

Seeing the popularity of the initiative, parents of boys also approached the Lions Club asking them to give their sons a similar incentive. “For four years now, even boys in the school are getting the amount for attendance,” says Narayanan.

Depending on the number of days they come to school, the accumulated amount is presented to the students at the end of the year in a grand function where parents are also invited. The club has also invested in some infrastructural development of the school such as laying new pavements, creating toilets and installing an RO plant for safe drinking water.

Source….K.Sarumathi in http://www.the hindu.com

Natarajan

“Chennai-born Raja Rajeswari is New York’s first Indian-American woman judge”…

Chennai-born Raja Rajeswari has been sworn-in as a criminal court judge in New York by Mayor Bill de Blasio, becoming the first India-born woman to be appointed a judge in New York City.

Newly appointed city judge, Chennai-born Raja Rajeswari, rises to take her place for a Judicial Swearing-In Ceremony at New York City Hall in New York on Monday.

Newly appointed city judge, Chennai-born Raja Rajeswari, rises to take her place for a Judicial Swearing-In Ceremony at New York City Hall in New York on Monday.

Ms. Rajeswari, 43, who had migrated to the U.S. from Chennai as a teenager, previously worked with the Richmond County District Attorney’s Office for her entire career in several bureaus including Criminal Court, Narcotics, Supreme Court, and the Sex Crimes Special Victims Bureau, where she last served as Deputy Chief.

Ms. Rajeswari took the oath of office at a ceremony in New York City on Monday along with 27 other judges appointed earlier this month to the Family Court, Criminal Court, and Civil Court, which are part of the New York State Unified Court System.

The mayor appoints judges to 10-year terms in the New York City Criminal Court and the Family Court within the city.

“To ensure New Yorkers have access to a fair, equitable justice system, we need judges who are qualified, honest and reflective of the people of this city,” Mr. de Blasio said.

“With their wealth of legal experience, these appointees represent all five boroughs and all walks of life. From the first female South Asian-American judge in New York City to a former NYPD First Deputy Commissioner, these talented leaders truly reflect the diverse range of communities that make up our great city,” he said.

The mayor said Ms. Rajeswari has an “extraordinary, extraordinary empathy for others”.

He lauded her ability to speak in Indian, Middle Eastern and Southeast Asian languages, saying she put her history as an immigrant and ability to speak all these languages to work, “helping to reach immigrants” in the Staten Island communities where she served as an Assistant District Attorney.

“And she saw as her mission to give them confidence in the justice process,” Mr. de Blasio said.

Ms. Rajeswari came to the U.S. when she was 16.

“It’s like a dream. It’s way beyond what I imagined,” she had told silive.com, a Staten Island news website.

“For someone like me, an immigrant who comes from India, I’m beyond grateful,” she had said. “I told the mayor this is not only my American Dream, but it shows another girl from a far away country that this is possible.”

Ms. Rajeswari hoped to use her new position to improve the judicial system by encouraging interpreters to have more access to aid immigrants, the news site had said.

Ms. Rajeswari had told Desi Talk newspaper that she had observed gender inequality even before coming to the US when some of her “brilliant” girlfriends in India were married off at the age of 14 and 15. “That has always stayed with me.”

As a prosecuting attorney in New York, she has come across numerous cases of spousal and child abuse with in the South Asian community in New York, Ms Rajeswari had said. “Many of the domestic violence victims have been South Asians, Sri Lankans.”

Ms. Rajeswari has served in the district attorney’s office for the past 16 years and has been the deputy chief of the Special Victims Unit for more than four years.

She has worked on cases involving women and children and said they are the ones that touched her the most.

Ms. Rajeswari said that she hopes to use her new position to improve the judicial system by encouraging interpreters to have more access to aid immigrants.

“I’m honoured to sit on a city bench and make Staten Island proud,” she said.

Currently, there are two male judges of Indian descent in civil court settings — Jaya Madhavan on the New York City Housing Court in Bronx County, and Anil C. Singh of New York County Supreme Court, 1st District, according to ethnic New India Times.

