” தங்கள் வீட்டைத் தேடும் பறவை கூட்டம் …”

அடுக்கு  மாடி  குடியிருப்பு  திறப்பு விழா  இன்று

ஆட்டம்  பாட்டம்  ஒரே அமர்க்களம் …. எங்கும்

ஆரவாரம் …புது  வீடு  குடி புகும்  குதூகல  கூட்டம் …

வட்டமடித்து  மேலே  பறக்குது  பறவை  கூட்டம்  ஒன்று ..

கீழே  கட்டிட  குவியலுக்கு  நடுவில்  தங்கள்  கூட்டையும்

வீட்டையும்  தேடி …

அதன்  கூட்டையும்  வீட்டையும்  சுமந்த மரங்கள்  என்றோ

சரிந்து  மறைந்து  விட்ட  உண்மை  நிலை

புரியவில்லையே  பாவம்  இந்த  பறவைகளுக்கு …

நடராஜன் .

Bottomline….
Yesterday evening at sunset,  i happened to watch a lot of birds making round and round over a vacant space looking for their respective nests or their dwelling places ..
During the Day time, all available vegetation and trees … small and big..were
cleared mechanically for paving the way for paved land …Probably for the construction of a Residential dwelling unit…
While watching the plight of those birds , the above lines came to my mind …
That is expressed in the form of a small kavithai..today in my blog …
It is before you now..Pl read and give me your feedback at your convenience..
Natarajan

படித்து ரசித்தது ….”அன்பு விதை” … ஒரு அருமையான கவிதை …!!!

 

அன்பு விதை!

பள்ளி சென்று
திரும்பும் குழந்தைகள்
அன்று
உணவுக்கு ஏங்கின
இன்று
பாசத்திற்கு ஏங்குகின்றன!

ஆதாயம் தேடும்
அவசர உலகில்
அன்பை
அடகு வைத்து விடுவதால்
துன்பங்களே நம்மை
துரத்துகிறது!

பிச்சைக்காரன் என்றாலும்
உன்னை வணங்கினால்
நீயும் அவனை வணங்கு…
மனசிருந்தால்
காசு போடு
இல்லையென்றால்
ஒரு புன்னகை சிந்து…
பூரித்துப் போவான்!

ஒவ்வொரு பூக்களும்
வாசத்திற்கு உரியவை தான்
ஒவ்வொரு மனிதனும்
நேசத்திற்கு உரியவன் தான்!

இறுகிக் கிடக்கும்
இதயங்களை கொஞ்சம்
தளர்த்திக் கொள்ளுங்கள்…
ஒவ்வொரு ஆன்மாவின் சுவாசமும்
அன்பால்
அரவணைக்கப்பட வேண்டும்!

விதை நெல்லாய்அன்பு பராமரிக்கப்பட்டு
வீரியமிக்க விதைகளாய்
இம்மண்ணில் துளிர்க்கட்டும்!

மகத்தான அன்பு விதைகள்
மனித மனங்களில்
அறுவடையாகிற போது
அங்கே
மனிதநேயம்
மறுமலர்ச்சியடையும்!

அன்பு இல்லாதவர்கள்
அரவணைக்கப்படுவதில்லை
அன்பை இழந்தோர்
ஆராதிக்கப்படுவதுமில்லை!

சிற்பத்தைப் போல்
செதுக்கப்படுவதல்ல அன்பு
இதயத்தில்
இயல்பாய் மலர்வது!

விருப்பு வெறுப்புகளை
புறந்தள்ளி
இதயங்களிலும்
அன்பு விளக்கேற்றுவோம்
எங்கும்
ஆனந்த ஒளி பரவட்டும்!

