” உன்னால் முடியும்” : உணவு தேடலில் உருவான தொழில் வாய்ப்பு ….

படித்து முடித்ததும் வேலை தேடி சென்னை வரும் ஆயிரக்கணக்கான இளைஞர்களில் ஒருவராக சென்னை வந்தவர் வினோத். சொந்த ஊர் திருப் பத்தூர் அருகில் உள்ள கிராமம். படித்தது எம்டெக் பயோ டெக்னாலஜி. வீட்டு உணவு சாப்பிட்டே பழகியவருக்கு, தங்குமிடத்துக்கு அருகில் உள்ள ஓட்டல் உணவு சரி யில்லாததால் பல அவஸ்தைகள். அதன் பிறகு யோசித்ததுதான் வீட்டில் சமைக்கும் உணவுகளை தேவைப்படுபவர்களுக்கு ஒருங்கிணைக்கும் இணையதளம்.

ஒரு வருட திட்டமிடலுக்குப் பிறகு, உணவு சமைத்து தரும் வீடுகளையும், தேவைப்படும் வாடிக்கையாளர்களையும் ஒருங்கிணைத்து வெற்றி பெற்றுள்ளார். வளரும் தொழில்முனைவோரான இவர் தனது அனுபவத்தை இந்த வாரம் பகிர்ந்து கொள்கிறார்.

வேலை தேடி வந்த புதிதில் மேடவாக்கத்தில் தங்கினேன். வீட்டு சாப்பாட்டுக்கு பழகிய எனக்கு அங்கிருந்த ஓட்டல் உணவை சாப்பிட முடியவில்லை. அந்த பகுதியில் சிறிய ஓட்டல்கள்தான் இருந்தன. தரமான பெரிய ஓட்டல்களும் கிடையாது. பெரிய ஓட்டல்கள் இருந்தாலும் சாப்பிடும் வசதி இல்லை.

ஐடி நிறுவனங்களில் பணிபுரியும் பல பேச்சிலர்களும் இந்த ஓட்டல்களில்தான் சாப்பிடுவார்கள். சப்பாத்தி சரியில்லை என்று புகார் செய்தால் நாளைக்கு சரி பண்ணிடுறோம் தம்பி என்று அனுப்பி விடுவார்கள், அடுத்த நாளும் அதே போல் இருக்கும். திரும்ப புகார் செய் தால் இஷ்டம் இருந்தால் சாப்பிடுங்கள் என்று முகத்தில் அடித்ததுபோல பதில் வரும். இவர்களை விட்டால் வேறு வழியும் இல்லை. சொந்தமாக சமைத்து சாப்பிடலாம் என்று முயற்சி செய்தால், எல்லோருக்கும் நேரம் ஒத்துழைக்க வில்லை.

தங்கியிருந்த பிளாட்டின் ஐந்து வீடுகளில் நாங்கள் மட்டும்தான் பேச்சிலர்கள். நான்கு குடும்பங்கள் ஆளுக்கு ஒரு நாள் எங்களுக்காக எக்ஸ்ட்ராவாக சமைத்து கொடுத்தால் நிம்மதியாக இருக்கலாம் என அவ்வப்போது நண்பர்களுக்குள் பேசிக்கொள்வோம். ஆனால் இந்த யோசனை சரியான தீர்வாக இருக்கும் என்று எனக்குப் பட்டது.

வீட்டு சாப்பாடு வழங்குகிறோம் என பல உணவகங்கள் ஏற்கெனவே ஆன்லைன் மூலம் ஆர்டர் எடுக்கின்றன. ஆனால் இவர் களும் கிட்டத்தட்ட ஒட்டல் போலவே ஒரு இடத்தில் சமைத்து ஆர்டர்களுக்கு ஏற்ப டெலிவரி செய்கின்றனர்.

ஆனால் எனது திட்டம் வீடுகளில் சமைப்பதையே வாடிக்கையாளர்களுக்கு கொடுப்பது. அதாவது ஒரு வீட்டில் தினசரி ஐந்து சாப்பாடு சமைத்து தர முடியும் என்றால் அதை வாங்கி வாடிக் கையாளர்களுக்குக் கொடுப்பது. பல குடும்பங்கள் இப்படி இணைந்தால் பேச்சிலர்களில் உணவு சிக்கல் தீரும் என்பது எனது எண்ணம். இதற்காக வேலையிலிருந்து விலகி ஒரு வருடம் ஆய்வு, ஆரம்ப வேலைகளில் இறங் கினேன்.

இணையதள உருவாக்கம், மார்க் கெட்டிங், ஒருங்கிணைப்பது போன்ற வேலைகளோடு நிறுவனத்தை பதிவு செய்து கடந்த ஆண்டு பிப்ரவரி மாதம் ப்ரம்எஹோம் இணையதளத்தை அறிமுகப்படுத்தினேன்.

எங்களது இணையதளத்தில் உணவுகளை ஆர்டர் கொடுப்பதற்கு என்று தனியாக உணவு பட்டியலோ, விலையோ கிடையாது. குடும்பத் தலைவிகள் தாங்களால் என்ன சமைக்க முடியும், அதற்கான விலை என்ன என்பதை முன்கூட்டியே பதிவு செய்து விடுவார்கள். வாடிக்கையாளர்கள் அவரது மெனுவை பார்த்து ஆர்டர் செய்து கொள்ளலாம்.

இந்த திட்டத்தில் கேரள குடும்பம் இணைந்தால் கேரள உணவும், பெங்காலி குடும்பம் இணைந்தால் பெங்காலி உணவும் அவர்களது பாரம்பரிய முறைப்படியே கிடைக்கும்.

குடும்பத் தலைவிகள் தாங்கள் சிறப்பு உணவுகள் மூலம் வாடிக்கையாளர்களை தக்க வைத்துக் கொள்ளவும் முடியும்.

உணவு சமைத்து தர விரும்புவோரின் சமையல் திறன், வீடுகளின் கிச்சன், அவர்களது வாழ்க்கைதரம், சமைக்கப் பயன்படுத்தும் தண்ணீர் ஏரியா என ஒவ்வொன்றையும் பார்த்து பார்த்து மேற்கொள்கிறோம். இவர்களுக்கு கிடைக் கும் ஆர்டர்களிலிருந்து கிடைக்கும் கமிஷன் தான் எங்களது வருமானம்.

