Message for the Day… ” We Need Extreme Patience and Enormous Capacity to Forget and Forgive …”

Sathya Sai Baba

For acquiring selfless love, the quality of kshama or forbearance is a vital necessity. (kshama is a word rich in meaning. Besides forbearance, it also implies extreme patience and an enormous capacity to forget as also forgive). Every individual must cultivate this noble quality. Kshama is not achieved by reading books or learnt from an instructor. Nor can it be received as a gift from someone else. This prime virtue of kshama can be acquired solely by self-effort, by facing squarely diverse problems and difficulties of various sorts, by going through anxieties and suffering as well as sorrow. In the absence ofkshama, man becomes susceptible to all kinds of evil tendencies. Hatred and jealousy easily take root in a person lacking this virtue. Divinity is merely the combined manifestation of prema (love) andkshama.

” என்னால் பேச முடியுமா …எழுதுவது வேறு ..பேசுவது வேறு….”

எத்தனையோ விஷயங்கள் என் தனிப்பட்ட வாழ்க்கையில் – பத்திரிகைகளில் பணி புரியும்போதும், சொற்பொழிவு துறைக்கு வந்த பிறகும் மிகவும் ஆச்சரியப்படத் தக்க வகையில் நடந்திருக்கின்றன… நடந்து வருகின்றன… எல்லாம் நம்மையும் தாண்டிய ஒரு சக்தியின் அருள்தான்!

தெய்வமாகட்டும்; மகான் ஆகட்டும். நமக்கு ஒரு அனுக்ரஹம் இருந்தால்தான், சில நல்லதுகளைப் பண்ண விடும். இல்லாவிட்டால், நாம்பாட்டுக்கு ஏதோ ஒரு வேலையைப் பண்ணிக் கொண்டிருப்போம் – எதைப் பற்றியும் சிந்திக்காமல்.

ஒவ்வொருவருக்கும் ஒவ்வொரு உத்தியோகம்.

கணக்கு எழுதிக் கொண்டிருப்போம். கம்ப்யூட்டர் தட்டிக் கொண்டிருப்போம். ஆட்களை மேய்த்துக் கொண்டிருப்போம். இல்லை நம்மை யாராவது மேய்த்துக் கொண்டிருப்பார்கள்.

ஆனால், பகவானுக்கே சேவை செய்வது எப்பேர்ப்பட்ட ஒரு உத்தியோகம்.

பகவான் பேரையே சொல்லிக் கொண்டு வாழ்வது, பிழைப்பு நடத்துவது எப்பேர்ப்பட்ட உத்தமமான பணி..

விகடனிலும், திரிசக்தியிலும் சில காலம் இது எனக்கு வாய்த்தது. அதைத் தொடர்ந்து சொற்பொழிவு துறையில்…

திடீரென்று பழைய சம்பவம் ஒன்று என் மனதில் ஏதோ ஒரு ஃப்ளாஷ் பேக் போல் தோன்றும். என் வாழ்வில் நடந்த இந்த சம்பவத்தை மீண்டும் அசை போட்டால் எனக்கே ஆச்சரியமாக இருக்கும். அப்படி நிறைய இருக்கு.

‘எப்படியும் இந்த விஷயத்தை இன்று இரவு பதிவு செய்து விட வேண்டும்’ என்று வெளியில் எங்கோ ஒரு ஷூட்டிங்கிலோ, சபாவிலோ இருக்கும்போது தீர்மானம் செய்வேன். வீட்டுக்கு வந்ததும், ஒரு ஆகாரத்தை உள்ளே தள்ளி விட்டு, முகநூல் மற்றும் ஜிமெயிலை கொஞ்ச நேரம் மேய்ந்து விட்டு, ஒரு சில தொடர்களுக்கும், உபன்யாசத்துக்கும் தகவல்களை சேகரித்து வைத்து விட்டுப் படுக்கப் போய் விடுவேன்.

இதை சோம்பேறித்தனம் என்று நான் சொல்ல மாட்டேன். 24 மணி நேரத்தில் என்னால் பலதுகளை பண்ண முடியவில்லை.

இருந்தாலும், அவ்வப்போது சில வேளைகளில் பதிவிடுகிறேன்.

அப்படிப்பட்ட ஒரு விஷயத்தை இன்று மதியம் பெங்களூர் நண்பரும் மகா பெரியவா பக்தருமான திரு கார்த்தி நாகரத்தினம் அவர்கள் எனக்கு நினைவுபடுத்தினார்.

