A Full Meal That Costs Just Re One. Meet the Man Behind it….

A Full Meal That Costs Just Re One. Meet the Man Behind it

Venkataraman, owner of AMV Homely Mess has been providing the Re one meal for the past eight years.

ERODE:  What can Re one get you in these days of escalating costs?

A full meal no less, at a mess run by a service-minded man for the attenders of poor patients at the Government Headquarters Hospital in Erode.

Venkataraman, owner of AMV Homely Mess has been providing the Re one meal for the past eight years, besides the regular “tiffin” in the morning and night.

He recalls an incident in 2007 which moved him to make this decision. An old woman came to his mess to buy idlis for her ailing husband when there were none available.

He suggested she buy three dosas for Rs. 10. She however, said it was costly for her. Even if she did manage to do buy them, she would have to share it equally with her husband and it would be inadequate for both of them.

Venkatraman said he immediately gave her six dosas for the same price, and since then started offering tiffin and meals at low rates to the attenders of patients at the hospital.

“In 2007, I visited Government Headquarters Hospital and enquired about patients with the incharge nurse there. I  was told by their attenders that almost all patients there were from poor families and could not afford food daily; only tea or bread at noon and night.”

He then decided to offer food at lower rates to such attenders of patients.

He visited the Government Hospital the next day, met nurses and senior doctors and told them he would provide meals at Re one to an attender. From that day on, he and his wife began visiting the hospital daily to offer 10 tokens to attenders.

“Now for the past few months the number has increased from 10 to 70 per day. In the morning I give 10 tokens, for which three dosas and two idlis are given. In the afternoon, 40 attenders are given meals comprising five items and at night 20 attenders are given dosa and chapati, every meal for just Re one.

“We have decided to increase the number from 70 to 100 in the coming years,” he says.

His wife said they charge Rs. 50 per meal from the public, but are planning to continue the Re one meal scheme, despite incurring heavy losses.

Venkatraman employs eight workers at his mess and there is no service on Sundays.
“I am ready to grant the food free of cost, but if I collect at least Re one, the buyer will not waste it. The food is given in packets and no one is allowed to eat inside the mess, but are advised to take it to the hospital, where others can also share the food.”

The couple have two girl children, one of whom is married and the other an engineering student.

Source…www.ndtv.com
Natarajan

Here’s Why This Sikh Taxi Driver Was ‘Australian of the Day’….

Pl click the following link and watch the video clip…..

https://fbcdn-video-b-a.akamaihd.net/hvideo-ak-xtp1/v/t43.1792-2/11842657_949880171717622_694979592_n.mp4?efg=eyJybHIiOjE1MDAsInJsYSI6MTI0Nn0%3D&rl=1500&vabr=636&oh=87cb7087141fa5cc1ac2ad7704ea0959&oe=55E58663&__gda__=1441106346_a6d2dede9ba960f6443e77e3872856cd

Here's Why This Sikh Taxi Driver Was 'Australian of the Day'

“My religion says 10% of income goes for the needy and poor people, no matter what religion they belong to,” he says.

Most people spend their Sundays sleeping in late or going out with friends. Tejinder Singh of Darwin, Australia, spends at least one Sunday every month giving back to the community.

Mr Singh works two jobs – an air conditioner mechanic by day and taxi driver by night – and spends the last Sunday of each month cooking and then distributing proper meals to the needy and poor in the city. He’s done this continuously for the last three years and his son Navdeep helps out.

“My religion says 10% of income goes for the needy and poor people, no matter what religion they belong to,” he says in a video posted by Nine News Darwin on Facebook.

It was because of this act of kindness that he was featured as the Australian of the Day, a campaign that aims to recognize the day-to-day contributions of ordinary Aussies.

“Often finishing his taxi shift in the early hours of the morning, this means his food drive is often completed on little sleep but the act of giving he says, gives him the energy to continue,” it says on their website about Tejinder Singh.