Besides her legal acumen Ms Rajeswari is an accomplished Bharat Natyam and Kucchipudi dancer who continues to perform at Indian events and temples with her troupe from the Padmalaya Dance Academy, named after her mother, Padma Ramanathan.

Source…..www.thehindu.com and http://www.ndtv.com

Natarajan

” Vishyanand”…A Planet Named After Viswanathan Anand …!!!

Vishyanand: Planet named after Indian chess grandmaster Viswanathan Anand

The Indian Chess grandmaster, Viswanathan Anand adds another feather in his cap with a minor planet being named after him. The planet was discovered back in 1988 but had not been formally named until recently. The news about a minor planet being named after him should excite Anand who recently fell to Magnus Carlsen in the recent World Chess Championship.

The minor planet is located roughly between the orbits of planets Mars and Jupiter. The discovery of the planet happened on October 10, 1988 thanks to the works of Kenzo Suzuki in Toyota, Aichi Prefecture in Japan.

Typically, the discoverer retains the rights to suggest a name for the discovered minor planet for 10 years. However, the final authority to assign a name to a minor planet rests with a committee within the International Astronomical Union.

When time came to formally name the numbered minor planet discovered in 1988, Michael Rudenko of Minor Planet Center, a committee of the International Astronomical Union, decided to give the minor planet the name of the chess grandmaster Anand.

Why Anand got his name the planet

According to Rudenko, the idea of naming the numbered minor planet after Anand was actually his own. However, he took some matters into consideration in arriving at the name. Rudenko selected Anand because he considered him a great chess player. Further to that, he selected him because he is an astronomy enthusiast.

How the naming happened

Therefore, when it came to giving the numbered minor planet a formal name, Rudenko proposed “Vishyanand”. The name itself was based on some set of rules that govern the naming of such objects. For one, the rule requires that the proposed name should have 16 characters or less. The naming rule also requires that the proposed name should not have spaces.

In addition to the name proposal, a brief citation that explains the reason for the proposed name should be supplied. Rudenko did all that to get “Vishyanand” through as the name of the numbered minor planet.

Anand is excited

Anand tweeted about his excitement for a planet being named after him. He also thanked Rudenko for taking the trouble to get his name to the outer space.

Source……… www .pc-tablet.co.in

Natarajan

Indian Airports Hold Top 6 Positions in South Asia Aviation Market…

Here we look closely at the airports of South Asia and highlight the region’s top performers. 

DATA: What are the Fastest Growing Airports in South Asia?

Ahead of this year’s Routes Asia forum, Routesonline is providing a snapshot on the leading airlines and airports and most used aircraft types across the region.  Here we look closely at the airports serving South Asia and highlight the region’s top performers.

Scheduled Air Capacity From South Asia (2005 – 2014)

Our analysis of published schedules for the past ten years shows that air capacity within and from South Asia has risen from 69,033,731 available seats in 2005 to 158,760,706 available seats in 2014.  This represents a growth of 130.0 per cent across the period, an average annual increase of 14.4 per cent.  In the past year capacity increased 7.3 per cent.

Year Available Capacity
2005 69033731
2006 88368144
2007 109348747
2008 118056955
2009 117414226
2010 125066419
2011 143163209
2012 143648290
2013 148024633
2014 158760706

Top Ten Airports in the South Asian Market (2014) ….

Delhi (DEL)    Mumbai (BOM)      Bangalore (BLR      Chennai (MAA)      Kolkata (CCU)   Hyderabad (HYD)     Colombo (CMB)        Dhaka (DAC)       Cochin (COK

Indian airports hold the top six positions in the listing of largest facilities for air travel within and from South Asia, highlighting the key role new entrants into the local market and infrastructure growth at airports in the country will have on the future of aviation in this region.