நான் கிட்டத்தட்ட மறந்து விட்டேன். அவர் சொன்ன பிறகுதான் எனக்கு அப்படியே நினைவுக்கு வந்தது.

எப்படி நினைவுபடுத்தினார் தெரியுமா?

மகா பெரியவா சொன்ன பொன்னான ஒரு செய்தியை எனக்கு இன்பாக்ஸில் மெஸேஜ் பண்ணி விட்டு, ‘அண்ணா… நினைவிருக்கா… 2012 அக்டோபர்ல பெங்களூர் வந்தேள்… அப்ப, இந்த உபன்யாசத் துறைக்கு எப்படி வந்தேள்னு சொன்னேளே… இப்ப நான் உங்களுக்கு அனுச்சிருக்கற இந்த பெரியவா வாக்கியத்தையும் படிச்சுப் பாருங்கோ… பெரியவா கருணை புரியும்’ என்றார்.

இத்தகைய ஜனங்களிடம் இருந்து கிடைக்கிற பாராட்டுக்கு விலை இல்லை. ஆத்மார்த்தம் மட்டுமே தெரிகிறது.

பெரியவா சரணம்.

அன்புடன்,
பி. சுவாமிநாதன்

கார்த்தி எனக்கு அனுப்பிய மகா பெரியவா திருவாக்கை இங்கே அப்படியே போட்டிருக்கிறேன். இதைப் படித்து விட்டு, அதன் பின் தொடருங்கள்…

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“அநுஷ்டானமில்லாதபோது இந்திரியம் ஓடுகிறபடி ஓடவேண்டுமென்று தோன்றுகிறது. ‘ஜனங்கள் இப்படிப்பட்ட சரக்குதான் கேட்கிறார்கள்’ என்று அவர்கள் தலையில் பழியைப் போட்டுவிட்டு, கன்னா பின்னாப் பாட்டுப் பாடுகிறார்கள், புலன் வெறியைத் தூண்டிவிடுகிற ரீதியிலேயே எழுதுகிறார்கள், ஸினிமா எடுக்கிறார்கள், சித்திரம் போடுகிறார்கள். ஜனங்களும் அவர்கள் தலையில் பழியைத் திருப்பிப் போட்டு அவர்கள் இப்படிப்பட்ட சரக்குகளைத்தான் தருவதால் தாங்கள் அதையே எடுத்துக் கொள்ளும்படி இருக்கிறது என்கிறார்கள்.

இதிலே ஜனங்களைவிடக் கலைஞர்கள் என்று சொல்லிக் கொள்பவர்களாக இந்தக் கலைகளை அப்யஸித்துக் கொண்டிருக்கிறவர்களுக்குத்தான் அதிகம் பொறுப்பிருக்கிறது. இப்போது கண்டதை எழுதியும், பாடியும், நடித்தும், படம் பிடித்தும் கீர்த்தி, தனம் எல்லாம் ஸம்பாதித்து விடலாம். ஆனால், ‘இத்தனை ஜனங்களைக் கெடுத்ததற்கான தோஷத்தையும் கண்ணுக்குத் தெரியாமல் ஸம்பாதித்துக் கொண்டிருக்கிறோம். நாளைக்கு இதற்காக நாம் ஒருத்தனுக்குப் பதில் சொல்லியாக

வேண்டும்’என்ற நினைப்பு அவர்களுக்கு இருக்க வேண்டும்.

மளிகை ஸாமானில் கலப்படம் பண்ணினால் குற்றம்;குடி தண்ணீரைக் கெடுத்தால் குற்றம் என்றால் நேரே மநுஷ்யனின் ஆத்மாவையே கெடுப்பது இவற்றைவிடக் குற்றம்தானே? கலப்படத்துக்காக தண்டிக்கிறவன் நம் மாதிரி ஒருத்தன்தான். அவனிடமிருந்து தப்பியும் விடலாம். அல்லது லஞ்சம் கொடுத்து ஸரிப்படுத்திடலாம். ஆனால் தன் ஆத்மாவையும் கெடுத்துக் கொண்டு, மற்றவர்களையும் கெடுத்ததற்காக ஒருத்தனைச் சிக்ஷிக்கிறானே, அவனிடமிருந்து தப்பவே முடியாது! அவனை நாம் வசியம் பண்ணிக் கொள்ளவும் முடியாது! இந்த நினைப்பு இருந்து விட்டால் கலைகளில் ஈடுபட்டவர்கள் தப்பு வழிக்குப் போக மாட்டார்கள்.

