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

British Airways Burning Plane….

BRITISH AIRWAYS

Smoke billows out from a plane that caught fire in Las Vegas | ASSOCIATED PRESS

British airways passengers have been ridiculed for walking away from a burning plane, with many people holding their carry-on suitcases, handbags and other items. One passenger was even spotted carrying a pair of thongs.

The London-bound plane was evacuated on the runway in Las Vegas. All 157 passengers escaped with only 14 being treated for minor injuries.

But social media quickly erupted into harsh criticism, as photos surfaced of passengers leaving the plane, clutching their belongings. Hundreds of people used Twitter to accuse the passengers of putting other lives at risk, and valuing their possessions more than their own lives.

British Airways policy is that passengers leave hand luggage behind in the event of an emergency.

The FAA in the US (Federal Aviation Administration), which sets the rules for flying, clearly advises passengers to always leave carry-on items where you left them — under the seat or in the overhead locker.

‘Retrieving personal items may impede the safe evacuation of passengers,’ states FAA guidance.

Lachlan Burnet, from Wendy Wu Tours, catches more than 50 planes a year. He told The Huffington Post Australia it doesn’t matter how many times people watch the flight safety instructions, in the event of an actual emergency, human behaviour is unpredictable.

“There’s a good reason why ladies are asked to remove high heels before attempting to slide down the plane’s evacuation slide, yet some of these British Airways passengers risked lives by sliding down the slide grasping luggage. If they’d damaged the slide, they’d put other passengers lives at risk,” Burnet said.

“I always keep valuables in my pockets: passport, keys, mobile, ID. That way if you’re in an emergency you can escape quickly, rest assured you have what you need to survive with your basic valuables. Your cabin bag can easily be replaced.”

According to experts, you have just 90 seconds to get off a plane once it’s on fire. FAA surveys have shown that passengers greatly underestimate how quickly a fire can spread and destroy an airplane, with many people bizarrely thinking they have about half an hour to get off a burning plane.

But the reality is that you’ve got one and a half minutes before flames burn through the plane’s fuselage and destroy everything.

Source….www.huffingtonpost.com.au

Natarajan

 

 

 

“As one gets older, one is drawn towards home’….

In a special series, Rediff.com looks at India through the lives of her people.

Today: Mohammed Taufiq, a waiter for 36 years at Kolkata’s famous Coffee House.

A fan of Manna De, he encounters at least 50 to 100 new faces every day — including Satyajit Ray once — but all he wants now is to return to his village after retirement.

Mohammed Taufiq has worked in Coffee House for 36 years

It seems like it was yesterday when I walked into the Indian Coffee House at College Street.

I have been working here as a waiter for 36 years.

There are 54 of us in the College Street branch whereas there are 12 in the Jadavpur branch. We work in two shifts. At times, when quite a few waiters don’t turn up at work, I work double shifts with a short 30 to 40 minute break.

Earlier, my salary wasn’t much. But now, it has improved. I get about Rs 10,000 a month. With tips, I make up to Rs 12,000 approximately. As Coffee House provides me free accommodation and meals, I manage to save most of my earnings that I transfer to my wife’s bank account.

This place is always buzzing with new people. I get to see at least 50 to 100 new faces. There are also quite a few regulars.

I have noticed that the younger ones (those in their late teens or early 20s) always order either a samosa or sandwich; the middle-aged ones (between 30 and 45) ask for fish fry or cutlets and those past 45 stick to only coffee (either espresso or ordinary).

Coffee House, Kolkata
I have had a chance to see many famous people at Coffee House — filmmakers Satyajit Ray, Mrinal Sen, Aparna Sen, Anjan Dutt; singers Manna De; actors Soumitra Chatterjee, Madhabi Mukhopadhyay, Anup Kumar; writers and poets Sunil Gangopadhyay, Sakti Chattopadhyay, Samaresh Majumdar…

The day (Satyajit) Ray was here, I heard whispers from here and there. I had not seen him earlier. To make sure, I rushed to our office that had a portrait of him.