ஆரம்பத்தில் பேச்சிலர்களை குறி வைத்தே இதை தொடங்கினேன். ஆனால் தற்போது வயதானவர்கள்தான் அதிக வாடிக்கையாளர்களாக இருக்கின் றனர். தற்போது நேரடியாக எட்டு பேர் வேலைபார்க்கிறார்கள்.

சுமார் 15-க்கும் மேற்பட்ட குடும்பத் தலைவிகள் சுயமாக சம்பாதிக்க வைத்துள்ளேன். உணவு சார்ந்த தொழில் என்பதால் மிகுந்த கவனமும் பொறுப்பும் இருப்பதை உணர்கிறேன்.

தவிர நானே தொழில்முனைவோராக இருந்து, குடும்பத்தலைவிகள் பலரும் சுயமாக சம்பாதிக்க பாலமாக இருக்கி றேன் என்கிறபோது பொறுப்பு பல மடங்கு மகிழ்ச்சியை கொடுக்கிறது என்றார். இவருக்கு ஏற்பட்டது உணவு பசி மட்டுமல்ல… அதுக்கு மேலே என்கிறது அனுபவம்.

maheswaran.p@thehindutamil.co.in

Source …….நீரை மகேந்திரன்  in http://www.tamil.thehindu.com

Natarajan

இந்த வாரக் கவிதை …..” புதுமை பொங்கல் ” !!!

புதுமை பொங்கல்
…………….
தை பிறந்தால் நல் வழி பிறக்கும் …வாழ்வு சிறக்கும்  !
பிறக்கும் தை மாதமதை நாம்  கை தட்டி வரவேற்போம் !
இரு கரம் கூப்பி  தை தாய்க்கு வந்தனமும்  செய்வோம்
நம் வாழ்வு சிறக்க ..  நாடு செழிக்க வேண்டி !
புதுப் பானையில்  மஞ்சள் கொத்துடன் ,செங்கரும்பு சூழ
 நம் வீட்டில் பொங்கல்  பொங்கும் நேரம்
நமக்கு பொன்னான நேரம் !…நாம் தொடுவதெல்லாம்
பொன்னாக மாற  இதுவே  அச்சாரம் !
பொங்கலுடன் சேர்ந்து மங்களமும்   பொங்கட்டும் …பொங்கும்
மங்களம் தங்கட்டும் நம் எல்லோர்  இல்லத்திலும் உள்ளத்திலும் !
பொங்கல் வாழ்த்து பிறருக்கு நாம் சொல்லும் அதே நேரம்
மறக்காமல்  சொல்லவேண்டும்  பல்லாயிரம்   நன்றி …
புத்தரிசி கொடுத்த பெருமகன் , வேளாண் குடிமகன் அவனுக்கு !
சேற்றில் கால் வைக்க அவன் மறுத்தால்  , பொங்கல் சோற்றில்
கை வைக்க முடியுமா நம்மால் ? மறுக்க முடியாது  இந்த உண்மையை !
உன்ன உணவு கொடுக்க உழைக்கும்  உழவனவன் இறைவனே நமக்கு!
வரும் தை பொங்கல் நன்னாளில் நம் வீட்டு பொங்கலை உழவர்
 குடும்பம் ஒன்றுடன் சேர்ந்து அமர்ந்து பகிர்ந்து நாம் உண்ணும்
தருணம் நம் வீட்டு பொங்கலுக்கு பெருமை சேர்க்கும் !
தித்திக்கும் பொங்கல் நன்னாளில் புதுமை இதை
நாம் செய்தால் நம் வீட்டு பொங்கலின் தித்திப்பு மேலும் கூடும் !
Credit……. My kavithai  published in http://www.dinamani.com  on 18 Jan 2016
natarajan

Message for the Day…” Move forward Towards God , adhering strictly to the demands of Truth …”

Consider how much talent the Lord has given to people. With that endowment, seek the four goals (purusharthas). Move forward on the path to the Lord, adhering strictly to the demands of truth. That is the purpose of the gift of talent. Only those gifted with eyesight can see things; those bereft of sight do not have that fortune. So too, only those gifted with truth, longing for the four goals and adherence to dharma, can see the Lord; all others are blind. The Lord has also given people instruments for developing their intellect and discrimination. If they use them well and try to realise God within themselves, the Lord will add unto them fresh talent and new sources of power, for He is full of grace toward the struggling. When people seek to follow dharma, the truth will also reveal itself to them.

Sathya Sai Baba

10 English words used only by Indians…..!!!

Because English is such a funny language! 

Close on the heels of the Lake Superior State University that published a list of banned words of 2016, we decided to have our own list of words which should be banned!

Why?

Because these words don’t make any sense, and it is funny to hear you use them.

If you have been using these words, here’s why you must stop using them right away!

pic

Photograph: Courtesy Ross Rollock/Creative Commons

1. Mother Promise

For ages, you have always used this word without even knowing if it was a legit word, haven’t you?

So we decided to burst your bubble!

While the word ‘promise’ features in the Oxford Dictionary, there’s no mention of ‘mother promise’.

Surprised? Wondering how ‘mother promise’ came into being.

It’s the literal English translation of ‘ma kasam’ or ‘aai shapath’.

The next time you want to stand by something you really mean, try using just ‘promise’.

You don’t really need to drag your mother into everything, do you?

2. Cousin sister and cousin brother

According to the Oxford Dictionary a ‘cousin’ is a child of one’s uncle or aunt.

And Grammar Nazis would insist that the word ‘cousin’ does not need to be followed with words like ‘sister’ or ‘brother’.

Did you know that ‘cousin sister or cousin brother’ are words used only in India.

The right way is just to say ‘cousin’.

Wondering how you’d get to know their gender. Well, that’s what names are for, aren’t they?

3Good name

When Indians meet strangers, why do they ask the question, ‘What’s your GOOD NAME?’

Every parent or grandparent who has named the child, does it with a GOOD intention.

So there’s nothing bad about a name.

