Image of the Day… ” Dooms Day Vault…”

 

View larger. | Svalbard Global Seed Vault.

Researchers have been adding seeds to the Svalbard Global Seed Vault – or Doomsday Vault – since 2008. Now, for the first time, they’ve taken seeds out.

Earlier this month (October 19, 2015), seeds deposited in 2012 from war-torn Syria became the Svalbard Global Seed Vault’s first-ever withdrawal. The seed vault – located in Norway, sometimes called the Doomsday Vault – was built in 2008. Since then, researchers there have been storing containers of seeds from all parts of the globe in the vault, and this is the first time they’ve removed seeds.

According to the seed vault’s website, all seed samples in the vault remain the property of the gene banks that deposit them. A nonprofit organization in Syria had originally stored the seeds in the Arctic vault. The International Center for Agricultural Research in the Dry Areas – which promotes agriculture in developing countries – ran a major seed bank near Aleppo, Syria until 2012, when rebel forces took over that area.

Before the nonprofit shut down its Aleppo operation, researchers there were able to transfer thousands of seed samples from Syria. Some were stored in the Svalbard Global Seed Vault.

Now, researchers have taken 38,000 seeds back out of the vault. On October 19, the seeds were delivered to Lebanon and Morocco, where the nonprofit will continue the research started in Syria.

This was the first of what they say will be “several shipments” over the next few years.

PBSNewsHour reported on October 19, 2015:

The 138 black boxes stacked on trolley carts and transported out of the vault contained a precious resource — seeds, that researchers hope will restore some of the genetic diversity lost during the Syrian conflict.

Visit the website of the Svalbard Global Seed Vault.

By the way, earlier this year, a new documentary film about the Svalbard Global Seed Vault opened in theaters. It tracks the history and mission of the vault and its founder Cary Fowler. It’s available on iTunes and Netflix

Bottom line: The Svalbard Global Seed Vault – sometimes called the Doomsday Vault – opened in 2008 for the purpose of storing seeds. Researchers have been adding seeds to the vault since then, but this month – October, 2015 – for the first time, they withdrew seeds from Syria that had been placed there in 2012.

Visit the documentary’s website to learn more. …….http://www.seedsoftimemovie.com/

Source….www.earthsky.org

Natarajan

 

A Manipur farmer grows black rice that cures cancer….

Potshangbam Devakanta from Manipur shows the way in conserving the biodiversity of the state, farming around 100 traditional varieties of paddy and rare medicinal plants, finds Manu A B/Rediff.com.

Image: Devakanta has succeeded in persevering 100 traditional varieties of paddy. Photographs, courtesy: Devakanta

When farmers across India are grappling with weather woes and poor yields, Devakanta from Manipur has succeeded in adopting smart and eco-friendly methods of farming to ensure the harvest is satisfactory year after year.

Like thousands of farmers in India, 60-year-old Devakanta too toils in the paddy fields in Imphal for long hours.

What makes him different from other farmers is his passion to conserve a wide variety of rice in his organic farm, including cancer-curing black rice, called ‘chakhao poireiton’ and drought resistant varieties.

Image: Devakanta’s organic farm is an insiration for many farmers.

He has so far succeeded in persevering 100 traditional varieties of paddy and is cultivating 25 varieties of rice in his lush green farm.

Despite India being one of world’s biggest producers of rice, little is known about the rich variety of rice that is grown across the country.

Manipur has a treasure trove of rice varieties, which can be grown in other states, which too face vagaries of nature.

Image: Devakanta won the PPVFRA conservation award.

Devakanta, who won the PPVFRA conservation award (Protection of Plant Varieties And Farmers Rights Act) in 2012, also cultivates 5 varieties of the rare and highly nutritious variety of black rice, called ‘chakhao poireiton’.

He has travelled all over Manipur, collecting different types of rice – from drought-resistant white rice (crop which needs less water), brown rice and black rice. Manipur is famous for black rice, which has several medical properties as well.

“In Manipur, farmers grow about 20 varieties of black rice and chakhao protein is the best variety.

Image: ‘Black rice, ayurvedic medicines and organic food can lead to a complete cancer cure.’

It has a relatively high mineral content, including iron and amino acids. There are several cases where even cancer patients got cured by having this black rice,” says Devakanta.

Devakanta is currently working with about 200 farmers to increase the cultivation of chakhao poireiton in their farms as well. He inspires other Manipuri farmers to grow this rare rice.