Mr Singh has been offered monetary support from many people, but so far he’s refused all help. In turn, he encourages others to begin food drives of their own so more people can benefit from the service.

“The van, the pots, anyone can use them. It’s for mankind,” he told the team at Australian of the Day.

If only more people did what Tejinder Singh does, the world would be a much better place to live in.

Source….www.ndtv.com
Natarajan

Retired post office clerk builds his own ‘Taj Mahal’….

Unlike the Mughal emperor’s monument that is a popular tourist destination, Faizul Hasan Qadri wants his Taj to remain just a shrine of his love for his wife. Manavi Kapur reports.

The residents of Kaser Kalan, a small village in Uttar Pradesh’s Bulandshahr district didn’t expect to have a new landmark in their village. But the “mini” Taj Mahal has become just that.

Visible from the main highway, this “monument” has made the tiny lane popular with inquisitive visitors, including a car from the sub-divisional magistrate’s office.

But 80-year-old Faizul Hasan Qadri, this “mini” Taj Mahal’s creator, says that people are mistaken.

“I never intended it to look like the Taj. Shah Jahan’s monument is eight-cornered with rooms inside. Mine is a simple four-corner structure with my wife’s grave in it,” says Qadri.

Despite his claims, the resemblance to one of the Seven Wonders of the World is striking.

A bare concrete structure stands in the middle of a green field, with four pillars around it, just like the famous monument in Agra.

When I reach Kaser Kalan to visit Qadri, he seems to be out on a stroll.

Ambaar Khan, the owner of a provision store, sends his workers to look for “Nawab sahib”.

A popular and well-loved resident, Qadri is greeted by shopkeepers from across the street as he makes his way with the help of a walking stick to meet me.

“Are you here from Lucknow?” he asks.

Akhilesh Yadav, the state’s chief minister, recently sought a meeting with Qadri after the media reported that he had run out of funds to complete the structure, but the meeting was rescheduled.

“I don’t think I will take his money, though. I have done all the hard work and just by giving a little money, they will claim it as theirs,” he says.

Unlike the Mughal emperor’s monument that is a popular tourist destination, Qadri wants his Taj to remain just a shrine of his love for his wife.

“I promised my wife that I will build a mausoleum for her and that’s all there is to it,” he says with a polite, clear diction peppered with English words.

Qadri married Tajammuli Begum, his maternal uncle’s daughter, in 1953 and remained married to her for over 58 years before she died of cancer in 2011.

Since the couple had no children, Begum insisted that Qadri build a mausoleum for both their resting places.

“Such forward planning comes with knowing that you have only a few years to live. I have already prepared a will and enlisted members of my family who will inherit all this land,” he says, waving towards the fields.

Much like Shah Jahan’s prison cell from where he could see the Taj Mahal, Qadri seems to have built the monument in a way that he can see it through his room’s window.

Pictures of his wife and the Maqbara Yadgare Mohabbat Tajammuli Begum, the official name for his “mini” Taj, are kept neatly on a shelf.

“Memories are all that remain,” he says with a smile.

Qadri has spent close to Rs 11 lakh and says that he still needs Rs 6-7 lakh to complete the project. He earns a pension of Rs 10,500 after he retired as a senior post office clerk, besides the agricultural income from his vast land.

A man well-versed with the ways of the world, Qadri speaks about the dollar rate, investments and cultivating high-yield fruit crops.

While his views on life and death have a touch of spirituality, he seems to be equally rooted in everyday reality.

“I could use plaster on the exterior, but I don’t want to saddle the family with its upkeep.”

Manavi Kapur

Source:
Natarajan

He Has Published 12 Books and Won Praise from a PM & a President. Why’s He Selling Tea Then ? –

No one would guess looking at this chaiwallah in his makeshift roadside shop — the one with an old tin kettle and crusty chai glasses — that he inhabits another world of reading and writing as well. Laxman Rao has written 24 novels, published 12, and is now pursuing a Master’s degree.