It was HIM indeed!

I felt the same when I saw Soumitra Chatterjee for the first time. Later, he became a familiar face at Coffee House.

There has not been much change here. But time has left its imprint — the place looks a lot older now. I like it this way. It goes well with my graying hair.

I have also seen the nature of customers change with changing times.

Earlier, people used to be kinder, more patient. But now they are always in a hurry. They are ruder.

100-150 new customers come to Coffee House every day

The day I wore this waiter’s headgear, I was told to be impersonal and never get close to my customers.

However, in all these years, I could never just be a waiter or an indifferent onlooker.

The other day, a couple of college students, two boys, came to Coffee House. They ordered a plate of samosa and two coffees.

When the bill arrived, they took out all the money from their wallets and started counting. I overheard one saying, ‘Aaj hente bari firte hobe (I will have to go home on foot).’

The boy was my youngest son’s age. He could have been my son. How could I let him walk back home after a tiring day at college?

On the pretext of cleaning the table, I sneaked a ten rupee note under the plate that afternoon.

Time has really flown! I vividly remember the day I arrived in Kolkata from my village in Bihar. Our five-member family was very poor and my father desperately needed an earning member.

My parents could not pay my fees and I was withdrawn from school in Class 9.

A friend of my father suggested I should come to Kolkata. He brought me to Coffee House and introduced me to Zahid Hussain, a senior accountant.

He was my trainer, friend and guide.

Since then, this Coffee House has become my second home and Zahidbhai my second family.

Coffee House at College Street

When I am off duty, I take a stroll around this part of the city, watch movies or listen to the radio.

‘Coffee House-er sei addata aaj aar nei, aaj aar nei (How I miss the long chat sessions with my friends at the Coffee House),’ I hum these lines (sung by the late Manna De) to myself often.

I need to be on my feet more than 8 to 10 hours at a stretch. It’s tiring and my legs hurt a lot at night. In fact, the pain keeps me up at times.

I had seen a doctor who says rest is the only medicine for me. I cannot afford that at the moment.

The only time I get to stretch my legs is when I visit my native place. I get about 30 days of paid leave in a year.

Earlier, I used to go home twice a year. Now I make three to four trips. As one gets older, one is more drawn towards one’s home.

When I am at my village home, my youngest son, who stays with my wife thee, massages my feet every night. He is studying at a college about two kilometres away. He cycles to and fro.

I have four sons and a daughter. Three of my sons are working, two of them in Kolkata (the eldest one is an electrician and the other one works as a zari worker). My third son works in a burqa-making factory in Bengaluru.

My daughter got married a few years back. She lives with her family in Bihar.

My family has visited me a few times and I have taken them on a tour of the famous spots of Kolkata — the Victoria Memorial, Princep Ghat, Maidan, Birla Planetarium, Indian Museum etc.

My youngest son dreams of visiting Mumbai some day. He wants to see the bungalows of Amitabh Bachchan and Shah Rukh Khan.

I have been setting aside a part of my salary for the last few years. Once my son clears his Class 12 examination, I plan to sponsor his Mumbai trip.

My wife and I have been staying apart for so many years. Once I retire, which is only 5, 6 years away, I want to spend time with her.

Life has been a long struggle against poverty. Post-retirement, I want to relax, I want to be with my wife.

I spent my life as a waiter. But I want my children to have a better future. Can’t our government ensure that?

A native of Bihar’s Aurangabad district, Mohammed Taufiq likes modern Bengali songs. He spoke to Indrani Roy/Rediff.com during his break at the Coffee House on College Street.

Photographs: Abhiroop Dey Sarkar.