The big metropolis hubs of Indira Gandhi International Airport in Delhi and Chhatrapati Shivaji International Airport in Mumbai lead the way with 16.8 per cent and 15.3 per cent shares of capacity within and from South Asia in 2014, respectively. With a faster rate of growth Delhi’s gateway has strengthened its prominence in the region with its share of available seats rising 0.3 percentage points between 2013 and 2014 following a 9.0 per cent rise in departure capacity.

The Indian airports hold seven of the top ten largest airports in South Asia with Kempegowda International Airport in Bangalore (6.2 per cent share); Chennai International Airport (6.1 per cent share); Netaji Subhas Chandra Bose International Airport in Kolkata (4.9 per cent share); Rajiv Gandhi International Airport in Hyderabad (4.5 per cent share) and Cochin International Airport (2.6 per cent share), the others.

The largest non-Indian airport in South Asia by departure capacity in 2014 was Bandaranaike International Airport, serving the Sri Lankan capital city of Colombo, which was ranked seventh with a 3.3 per cent share. The other non-Indian airports in the top ten were: Dhaka’s Shahjalal International Airport in Bangladesh (2.8 per cent share) and Karachi’s Jinnah International Airport in Pakistan (2.6 per cent share).

Fastest Growing Airports in the South Asian Market (2010-2014)

Looking at capacity data in the region across a five year period, it is Rajiv Gandhi International Airport in the Indian city of Hyderabad that has grown by the biggest margin with capacity up 68.6 per cent from 2010. The modern facility was opened in March 2008 as a replacement for the city’s former airport at Begumpet and is viewed upon as one of the most efficient facilities across the Asian market, regularly appearing highly in customer surveys.

The performance at Hyderabad over the last five years only just exceeded that of two other Indian airports. Pune Airport grew capacity 65.9 per cent between 2010 and 2014, while at Lucknow’s Chaudhary Charan Singh International Airport departure seats increased 60.6 per cent, despite capacity falling last year.

Outside of the dominant Indian market, Ibrahim Nasir International Airport, the main international airport in the Maldives, was the fastest growing airport in South Asia with departure capacity up 56.4 per cent over the past five years. Bandaranaike International Airport in Colombo, Sri Lanka also saw a notable 45.3 per cent capacity rise between 2010 and 2014, highlighting its emergence as a regional hub for the oneworld alliance and resurgence of tourism to the country.

SOURCE::::: www .routesonline.com

natarajan

 

One Year on, This Chennai Family Waits for MH 370 Passenger… Whole World Still Looking For Clues…

 

 

Chandrika Sharma(L)was one of the 239 people on board the ill-fated MH370 flight that disappeared while on its way to Beijing on March 8, 2014. In this photograph, she is seen with her daughter Meghna and husband Narendran.

KS Narendran, Chandrika Sharma’s husband, is a shattered man. His wife was one of the 239 people on board the ill-fated MH370 flight that disappeared while on its way to Beijing, one year ago on March 8, 2014.

Sharma had taken the flight on her way to Ulan Bator to participate in a Food and Agriculture Organisation conference to represent the NGO she worked for. Narendran, a management consultant, is a quiet man and has since chosen to keep to himself.

A colleague of Sharma at the NGO she worked at, International Collective in Support of Fishworkers (ICSF), said Narendran did not want to be disturbed. “Till date he has not received any death certificate,” the colleague added

https://i0.wp.com/www.hindustantimes.com/Images/popup/2015/3/08-03-pg21a.jpg

The couple’s only daughter is studying in a Delhi college and is currently preparing for her annual examinations.

On Friday, Narendran was present at a workshop organised by the NGO where Sharma’s co-workers and government officials paid tribute and spoke about her commitment to the cause and dedicated service to the people.

A stoic Narendran looked on as speaker after speaker narrated their own experiences at the NGO and shared their thoughts about Chandrika Sharma.  The ICSF in its website homepage has a section titled “Waiting for Chandrika Sharma”.

If the massive undersea search for Malaysia Airlines Flight 370 turns up nothing by the end of May, the three countries leading the effort will go “back to the drawing board,” Malaysia’s transport minister said on Saturday.