The next time you meet a stranger, you could say ‘What’s your name?’

4. Revert back

Now this one’s tricky! Because that’s what you have been writing in e-mails, haven’t you?

Well according to The Free Dictionary ‘revert’ means ‘to reply to someone’.

Why use ‘revert back’ when you can just say ‘revert’?

5.  Rubber

In India the ‘eraser’ is also called ‘rubber’!

But in the rest of the world, ‘rubber’ is a slang for ‘condom’.

Now it makes sense why your relatives and friends in foreign countries complain that people there burst out laughing when they ask for a ‘rubber’ instead of an ‘eraser’.

Wondering what’s the origin of the word?

Eraser is actually a piece of soft rubber used to rub out something written.

6. Picture

When was the last time you mentioned that you were going to ‘watch a ‘picture’?’

No one really knows when ‘picture’ became synonymous with ‘films’ or ‘movies’ in India.

According to the Oxford Dictionary, ‘picture’ means a drawing or painting.

You could say ‘I am going out to watch a movie or film’.

7. Mention not

Isn’t it funny that every time someone thanks an Indian, they quickly turn around and say ‘mention not’.

We are still scratching our heads wondering how the word originated and what it means.

There are plenty of ways you can accept someone’s thanks.

You can use any of the following:

  • You’re welcome.
  • It’s my pleasure.
  • That’s alright.
  • No problem.

8. Pass out

How is it that every Indian graduating from college is passing out?

Confused?

Let’s tell you the difference.

When you are really drunk and become unconscious, you ‘pass out’.

But when you refer to a successful completion of a course or training, you use the word ‘graduate’.

9. Cheatercock

We all have used this word in our childhood.

Once, twice, thrice…we have lost count of the number of times we called someone a ‘cheatercock’!

But ever wondered what does the word mean?

We are still wondering!

According to the Oxford Dictionary, cheater is a person who acts dishonestly in order to gain advantage.

Won’t it be sufficient if we just said ‘cheater’?

10. Would be

How would you introduce your fiance?

Read the following conversation.

Amit: Hello uncle.

Uncle: Hello Amit.

mit: Uncle, I would like to introduce you to my ‘would be’.

Unfortunately Amit doesn’t know that ‘would be’ means nothing.

If you want to introduce your to-be bride then simply use ‘fiance’.

How easy is that!

Source……www.rediff.com

Natarajan

 

Don’t Know What to Do with Your Old Tyres? This 16-Year-Old Has a Brilliant Answer….!!!

With an aim to safely dispose end-of-life tyres, Anubhav Wadhwa is a 16-year-old on a mission.

It all started when 16-year-old Anubhav saw someone setting fire to a couple of tyres. It got him thinking about what happens to tyres that have served their time. After a quick Google check, Anubhav realised that burning tyres, an act that releases a cocktail of toxic gases, is a huge environmental hazard.

On the face of it, Anubhav may seem like any other teenager. But this extraordinary student of Pathways World School, Aravali, launched his first venture, a software product development company called TechAPTO, at the age of 12. Later, he launched Trends on Internet, an analytical company.

With a determination to act on the issue of safe disposal of tyres, Anubhav founded Tyreslessly, an aggregator of used tyres, in December, 2015.

Through its website, which was launched a couple of days ago, anyone can request a pickup of end-of-life tyres.

Anubhav Wadhwa

“Once the tyre is picked up, it is sent to a recycling plant and will undergo pyrolysis – an extraction process which can help convert tyres into usable by-products like fuel oils, steel etc.,” says Anubhav.

So what happens to such tyres usually? Anubhav says that these are carelessly burned and used to produce heat, especially for use in sugarcane industries.

“A majority of these industries burn tyres in a manner that is hazardous to the environment. The only way forward is to embrace pyrolysis,” he maintains.

He believes this process of recycling end-of-life tyres will, over the years, help in saving a lot of landfill space in the country.

“There are a lot of pyrolysis plants across India. But right now, the challenge is to get the used tyres to them.”

Tyrelessly currently operates only in the Delhi/NCR region. But the company plans to expand it’s services to all major cities by February. As of now the service is free of cost. However, Anubhav plans to generate revenue from advertisements on the website and later on from the sale of the recycled byproducts themselves.

Tyrelessly has been funded from the internal accruals of TechAPTO.

tyres lying around

Photo source: Flickr/Anjan Chatterjee

Anubhav is a firm believer in the power of communities and aims to increase tyre recycling rates in India with the help of student and local communities. It is his dream to create such communities across the country.

“Right now we are educating people about the dangers of tyre burning and with the help of these communities, we are procuring more such tyres,” says Anubhav.

Tyrelessly, that has just begun it’s collection process, hopes to achieve it’s first target of collecting at least 1,000 tyres by the end of February.

This super kid is definitely doing something right.

When asked about how he has achieved so much in such a short period of time, Anubhav says he owes it to his alma mater for recognising and channeling his talents.

anubuv

Juggling his school work as well as these three companies doesn’t seem to be too much of a task for him. Anubhav starts his day as early as 6.30 a.m. He attends school, where apart from his academic responsibilities, including being a member of the student council, Anubhav also assists his teachers in preparing visual display material as well as projects. He gets back home around 5 p.m. and starts work then.

“Being a part of Pathways World School has been the most rewarding experiential learning for me. I feel that this has helped me evolve into a good human being.”

He feels that the two most important traits he developed and has held him in good stead are dedication and commitment.

After graduating as an IB scholar, Anubhav wants to be a barrister. His commitment towards achieving this goal is evident from his academic accomplishments and a keen sense of community service.

The world has taken note of this enthusiastic teenager.

ProSieben, a German TV channel that is aired in over 12 countries, featured Anubhav as part of a documentary for its show called Galelio.

As part of his vision towards ensuring sustainable development, Anubhav is working towards building strong relationships with governments and other key stakeholders. For now, Anubhav wants to just keep doing what he does best and spread the message of disposing tyres in a safe manner.

To learn more about Tyrelessly, please visit its website.

Source……..Meryl Garcia….in http://www.the betterindia.com

Natarajan

An 80-Year-Old Labourer Is Fighting the Mining Mafia by Distributing His Land to the Poor…

Natarajan, an 80-year-old manual labourer, has distributed 50 cents of land in his village in Kerala to 10 poor families. Read how he did this to protect the environment.