Indrani Roy / http://www.Rediff.com

Natarajan

Message for the Day…” Love for Love’s sake is eternal…Love is God…”

Sathya Sai Baba

You have to seek love only through love. The Gopikas prayed: “Oh Krishna, play Your sweet flute and sow the seeds of love in the desert of loveless hearts. Let the rain of love fall on earth and make the rivers of love flow.” The rivers of love must flow continuously. It is enough, if you can understand this one principle of love. This love is everything. Treat this love as the be-all and end-all of your life. Do not direct your love towards material objects. If you continue to love for love’s sake, then such a love will be eternal. It is not the body that is to be loved, but the principle of love. All the names and forms are evanescent and impermanent. Love directed towards temporary objects or beings is physical, whereas love for love’s sake is eternal. Love is God. You must attain Divinity with such love.

This 96-Year-Old Is Fulfilling His Dream to Study by Enrolling for a PG Course …

A 96-year-old man from Patna has shown the world that age should never be a barrier for those who want to learn. And then learn some more. The man got himself enrolled for a MA (Economics) course at Nalanda Open University, to fulfil his 77 year old dream of studying economics.

Age is just a number, they say. And with his zeal to live life to the fullest, and the desire to study as much as he wants, Raj Kumar Vaishya has proven that this phrase can be turned into an actual fact.

This 96-year-old man was admitted to the Master’s course in Economics at Nalanda Open University (NOU) in Patna on Tuesday, for the 2015-16 session.

MA

Vaishya was born on April 1, 1920 in Bareilly, Uttar Pradesh. And this post-graduation course has been a lifelong dream for him.

It was more than 75 years ago that Vaishya had last visited a college as a student. In 1934, he passed matriculation from the Government High School in Bareilly and then moved on to complete his graduation from Agra University in 1938. After this, he successfully obtained a Bachelor of Law (LLB) degree in 1940. But that was it for the man who wanted to study further. He got a job as a law officer with the Christian Mica Industry at Koderma, and hence, could not opt for the post-graduation course that he really wanted to take up at that time.

Since the past 77 years, he had been carrying around that dream of getting an MA degree for himself. He retired from service as general manager in 1977 and returned to Bareilly. Following this, he moved to Patna to live with one of his sons, after his wife passed away. He has three sons and all of them have retired from their jobs.

Six months back, Vaishya expressed his desire to take up the MA course in front of his son and daughter-in-law. They feared it would be very difficult for him at this age, but he assured that he would be able to handle it.

Thus, Prof Santosh Kumar, his son who has retired from the National Institute of Technology, Patna and his daughter-in-law Prof Bharti S Kumar, who is a retired professor of Patna University, met the officials at NOU and explained the situation.

They agreed to enrol him in the current course. Not just that, they even came to visit Vaishya to hand over his identity card and course materials, at his residence in Rajendra Nagar.

Ras Bihari Prasad Singh, NOU vice-chancellor, said that Vaishya simply proves that age is no bar in acquiring knowledge and formal degrees.

Raj Kumar Vaishya’s happiness knew no bounds when he had the course material in his hand. “I have always been interested in economics…I wanted to do MA in this subject only,” he told India Today.

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

Natarajan

” ஷேமமா இரு…உன் கடமையை செய் …”

ஒரு பக்தரின் குடும்பத்தில் கஷ்டங்கள் தொடர்ந்து வந்து கொண்டேயிருந்தன. குடும்ப தலைவர், ஒரு ஜோசியரிடம் தன் ஜாதகத்தை கொடுத்து விவரம் கேட்டார். ‘எக்கச்சக்கமா கிரக தோஷம், நவக்ரக ஹோமம், பெரிய அளவிலே செய்வது தான் பரிஹாரம்’.

பெரியவாளுடைய அனுமதியை பெற வந்தார் பக்தர். ‘ஜோசியர் சொன்ன படி நவக்ரக ஹோமம் செய்தால், நல்லது ஏற்படா விட்டாலும், நிச்சயம் கெடுதல் ஏற்படாது’ என்று சிந்தனைக்குரிய ஒரு பதிலை கூறி விட்டார்கள் பெரியவாள்.