“I am recommending chakhao poireiton to cancer patients who seek my advice. Considering the high prices of allopathic drugs which also have terrible side effects, it is advisable to have black rice. Black rice, ayurvedic medicines and organic food can lead to a complete cancer cure,” explains Dr Anjali Pathak, naturopath and organic consultant.

Image: Devakanta sells organically grown black rice from his farm for just Rs 150.

The rice is also good to fight dieases like viral fever, dengue, chikungunya or influenza.

While some e-commerce sites sell black rice for Rs 300-350 a kg, Devakanta sells organically grown black rice from his farm for just Rs 150.

“I have adopted organic methods of farming. I have also succeeded in convincing many farmers to switch to organic farming. It’s high time we stopped using harmful insecticides and fertilisers. The soil here is very fertile and it is our duty to maintain by using only natural manures and bio-agents to protect the crop,” explains Devakanta.

Image: The produce is high on nutritional value and ensures people who consume it are healthy and have a longer life span.

Many people know that he has an organic farm. So they come to him to buy different varieties of rice. However, if he gets the organic certification, he can package the rice better and sell it for a higher price.

“I don’t have the money to get an organic certification done. I don’t look at the profit aspect. I am more focused on how I farm. Now people who know me buy from my farm. Manipur is one of the few states in India where there is great awareness among people to curb the use of chemicals and fertilizers,” says Devakanta.

There are groups formed by local people who charge a penalty if anyone is found using chemical fertilisers in some districts.

“Traditional methods of farming do not give much yield. From a hectare, I get just 2-3 tonnes of rice every year. However, the produce is high on nutritional value and ensures people who consume it are healthy and have a longer life span, explains Devakanta.

Manipur is a hilly area and farming is done at different altitudes. Most villages are not connected by motorable roads.

Most of the time, Devakanta and his assistants walk for 2-3 days to reach the villages to collect plants and seeds of indigenous crops.

Image: An e-commerce site to sell his products would have helped farmers like Devankanta get good exposure.

Besides the infrastructural issues, there is threat from militant groups who can field workers. “I was once caught by militants. They demanded money. Luckily they let me go after I convinced them that I am a farmer,” says Devankanta.

Farmers like Devakanta need a proper godown to store the rice, machinery to clean and sort the rice, packaging machine machine,  computers to keep stock of the inventory, cameras to document the rice varieties and medicinal plants for the benefit of researchers, funds to train the farmers in better methods of organic farming and plant protection.

An e-commerce site to sell his products would have helped farmers like him get good exposure.

Several farmers will stop growing their unique rice varieties unless they have an incentive to grow it on a large scale. Therefore, Devakanta has turned into a small scale entrepreneur to encourage these small farmers to continue growing their indigenous rice varieties. He buys the harvested rice from the small farmers and is willing to supply it in bulk to buyers in any part of India,” says Anjali pathak.

Devakanta and many farmers like him are looking for support to sustain agriculture.

“The government is not doing enough to promote agriculture. Farmers who do organic farming should be given more incentives. Scientists too must work towards growing better varieties of paddy and other crops so that weather will not spread havoc on crop yield,” says Devakanta.

Devakanta also cultivates one of the hottest varieties of chilli called ‘Bhut jolokia’. It is grown in Assam and Nagaland as well but the Manipuri chilli is considered to be better.

Image: ‘Our nature is blessed with plants that can save us from several ailments.’

Though there is a good demand for this chilli, Devakanta needs funds to buy a sturdy drier to dry the ‘bhut jolokia’ chilis during the peak season.

Devakanta is also conserving medicinal plants of Manipur. He runs an NGO called All Manipur Medicinal and Aromatic Plant Growers’ Consortium.

“We have several high medicinal value plants, some of which are good to cure cancer. Several aromatic plants can be used as inset repellents also. It is difficult to grow and maintain medicinal plants. Our nature is blessed with plants that can save us from several ailments. It is important to protest our naturally available medicinal plans before many varieties get extinct,” says Devakanta.

“Devakanta’s major challenge is to find a place to store harvested rice and spices, dry them, clean and grade it according to the quality. With proper infrastructure in place, Devakanta can provide employment to a few locals and also bring Manipur on the organic map of India,” says Anjali Pathak.

If you want to know more about Devakanta’s initiatives, you can reach him at 09862565030 / 09774269517.