P athanamthitta, the land of Lord Ayyappan, is a scenic district in Kerala, known for its rocky hill ranges. The district is also infamous for its stone quarrying activities. Many illegal quarries continue to operate in this region, resulting in machines mowing down these hills, one day at a time.

This indiscriminate quarrying has led to a series of agitations across the district – especially in areas like Konni, Athirungal etc.

One man has been at the forefront of this agitation. Meet 80-year-old manual labourer Natarajan, fondly known as Achan (father), who has found the most unique way to protest against this large-scale quarry mining. As quarry owners continue to accumulate more land in the region, Natarajan, in a bid to protect the environment, has distributed 50 cents of his land to poor families. Here’s a discussion with this ordinary man who has done an extraordinary thing.

Q: Can you tell me a little about yourself?

achan 3

A: I’ve been living in this hillock in Konni for the last 45 years. I’ve been a manual labourer all my life. My wife and I live in a small tin shed here. I don’t have any savings. Over the years, I’ve managed to buy one-and-a-half acres of land here. The rest of the money I had was spent on marrying off my two daughters.

Q: How has life changed in all these years?

A: Actually, I can’t even remember a time when this used to be a quiet area. Granite quarries and stone-crusher units have mushroomed all over the district. According to government records, only around 169 quarry licenses have been issued. But the truth is that over 800 quarries operate in this district.

Q: What problems have you directly faced from them?

A: See, my house is very close to the biggest granite crusher here. So naturally, as they expand their operations, they wanted to buy my land as well. Because this is a remote area, away from the town, we don’t have access to water. Even today, my wife Kalammma needs to walk a lot to fetch drinking water. So some people advised me to sell off my land and then go live in a better place with access to water and electricity. However, the quarry owners, who were eyeing my land, did not quote a fair price. They also threatened me with goondas and were forcing me to part with my land, for a paltry sum.

Q: How did you tackle this problem?

A: I revisited my decision to sell. I didn’t want to succumb to pressure and also harm the environment. So, I distributed 50 cents of my land among 10 poor families. They have now constructed huts and have started living here. This is the part of my land that is closest to the quarry. I think that if more people are living in this area, it will be more difficult for them to find ways to make us leave.

Q: What if these families come under pressure from the quarry mafia and are forced to sell?

A: Though I have made the title deeds, I haven’t distributed it among these families as yet. What if these people (goondas) forcefully snatch it away from them? And to ensure that the land doesn’t end up in the wrong hands, I have made a clause which says that the land can be transferred to another person only after 70 years. I believe by doing this I have protected these 50 cents of land.

Q: What has been their (quarry owners) reaction?

A: They think I have gone crazy, distributing the land for free. They have also tried to intimidate me by sending their goondas a couple of times. But, I don’t fear them. Neither does my wife.

Q: Do the people in the region support you?

A: See, initially a lot of people stood up against the quarry mafia. There are plenty of health problems among the people, especially respiratory troubles, as a lot of dust comes from the quarries. Water is getting polluted and there is always a lot of noise going on. People cannot live in peace. However, fewer people complain now. I hear that these guys are going around bribing people with money, rice etc. So if ever a problem happens, I can’t be sure how many people will stand by me. Even the authorities in this area turn a deaf ear towards our problems. I’m sure these officials are in connivance with the quarry owners.

Q: Do you foresee things getting better in the future?

A: I doubt things will get better for the people living in these areas. I just hope the identity of this district (hills) isn’t compromised due to this mad fascination we have with development. In all these years there is one thing that I’ve learnt and it is that this world only belongs to the rich. There is no place for the poor here and there is certainly no justice for people like us.

Photo credit: Shameem Kunnumathige

Source……..Meryl Garcia in http://www.the betterindia.com

natarajan

படித்து வியந்த செய்தி …” மணி …தங்க மணி ” !!!

தர்மபுரி மாவட்டம் பெரியாம்பட்டி அருகில் உள்ள கீழ்தும்பலஹள்ளி கிராமத்து சாலையில் சென்று கொண்டிருந்தோர், அங்கே நடப்பதை பார்த்து, சில நிமிடம் நின்று, ரசித்து, வியந்தபடி சென்றனர்.
அப்படி என்ன சாலையில் நடந்தது… மலர்களால் வேயப்பட்ட சிறிய வண்டி ஒன்றை இழுத்தபடி சென்றது ஒரு நாய். வண்டியின் மேல் மாவிளக்கு வைக்கப்பட்டிருந்தது.
‘மெள்ள வா ராசா…’ என்று அதை, அன்புடன் வழி நடத்தி, அழைத்துச் சென்றார் ஒருவர். அவரிடம் இது குறித்து விசாரித்த போது, நெகிழ்ச்சியுடன், மகிழ்ச்சியாக அவர் பகிர்ந்து கொண்ட அன்பின் கதையிது:
என் பெயர் தங்கவேலுங்க; அந்தக் காலத்து 10ம் வகுப்பு. மனைவி பெயர் கோவிந்தம்மாள். தமிழ் மொழி மீது இருக்கும் பற்று, பாசத்தால், என் ரெண்டு பொம்பளப் பிள்ளைகளுக்கும், இலக்கியா, குறளரசி என்று பேர் வைச்சுருக்கேன்.
வீட்டில் நாலு மாடுக இருக்கு; பால் கறந்து சொசைட்டிக்கு ஊற்றி, அதன் மூலம் வரக்கூடிய வருமானத்தில் வாழ்க்கை ஓடிக்கிட்டிருக்கு.
ஒருமுறை, சந்தைக்கு போயிருந்த போது, இவன் சின்னக்குட்டியா இங்கேயும், அங்கேயுமா ஓடிட்டு இருந்தான். பார்த்ததுமே பிடிச்சுப் போச்சு. வீட்டுக்கு தூக்கிட்டு வந்துட்டேன். ஏற்கனவே எனக்கு ரெண்டு பொம்பளைப் புள்ளைங்க இருக்கிறதாலே, இவனுக்கு, மணின்னு பேர் வச்சு, பையனா நினைச்சு வளர்த்துட்டு வர்றேன். எங்க குடும்பத்துல ரொம்ப முக்கியமான ஆளு இவன்.
எனக்கு மணியும், மணிக்கு நானுமா இருந்தா போதும்; வேறே எதுவும் வேணாம். எங்களுக்குள்ள அப்படி ஒரு பாசம் ஏற்பட்டு போச்சு. அவன் இல்லாம எனக்கு பொழுது விடியவே செய்யாது.
வீட்டுலயிருந்து பால் கேனை தூக்கிட்டு, 1 கி.மீ., தூரத்திலுள்ள சொசைட்டிக்கு நடந்து போவேன். அப்ப, மணியும் கூடவே வருவான். நான் பால் கேன் தூக்கிட்டு சிரமப்பட்டு நடக்கிறேன்னு நினைச்சானோ என்னவோ… என்னை தூக்க விடாம, அவன் வாயில் கவ்வி நடக்க ஆரம்பிச்சான். என்ன சொன்னாலும், கேனை தர மாட்டான். ஆனா, அவனாலும் கேனை தூக்கிட்டு நடக்க முடியாம, கேன் தரையில் தட்டுச்சு. அப்புறம் தான், 1,500 ரூபாய் செலவு செய்து, ஒரு சின்ன வண்டி தயார் செய்து, அதுல பால் கேனை வச்சதும், உற்சாகமாக இழுத்துட்டு நடக்க ஆரம்பிச்சான்.
ஒரு கட்டத்துல, கேனை வண்டியில வச்சுட்டா போதும், கரெக்டா கொண்டு போய், சொசைட்டியில சேர்த்துருவான். நான் போக வேண்டிய தேவையே இல்ல. அவங்க பாலை எடுத்துட்டு காலி கேனை வச்சதும், பத்திரமா திரும்ப கொண்டு வந்துடுவான்.
எம் புள்ளைகள யாரும் நெருங்க முடியாது. ஒரு உறுமல்லயே ஓட வச்சுருவான். ஆறு மாசத்திற்கு முன் கொஞ்சமும் எதிர்பாராம அந்த விபத்து நடந்து போச்சு.