பக்தருக்கு குழப்பம். ஹோமம் செய்வதா? வேண்டாமா? பெரியவாளை மறுபடி கேட்கலாம் என்றால், பெரியவா அங்கே இருந்தால் தானே? பதில் சொன்ன உடனேயே, சடக்கென்று புறப்பட்டு அந்த இடத்தை விட்டு போய்விட்டார்கள்.

பக்தர், பெரியவாளின் கைங்கர்யபரர்களிடம் ‘பெரியவா சரியான முடிவு சொல்லலையே?’என்று புலம்பி நச்சரித்தார்.அவருடைய தொல்லை தாங்காமல், ஒரு சிஷ்யர் பெரியவாளிடம் போய் பக்தரின் ஆதங்கத்தை சொன்னார்.

பெரியவா சொன்ன பதில்….

1. எல்லோருக்கும் அவரவர்களுக்கான கடமைகள் உண்டு. இவன் வீட்டில் தாத்தா, பாட்டி, இருக்கிறார்கள். அவர்களை சரிவர கவனித்து போஷிக்க வேண்டும். அது முக்கியமான தர்மம்.

2. வீட்டு வாசலுக்கு வந்து பிச்சை கேட்பவர்களுக்கு கூடுமானவரையில் தர்மம் செய்யணும்.

3. தாகத்துடன் வருபவர்களுக்கு தண்ணீர் கொடுக்க வேண்டும்.

4. ஏழைகளையும், சமையற்காரர்களையும், தொழிலாளிகளையும் நிந்தனை செய்யகூடாது, பிரியமாக நடத்த வேண்டும். –

இதில் இருந்து, அக்குடும்ப தலைவர் இந்த நற்செயல்களை செய்யவில்லை என்பதை ஊகித்து அறிய முடிகிறது. அந்த சீடர், பக்தரிடம் போய், ‘உங்கள் கடைமைகளை எல்லாம் தவறாமல் செய்து வந்தாலே போதும். குடும்ப கஷ்டம் எல்லாம் போய்விடும். ஹோமம் செய்ய வேண்டிய தேவையே இருக்காது’ என்று பக்குவமாக சொன்னார்.

பக்தருக்கு நெஞ்சில் முள் குத்திற்று. பெரியவாளிடம் மறுபடியும் வந்தார். தன் துஷ்டத்தனங்களை ஒப்பு கொண்டார். ‘பரம்பரையா வந்தது. பெரியவா அனுகிரகத்தாலே, நல்ல வழிக்கு திரும்பணும். சரணாகதி பண்றேன்’.

பெரியவாள் மனம் உருகி போய்விட்டது.

‘க்ஷேமமா இரு’.

அது சரி, அந்த குடும்பத்தின் பரம்பரை இழிகுணங்கள் பெரியவாளுக்கு எப்படி தெரிந்தது?

ஸ்வாமியே சரணம்

Source….www.periva.proboards.com

Natarajan

 

 

Picture of the day….

Buddhist Monk Feeds Tiger

Founded in 1994, Wat Pha Luang Ta Bua, a Theravada Buddhist temple in western Thailand, is also known as “Tiger Temple.” This forest temple/animal sanctuary is, in fact, home to many wild animals, the majority of which are Indochinese tigers. As of July 2014, the total number of tigers living at the temple has risen to 135. Though the temple has fallen under scrutiny for years and even been accused of animal mistreatment, Thai officials have found no evidence. In fact, the temple’s monks have established an extraordinarily unique relationship with the nearby tigers, allowing the big cats to freely wander the temple grounds alongside them.

As wild tigers become increasingly rare in the forests of Asia and the very future of the species remains uncertain, the Tiger Temple continues to rescue these majestic beasts.

Source…..www.all-that-is-interesting.com

Natarajan

 

Better Tech, Upgraded Stations – Japan to Help Indian Railways Revamp Its Look and Feel…..

Indian Railways is all set for a $140 billion investment plan, which will be executed over the next five years to modernise the system. And in this, we are going to get a lot of help from Japan as well.