Source…….Manu A B  in http://www.rediff.com

Natarajan

Sweden Getting Close to Become the First Country to turn as “all electronic” Cashless Society!!! …

Sweden is shaping up to be the first country to plunge its citizens into a fascinating — and terrifying — economic experiment: negative interest rates in a cashless society.

The Swedish central bank held its benchmark interest rate at
-0.35% today, the level it has been at since July.

Although retail banks have yet to pass on that negative to rate to Swedish consumers, the longer it’s held there the more financial pressure there is for banks to pass the costs onto their customers. That’s a problem because Sweden is the closest country on the planet to becoming an all-electronic cashless society.

Remember, Sweden is the place where, if you use too much cash, banks call the police because they think you might be a terrorist or a criminal. Swedish banks have started removing cash ATM machines from rural areas, annoying old people and farmers.
Credit Suisse says the rule of thumb in Scandinavia is: “If you have to pay in cash, something is wrong.”

Sweden cash

Quartz

If banks charge customers negative rates of interest in a cashless society, those customers are not able to withdraw their money as cash to shield it, under their putative mattresses. Consumers’ only choice in such a scenario is to spend it or let the bank take it. (The theory is that by forcing people to spend cash rather than save it, you can spur economic growth.)

Rather than going further into negative territory — a move that carries political risks the more negative it becomes — the Riksbank chose instead to do another round of quantitative easing (a forced bond buying program that flushes more central bank cash into the economy).

But the pressure for negative interest rates to drive cash out of bank deposits and into the economy is building. Switzerland, for instance, has negative central policy rates that cost its banks $US1 billion a year. Those costs haven’t yet been passed down to consumers. But how much longer will banks eat that before adding fees and charges to Swiss accounts to defray the cost?

We reported at the weekend how central bankers and investment bank analysts are increasingly discussing when this might happen. And yesterday, Italy sold a two-year bond at an interest rate of -0.023%, which means investors have to pay to lend Italy money rather than receive interest on their loans. (Why would you buy such a bond? Well, if you believe that you’ll get even worse terms in the future from other creditors — hello, Sweden! — then suddenly -0.023% starts to look pretty good.)

So two trends are converging on Sweden at the same time:

  • Sweden is using less and less cash.
  • Sweden is a negative interest rate environment.

And that means many Swedes have no way to “hide” their money.

So Sweden may become the first country where its citizens may have to accept negative interest rates (probably in the form of higher bank charges or fees) or be forced to spend their money in order to “save” it from those rates.

A resistance is forming, and some people are protesting the impending extinction of cash. Björn Eriksson, former head of Sweden’s national police and now head of Säkerhetsbranschen, a lobbying group for the security industry, told The Local, “I’ve heard of people keeping cash in their microwaves because banks won’t accept it.”

Source….JIM EDWARDS…. http://www.businessinsider.com.au

Natarajan

Images of the Day….Hunter’s Moon

See it! Great photos of Hunter’s Moon

Thanks to all friends who shared your fantastic images of the October 2015 full moon – Northern Hemisphere’s Hunter’s Moon – shining down on all the world.

Everything you need to know: Hunter’s Moon 2015

Photo by James Younger at Vancouver Island.

Photo by James Younger who wrote: “Hello and good morning to you! Truly one of my best wild life experiences ever while photographing the moon. I had to keep stopping taking photographs because Smokey my dog was swimming with the whales 30 feet off shore and would not come back to land. I was stuck between exhilarated and freaked out as I could see the whales breaching near Smokey … an awesome night out on the shore of Vancouver Island.” P.S. Smokey came back.

October 27, 2015 moon in Spain by Javier Martinez Moran.

October 27, 2015 moon in Spain by Javier Martinez Moran.

Lynne Pitts took this photo in New Hampshire on October 26, 2015.  Lynne wrote,

Lynne Pitts took this photo in New Hampshire on October 26, 2015. Lynne wrote: “Went to  the lake to enjoy the sunset and the moonrise. Had a beautiful evening with soft colors and a spectacular moon.”

Moonrise, New Delhi, India, October 25, 2015. Photo: CB Devgun

New Delhi skyline seen as a planet – with a moonrise to one side – a panoramic view! Photo taken from New Delhi, India on October 25, 2015 by CB Devgun.