ஜோதி பாரதி,
தேனி.   in http://www.dinamalar.com

Natarajan

Message For the Day…”Sanctify Every Day by Cultivating Sacred Thoughts and Broad Feelings…”

Love is God, love is Nature, love is life and love is the true human value. It is on the basis of the principle of love that sages declared: Loka samastha sukhino bhavantu(May the whole world be happy!). Love even the worst of your enemies. Sanctify every day by cultivating sacred thoughts and broad feelings. Today, humanity is stricken with fear and restlessness. Courage and strength are on the decline, because you have unsacred thoughts and wicked feelings. Your enemies are not outside. Your bad thoughts are your worst enemies and thoughts based on Truth are your best friends. You must make Sath, the eternal Truth, as your best friend. Worldly friends and enemies change with passage of time, but God is your true and eternal friend. This friend is always with you, in you, around you, above you, below you and protects you just as the eyelid protects the eye.   

Sathya Sai Baba

 

Stockholm Water Prize 2015 for an Indian from Rajasthan ….

India’s waterman Rajendra Singh has been awarded the 2015 Stockholm Water Prize for his consistent and innovative efforts in Rajasthan to save water in rural areas.

The Stockholm Water Prize, founded in 1991 is presented annually by the Stockholm International Water Institute (SIWI) to an individual, organisation or institution for outstanding water-conservation achievements and it carries a cash amount of $150,000 and a specially designed sculpture.

Rajendra Singh interacting with Teri University Students(Photo: Abhinav619)

Rajendra Singh interacting with Teri University Students(Photo: Abhinav619)

Rajendra Singh, who hails from Dollah village of Baghpat district in Uttar Pradesh, shifted to Rajasthan 35 years ago to provide medicines to the old in village areas.

“I used to provide medicines to the old in Rajasthan villages. I also used to help children to go to school but one day an elderly man told me that the people there don’t need medicine or education but water,” he told IANS.

His direction in life changed eversince as he started working on water problems in the villages there. Though he did not have any knowledge of water harvesting or how to get the ground water table recharged, local people helped him learn and he never look back after that in his mission to work on johad or earthen check dams.

These check dams are traditionally used to store rainwater and recharge groundwater, a technique which had been abandoned for decades and revived by Rajendra Singh. With the help of a few local youths he started desilting the Gopalpura johad, lying neglected unused.

When the monsoon arrived, the johad filled up and soon wells which had been dry for years nearby too had water. Villagers pitched in and in the next three years, it made it 15 feet deep.

He had set up Tarun Bharat Sangha in mid-1980s and started padayatra through the villages educating people to rebuild villages’ old check dams. Soon, taking his example, villagers constructed a johad at the source of a dried Arvari River, and along it also built tiny earthen dams, with largest being a 244-meter-long and 7-meter-high concrete dam in the Aravalli hills.

When the number of dams reached 375, the river started to flow again in 1990, after remaining dry for over 60 years.

Later, he turned his attention to Sariska, where mining pits left unfilled led to drought despite constructing johads. He petitioned to the Supreme court, which in turn banned mining in the area and the TBS built 115 earthen and concrete structures within the sanctuary and 600 other structures in the buffer and peripheral zones that paid off and by 1995 Aravri became a perennial river.

In the coming years, rivers like Ruparel, Sarsa, Bhagani and Jahajwali were revived after remaining dry for decades and farming activities could be resumed in hundreds of drought-prone villages in neighbouring districts of Jaipur, Dausa, Sawai Madhopur, Bharatpur and Karauli.

By 2001, his movement had spread over an area of 6,500 km, including also parts of Madhya Pradesh, Gujarat and Andhra Pradesh. It had built 4,500 earthen check dams to collect rainwater in 850 villages of Rajasthan, and he was awarded the Magsaysay Award for Community Leadership for his yeoman service.

In 2005, he was awarded the Jamnalal Bajaj Award. He also played a pivotal role in stopping the controversial Loharinag Pala Hydro Power Project over river Bhagirathi, the headstream of the Ganges River in 2006.

In 2009, he led a pada yatra through Mumbai city along the endangered Mithi river and is currently doing a parikrama along the banks of Godavari river, from Trimbakeshwar to Paithan to educate people to make the river pollution free.

SOURCE:::::www.microfinance monitor.com

Natarajan

” வாய் விட்டு சிரித்தால் நோய் விட்டு போகும் …” !!!