People in Delhi who like tea and good stories should pay a visit to Laxman Rao. The 63-year-old man has been writing books since he was a teenager. He has self-published some of those books and they are on sale at his roadside chai shop near ITO in Delhi, and are also available on Flipkart, Amazon and Kindle.

Born in Talegaon Dashasar village of Maharashtra, Laxman was inspired by the

 

writings of Gulshan Nanda to take up writing himself.

He used to read Nanda’s novels as a 15-year-old. “I used to think I will become Gulshan Nanda one day,” he says.

There were no schools in Laxman’s village, so he had gone to live in Amravati. However, due to financial problems in his family, he also had to work as a domestic help for three years, and at a spinning mill for five years, while continuing his education.

It was an incident at school that first upset and moved him, and then inspired him to write. One of his schoolmates, Ramdas, a boy from his village, drowned in a river and lost his life. Ramdas was known for being a rebellious student before one teacher helped him change his life and turned him into a favourite of everyone at school. The story of Ramdas became the first book written by Laxman.

Knowing that Delhi is the place where many publishing houses are located, Laxman wanted to move there and take up writing in a more serious way. After finishing school till Class 10 and working as a farmer for some time, Laxman left his village with only Rs. 40 given by his father. The journey to the capital city itself was not an easy one. He could only reach Bhopal before all his money was used up. So he had to work as a labourer at a construction site for three months.

Finally, in July 1975, he reached Delhi as a young man of 25. All he had at that time were two shirts, a 10th-grade completion certificate, and the dream of becoming a successful writer someday.

laxman2

On reaching Delhi, he tried to find a job but could not get anything. He had to work as a construction site labourer and a waiter at a restaurant for two years before opening his own paan (betel leaves) shop. Later, he converted it into a tea shop and has been selling tea for the past 20 years now.

In those two years, he wrote another book called Nayi Duniya ki Nayi Kahani, based on his journey to Delhi and his determination to become a writer. But when he finally took both his books to the many publishers in the city, Laxman received nothing but rejection and ridicule. Nobody believed that the work of a tea seller could be any good. It was when one of these publishers literally asked him to “get out” that Laxman decided to publish his books himself, without any external help.

And so, in 1979, he used all his savings (Rs. 7,000) to self-publish his first novel, Nayi Duniya Ki Nayi Kahani. Being a publisher means you have to sell your book yourself too. Laxman used to do that by riding across the city on his bicycle, stopping by at libraries and schools, asking people if they would be interested in reading his work.

He also registered his own publishing company — Bhartiya Sahitya Kala Prakashan.

laxman3

Today, he publishes 500 copies each of 4 different titles annually. Publishing one title costs around Rs. 25,000-30,000. He says about 100 copies are sold from the tea shop itself every month, and the rest are sold through e-commerce websites. He is also working on 2 more novels these days.

After his first book was published, people slowly began recognizing him as an author. In 1984, a senior Congress party member came to know about him after reading an article based on his life. He told the then PM of India, Indira Gandhi, about Laxman, and he was invited to meet and present his books to her. She encouraged him to continue writing. When he insisted that he wanted to write a book on her life too, she said that he should write something about her tenure instead. Hence, he wrote a play calledPradhanmantri.

“I wanted to present it to Mrs. Indira Gandhi but her unfortunate death took this opportunity from me,” he says.

In spite of being good as a writer, Laxman never gave up the urge to learn, and is continuing his education even today.

He passed the Class 12 CBSE exam at the age of 40 from Patrachar School in Delhi, and then completed his graduation through a correspondence course from Delhi University. Currently, he is pursuing MA in Hindi from IGNOU.

laxman4

“I chose to write in Hindi as I wanted my books to be read all over the country. So I started reading Hindi books as much as possible. I used to visit Daryaganj’s old books’ market every Sunday to buy Hindi books,” says the writer.

Like his novel about Ramdas, all his books are based on real life incidents.

“Some boys at my stall used to talk about a girl, their classmate, who did not speak much. I asked them if I could meet her. She then became a character (and title) of one of my books — Renu,” he says.