“This is my wife and my two kids watching tonight’s full moon rise above the horizon … The moon is somewhat deformed in the lower half due to atmospheric refraction.” By FotografGöranStrand on Facebook

Moon on a cloud. Photo: Dinh Nguyen

Moon on a cloud. Photo by Dinh Nguyen

“Spooky moonrise behind clouds from southern Wisconsin, October 26, 2015.” Photo by Suzanne Murphy

Boston, Massachusetts Photo: KL Chipman

Boston, Massachusetts Photo: KL Chipman

Monterrey, Mexico, October 26, 2015. Photo: Raúl Cortés

Monterrey, Mexico, October 26, 2015. Photo: Raúl Cortés

Hunter's Moon, taken by Donna Matthie Pray. October 26, 2015 at Mud Lake in DePeyster, New York

Hunter’s Moon, via Donna Matthie Pray. October 26, 2015 at Mud Lake in DePeyster, New York

Source….www.earthsky.org

Natarajan

ISRO Releases First Ever Hindi Atlas on MOM to Help More Indians Learn About the Mission ….

India’s Hindi-reading citizens can now get interesting updates about the country’s space missions, especially the Mars Orbiter Mission (MOM), as the government has released the first ever Hindi Atlas book based on Mangalyaan. –

mangalyaan

Photo: Twitter

The atlas has been launched to spread awareness about some of the landmark achievements of Indian Space Research Organisation (ISRO), and to engage those citizens who cannot understand English but are well versed in Hindi.

After success of many missions like Chandrayaan, Mangalyaan and ASTROSAT, ISRO has gained worldwide popularity and many foreign space agencies have shown interest in working with India.

This step will encourage young minds across the country to contribute to the field of space research, even if they do not possess the knowledge of English language.

The atlas will contain a compilation of images acquired by the Mars Colour Camera, and data collected by the five payloads of MOM. ISRO had also released a Mars Atlas in English on the occasion of Mangalyaan’s first anniversary on September 24, 2015. It provides a lot of detailed information about the different features of the red planet, such as its craters, moons, volcanic features, tectonic features and more.

– Source….Shreya Pareek…..www.thebetterindia.com

Natarajan

 

” I Thought I Was a Darn Good Environmentalist. Till I Met This Guy. ..” Says Abhinav Bajpai of Bengaluru

We always like meeting two kinds of people in life. Those who inspire us, and those who get inspired by us. Recently, Abhinav Bajpai got a chance to meet one from the first category – a guy who inspired him to work harder towards the cause that he has taken up. This is his story.

I work for an NGO and my work usually involves going out on the streets of Bangalore to raise awareness among people about the environment. So one day, while I was working in BTM Layout, a neighbourhood in South Bangalore, a young guy named Nikhil came up to me and started asking about my work. He was decently dressed, but did not have any footwear on. He asked what I and my NGO do for the welfare of the environment. I started explaining with a preconceived notion that he must be one of those people who usually criticize NGOs and their objectives.

Once I was done describing what we do and how we work for the environment, he just pointed towards a tree nearby and asked a simple question – “What have you done for this tree?”

flyer in street tree one_0

Picture for representation only. Source: http://www.atlanticyardswatch.net/

“Nothing really,” I said.

He then took me near the tree and showed how the surface of its trunk was covered with hundreds of staple pins. Nikhil told me that he is terribly pained on seeing a similar condition of thousands of trees in Bangalore, and wished this would come to an end.

During our conversation, he informed that he had left his job a few days back because of lack of interest, and was searching for something new. Also, his footwear had been stolen at a temple from where he was coming back when we met. In spite of all these talks, I was still not taking him very seriously as I did not know anything about him. Another reason for that could be his appearance and the way he was talking with a stammer.

Then he left and I resumed my work. But after half an hour, I saw Nikhil again. He was standing near the same tree.

I went to check what was going on, and to my shock, he was removing the staple pins on the tree with complete dedication.

nikhil1

I suddenly felt really small for judging him before. It was then that he told me how he chooses a tree each day and removes staple pins from it, working for as many hours on a tree as it takes. He was sad though; there are so may such trees in the city that he does not see his efforts having any impact. He also shared that the image of those trees covered in pins did not let him sleep peacefully at night.

I saluted Nikhil’s efforts, and told him that people like him should not work alone. They should be accompanied by a like-minded people who can work together to change the society for the better. My appreciation brought a precious smile on his face and then he continued pulling out those pins with even more energy.

Nikhil taught me that no cause is big or small. What matters is how dedicated you are towards it.