பல்ப் – எடிசன்

ரேடியோ – மார்கோனி

பை-சைக்கிள் – மேக் மில்லன்

போன் – க்ராஹாம் பெல்

க்ராவிடி – நியூட்டன்

கரண்ட் – பாரடே

எக்ஸாம் – மவனே..அவன்தான் சிக்க மாட்றான்!

சிக்கினா செத்தான்டா இதோடு..!!

…………………….

ஒன்றுமே தெரியாத ஸ்டுடென்ட் கிட்ட

கொஸ்டின் பேப்பர் கொடுக்குறாங்க…

எல்லாம் தெரிஞ்ச வாத்தியார்கிட்ட

ஆன்சர் பேப்பர் கொடுக்குறாங்க…

என்ன

கொடும சார் இது?….

 

…………………………….

அப்பா:

நேத்து ராத்திரி பரிச்சைக்கு

படித்தேன்னு சொன்ன,

ஆனா,

உன் ரூம்’ல லைட்டே எரியல?

மகன்:

படிக்குற இன்ட்ரெஸ்ட்ல அதை எல்லாம் நான் கவனிக்கலப்பா!

………………….

 SOURCE::::: input from a friend of mine….

Natarajan

 

NewDelhi is More Polluted than Beijing….

NEW DELHI, India — Weaving through traffic in central New Delhi, Bharat Singh takes his hand off the throttle of his sputtering, three-wheeled rickshaw — India’s cheap alternative to a taxi — and coughs into his fist.

“By the time evening comes around, I’m coughing like crazy and my eyes are red and burning,” he says, speaking Hindi.

“I can’t get to sleep because of the headaches, and when I finally do fall asleep, my coughing wakes me up again.”

Gaunt and rheumy eyed, the 20-year veteran of New Delhi’s congested roads is not alone.

Near daily stats show that the air in India’s capital is far more polluted than in Beijing, where a public outcry prompted the government to shut down factories and restrict the use of cars. And in New Delhi, rickshaw drivers, traffic cops and the underclass that travels by bus and bicycle are the worst affected, according to one new study.

But New Delhi’s problem might not be a lack of strict regulation. Instead, its overly harsh penalties for polluting the air could actually be to blame.

The 1981 air pollution control act — India’s answer to America’s 1963 Clean Air Act — gives regulators the power to ban dirty fuels, cut off water and electricity to factories and bring criminal charges against violators. But there’s no provision allowing them to levy fines. The harsh measures at regulators’ disposal are viewed as “nuclear options” and rarely used.

“Clearly, criminal liability is not working,” says Shibani Ghosh, an environmental lawyer at the New Delhi-based Center for Policy Research, an independent think tank.

“We certainly need to have criminal penalties for more egregious violations of the law. But criminal penalties also come with a higher evidentiary burden, because charges have to be proven beyond a reasonable doubt.”

Without question, the results are disastrous.

In May last year, a World Health Organization study found Delhi to have the world’s worst air pollution, based on the amount of floating particular — the superfine, microscopic particles that cause the worst damage to the lungs — in the city’s air. The Indian capital averaged 153 micrograms per cubic meter in 2013, compared with about 90 in Beijing.

New delhi

Emergency health warnings due to thick smog have been issued by the Indian government in the past.

As a point of reference, the US National Ambient Air Quality Standard is 12 micrograms per cubic meter.

For rickshaw drivers like Singh, living in Delhi means 12- to 16-hour days inhaling microscopic brick dust and other hazardous pollutants, such as lead and arsenic from diesel exhaust.

Worse still, while conducting a real-time study of air quality on the city’s roads, bus platforms and metro stations, the Center for Science and Environment found that levels in heavy-traffic areas were routinely two to four times higher than the average reported by the Delhi Pollution Control Committee. In one congested corner during rush hour, the levels of floating particular exceeded 1,000 micrograms per cubic meter.

Delhi’s pollution problem is the most infamous, but it’s by no means unique in the country. India accounted for a full 11 out of the worst 20 cities in the WHO study — with deadly consequences.

In 2010, a Global Burden of Disease study estimated that 627,000 Indians died prematurely due to outdoor air pollution (with the indoor variety a separate scourge), and experts fear that number could double or triple by 2030.