Renu also became the book that Laxman personally presented to the former Indian president, Pratibha Patil, who was so impressed by his work that she invited him to Rashtrapati Bhavan, along with his family, on July 23, 2009.

laxman5

As of now, he has no plans of closing his tea shop. “With the money I earn from my books, I have to publish more books. And the tea shop helps me run my household,” says Laxman, who lives with his wife and two sons, both of whom are pursuing higher studies.

Laxman has now stopped going around selling his books. Ramdas, the first book that he wrote, is his bestselling novel till date and is already in its 3rd edition. Over 3,000 copies of it have been sold and it has also been converted into a play.

He is currently working on his upcoming books —Barrister Gandhi, which is based on the life of Mahatma Gandhi, and DANSH, a social novel. Some of his other famous books include Narmada, Parampara Se Judi Bhartiya Rajneeti, Ahankaar, and Abhivyakti.

Laxman Rao refuses to take any funds and donations from people. Those who want to give are politely advised to buy one of his books instead.

“I am satisfied with my life, I want to move ahead. I am hopeful that my books shall earn me a lot of money someday. Then I’ll stop selling tea and engage in full time writing. That day is not too far away now,” he says confidently.

To know more about Laxman, you can write to him at laxmanrao.bskp@gmail.com and visit his Facebook page. His books can be bought on Flipkart, Amazon and Kindle.

Source……www.thebetterindia.com

Natarajan

Message for the Day….” Ways to attain Bliss…”

Sathya Sai Baba

Your heart should be like glass, with the spiritual light inside illuminating the world outside. The inner urges on interacting with the world outside should make one lean towards service, empathy and mutual help. Presently, people read and study all kinds of unintelligible Vedantic texts and struggle with commentaries and translations to grasp their sense. Knowledge is being poured down their throats; but the potion does not get down to soften their heart. The spiritual truths should not be put on for mere public exhibition, as in a drama, where appropriate dresses are worn on the stage but taken off when the actor moves off the stage. They must be adhered to all the time to derive the Atma ananda (Bliss of the Soul) which they genuinely confer. Bliss is easily attained by careful, well-timed and regulated discipline; it cannot be got by spurts and skips. You must take the effort to learn each lesson of virtue through systematic study and diligent application to attain success.

California’s wildfires are actually changing the appearance of the moon ….

Did you see the Moon last night? I walked outside at 10:30 p.m. and was stunned to see a dark, burnt-orange Full Moon as if September’s eclipse had arrived a month early? Why ?

Bob King in Universe Today….

moon

The Full Moon at 10:30 p.m. last night (Aug. 29). Even at 25 degrees altitude, it glowed a deep, dark orange caused by heavy smoke from western forest fires.

Heavy smoke from forest fires in Washington, California and Montana has now spread to cover nearly half the country in a smoky pall, soaking up starlight and muting the moonlight.

If this is what global warming has in store for us, skywatchers will soon have to take a forecast of “clear skies” with a huge grain of salt.

By day, the sky appears the palest of blues. By night, the stars are few if any, and the Moon appears faint, the color of fire and strangely remote. Despite last night’s clear skies, only the star Vega managed to penetrate the gloom.

I never saw my shadow even at midnight when the Moon had climbed high into the southern sky.
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Last night’s Full Moon seen through an 8-inch telescope at 11:30 p.m. The colors are true.

We’ve seen this smoke before. Back in July, Canadian forest fires wafted south and west and covered much of the northern half of the U.S., giving us red suns in the middle of the afternoon and leaving only enough stars to count with two hands at night. On the bright side, the Moon is fascinating to observe.

I set up the telescope last night and spend a half hour watching this unexpected “eclipse”; sunsets appear positively atomic. The size of the smoke particles is just right for filtering out or scattering away blues, greens and even yellow from white light. Vivid reds, pinks and oranges remain to tint anything bright enough to penetrate the haze.
Fire haze satellite Aug30_edited 1

GOES-8 satellite view of the central U.S. taken at 8:15 a.m. CDT August 30, 2015 show a veil of grayish forest fire smoke covering much of the Midwest with clearer conditions to the southeast. The red line is the approximate border between the two.