Liow Tiong Lai told a small group of foreign reporters on the eve of the anniversary of the plane’s disappearance that he remains cautiously optimistic the Boeing 777 is in the area of the southern Indian Ocean where the search is ongoing.

Despite the exhaustive search for the plane, which disappeared last March 8 during a flight from Kuala Lumpur to Beijing, no trace of the jet has been found. Malaysia’s government on January 29 formally declared the incident an accident and said all 239 people on board were presumed dead.

“By the end of May, if we still can’t find the plane, then we will have to go back to the drawing board,” Liow said.

Asked if Malaysia might stop the search if there are no new leads by the end of May, when bad weather usually sets in, Liow said it was “too early to pre-empt anything now,” and that the government would continue to rely on the group of experts leading the hunt.

“We stand guided by the expert team,” he said.

“I am cautiously optimistic it should be in this area,” he said, adding that “we need directions, we need plans, we need to review all the data that we have.”

Ships looking for debris from the plane on the ocean floor off the coast of western Australia have so far scoured 44 percent of the 60,000-square-kilometer (23,166-square-mile) area the search has been focused on, Liow said. In the latest report he received Friday, he said the search team had identified 10 hard objects that still need to be analysed.

Such findings, which often include trash and cargo containers from passing ships, have been common during the search, and so far no trace of wreckage has been located.

Liow said that Australia, Malaysia and China would meet next month to discuss the next steps in the search. Most of the plane’s passengers were Chinese.

Australian transport minister Warren Truss said last week that if the plane isn’t found by May, one option is to expand the hunt beyond the current search zone to a wider surrounding area.

Australian Prime Minister Tony Abbott said on Thursday, “I can’t promise that the search will go on at this intensity forever,” but added that “we will continue our very best efforts to resolve this mystery and provide some answers.”

Liow said an interim report on the investigation – a requirement under international civil aviation regulations – would be presented to the Malaysian government on Saturday and released to the public on Sunday. He didn’t comment on it.

But he outlined measures his government has already undertaken, including plans to upgrade radar systems to cope with bigger traffic volume and a new tracking system on Malaysia Airlines flights that sends aircraft data every 15 minutes, instead of the previous 30 to 40 minutes.

Liow said the government has allocated 700 million ringgit ($190 million) for the improved radar.

He said that the radar upgrade had been in the works even before Flight 370 disappeared. The plane dropped off civilian radar when its transponder and other equipment were switched off shortly after takeoff from Kuala Lumpur, but was tracked for some time by Malaysia’s military radar as it headed south across the country toward the Indian Ocean.

SOURCE:::: http://www.hindustantimes.com

Natarajan

படித்து ரசித்தது … ” உடல் எழுத்து…. வைரமுத்துவின் வரிகள் “

உடல் எழுத்து

அதிகாலை எழு

ஆகாயம் தொழு

இருதயம் துடிக்கவிடு

ஈறழுந்தப் பல் தேய்

உடல்வேர்வை கழி

ஊளைச்சதை ஒழி

எருதுபோல் உழை

ஏழைபோல் உண்

ஐம்புலன் புதுக்கு

ஒழித்துவிடு புகைமதுவை

ஓட்டம் போல் நட

ஔடதம் பசி

அஃதாற்றின் எஃகாவாய்.

SOURCE::::: http://www.leninkarky .wordpress.com

Natarajan

” ” அச்சு இற்று முறிந்த இடம் … அச்சரப்பாக்கம்…” !!!

“இளையாத்தங்குடிப் பிள்ளையாருக்குத் தாமே

தள்ளாத வயதில் துள்ளும் பாலகனைப் போல்

முட்டிக்கால் தோப்புக்கரணம் போடுகிறார்பெரியவா”

(கைலாஸ சங்கரனின் மறு அவதாரமோ!)