India Air Pollution

With statistics like those, the impulse is to treat polluters harshly. But, as it turns out, allowing violators to pay their way out of trouble — rather than mandating jail time — could be more effective, according to research by economists from the University of Chicago, Harvard and Yale.

“Criminal penalties are very expensive to enforce,” said Anant Sudarshan, one of the study’sauthors, and the head of the India division of the University of Chicago’s Energy Policy Institute at Chicago.

“You have to file a case and win that case, and that can drag on for years. And [criminal penalties] can be too severe for minor infringements.”

The problem is that while India mandates expensive pollution control standards for industry, it fails to enforce those standards because its regulators cannot don’t have the legal expertise — or endurance — to send violators to jail, Sudarshan’s colleagues Michael Greenstone and Rohini Pande wrote in a recent op-ed for the New York Times.

smog india

A rag picker collects recyclable materials in the polluted waters of river Yamuna amid dense smog in the old quarters of Delhi November 8, 2012.

Instead, they argue, India should follow the method that the US government used to fight acid rain in the 1980s. The United States implemented a “cap and trade” system, which creates financial incentives for industry to clean up its act — including stiff fines for exceeding norms.

Apart from making regulators less reluctant to penalize violators by giving them smaller bullets, such a system would also make companies themselves less likely to skirt the rules, Sudarshan said. Now, the regulators set a pollution norm and every factory has to meet it — it’s the same standard for a sponge iron producer spending $20 million and a garment maker spending $20,000. In contrast, cap-and-trade would let companies for whom reducing pollution is prohibitively expensive buy credits from firms in other industries.

“If you set limits on every plant individually, often those limits can be too expensive for some plants and too lenient for others,” Sudarshan said. “So command-and-control tends to enforce costs that are too high, which makes them more likely to be violated.”

That said, in other areas, such as traffic policing, India’s regulators view fines as an opportunity to pocket 10 percent in exchange for looking the other way. So it’s not hard to understand the skepticism of the average rickshaw driver.

“I don’t think anything can improve matters,” Singh said.

Even the much-vaunted Delhi Metro hasn’t made a dent, he argued. The new stations underway all over the city, he said, seem to have more than made up for any reduction in car commuters with an increase in construction dust and traffic snarls.

“You just sit there in the traffic jam breathing in the poison,” he said.

This article originally appeared at GlobalPost. Copyright 2015. Follow GlobalPost on Twitter

SOURCE:::::::::::: JASON OVERDORF, GLOBALPOST ….www.businessinsider.com

Natarajan

message For this Day… Ugadi… “Share Your Love with Everyone Who Visits Your Home …”

You would have celebrated many Ugadi (New Year day) festivals in your life. Certain traditional practices go with every festival, such as having a sacred bath, wearing new clothes, cleaning the house and decorating it with buntings of green leaves. Greatness lies in purifying our thoughts, not merely the transient human body. The significance of a festival does not lie in wearing new clothes but in cultivating new and noble thoughts. The house should be decorated not merely with the buntings of green leaves, but with buntings of love. Share your love with everyone who visits your house. Only then would we be celebrating the festival in its true spirit. This is the beginning of Nuthana Samvatsara (New Year). Vatsara is another name of God. Time is God.

Sathya Sai Baba

Message For the Day… ” Truth is God …Love is God…”

God is not found separately in a temple or in an ashram.Truth is God. Love is God. Dharma is God. When you worship God by following these principles, He will manifest Himself then and there. Do not doubt this. Love God wholeheartedly. Pray to God and make friends with Him. You can achieve anything if you have God as your friend. Learn today to fill your heart with love and adorn your hand with the ornament of sacrifice. Sacrifice is the jewel for the hands. Truth is the necklace one should wear. You must develop the habit of adorning these jewels. Develop divine love and foster peace in the country. Pray with a broad feeling: Loka samastha sukhino bhavantu (May the whole world be happy)! Start every day with this prayer. Then, you will lead a blissful and peaceful life which is full of enthusiasm. Love God and make friendship with Him, and you are bound to be successful in all your endeavours.

Sathya Sai Baba