தெய்வ நினைப்பு, பய பக்தி அநுஷ்டானம் இவை போனதில்தான் அடக்கம் போய்விட்டது; இந்திரியங்களின் வேகம் குறைவதால் ஏற்படுகிற பக்வம் வராமலே போகிறது. இதோடுகூடக் ‘கலைஞர்கள்’ என்று தாங்களாகவே தங்களுக்குக் கௌரவம் கொடுத்துக் கொண்டு பொதுஜனங்களும் அதில் மயங்கி இவர்களைக் கொண்டாடி முகஸ்துதி பண்ணுவதில் அஹம்பாவம் ஜாஸ்தியாகிவிடுகிறது.

பழைய காலத்தில் போல, வித்வான்களைக் கூட்டி ‘அரங்கேற்றம்’ என்று செய்து, அவர்கள் ஒப்புக் கொண்டால்தான் ஒரு புஸ்தகத்தையோ, நாடகத்தையோ பிரசாரம் பண்ணலாம் என்றுமில்லாமல், ‘கருத்து ஸ்வதந்திரம், எழுத்து ஸ்வதந்திரம், பேச்சு ஸ்வதந்திரம்’ என்று வேறு ஏற்பட்டிருப்பதால், எதை வேண்டுமானாலும் ஆடிப் பாடி ஊரை வளைக்கலாமென்று நடந்து வருகிறது.

சின்ன வயதிலிருந்தே மதக் கல்வி, மதாநுஷ்டானங்கள் இருந்தால் தான் ஸாத்விகம் ஏற்படும். அப்போதுதான் எத்தனை ஆட்டம், பாட்டம் இருந்தாலும் அதுகளும் முடிவில் உயர்ந்த ஸாத்விக லக்ஷ்யத்தில் சேர்ப்பதாக இருக்கும். முற்காலங்களில் இப்படித்தானிருந்தது. அநுஷ்டான ஸம்பந்தம் துண்டித்துப் போனபின்தான் ராஜஸ, தாமஸப் போக்குகளையே தூண்டிவிடுவதாக இந்தக் காந்தர்வ கலைகள் ஆகியிருக்கின்றன.”

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கார்த்தி அனுப்பிய செய்தியைப் படித்து விட்டீர்களா?

2012 அக்டோபரில் ‘மகா பெரியவா மகிமை’ சொற்பொழிவு நிகழ்ச்சிக்காக நண்பர்கள் கார்த்தி மற்றும் ஸ்ரீதர் சுவாமிநாதன் என்னை பெங்களூருக்கு அழைத்தார்கள். அப்போதுதான் இந்தத் துறையில் நான் நுழைந்திருந்தேன்.

அப்போது நண்பர்கள் கார்த்தி மற்றும் ஸ்ரீதரிடம், ‘நான் இந்த உபன்யாசத் துறைக்கு வராவிட்டால், தமிழ் தொலைக்காட்சி சீரியல்களுக்கு வசனம் எழுதப் போயிருப்பேன்’ என்று சொன்னேன்.

ஆம்! 2012 ஏப்ரல் வாக்கில் பணியில் இருந்து வெளியே வந்தபோது அடுத்து என்ன செய்வது என்று யோசித்தேன்.

எழுத்தைத் தவிர, எதுவும் தெரியாது! மீண்டும் பத்திரிகைக்குத்தான் போக வேண்டும் என்று முயற்சித்தேன். ஆனால், சரிவரவில்லை.

அப்போதுதான் என் பத்திரிகைத் துறை நண்பர் ஒருவர், ‘பத்திரிகைகள்ல வேலை செஞ்சது போதும் சுவாமீ… டிவி சீரியல்களுக்கு வசனம் எழுத வாங்க… மாசம் நல்லாவே சம்பாதிக்கலாம்’ என்று புள்ளிவிவரத்துடன் பேசினார்.

அவர் சொன்ன தொகையும், விவரித்த விதமும் என்னைக் கவர்ந்தது.