But smoke can cause harm, too. Forest fire smoke contains carbon monoxide, carbon dioxide and soot. On especially smoky days, you can even smell the odor of burning trees in the air at ground level.

Some may suffer from burning eyes, asthma or bronchitis on especially smoky days even a thousand miles from the source fires.

moon3

Wide-angle view of last night’s Moon. Notice that the smoke is thicker along the horizontal – left and right of the Moon. Above, at a higher elevation, we see through less smoke, so the moonlit sky is a bit brighter there. No stars are visible.

On clear, blue-sky days, I’ve watched the smoke creep in from the west. It begins a light haze and slowly covers the entire sky in a matter of several hours, often showing a banded structure in the direction of the Sun.

A little smoke is OK for observing, but once it’s thick enough to redden the Moon even hours after moonrise, you can forget about using your telescope for stargazing. Sometimes, a passing thunderstorm and cold front clears the sky again. Sometimes not.

The only cures for fire soot are good old-fashioned rain and the colder weather that arrives with fall. In the meantime, many of us will spend our evenings reading about the stars instead of looking at them.

Read the original article on Universe Today. Copyright 2015.

Source……www.business insider.com and http://www.universetoday.com

Natarajan

 

 

” நீங்கள் திட்டுவதால் , நாங்க தீட்டப்படுகிறோம் , ஆசிரியர் பெருமக்களே ….”

அறியாமை இருள் விரட்டுங்கள்!

கரும்பலகைகளில் வெளிச்சம் விதைத்து
அறியாமை இருள் விரட்டி
சூரியப் பிரதிகளை உருவாக்கும்
‘ஆ’ சீரியர்களே…

அறிவு மாளிகைக்கு
அஸ்திவாரம் அமைத்து
திறம்படக் கட்டி
திறப்பு விழா நடத்தி
விளக்கேற்றி வைக்கும்
வெள்ளை மனக் கோட்டங்களே…

நீங்கள்
முள்காட்டை செப்பனிட்டு
முல்லை மலர் வளர்க்கிறீர்கள்
சிப்பிகளில் மட்டுமல்ல
நத்தைகளிலும் முத்து விளைவிக்கிறீர்கள்
கூழாங்கற்களை வைரங்களாய்
வடித்தெடுக்கிறீர்கள்!

நீங்கள்
வியர்வை வெப்பத்தில் புழுங்கி
வேதனை துளிகளை விழுங்கி
சாக்பீசில் முகங் கழுவி
சரித்திரம் படைக்கிறீர்கள்!
நீங்கள்
நெற்றிக்கண் திறந்து
நெருப்பை உமிழ நேரினும்
கொதித்து வரும் தீயினிலும்
குளிர்ச்சி உறைந்திருக்கும்
புயலாய் சீறுகிற போதிலும்
புன்னகை மறைந்திருக்கும்!

நீங்கள் திட்டுவதால்
நாங்கள் தீட்டப்படுகிறோம்
உளிபடாமல், துளிச்சிதறல் இல்லாமல்
எதிர்கால இந்தியாவை
சிரத்தையாய் செதுக்கும் சிற்பிகளே…
உங்களை
சிரம் தாழ்த்தி வாழ்த்தி
வணங்கி மகிழ்வதில்
பெருமிதம் கொள்கிறோம்!

Source…சுப்புராஜ், திருமுல்லைவாயில்…..www.dinamalar.com

natarajan

 

Message for the Day…”Truth Emanates From Truth….