வழக்கம் போல வண்டியில போய் பாலைக் கொடுத்துட்டு, திரும்ப வரும் போது, தாறுமாறா வந்த டெம்போ வாகனம் மணி மேலே மோதிருச்சு. ரத்த வெள்ளத்துல கிடந்தவனை பார்த்துட்டு, எனக்கு தகவல் கொடுத்தாங்க. அழுது, அடுச்சு புடிச்சு ஓடிப் போய் பார்த்தேன். வலியில எழுந்திருக்க முடியாம முனகிக்கிட்டே படுத்திருந்தான்.
அவனை அள்ளித் தூக்கிட்டு கால்நடை ஆஸ்பத்திரிக்கு ஓடினேன். அவனுக்கு முதலுதவி செஞ்ச டாக்டர், ‘இடுப்பு எலும்பு முறிஞ்சு போச்சு. பிழைக்கிறது கஷ்டம்; அப்படியே பிழைச்சாலும் நடக்கிறது சிரமம். போற வழியில குப்பையில வீசிட்டுப் போ’ன்னு சொல்லிட்டார்.
என் மணியைப் பார்த்து, டாக்டரு இப்படி சொல்லிட்டாரேன்னு எனக்கு மனசே ஆறலை. ஆனாலும் அவனுக்கு எதுவும் நடக்காதுன்னு என் மனசு சொல்லிட்டே இருந்துச்சு. வர்ற வழியில தண்ணி தொட்டியில இறக்கி விட்டேன். கொஞ்சம் சிரமப்பட்டாலும், அவனால காலை உதைச்சு, நீந்த முடிஞ்சது.
இதைப் பார்த்ததும், இனி மணியை காப்பாத்திடலாம்ன்னு எனக்குள்ளே நம்பிக்கை வந்து, வேற டாக்டரை போய் பார்த்தேன். அவர், ‘நாயை காப்பாத்திடலாம்; ஆனா, கொஞ்சம் செலவாகும்’ன்னு சொன்னார்.
‘பரவாயில்ல… என் மணிக்காக நான் எதுவும் செய்வேன்…’ என்றதும், ‘ஒரு நாளைக்கு மூணு முறை வெந்நீரால் மெதுவாக நீவி, குளிப்பாட்டணும். தினமும் ரெண்டு ஊசி போடணும்; ஊசி விலை கொஞ்சம் கூடுதல். நிக்க, நடக்க பொறுமையா பயிற்சி கொடுக்கணும். நேரத்துக்கு மருந்து மாத்திரை கொடுக்கணும். பச்சைக்குழந்தையை பாத்துக்கிறது மாதிரி பாத்துக்கணும்…’ என்று கூறி மருந்து, மாத்திரை எழுதி கொடுத்தார்.
டாக்டர் சொன்னபடியெல்லாம் செய்தேன். அதோட, எங்க ஊர் மாரியம்மனிடம், ‘என் மணி பழையபடி நடந்தா, அவனே நடந்து வந்து மாவிளக்கு போடுவான்’னு வேண்டிகிட்டேன்.
மூணு மாசம் மணியை கண்ணும் கருத்துமா பாத்துக்கிட்டதன் பலன், இப்போ, மணி, பழையபடி கம்பீரமாக வலம் வர்றான்.
மாரியம்மன் கோவில் திருவிழா அன்று, பக்தர்கள் எல்லாம் அம்மனுக்கு மாவிளக்கு போட ஊர்வலமாக சென்ற போது, அந்த ஊர்வலத்தில மணியும் ஒரு பக்தனாக தன் வண்டியில் மாவிளக்கு எடுத்துப் போய், அம்மன் காலடியில் வைத்தான். இதைப் பார்த்து நிறைய பேர் பாராட்டினர்.
‘என் புள்ளைய காப்பத்தறது என் கடமைங்க; இதுக்கு எதுக்குங்க எனக்கு பாராட்டு…’ என்றார் தங்கவேல் அடக்கமாக!
வாசகர்கள் தெரிந்து கொள்ள வேண்டும் என்பதற்காக, நாய் என்று சில இடங்களில் கூறியுள்ளேன். ஆனால், தங்கவேல் பேசும் போது, ‘எம் பையன் மணி…’ என்று குறிப்பிட்டாரே தவிர, நாய் என்ற வார்த்தையே அவரிடம் இருந்து வரவில்லை.
அத்துடன், அவரிடம் நாம் போனில் பேசினால் கூட, ‘ஒரு வார்த்தை மணிகிட்டேயும் பேசிருங்க…’ என்று போனை அதன் வாயருகே கொண்டு செல்வார். அதுவும் பெரிய மனுஷன் மாதிரி, அதன் மொழியில் நம்மை நலம் விசாரிக்கும்.
இருவரிடமும் பேச ஆசையா? 98423 48790 என்ற எண்ணில் தொடர்பு கொள்ளவும்!