ஒரே ஒரு தர்மசங்கடம் – கடந்த பத்து வருடங்களாக பல கோயில்களுக்கும் மகான்களின் அதிஷ்டானங்களுக்கும் போய் தரிசித்து ஏராளமான ஆன்மிகக் கட்டுரைகளை எழுதி இருக்கிறேன்.

திடீரென சீரியல்களுக்கு வசனம் எழுதப் போனால்… என்னை பலவாறு மாற்றிக் கொள்ள வேண்டுமே என்று தயங்கினேன்.

ஆனாலும், ஜீவனம்தான் அவ்வப்போது கண்களை மறைத்தது.

அப்போது மகா பெரியவாளிடம் ஒரே ஒரு கோரிக்கை வைத்தேன். ‘பெரியவா… இத்தனை வருடமா ஆன்மிகத்துல இருந்துட்டேன். நிறைய எழுதிட்டேன். இனி தொடரப் போகிற எனது பணி ஆன்மிகத்துக்கா, டிவி. சீரியல்களுக்கா? நீங்களே முடிவு பண்ணுங்கோ’ என்று வேண்டினேன்.

பெரியவா கண் திறந்தார்.

அடுத்து ஒரு சில நாட்களிலேயே மகா பெரியவாளின் பரிபூரண அருளோடு என் வாழ்க்கைப் பாதை மாறியது.

எழுத்தில் இருந்து பேச்சுக்குப் பாதை திரும்பியது.

என்னால் பேச முடியுமா?

எழுதுவது வேறு. பேசுவது வேறு.

எழுத்து என்றால், திரும்பத் திரும்ப எடிட் செய்து ஒரு கட்டுரையை வெளியிடலாம். ஆனால், பேச்சு அப்படி இல்லை. பேசினால் அது ‘லைவ்’.

பெரியவாதான் இதை சாதித்துக் கொடுத்தார்.

கொடுத்துக் கொண்டிருக்கிறார்.

அந்த தெய்வம் சத்தியமாக இருந்து என்னைக் காப்பாற்றிய விதம் என் நெருங்கிய நண்பர்களுக்குத் தெரியும்.

பேசவே தெரியாத ஒருவனை பேசவும் வைக்கிறார்.

கார்த்தி இன்று மதியம் இதைத்தான் சொன்னார்: ‘அண்ணா… சொற்பொழிவுத் துறைக்கு வந்து நேற்றோடு மூன்று வருடம் பூர்த்தி ஆகிறது. இந்த பெரியவா போஸ்ட்டிங்கைப் பார்த்ததும், மூன்று வருடங்களுக்கு முன் பெங்களூரில் நீங்கள் சொன்னதுதான் என் நினைவுக்கு வந்தது. எல்லாம் பெரியவா கருணை’

மகா பெரியவா சத்தியம்!

என்னைத் தடம் புரள விடவில்லை.

தன் பணிக்கே பயன்படுத்திக் கொண்டார்.

இன்று எத்தனையோ சேனல்கள், மேடைகள், வெளிநாடுகள் என்றெல்லாம் சென்றாலும், எல்லா புகழும் மகா பெரியவாளுக்கே!

வெகு சாதாரண மக்களிடம் இருந்து கிடைக்கிற பாராட்டுதான் எனக்குப் பெரும் பலம் – ‘சாமீ… எங்களுக்குப் புரியும்படியா எளிமையா சொல்றீங்க… நாங்களும் இப்ப காஞ்சிபுரம் போக ஆரம்பிச்சிருக்கோம்.’

இத்தகைய ஜனங்களிடம் இருந்து கிடைக்கிற பாராட்டுக்கு விலை இல்லை. ஆத்மார்த்தம் மட்டுமே தெரிகிறது.

பெரியவா சரணம்.

அன்புடன்,
பி. சுவாமிநாதன்

Source ….A Mail from my Friend Shri. Swaminathan  to me this Morning…

Natarajan

The Lady Behind one of TIME’S 100 Most Influential People ….

Sheela Bhatt meets Bharti Patel, whose son Dr Vikram Patel was recently ranked one of Time magazine’s 100 most influential people, to find out her recipe for a remarkable upbringing.

IMAGE: ‘Once the doctors told me Vikram was unlikely to survive,’ recalls Bharti Patel. Photograph: Reuben NV/Rediff.com

Time magazine’s list of 100 most influential people of 2015 featured four Indians: Prime Minister Narendra Modi, Chanda Kochhar, managing director and CEO, ICICI Bank, Microsoft CEO Satya Nadella, and Dr Vikram Patel, co-founder of the Goa-based NGO Sangath which provides mental healthcare to communities with low resources.