– Abhinav Bajpai

Source…..www.thebetterindia.com

natarajan

 

 

 

“க்ரகங்களைத் திட்ட வேண்டாமே …”

18698_10153209347029244_3030028360467212073_n.jpg

ஐயோ…சனியன் புடிச்சு போனவனே…இந்த பாவி என்றைக்கு விலகுறது… இவனுக்கு படிப்பு மண்டையிலே ஏறப்போவுது…!”

“இந்த குரு நீசமாகி கிடக்கிறாராமே! இவளுக்கு எப்ப தான் கல்யாண யோகம் வந்து தொலையப் போகுதே…”

“ராகுவைப் போல கொடுப்பாருமில்லை… கெடுப்பாருமில்லையாம்…இவர் என்னத்த கொடுத்தாரு… கெடுக்கிறதுக்குனே என்னை தேர்ந்தெடுத்திருக்கிறானே…”

இப்படி ஒவ்வொரு கிரகத்தையும் திட்டித் தீர்ப்பவர்கள் ஏராளம். இப்படி கிரகங்களைத் திட்டக்கூடாது என்கிறார் காஞ்சி மகாபெரியவர்.

ஒருமுறை, பெரியவரைத் தரிசனம் செய்ய ஜோதிடர் ஒருவர் வந்தார். அவரது குடும்பம் மிகவும் பெரியது. ஜோதிடம் கணித்துச் சொல்வதில் கிடைக்கும் வருமானம் போதவில்லை. செலவுக்கு ரொம்பவே சிரமப்பட்டுக் கொண்டிருந்தார்.

பெரியவரை தரிசனம் செய்த அவர், “பெரியவா… எனக்கு வருமானம் போறலே! ரொம்ப சிரமப்படறேன்… நீங்க தான், எனக்கு அனுக்கிரகம் செய்து, வருமானம் உயர அருளாசி தரணும்,” என்று வேண்டிக் கொண்டார்.

பெரியவர் அவரிடம், “நீ உன்னோட அப்பா வசித்த பூர்வீக வீட்டில் தானே இருக்கே…?” என்று கேட்டார்.

அதற்கு ஜோதிடர், “இல்லை பெரியவா… அங்கே என் அண்ணா இருக்கான். அதற்கு மேலண்டை இருக்கிற ஒரு வீட்டில் நான் குடியிருக்கேன்…” என்று பதிலளித்தார்.

“நீ அந்த வீட்டில் குடியிருக்க வேண்டாம். உன்னோட பூர்வீக வீட்டிற்கு கிழக்கு பக்கத்திலே இருக்கிற பழைய மாட்டுக்கொட்டகை இருக்குதே…அந்த இடத்திலே, ஒரு குடிசை போட்டுகிட்டு அங்கே போய் குடி இரு,” என்றார் பெரியவர்.

அவர் அவ்வாறு சொன்னதற்கு காரணம் இருந்தது. அந்த ஜோதிடரின் குடும்பம் பரம்பரை பரம்பரையாய் அம்பாளை உபாசனை (பூஜை) செய்த குடும்பம். அதனால், புனிதம் மிக்க பசு கொட்டிலில் குடியிருக்கச் சொன்னார் பெரியவர்.

அத்துடன், “நீ எல்லாருக்கும் பலன்கள் சொல்லும் போது, கிரகங்கள் சரியில்லேன்னு பொதுவாகச் சொன்னால் போதுமே…!

எதுக்காக, உங்க ஜாதகத்திலே குரு நீசன்… சனி பாபி, புதன் வக்ரம் என்றெல்லாம் சொல்றே…குரு என்பவர், தட்சிணாமூர்த்தி சொரூபம். சனி என்பவர் சூரியனின் புத்திரர். ஈஸ்வர பட்டம் பெற்றவர். அவரை பாபி என சொல்லலாமா!

திருமணப் பொருத்தம் பார்க்க வருகிறவர்களிடம் கூட, “”பொருத்தம் இல்லே…” என நிர்தாட்சண்யமாக சொல்லாமல், பெண்ணுக்கு விவாகம் வர கொஞ்சம் தாமதமாகும் என்று சொல். புத்திர பாக்கியம் பற்றி கேட்டால், அதற்கு பாக்கியமில்லை என வெளிப்படையாகச் சொல்லாமல், கொஞ்சம் பொறுத்து பார்க்கலாமே… என சமாளி,” என்று புத்திமதி கூறினார்.