734324_514749501889171_935875765_n.jpg

ராமேச்வரத்தில் அப்போது நிர்மாணமாகி வந்த

ஸ்ரீ சங்கரமடத்துக்குச் சென்னையிலிருந்து சிலர்

விக்கிரகங்களுடன் சென்ற லாரி வழியே ‘ஆக்ஸில்’

உடைந்து நின்று விட்டது. இளையாத்தங்குடியிலிருந்த

பெரியவாளுக்குத் தகவல் தெரிவிக்கப்பட்டது.

“எந்த இடத்தில் நின்று விட்டது” என்று வினவுகிறார்.

“அச்சரப்பாக்கத்தில்” என்று பதில் வருகிறது.

பெரியவாள் முகத்தில் புன்னகை விரிகிறது.

இடுக்கண் வருங்கால் நகைக்கிறார்.

இளையாத்தங்குடிப் பிள்ளையாருக்குத் தாமே

தள்ளாத வயதில் துள்ளும் பாலகனைப் போல்

முட்டிக்கால் தோப்புக்கரணம் போடுகிறார்.

ராமேச்ர விஷயம் விக்கினமின்றி நடைபெறவே

விக்னேஸ்வர வழிபாடு என்பது வெளிப்படை.

மூர்த்தி வழிபாட்டுக்கு மேம்பட்ட முற்றிய அருள்

நிலையில் இருந்து இவரே இடையூற்றைத்

தீர்த்துவிடலாம்.ஆயினும் விக்கினம் தீர்க்கவே

ஏற்பட்ட தெய்வத்தை, மானுடருக்கு முன்னுதாரணமாகத்

தாமே வழிபட்டுக் காட்டுகிறார்.அதைச் சொல்லாமல்

சொல்லுகிறார்.

“பரமசிவன் பிள்ளையாரை வேண்டிக் கொள்ளாமலே

திரிபுர தகனத்துக்குப் புறப்பட்டார். ‘எந்தக் காரியம்

ஆரம்பித்தாலும் பிள்ளையாரை முதலில் பூஜிக்க வேண்டும்

என்று லோகத்துக்கு ஏற்பட்ட சம்பிரதாயத்தை ஈஸ்வரனே

செய்து காட்டினால்தானே, மற்ற ஜனங்களும் அப்படிச்

செய்வார்கள்? அதனால், ஈஸ்வரன் இப்படிப் பண்ணாத போது

அவர் புறப்பட்ட ரதத்தின் அச்சு முறிந்து போயிற்று.அப்புறம்

அவர் விக்னேஸ்வரரைப் பிரார்த்தனை செய்து கொண்ட பிறகு

தான் அது புறப்பட்டது.

அச்சு இற்று முறிந்த போன இடம்தான் ‘அச்சரப்பாக்கம்’ என்று

இப்போது சொல்லும் அச்சிறுப்பாக்கமான ஊர்.அங்கேயேதான்

நம் லாரியும் அச்சு முறிந்து நின்றிருக்கிறது.!”

எப்பேர்ப்பட்ட பொருத்தம்! பொருந்தாமல் இடையூறு

ஏற்பட்டதிலேயே ஒரு பொருத்தம் கண்டுவிட்டார்.

“கைலாஸ சங்கரன் ரதத்தில் போனபோது எங்கே அச்சு

முறிந்ததோ, அதே ஊரில் காலடி சங்கரர் லாரியில்

போகிறபோது ஆக்ஸில் உடைந்திருப்பதால் இவர்

அவனுடைய அவதாரமே என்றும் நிரூபணம் ஆகிறது!”

என்று பின்னரும் ஒரு பொருத்தம் காட்டிவிட்டார்

Read more: http://periva.proboards.com/thread/8611/#ixzz3RUElITvx

SOURCE:::: http://www.periva.proboards.com

Natarajan

” These Women Made us Proud on Republic Day…”

These Women made us proud on Republic Day

Lt Haobam Bella DeviWomen officers came from different parts of this vast country to give us some of the proudest moments at this Republic Day.

Archana Masih/Rediff.com speaks to Lieutenant Haobam Bella Devi and Captain Divya Ajith, young Army officers who stole the show on Rajpath.