Dr Patel, a psychiatrist, has been focusing on global mental health(external link), his passion being to raise his voice for the human rights of individuals with mental disorders. He is also a professor of international mental health at the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine.

Dr Patel’s body of work has been published in Lancet, the well-respected medical journal, and he has created immense awareness in the field of mental healthcare. As the Sangath Web site notes, ‘Dr Patel studies how to treat conditions like depression and schizophrenia in low-resource communities, and he’s come up with a powerful model: Training the community to help.’

Dr Patel,  is known for his research in finding the link between mental disorders and poverty, and ranks along the likes of German Chancellor Angela Merkel and Japanese novelist Haruki Murakami because of his pioneering work. He is one of the founders of the Centre for Global Mental Health, having served till recently as its joint director.

In Delhi he is associated with the Centre for Chronic Conditions and Injuries at the Public Health Foundation of India.

As the co-chair of the Grand Challenges in Global Mental Health (external link), Dr Patel is passionate about identifying research priorities in global mental health. His book, Where There Is No Psychiatrist, is considered a must read for those serving people with mental disorders, while it teaches the rest of us how to approach mental health.

However, the story is not about how Dr Patel reached the pinnacle of success.

At a time when we see Arushi Talwar’s convicted parents in prison or another parent, Indrani Mukerjea, in police custody suspected of having murdered her daughter, something inside society’s soul gets shaken.

Sheela Bhatt spoke to Bharti Patel, Dr Patel’s ageing and ailing mother, who narrates her extraordinary emotion-soaked struggle to bring up her child who saw death thrice before he went to regular school. And how 100 mothers may have contributed to the greatness of the men and women on Time‘s 100 most influential list.

Bhartiben is the Mother India of the 20th century for more than one reason. Her story highlights patience, wisdom, grit, value-based parvarish and boundless faith in God. A combination of value systems that provided the divine touch to Dr Vikram Patel, her loving son.

I have three children. My only son, Vikram, was born in 1964. In traditional Gujarati families the first boy is given the ‘Yamuna snan’ (a special shower for babies) at the Shrinathji temple. He was born healthy and we went to the Nathdwara temple for that baby bath. I don’t know what happened soon after, but he was found to have chronic asthma. It was difficult for a toddler. He used to have cold and cough, but the doctor said it was more serious than that.

Once the doctors told me he was unlikely to survive. Actually, on three occasions, we had lost all hope about Vikram. He came close to death, but by God’s grace he survived, every time.

My mother-in-law had died early and I had to join my father-in-law Bhagwatprasad Patel (B R Patel) when he was appointed India’s ambassador to Belgium. We stayed there for four years. My father-in-law was a distinguished ICS (Indian Civil Service, which precded the Indian Administrative Serice) officer who once headed Air India. I got the courage to shift because I thought I would find a cure for Vikram in a foreign land.

Asthma, when it afflicts a child, is more painful than when it does adults. During an asthma attack a child finds it difficult to breathe, as it happens to adults, but because he is innocent and does not know why it is happening to him, it is difficult to handle for him.

Such children have many allergies too. Vikram had a chana (gram) allergy, he could never have Gujarati Kadhi as it contains gram flour. Even today Vikram can’t have chana or any dish with it. He can’t have most of the yellow items in a Gujarati kitchen.

Since his asthma was so intense we had no clue how long he would live, so we did not think much about his education. My father-in-law thought even if he survives, he won’t pass the 12th standard. He was always in and out of hospitals. But somehow, God saved him.

IMAGE: Dr Vikram Patel’s parents, Harshad and Bharti Patel. Photograph: Reuben NV/Rediff.com

During his childhood he needed to be given an injection every day, and had the strictest possible diet restrictions. Most items in my kitchen were not acceptable to him. When we returned from Belgium to our Marine Drive home in Mumbai, he was admitted to the Campion school where he excelled. In fact, in Belgium, where the medium of instruction was French, Vikram learnt the language very fast. He would mostly top his class in all subjects.

What was unique about Vikram was that although he was sick, he never harassed me. Initially I was very strict with him to ensure that he studied. But when I saw he was sick all the time, hardly eating anything, I left him alone to make his own schedule.