Source…..Hariharan in http://www.dinamalar.com

Natarajan

Subhashini Vasanth Just Won the Neerja Bhanot Award. Here Are FewThings You Need to Know About Her.

The Neerja Bhanot Pan Am Trust has been set up in the memory of Neerja Bhanot – the brave woman who was the senior flight attendant on board Pan Am Flight 73 that was hijacked in Karachi in 1986. Neerja showed immense courage and helped many passengers escape. She was shot on September 5, 1986 while shielding three children from terrorists.

The trust was set up by her parents Rama and Harish Bhanot, with the insurance money they received after her death, and an equal contribution from Pan Am. Today, they present two awards of Rs. 1,50,000 each. One award is given to an Indian woman who raises her voice against social injustice and also helps other women in similar situations, and another to honour an airline crew member who acts beyond the call of duty.

This is the 24th year of the award and it was given to Subhashini Vasanth of Bengaluru, for the first category. Subhashini’s husband, Colonel Vasanth Venugopal, lost his life while fighting terrorists in Jammu and Kashmir. He was awarded the Ashok Chakra (Posthumous) in 2008. Subhashini founded the Vasantharatna Foundation in his memory, with the aim of creating a support system for the families of martyred soldiers.

“I am proud to receive this award as it represents the spirit of Neerja Bhanot’s determination and grit in the face of overwhelming circumstances. A woman must always face all adversities in life and ensure she is treated with respect. She must stand up for her rights, come what may,” said Subhashini.

The award was presented on Wednesday by Bollywood actress Sonam Kapoor who is playing the lead role in the biopic Neerja

Here are five things to know about this remarkable woman.

1. Subhashini Vasanth’s husband, Colonel Vasanth, was martyred on July 31, 2007.

She started an NGO named Vasantharatna Foundation for Arts in the same year, and named it after him because starting the NGO was something they had planned together.

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Source: www.vasantharatna.org

2. She is a renowned Bharatnatyam dancer.

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Source: YouTube

Three months after the death of her husband, Subhashini wrote a play name Silent Front. It was based on the lives of army wives, and she was the protagonist. She performed the play in Delhi and Bengaluru and the funds generated through it helped strengthen the base of the Foundation in the initial years.

3. The foundation began work in Karnataka and has helped over 80 families till now.

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Source: YouTube

She initially identified 30 families of martyrs in Belgaum, Bagalkot, Coorg and other parts of rural Karnataka, and started helping them. The foundation provides education scholarships to children and emotional and legal counselling to widows. She also conducts empowerment programs for women and outbound learning programmes for both women and children.

4. She co-authored a book named Forever Forty with Veena Prasad. It is the biography of Colonel Vasanth.

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“The book is a collection of memoirs for my two daughters who were aged seven and 10 at the time of their father’s death. I want them to know their father as he really was,” she said.

5. She wants to add the award money she just won to a fund that she is setting up to give memorial awards to children of martyrs for all-round excellence.

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Source: Twitter

Source……Tanaya Singh ….in http://www.thebetterindia.com

Natarajan

 

Indian Army Day…15 Jan …

The Indian Army on Friday celebrated the Army Day in recognition of Lieutenant General (later Field Marshal) K M Cariappa’s taking over as the first Commander-in-Chief of the force from General Sir Francis Butcher — the last British Commander-in-Chief of India, on January 15, 1949.

Addressing the Army Day parade in New Delhi, Army Chief Gen Dalbir Singh Suhag complimented the soldiers for giving a befitting reply to the enemy at the Line of Control which has been “active” due to cross-border firing and continuous infiltration attempts.

Prime Minister Narendra Modi tweeted: “Saluting the indomitable valour, determination and dedication of our Army on Army Day.”

Here are some glimpses of the celebrations:

Army soldiers participate in the Army Day parade in New Delhi on Friday. Photograph:Atul Yadav/PTI Photo

Army daredevils perform at the Army Day parade. Photograph: Atul Yadav/PTI Photo

A tableau on display at the Army Day parade in New Delhi. Photograph: Atul Yadav/PTI Photo

An Army paratrooper performs during the Army Day parade. Photograph: Atul Yadav/PTI Photo

Army soldiers display their combat skill during the Army Day parade. Photograph: Atul Yadav/PTI Photo

A marching contingent during the Army Day parade. Photograph: Atul Yadav/PTI Photo

General Dalbir Singh, Chief of the Army Staff, Navy Chief R K Dhowan and Air Chief Marshal Arup Raha after paying homage at Amar Jawan Jyoti at India Gate. Photograph:Atul Yadav/PTI Photo

An army contingent marching during the Army Day parade. Photograph: Atul Yadav/PTI Photo

Army chief Gen Dalbir Singh Suhag pinning decorations on a soldier. Photograph: Atul Yadav/PTI Photo

Army Chief General Dalbir Singh Suhag honours a martyr’s widow. Photograph: Atul Yadav/PTI Photo

Source……www.rediff.com

Natarajan

10 Army Heroes and Their Extra Ordinary Tales of Bravery…..

Far from home and loved ones, these heroes sacrifice their own lives so the entire nation can sleep in peace. The stories of their courage and passion are larger than life. Read on and be inspired by 10 such army heroes – they are legends whose tales will not just make your chests swell with pride, but whose sacrifices will leave your eyes a little moist.