“இனிமேல் நீங்கள் சொன்னபடியே செய்கிறேன்,” என்ற ஜோதிடர், பெரியவரிடம் ஆசி பெற்று கிளம்பினார்.

நாமும் இனி கிரகங்களைத் திட்டாமல், அவை தரும் சோதனைகளை கடவுளிடம் ஒப்படைத்து விட்டு, நம் பணியைத் தொடர வேண்டும். அப்படி செய்தால், கிரகங்கள் மகிழ்ந்து நம்மை நல்வாழ்வுக்கு அழைத்துச் செல்லும்

Source….www.periva.proboards.com

Natarajan

 

” நான் வாழை மரம் இல்லை …சவுக்கு மரம் …” !!!

நகைச்சுவை நடிகர் நாகேஷ் அவர்களின் தன்னம்பிக்கை மிக்க அருமையான வார்த்தைகள்…

– வானொலிப் பேட்டியொன்றில் நாகேஷ்

வானொலி: நியாயமாக உங்களுக்கு வரவேண்டிய நல்ல பெயர் மற்றவர்களுக்குச் செல்லும் போது உங்களுக்கு எப்படி இருக்கும்?

நாகேஷ்: நான் கவலையே படமாட்டேன் சார்.
ஒரு கட்டடம் கட்டும் போது, சவுக்கு மரத்தை முக்கியமா வச்சு சாரம் கட்டி, குறுக்குப் பலகைகள் போட்டு, அதன் மேல பல சித்தாள்கள் நின்னு, கைக்குக் கை கல் மாறி கட்டடம் உயர்ந்து கொண்டே போய் பல ஆண்டுகளுக்குப் பிறகு அது முடிந்த பிறகு, அந்தக் கட்டிடத்துக்கு வர்ண ஜால வித்தைகள் எல்லாம் அடிச்சு, கீழ இறங்கும் போது ஒவ்வொரு சவுக்கு மரமாக அவிழ்த்துக் கொண்டே வருவார்கள்.

கட்டடம் முடிந்து கிரஹப் பிரவேசத்தன்று எந்தக் கட்டடம் கட்டுவதற்கு முக்கிய காரணமாக இருந்ததோ அந்தச் சவுக்கு மரத்தை யார் கண்ணிலும் படாமல் பின்னால் எங்கயோ மறைத்து வைத்துவிட்டு, வேறெங்கேயோ வளர்ந்த வாழை மரத்தை முன்னால் நட்டு கிரஹகப் பிரவேசம் நடத்தி அனைவரையும் வரவேற்பார்கள்.
அத்தனை பெருமையும் வாழை மரத்துக்குப் போய் விடும்.
இதில் உள்ள உண்மை என்ன தெரியுமா? அந்த வாழை மரம் மூன்று நாள் வாழ்க்கை தான் வாழும். ஆடுமாடுகள் மேயும். குழந்தைகள் பிய்த்தெடுப்பார்கள். பிறகு குப்பை வண்டியிலே போய்ச் சேரும்.

மறைந்து கிடக்கிறதே அந்தச் சவுக்கு மரம் கண்ணீர் விடுவதில்லை. அடுத்த கட்டடம் கட்டுவதற்கு தயார் நிலையிலj் என்றைக்கும் சிரித்துக் கொண்டேயிருக்கும்.!!!

நான் வாழை அல்ல…! சவுக்கு மரம்….
Think positive always👍😊

Source….input from a friend of mine

Natarajan

” On My 25th Birthday, I Gave Society a Return Gift to Remember…” Says Sushrut Ahale …

Sushrut Ahale wanted to do something special on his birthday, and to make the day a happy one for many people around him. This is what he did.

I am a student pursuing a master’s degree in Ophthalmology from the Institute of Ophthalmology – Joseph Eye Hospital, located in Tiruchirapalli, Tamil Nadu. And this year, on my 25th birthday, I decided to do something that would help me thank all my friends and relatives for their heart-warming wishes and blessings in a much better manner than just saying thank you. I wanted to make my birthday a happy day for one and all around me, and a simple ‘thank you’ did not seem sufficient.

So this is how I went about it.

My college falls under the administration of the Tamil Evangelical Lutheran Church. Now, the church is located inside a large campus which consists of staff quarters, a primary and secondary school, the college and a park called the Luther Park.