He had always wanted to be a doctor. Seeing his physical condition everyone would laugh at his dream. How could a seriously ill boy, who may not even live long enough, become a doctor? But Vikram was determined. He would bag all the prizes in school in science, math, geography etc.

He passed the 12th standard on the merit list. He had a permanent handicap because he could not participate in sports as he was sick, so he never got that added advantage of extra marks. Due to breathing problems he could not run. I remember how Vikram was upset in the morning when his 12th standard result was due. He said, ‘Ma, I will get less marks because sports marks will not be added to my grand total. I will get less than 98%.’

When he was admitted for the MBBS he went to do his internship in Goa where his friend Gauri, who is now his wife, gave him the form for the Rhodes Scholarship. He filled it although I was sure that Vikram won’t get in because of his physical condition.

Vikram shared with me his plan, but I didn’t share it with the family. My husband Harshad and I were delighted when Vikram came back from Goa and said he wanted to go to Jamshedpur to meet Rusi Mody of Tata Sons who was to conduct the Rhodes Scholarship interview along with some other well-known people. It was very big news for me.

My son, who could only plan his life one day at a time, had been selected for an interview along with 15 others. Six people including Mody were on the panel. The selection process went on for four days.

Vikram is essentially a simple person. Even though he has asthma, he never allows a coolie to handle his luggage, he manages his own bags. He was asked to wear a suit to one event for the scholarship process, so his father got someone’s suit for him. He doesn’t wear a suit even now. Till he got his MBBS degree he had not worn a suit. Till then he never even had his own shirt! He would wear his grandpa and father’s old shirts. He wore slippers for a long, long time.

I still remember how Vikram called from Jamshedpur to say, ‘Ma, I got all six votes (of the selectors panel)! It was a record for the Rhodes Scholarship process in India then. I went down on my knees to thank Thakorji (Lord Krishna) profusely.

Vikram was so sick and he was suffering so much that sometimes I would plead to Thakorji to please take him away, I could not bear to see his pain. We had no hope for him. Even my mother had lost hope.

In Belgium nobody was ready to admit him while my daughters were accepted everywhere. My mother could not help me much in bringing him up as he was so sick.

Education is very important for me, I never allowed my children to ignore their studies. I got married at an early age. I had a degree from Sophia College and wanted to pursue my career, but my mother-in-law told me to leave aside advance studies and manage the household instead. I told all my three children that I would be rigid about ensuring that all of them study well.

Once you study, stand on your own feet and show me your first salary after which I will not come in your way. I will see to it that you marry the person you want.

I strongly believed that the future lies in good education. We never had huge amounts of money, my husband Harshad was a professional, not a businessman. What would my children do without money to invest in them? So I wanted them to be well educated.

My in-laws and other relatives from Dharmaj (a town in Gujarat) were conservative, but my faith in education was strong. My elder daughter Natasha did her MPhil from JNU. She was selected by the French government for a doctorate at Sorbonne University. She now works in London for a multinational bank, heading a department. My younger daughter Sheena stood first in Maharashtra in her final MA exams; her subject was French literature. She is in Paris right now.

Vikram was in Goa for many years, but for his son Farai’s studies, they have got a house in Delhi. My grandchildren are doing excellently in their studies.

Our family was clean in money matters. My father-in-law and husband earned money the legitimate way. We never even earned interest from investments. Vikram once informed us that a Mumbai medical college offered seats for Rs 2 lakhs (Rs 200,000) each. My father-in-law got angry and scolded him, ‘Do you want me to pay Rs 2 lakhs for your future? Go inside your room and don’t show me your face!’ It was against his principle to pay for education. My father-in-law did not even allow tuitions, he believed a good school is your tuition.

After hearing that, Vikram immediately left with his sister for Lonavla. In the late afternoon we received a telegram and I was scared. We always lived in constant fear of getting bad news about his health. I sat at the table before opening it, as I thought it may be about Vikram’s health, he was so weak. I thought the telegram was from my daughter in Lonavla. But it read, ‘Congratulations! Vikram Patel is in merit list!’

I was overwhelmed, my son who had dim hopes of surviving since many years, had made it as a topper. My son didn’t need money for education, he made it on his own.

Vikram, as I said, is a simple man. He hardly watched TV when growing up. He doe not SMS, but calls me. He is not addicted to Twitter or Facebook. All the time he writes, writes and writes. There are many papers to his credit.