Under a rainy sky, just as the grand celebration of Republic Day began on Rajpath, Lieutenant Haobam Bella Devi, a 24-year-old Indian Army officer from Manipur stood near the saluting dais.

Like most Indians, she had never unfurled the Indian flag before — and here she was entrusted with that responsibility in front of the whole nation on the nation’s grandest day.

Image: Lieutenant Haobam Bella Devi unfurls the flag on Republic Day.

In the run-up to Republic Day, she and another officer had practiced the procedure. When the big moment arrived, the only thing she had ears for was the command from the commanding officer of the President’s Bodyguard.

Just as he finished giving the crisp command, Lieutenant Bella, tugged at the rope to unfurl the flag and gave it a smart salute. The rose petals wrapped within the flag lay around, while in the distance she could hear the roar of the 21-gun salute.

“There is a whole procedure and ceremony as far as the flag is concerned. How it is put up, how it is tied, how it goes up, how it is folded. I learnt everything about it,” says the officer, who was commissioned a year-and-a-half ago and is currently posted in Amritsar.

The only child of retired army officer Colonel H G Singh, the lieutenant grew up in cantonments around the country, staying in Manipur when her father was away on field postings.

“There are not many lady officers from the North-East and girls get motivated when they see me. I tell them the Army is not a profession, but a way of life,” says the lieutenant who arrived in Delhi on January 4 for Republic Day preparations.

“I hope more and more girls join the armed forces. It gives you the opportunity to grow professionally and personally.”

The Army’s marching contingent was invited for tea by the Army Chief, General Dalbir Singh, on Republic Day, while there is a ‘Bada Khana’ — a meal shared by the officers and men — on January 31.

Lt. Bella

Image: Lieutenant Bella, an officer from Manipur, seen here second from left, is a second generation Army officer.

At the tea he hosted, the Army Chief, General Dalbir Singh, not only congratulated his officers, but also gave out commendations.

One of them to receive the honour was Captain Divya Ajith, 25, the officer who led the Indian Army’s contingent of women officers. An instructor at the Officers Training Academy in Chennai, she was awarded the sword of honour as the best cadet when she graduated from the academy in 2010.

The others who received the Chief’s commendation were the contingent’s drill instructors.

“The drill instructors were a major part of how well we did,” says Captain Divya. “One important thing is that our motivation comes from them. They are the people who train us, even when we were tired, they ensured that we practiced till the time we were perfect.”

Not new to the Republic Day parade, the captain had previously represented the National Cadet Corps as a school girl at the event. Her mother, a housewife, had watched her at that parade and had hoped that one day her daughter would march down Rajpath as an officer.

When the captain commanded the contingent to a rousing reception from the audience, her mother was there once again. Her dream had finally come true.

Image: Captain Divya Ajith from Chennai received the Army Chief’s commendation for commanding the parade. Photograph: PTI.

The marching contingent comprised officers from Jammu and Kashmir to Tamil Nadu. Training began in Chennai in early December where they would march 7 to 8 kilometers every day.

Early in the mornings, practice was held at the city’s main highway where 12 files could be accommodated and which provided a longer stretch. Later in the day, marching practice took place at the drill square at the OTA.

“Selection as contingent commander was purely on how you fared at drill. The drill instructor, adjutant selected around 10 people, which was later reduced to 3 with reserves,” says Captain Divya, the first person in her family to join the Army.

Since the Republic Day parade, she has been inundated with congratulatory messages. Some of the best messages have come from her teachers at Chennai’s Good Shepherd School. Now that she has a home posting, she hopes to pay them a visit soon.

In the four years that she has been in the Army, the captain has served in Anantnag, J&K, and MHOW before being posted to Chennai six months ago. “Anantnag was a very good exposure for me. It was a field posting. I had counter intelligence duties there,” says the officer whose father is a painting contractor.

“I feel if young girls want to pursue a career in the Army,” she says, “they already have a desire to do something different. They should stick to it and be determined to achieve what they want.”

SOURCE:::: http://www.rediff.com

Natarajan

Feb 1 2015