They are men of steel, standing tall in the harshest of conditions. They disregard freezing cold temperatures and scorching heat to always remain brave, awake and devoted towards us.

They are all heroes, each and every one of them. But there are a few whose stories have become the stuff of legends, stories that deserve to be shared and told over and over again:

1. Captain Vikram Batra

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Source: Wikimedia

Born in Palampur, Himachal Pradesh, Captain Vikram Batra of 13 J&K Rifles, is known as the hero of the Kargil war. He led one of the toughest war operations in Kashmir, and was also called Sher Shah (in the intercepted messages of the Pakistani army).

He was instrumental in recapturing Peak 5140, which is located at an altitude of 17,000 feet. During this mission, Batra was seriously injured but still managed to kill three enemy soldiers in close combat. After capturing Peak 5140, he went on yet another difficult mission to recapture Peak 4875 on July 7, 1999. Batra made a call to his father before he left and told him about the crucial mission. Hardly did he know that this would be his last call home.

It was one of the most difficult missions the Indian army attempted because the Pakistani forces were sitting above the peak at 16,000 feet and the climb gradient was 80 degrees. On their way up, one of Batra’s fellow officers was severely injured. Batra set out to save him. When a subedar tried to help him save the officer, Batra pushed him aside, saying, “You have children, step aside.” He saved his fellow soldier but was killed while clearing enemy positions. Batra’s last words were “Jai Mata Di.”

A famous quote by Batra is: “Either I will come back after hoisting the tricolour (Indian flag), or I will come back wrapped in it, but I will be back for sure.” He was honoured with the Param Vir Chakra.

Quick fact: The 2003 Hindi film LOC Kargil had a character based on Captain Batra, played by Abhishek Bachchan.

2. Major General Ian Cardozo

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Source: Facebook

Major General Ian Cardozo, who has many achievements to his name, will always be known for his immense courage in the 1971 war with Pakistan. He was, at the time, a young major with 5 Gorkha Rifles. During the war, he stepped on a landmine and severely injured his leg. When even the doctor could not cut his leg, Cardozo asked for a khukri (the Gorkha knife) and cut his own leg off, saying, “Now go and bury it!”

The incident did not deter Cardozo from going on to serve his country. Through sheer willpower and determination, he continued to perform his duties as a soldier and became the first disabled officer in the Indian Army to command an infantry battalion and a brigade. In spite of not being physically at par with other officers, he defeated many ‘two-legged’ soldiers to come first in many fitness tests during his stint in the army.

3. Brigadier Mohammad Usman

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Source: Facebook

Born in Bibipur, Uttar Pradesh, this man of steel joined the Indian army in 1934. During the Indo-Pakistan war of 1947/48, Brigadier Usman repulsed a fierce attack on Naushera and Jhangar, two highly strategic locations in Jammu and Kashmir, and was named by his fellow soldiers ‘The Lion of Naushera.’

At the time of the Partition, he was made the offer of becoming the Chief of the Pakistani Army but he chose to stay in India. He left the Baloch regiment of Pakistan and was inducted into the Dogra regiment in India. After the Battle of Naushera, where the Pakistanis suffered heavy casualties at his hands, the same country that had courted him to become the chief of the army, now went ahead and placed prize money of Rs. 50,000 on his head.

Brigadier Usman was not just a fierce soldier but also a compassionate man. He never got married and used to donate a large part of his salary to support poor children and pay for their education. This inspiring and exemplary officer of the Indian Army died on July 3, 1948, defending Jhangar. His last words were, “I am dying but let not the territory we were fighting for fall to the enemy.”

He was awarded the Maha Vir Chakra posthumously for his great courage and leadership.

4. Subedar Yogendra Singh Yadav

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Source: Wikimedia

This brave soldier has the high honour of being the youngest recipient of the Param Vir Chakra. He received this award at the age of 19 for his actions on July 4,1999, during the Kargil war. Born in 1980 in Aurangabad Ahir village, Uttar Pradesh, Yadav showed immense courage during the war in 1999. He volunteered for the task of capturing three strategic bunkers on Tiger Hill, which were situated at the top of a vertical, snow-covered, 16,500 feet high cliff face.

He was climbing the high cliff with the help of a rope when the enemy bunker started rocket fire. Yadav was hit by three bullets in his groin and shoulder. Despite being severely injured, Yadav kept climbing and finished the remaining 60 feet to reach the top of the cliff. Though in immense pain, Yadav crawled to the first enemy bunker and lobbed a grenade, which killed four Pakistani soldiers and set back the enemy fire. This gave the rest of the Indian platoon the opportunity to climb up the cliff face.

However, this was not it. Yadav continued to fight and destroyed the second bunker too with the help of two fellow soldiers. In fact, he also engaged in hand-to-hand combat with the enemy and killed four more Pakistani soldiers. By the time the rest of the Indian platoon arrived, Yadav had already neutralised the enemy attack. This gave Indian soldiers the upper hand and they managed to accomplish one of the toughest missions of the Kargil war – the capture of Tiger Hill.

During the second part of the fight, a few more bullets hit Yadav. Some say he was hit by 16 bullets, some say less, but he survived it all. Yadav’s heroic actions were portrayed in the film, Lakshya, by actor Hrithik Roshan.

5. Rifleman Jaswant Singh Rawat

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Source: Facebook

Words fall short when it comes to telling this brave man’s story. A hero of the 1962 Indo-China war, Rifleman Jaswant Singh Rawat of the 4th Garhwal Rifles Infantry Regiment is the only soldier in the history of the Indian Army who has risen through the ranks after his death. He was ‘promoted’ to the rank of Major General 40 years after his death, and is still believed to ‘command’ troops guarding India’s eastern frontiers with China.

During the 1962 war, soldiers were ordered to vacate their posts as soon as possible due to heavy casualties against the Chinese at the Battle of Nuranang. But Jaswant did not leave his position and continued to fight even after the other soldiers had left.

Rawat was helped by two Monpa tribal girls named Sela and Nura. The trio set up weapons at separate points and maintained a volume of fire to make the Chinese believe they were facing a huge battalion. Rawat successfully managed to fool them for three days. But the Chinese found out about the set up through a man who used to supply rations to Rawat and the two girls. At this point, Rawat chose to shoot himself rather than be captured by the Chinese forces. The Chinese were so furious on learning that they had been fighting a single soldier all this time that they cut off Rawat’s head and carried it back to China.