He did his degree in psychiatry and his PhD as well. When his wife Gauri was studying, he managed the home and kitchen. Both of them stayed in Zimbabwe for three years for a project. While studying they had no money at all.

We never expected such high recognition like being nominated to Time magazine’s 100 most influential people list. After doing his MBBS he saw the malpractices in the medical profession and is dead against it. So he decided to not practise, but serve the poor by taking up teaching.

My son has travelled to many, many, villages. He has noted that in villages there are no psychiatrists and people suffer mental disorders silently. In Goa he trained local girls and boys. He developed the manual at Sangath to handle such cases. Even without setting up hospitals and dispensaries, he helped the local people treat their relatives and neighbours who were suffering from mental disorders.

He started out in a small corner provided by a local hospital where he had done his internship. He started very small, with just a table and few chairs and had some four, five poor men and women to help. He took me there to show what he was going to do. He wanted to train, for free, poor people to treat mental disorders in villages. We had no money to invest.

When I saw his table and chair in Goa I wondered, ‘How will he ever come up in life?’ Vikram asked me, ‘Ma, you are thinking of my future?’ I asked him ‘Who will give you money?’ He worked step by step. He got so much recognition for his work that his institution was awarded the best NGO. He worked with families of rape victims, suicide cases and took interest in settling them.

WHO wanted his medical manual for mental health. As long as you distribute it for free, he told WHO, you can translate it into as many languages as you want. It was distributed in 70 countries.

Vikram has retained his Indian passport as he wants to settle down only in India. Even now he has to follow diet restrictions. He has very weak eyesight, it’s a hereditary problem. He can’t eat dhoklas or khandvis. Gauri doesn’t store grams in her house. In his early days most times I gave him mixed vegetable soup and fish.

I am a believer of Pushti Marg (of the Vaishnav sect). My son always greeted me with ‘Ma, Jai Shri Krishna’ whenever he called me. I ensured that he accepted the Brahma-Sambandh (initiation into the Pushti Marg). It is a sacred procedure(external link) of the Pushti Marg sect. He did it when he was young. He believed in all these at a young age, but doesn’t do all this now. He stopped suddenly. He even stopped saying ‘Jai Shri Krishna.’ I didn’t say anything.

Some years ago he said he wanted five minutes with me. He then sat down with me and asked why I had not questioned him about why he had stopped saying ‘Jai Shri Krishna.’ Vikram then narrated his sorrowful experience at the KEM hospital (the King Edward Memorial hospital in parel, north-central Mumbai, one of Mumbai’s leading civic hospitals).

One day he said he got the body of a married woman for post-mortem. He was surprised to see that she was still a virgin. He then found out from her husband that they lived in a single room with a large family, including the in-laws. After marriage they could never get any privacy. They had no time, no money and no place to meet privately and consummate their marriage.

One day, the couple decided to go to Juhu beach for some privacy. That evening, they were robbed by goons and in the scuffle the wife died before they could rape her. Vikram asked himself, ‘Where is god? What was the crime of that woman?’

He has started saying ‘Jai Shri Krishna’ again.

Sheela Bhatt / Rediff.com

Source…www.refiff.com

Natarajan

Message for the Day…”People Tend to Forget their Inherent Divinity…”

The Supreme Lord can assume countless forms including that of the entire cosmos. Hence scriptures declare, “The entire cosmos is God’s dwelling. All are forms of the Divine.” Seeing a Divine Incarnation people doubt whether God has such miraculous powers while He has the same body as themselves. People who find it difficult to perceive their oneness with the Self (Atma), fail to recognise the Avatar. Such people reviled Lord Krishna as a philanderer and a thief. Such accusations, born of delusion, will never undermine His greatness. Lord Krishna’s leelas were intended to reveal His Divinity. People make the same mistake about themselves; forgetting their inherent Divinity, they identify themselves with their bodies. Lord Krishna’s Avatar is to teach mankind to transcend their body consciousness.

Sathya Sai Baba

Heartwarming photo of Danish officer and Syrian refugee goes viral….

The heartwarming image of a Danish officer playing with a Syrian refugee girl is going vi

The heartwarming image of a Danish officer playing with a Syrian refugee girl is going viral. Source: Reddit

AS the Syrian refugee crisis unfolded, we saw hundreds of pictures of people crossing the Danish border in search of a better life.