Sathya Sai Baba

Practical dharma, or rules of good behaviour (achara-dharma), relates to temporary matters concerning our problems and physical needs, to our passing relationships with the objective world. The very instrument of those rules, the human body, is not permanent, so how can then these rules be eternal? How can their nature be true? The Eternal cannot be expressed by the evanescent; light cannot be revealed from darkness. The Eternal emerges only from the Eternal; truth emanates only from truth. Therefore, follow the objective codes of dharma relating to worldly activities and daily life, with the full knowledge and consciousness of the inner basic Atma-dharma. Then only can the internal and external urges cooperate and yield the bliss of harmonious progress. If in your daily avocations, you translate the real values of eternal dharma into love-filled acts, then your duty to the inner reality, the Atma-dharma, is also fulfilled. Always build your living on the Atmic base; then, your spiritual progress is assured.

The Inspiring Story of How a Gardener & Watchman Went on to Become a College Principal ….

Ishwar Singh Bargah is a living example of the fact that hard work and determination always pay off in the end. Meet this principal of a college in Bhilai who was once working as a gardener, a salesman, and a night watchman.

48-year-old Ishwar Singh Bargah was once employed as a gardener by an organization that runs educational institutions in Bhilai.

Today, he has succeeded to become the principal of one of the colleges being run by the same organization.

principal

Source: www.cgksmaheri.org

His journey began in 1985. At the age of 19, he went to Bhilai seeking a job after finishing his school education in Ghutiya village and Baitalpur. There, he began working as a salesman at a cloth store, earning Rs. 150 per month. With his earnings, he applied for a BA course. Along with his studies, he also got a job as a gardener in Kalyan College, Bhilai, with the help of his uncle’s connection. Until the time when he graduated in 1989, Ishwar took up several jobs and worked as a gardener, a parking stand keeper, and then as the supervisor of a construction work.

After graduation, he got himself enrolled as a craft teacher in the college, and during the night he used to work as the watchman, there itself. Recognizing his skills and capabilities as a teacher, college authorities appointed Ishwar as an assistant professor.

After this there was no stopping the man and his immense interest in education. While continuing his job, he also completed his MEd, BPEd and MPhil from the same college which is run by the Chhattisgarh Kalyan Shiksha Samiti.

Later, acknowledging his hard work and determination, the samiti members recommended his name for their newly set up college Chhattisgarh Kalyan Shiksha Mahavidyalaya in Aheri. In 2005, he joined there as principal on deputation.

“I was provided enough support and guidance by Professor TS Thakur, the then principal of the college, PK Shrivastav (HoD, Education), Dr HN Dubey (HoD Chemistry) and JP Mishra, who always stood by me to support me,” he told The Times of India.

Three cheers to the man and his inspiring dedication.

Source…www.thebetterindia.com

natarajan

Over 2,000 Parrots Visit This Mechanic Every Day. The Story Behind This Is Fascinating…!!!

Sekhar from Chennai gets up at 4:30 am to feed over 2,000 parrots who arrive at his doorsteps everyday. It’s been 10 years and he has never failed to feed these parrots even for a single day. A mechanic by profession, he spends 40 percent of his salary on this cause. Watch the heart warming video.

He might have missed his own meal but has never failed to feed thousands of parrots every single day for 10 years now.

Meet Sekhar, the Birdman, who spends hours every day preparing a meal for the thousands of parrots who come to his house twice a day.

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It all started 10 years ago, when Sekhar started putting some rice and grains on the boundary of his house. Many birds, squirrels and other creatures would come and enjoy their meal. –

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But one day, during the horrific Tsunami in Chennai, Sekhar saw two parrots sitting on his house parapet wall. Since then, Sekhar’s house has become a regular spot for these parrots, and they come here every day.

Today, Sekhar feeds over 2,000 parrots every day. Sometimes, their number even reaches 4,000!

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He wakes up at 4:30 in the morning everyday to prepare a meal for these birds, who come at his house at sharp 6 in the morning. The same routine is followed in the evening. –

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The bond that Sekhar the camera mechanic has developed with these winged creatures is beyond beautiful.

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Watch the video to get awestruck by his work –

Source….Shreya Pareek ….www.the betterindia.com and http://www.youtube.com

 

natarajan