If all goes as plan, we might soon be welcomed by some really modern and world class railways stations in India, all equipped with features that will enhance the railway experience for commuters.

As a part of its railway station development plan, Indian Railways has identified 400 stations which will be upgraded with the help of private investment. And for this, Japan has agreed to be a part of the process and to help us reach there.

japan india

Picture Credit: Keshav Mukund Kandhadai/Flickr

In July this year, the Union Cabinet chaired by PM Narendra Modi had given approval for redevelopment of 400 stations by involving private parties using the Swiss Challenge method. In this method, open bids are invited from interested parties and the best proposal is accepted by an expert committee. India will soon host a Japanese delegation which is going to come in with the aim of studying the opportunities for industries in this development plan.

In meetings with Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe and Deputy Prime Minister and Finance Minister Taro Aso, Railway Minister Suresh Prabhu discussed the ways to strengthen cooperation between the two countries in terms of the rail sector. These meeting included discussions on the participation of Japanese railways and Japanese companies in the development of different areas of Indian Railways, with a focus on technological modernization and upgradation.

Here are the things on which the two countries will be working together:

  • Modernising the railway stations.
  • Japan will assist Indian Railways in achieving its zero-accident mission.
  • They will also help in solving the issue of sanitation by working on the development of waterless and odourless toilets in trains and station.
  • They will provide assistance in development of a legal framework for high speed railways in India as well.

The zero-accident mission, which was chalked out keeping in view the increasing number of train accidents, will include renewal of tracks, construction of more railway bridges, development of accident proof coaches, better signalling and more.

“Once we implement it fully, the accident rate will go down and speeds will improve, facilities will improve, quality of service will go up and revenue will increase. Customer experience will go up significantly,” Suresh Prabhu had earlier informed The Hindu.

To begin with, Research Designs & Standards Organisation (RDSO), which is the research wing of Indian Railways, will sign a MoU with Railway Technical Research Institute of Japan. As per the memorandum, Japan will conduct research work for upgradation of our stations.

The plan is that Railways will invest $140 billion in infrastructure upgradation in the next five years. For this, the Railway Minister also held meetings with heads of leading financial institutions in the country.

Source…..Tanaya Singh…www.thebetterindia.com

Natarajan

5 Things You Should Know About J Manjula – DRDO’s First Woman Director-General ….

J Manjula, a recognized scientist, will now be heading the Electronics & Communication Systems cluster, one of the seven main clusters of DRDO.  Here are six amazing things to know about the reputed scientist.

J Manjula, , has become the first woman to lead a very important cluster of  Defence Research and Development Organisation (DRDO).

Manjula has been appointed as the first woman Director General and she will be heading the Electronics & Communication Systems cluster. Already a known name in the field of science, she will be one of the seven DG’s who are heading different clusters within the DRDO.

Here are some interesting facts that you should know about the lady –

1. Manjula is an alumna of Osmania University, Hyderabad and a practising electronics and communications engineer. She joined DRDO in 1987 after working for some time in Electronics Corporation of India Ltd.

manjula1

Photo: DRDO

2. Before the recent appointment, she was leading Defence Avionics Research Establishment (DARE), which is an establishment of DRDO, as a Director since July 2014.

3. The recognised scientist is also the recipient of DRDO award for “Performance Excellence”; the Scientist of the Year award, 2011; and the India Today Woman Summit award of 2014. –

 

manjula4

Photo: focusnews.com

4. She has worked with the Integrated Electronic Warfare cluster of DRDO’s Defence Electronics Research Laboratory (DLRL) Hyderabad, for 26 years.

5. She has successfully designed fast signal acquisition receivers, high power RF systems, responsive jammers and controller software for various systems that have been introduced in Army, Navy, Air Force and Paramilitary forces.

DRDO works in a hierarchical format with a Director General, S. Christopher who was appointed a few months ago, and seven DGs heading the various clusters. And Manjula has taken charge from yet another distinguished scientist, Dr. K.D. Nayak.

Source…Shreya Pareek….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