The post that Rawat held to repulse the Chinese troops has been renamed Jaswant Garh in recognition of his courage. A small shrine to Rawat has also come up at the battle spot. All army personnel who pass by this route make sure to pay their respects to him here.

Rifleman Jaswant Singh Rawat was awarded the Maha Vir Chakra posthumously.

6. Second Lieutenant Arun Khetarpal

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Source: Wikimedia

Born in Pune, 2nd Lieutenant Arun Khetarpal of the 17 Poona Horse regiment is yet another braveheart who died too young at the age of 21. He died in the Battle of Basantar during the Indo-Pakistan War of 1971, where his brave actions earned him the Param Vir Chakra posthumously.

Khetarpal showed immense courage and strong will when Pakistani armour, which was superior in strength, counterattacked at Jarpal, in the Shakargarh sector, in December, 1971. Though Khetarpal was in a different squadron, he rushed to help, moving towards the enemy, overrunning the defences with his tanks, and capturing Pakistani infantry and weapons.

When the commander of his troops was killed, Khetarpal continued to attack the enemy fiercely until the latter’s tanks started pulling back. Khetarpal even managed to destroy one of the withdrawing tanks.

But the enemy reformed their armour and prepared for a second attack. This time they targeted the sector held by Khetarpal. The attack was severe and swift. Khetarpal was wounded but managed to hit 10 enemy tanks. He was asked to abandon his tank but realised that if he left it the enemy would break through. He fought courageously and destroyed another enemy tank. But then his own tank received another hit, which resulted in the death of this courageous officer.

7. Major Somnath Sharma

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Source: Wikimedia

This brave soldier of Fourth Kumaon regiment sacrificed his life at the young age of 24. With his hand already in plaster from an injury sustained in a hockey game, Sharma insisted on being with his company in combat when they were airlifted to Srinagar on October 30, 1947 to fight Pakistani invaders.

On November 3, when Sharma’s company was on a patrol of Badgam village, it was approached by a tribal lashkar of 700 raiders from the direction of Gulmarg. The company was soon surrounded from three sides and endured heavy casualties from the ensuing heavy mortar bombardment. Realising that Srinagar and the airport would be vulnerable if they abandoned the battle at this point, Sharma ran from post to post, encouraging his men to fight in the face of an enemy that outnumbered them seven to one.

When heavy casualties adversely affected their firing power, Sharma, with his left hand in plaster, took to filling the magazines for the men operating light machine guns. While he was busy fighting, a mortar shell exploded on the ammunition near him, killing him instantly.

His last message to Brigade HQ, received a few moments before he was killed, was: “The enemy is only 50 yards from us. We are heavily outnumbered. We are under devastating fire. I shall not withdraw an inch but will fight to our last man and our last round.”

Major Somnath Sharma was the first recipient of the Param Vir Chakra. The citation on the award says, “His leadership, gallantry and tenacious defence were such that his men were inspired to fight the enemy by seven to one, six hours after this gallant officer had been killed.”

8. Naik Jadu Nath Singh

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Source: Wikimedia

Naik Jadu Nath Singh, the fourth recipient of the Param Vir Chakra, fought in Jammu and Kashmir in the Indo-Pak war of 1947/48. His presence of mind and bravery saved his post, not just once but thrice, from the enemy. On the crucial day of February 6, 1948, Singh was in command of a forward post at Taindhar. Nine men garrisoned the post.

The Pakistanis launched their attack in successive waves to take this post. At this juncture, Singh showed superb leadership and used his small force in such a manner that the enemy retreated in utter confusion. With four wounded men, he re-organised his force to face another onslaught. He did not give in despite being outnumbered.

When all his men, himself included, were wounded, he took over the Bren gun from the wounded gunner and continued to fight. The enemy were now on the walls of the post but Singh’s fire was so devastating that the post was saved for a second time.

Every one in his post was dead by now. The Pakistanis came in again for a third attack. Wounded and alone, Sharma charged out of his post with his sten gun firing, surprising the enemy and forcing it to flee back in confusion again. But two bullets caught Sharma in the head and chest and this gallant soldier died instantly.

9. Subedar Karam Singh

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Source: Wikimedia

Born in Sehna village in the Sangrur District of Punjab, Karam Singh was the first non-posthumous Param Vir Chakra awardee. Singh retired from the Indian Army as Honorary Captain in 1948 and died in 1993 at the age of 77. He is also the only Indian to win the highest medals of both the British and Indian governments.

Among his several brave acts, Karam Singh is best known for his courage on 13 October, 1948, when Pakistan decided to launch a brigade attack to retake Richhmar Gali in Kashmir. The firing was so furious that it destroyed almost all the bunkers in the Indian platoon. The communication with the commander was also cut off and Singh could not update his situation or ask for reinforcements.

He was left with just one choice – to fight the enemy with whatever little army and weapons he had. The attacks had left Karam Singh severely injured but nothing could deter his spirit. He refused to evacuate the post even when the enemy got very close. When enemy soldiers came even closer, Karam Singh jumped out of his trench and stabbed two intruders to death. His brave act demoralised the enemy so much that they broke off the attack.

10. Major Ramaswamy Parameswaran

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Source: Wikimedia

Born in Mumbai, Maharashtra, Parameswaran is yet another braveheart who died at the age of 41 in 1987, in India’s Sri Lanka operations. He was awarded the Param Vir Chakra, posthumously.

It was late night when Parameswaran was returning from search operations in Sri Lanka, when his column was suddenly attacked by a group of militants. He did not panic and showed great presence of mind by encircling the enemy from the rear and surprising them with an unexpected attack. During the hand-to-hand combat, a militant shot him in the chest. Undaunted, Major Parameswaran snatched the rifle from the militant and shot him dead.

Barely able to stand now, he continued giving orders to his men and inspired them to fight till his last breath. The Indians managed to kill five militants and recovered three rifles and two rocket launchers from the militants.

Source…..www.the betterindia.com

Natarajan