It’s a small park in the vicinity of our college – disdained and neglected, it once wore a very shabby, saddening, and haunted look. One could only spot wildly grown weeds and creepers, dead and dried bushes, and thorny shrubs there. The park was also used as a dumping ground for plastic waste, broken glass and garbage in general.

I used to notice that park every day. And this October, it struck me that it would be a great idea to rejuvenate the place and make it brighter, cleaner, and more accessible for people inside the campus. This, I wanted to do just as a gesture of returning back to the society. So I went ahead and requested the church officials to allow me to take up this project. And fortunately, I got their approval.

The authorities were more than happy to let me proceed. One staff member, Mr. Stephan, even arranged for a spade, sickle, plough and some brooms that were required for cleaning up the place.

Finally, on a hot Saturday evening, I started my work – that of cleaning up and planting saplings in the park. While I began all alone, some very encouraging incidents took place within a matter of few hours, and they motivated me to continue. About half an hour after I started, a 10-year-old boy came up to me and asked if he could help. I was pleased and gave him some simple things to do. He was then followed by a gardener who came about an hour later and joined us. In two hours’ time, we were a small group of 10-12 people working together – all strangers, but all motivated towards the same cause.

And lastly, with the help of that gardener, some energetic school boys, a few friends and a couple of locals who had joined me, we successfully removed more than a trolley-full of garbage from the park. This was accompanied by the plantation of 16 saplings. The task got competed on Oct. 19 – my birthday.

At the end of it, my small team sang the birthday song for me. It was a really amazing feeling. This small deed made me realise that money isn’t always the best award we can get in return for doing something good. It’s goodwill and kindness that give one the satisfaction after a hard day’s work.

Here is a look at our work:

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– Sushrut Ahale

Source…www.thebetterindia.com

Natarajan

 

Launched in India – a ‘Scientifically Validated’ Anti-Diabetes Herbal Drug…

A Council of Scientific and Industrial Research (CSIR) lab in Lucknow launched a scientifically validated anti-diabetes herbal drug called BGR-34.

The drug is a based on Ayurveda, and is meant to treat type-II diabetes mellitus. It is basically a combination of natural extracts obtained from plants.

diabetes

Photo Credit: Flickr

Two CSIR laboratories have jointly developed BGR-34. The two labs are the National Botanical Research Institute (NBRI) and Central Institute for Medicinal and Aromatic Plant (CIMAP). It was launched on Oct. 25, which is also the 62nd annual day of NBRI.

“The drug has extracts from four plants mentioned in Ayurveda and that makes it safe,” Dr AKS Rawat, senior principal scientist at NBRI told The Times of India.

According to reports, the drug is animal tested and scientific studies show that it is safe with no side effects. Clinical trials of the drug have also shown a 67% success rate. Hence, while other herbal drugs for diabetes are already available in the market, this one is backed by scientific validation. According to a report in Live Mint, the drug was approved by AYUSH, the ministry for traditional Indian medicines. It has been tested on 1,000 patients over a period 18 months across Delhi, Himachal Pradesh, Haryana, Punjab and Karnataka.

The functions of BGR-34 include the following:

  • It boosts the immune system
  • Works as antioxidant
  • Helps maintain normal blood glucose levels
  • Reduces chances of complications caused by persistent high blood glucose levels
  • Improves the quality of life for patients with high blood sugar levels

In February last year, Vice-President Hamid Ansari had already launched the drug at Vigyan Bhawan in New Delhi. But now it has been launched commercially to be manufactured and sold by M/s Aimil Pharmaceuticals Pvt Ltd, New Delhi.

According to V S Kapoor, marketing head of Aimil Pharmaceuticals for UP and Delhi, the drug will be available in the market soon, in about 15 days. The estimated price is said to be Rs. 500 for 100 tablets. He also added that the drug will be sold in Delhi and Himachal Pradesh to begin with, and they will reach out to doctors through medical representatives to explain its benefits.

About 90% of cases of diabetes are type II diabetes, while the other 10% are primarily diabetes mellitus type 1 and gestational diabetes. The primary cause of type II diabetes is considered to be obesity, and it is also found in people who are genetically predisposed to the disease.

CSIR, which developed the drug, is an autonomous body and India’s largest research and development (R&D) organisation. It includes 37 laboratories and 39 field stations spread across the nation, with a total of over 17,000 people.

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

natarajan