We have seen tragic images of men, women and children weeping and struggling as they set off on foot — walking down seemingly endless desert roads, or cramped among thousands of others and waiting to cross numerous borders.

But amid all the coverage of the horrific crisis comes a heart-warming picture of a Danish officer playing a game with a Syrian refugee girl, as a group of asylum seekers walk along the Danish-German border towards Sweden.

The beautiful interaction was caught on camera.

The beautiful interaction was caught on camera. Source: Reddit

The photo quickly went viral after it was shared on Reddit. Danish newspaper BTreported they were playing a game in which the officer would hold his wedding ring in one hand, and the girl would have to guess where it is.

Police assistant commissioner Knud Reinholdt told BT: “The picture shows that even though we have a task we must solve, we are also dealing with people who are in a difficult situation that nobody wants to be in.

“We have to deal with children who have experienced a lot of things and who have travelled far, so if we can make life a little easier for them, as in the pictures, then it’s worth it. It does not cost anything.”

With more than 380,000 migrants and refugees having crossed the Mediterranean since January, Europe is struggling to cope with the worst refugee crisis it has faced since World War II.

Syria’s civil war has accounted for half of all crossings so far this year, which claimed 240,000 lives after four and a half years.

Prime Minister Tony Abbott has announced that Australia will take 12,000 Syrian refugees within a year, on top of Australia’s current refugee intake.

Source….www.news.com.au

Natarajan

Lalbaugcha Raja’s magnificent statue unveiled ahead of Ganesh Chaturthi….

 

Picture credits: Yogen Shah

With Ganesh Chaturthi around the corner, the iconic statue of Lalbaugcha Raja was unveiled in the city of Mumbai. This year, the statue has an added touch of grandeur that symbolizes the joy and vigor of the festival.

 

The statue sits in a palace like set up, made of different coloured glasses that add to the surreal beauty of the magnificent work done by the craftsmen.

Source…..www.ibnlive.com

Natarajan

British Airways Burning Plane….

BRITISH AIRWAYS

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

Source….www.huffingtonpost.com.au

Natarajan

 

 

 

Can You Pronounce This 58-Letter Name? This Man Can, Like a Boss !!!

Can You Pronounce This 58-Letter Name? This Man Can, Like a Boss

Image Courtesy: Screengrab taken from video posted on Facebook by Channel 4 News

The only way to describe this Welsh weather presenter is ‘supercalifragilisticexpialidocious’. And if you think that’s a mouthful, you ain’t seen (or heard) nothing yet.

In a video that’s going viral with over 6.8 million views on Facebook, Channel 4 weatherman Liam Dutton talks about one of the warmest places in UK on September 9 in his forecast, and it just happens to be called, wait for it… Llanfairpwllgwyngyllgogerychwyrndrobwllllantysiliogogogoch.

No, that wasn’t a seizure-induced typing error – that’s actually the name of a large village in North West Wales.

The video shows Mr Dutton, calm as a breeze, pronouncing the giant name and then talking about the weather conditions in the area. He’s so collected, you’d think saying that name out loud is a cakewalk.

It really isn’t, even for those born Welsh, like actress Catherine Zeta-Jones who gave Mr Dutton 10 on 10. “Amazing job!! Some of those Welsh names are tricky!” she said on her Facebook page.

So watch Mr Dutton and then try saying ‘Llanfairpwllgwyngyllgogerychwyrndrobwllllantysiliogogogoch’ yourself. And while you’re at it, also try saying

‘Taumatawhakatangihangakoauauotamateaturipukakapikimaungahoronukupokaiwhenuakitanatahu.’     That’s the name of a hill in New Zealand.
https://video-lax3-1.xx.fbcdn.net/hvideo-xfp1/v/t43.1792-2/11959269_10153205021301939_1582746876_n.mp4?efg=eyJybHIiOjE1MDAsInJsYSI6MTAyNH0%3D&rl=1500&vabr=699&oh=d199490caa96079cd2f2a6ac3e50bcc9&oe=55F3CDAF
Source…..www,ndtv.com and http://www.facebook.com
Natarajan

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

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

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

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

Mohammed Taufiq has worked in Coffee House for 36 years

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

It was HIM indeed!

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

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

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

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

100-150 new customers come to Coffee House every day

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

He was my trainer, friend and guide.

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

Coffee House at College Street

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

Photographs: Abhiroop Dey Sarkar.

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

Natarajan

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

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

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

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

MA

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

Natarajan