A Tribal Woman from MP Has Been Saving Forests Since 7 Years. Now She Will Teach the World …

Ujiyaro Bai, a tribal woman from Pondi village in Madhya Pradesh will be addressing the UN World Forestry Congress in South Africa. Ujiyaro has been the force behind leading a movement against tree logging in MP since the past 7 years. Here’s more.

Ujiyaro Bai, a tribal woman from Madhya Pradesh has spent several years working for the conservation of forests in the state. She has been leading the residents of Pondi village, inspiring them to do their bit in making sure that the green covers around them do not recede.

And finally her hard work is getting the recognition it deserves. Ujiyaro has been invited to attend the World Forestry Congress (WFC) to be held from September 7 to 11 in Durban, South Africa.

ujiyaro

Source: Flickr

Ujiyaro, who belongs to the Baiga tribe, started her fight to save forests, seven years back. This was after she saw markings on some trees during her regular visit to the village for collecting leaves. Disturbed by the fact that the trees will be logged, she waited at the location and raised an alarm when some contractors started logging. She called in all the villagers. Since then she has dedicated her life to preserve the natural forests around the Baiga Chakka belt.

Her efforts soon picked up pace when other women got inspired by her work and started an awareness drive to save the trees and warn people about forest fires.

The 2015 WFC will bring many foresters and forest supporters together from around the world, and Ujiyaro will get a chance to share her views with them. The theme this year is Forest and People which will focus on “investing in a Sustainable Future”. Here’s more about the event.

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

Natarajan

 

Thalassemia Could Not Stop Her from Achieving Her Dream of Becoming a Novelist…. Meet This Dynamo….

Jyoti is a thalassemia patient. But, she says, she is more than an illness—she believes in her identity as a novelist, a blogger, a speaker, and a woman.

Jyoti’s childhood was different in many ways. She remembers reading books under a small lamp while her sisters slept. She also remembers going for regular blood transfusion while her friends went to school.

Jyoti Arora was three months old when she was detected with thalassemia, which was long before she understood the full meaning of her ailment. Her parents, though shell shocked, wanted Jyoti to have a happy and fulfilling childhood.

jyoti1

They sent her to the same school that all the neighbourhood children went to. Her school was disrupted often, and for days together, when she had to be admitted to the hospital.

This continued for a few years and when Jyoti was in Class 7, she had to drop out of school. This was a huge setback. But Jyoti was not going to let her illness win over her. She not only completed her school through correspondence but also got a Master’s in English and Applied Psychology.

Jyoti loved reading. Books were her best friends and she devoured every genre; she would submerge herself in classics that were written hundreds of years ago. She would dream about stories, about writing stories, about other children reading her stories. While thalassemia stunted her growth and regular blood transfusions increased the iron content in her body, what did not change was her love for books. She started nurturing a dream, a dream to write her own book.

Jyoti started her professional career as an English tutor, while simultaneously writing articles for a couple of magazines. After that, she worked for a few years as a freelance writer and content developer. Her primary role was to abridge classics and make them suitable for pre-teens to read. She also wrote fiction/adventure books for children. After working in the freelancing space, Jyoti took up full time employment with a US-based recruitment firm where she was awarded the best employee of the year award for 2014.

The battle with thalassemia continued. However, there was no stopping Jyoti. She was convinced that her soul lies in writing and her first novel — Dream’s Sake — was published in the year 2011. –

The novel is based on the psychological conflict of physically challenged people. She went on to self-publish her second novel — Lemon Girl — in the year 2014. The theme of Lemon Girl is women’s abuse and oppression. Both her novels have garnered positive reviews from readers as well as critics. While her love for reading and writing is second to none, she is fascinated by technology too, and writes about various gadgets and products at http://www.technotreats.com.

Jyoti’s undefeatable grit and go-getter attitude have won her many laurels. She was recently invited to be a speaker at an event on World Thalassemia Day on May 8, 2015, which incidentally is also her birth date.

Jyoti used that platform as an opportunity to talk about thalassemia, and today advocates awareness about thalassemia on various other forums. –

Jyoti feels that even today, awareness about thalassemia and its prevention is minimal. Thalassemia is a genetically inherited disease, is not infectious, and cannot be passed on from one individual to another through personal or any other contact. In India, about 3.9 percent of people are carriers. Thalassemia Major patients require life long blood transfusions and costly medicines for their survival. Often, the blood transfusion needs to be carried out on monthly or even fortnightly basis.

Apart from regular blood transfusions and costly medicines, thalassemia patients are also given Desferal injections that need to be infused over a period of several hours. This means that the patient has to keep the injection and the infusion pump attached to the body over a period of ten-twelve hours, several days a week. The only treatment available for this disease is a bone marrow transplant, which is very expensive and risky.

While the treatment of thalassemia can get complicated and expensive, the best solution is to prevent the occurrence of the disease. In fact, a child can be Thalassemia Major only when both parents are Thalassemia Minors. The probability of the child being a Thalassemia Major in such a case is 25 percent and can be detected during the early stages of pregnancy.

Jyoti feels that society at large needs to accept and assimilate people like her in the mainstream. She is not sick or feeble or unintelligent just because she is a thalassemia patient. She, in fact, advocates the importance of considering herself equal to one and all. Jyoti feels that she is more than an illness—she believes in her identity as a novelist, a blogger and a woman.

For more information, write to Jyoti at: write2jyoti@gmail.com

About the author: Neha Dua is a graduate from St Stephen’s College, Delhi and completed her MBA degree from MDI, Gurgaon. She is currently working with a large Indian MNC bank. She is an avid reader, dance enthusiast and likes to write. Her personal blog can be accessed at: http://www.allexpressions.blogspot.com. In her pursuit to write beyond her personal experiences, she has volunteered to be a writer of happy and inspiring stories of The Better India. –

Source….Neha Dua …. http://www.thebetterindia.com

Natarajan

ஆஸ்திரேலியா ஸ்பெல்லிங் பீ போட்டி: கலக்கிவரும் தமிழகத்தைச் சேர்ந்த இரட்டையர்கள்….

ஆஸ்திரேலியாவில் ஸ்பெல்லீங் பீ நிகழ்ச்சியில் தமிழகத்தைச் சேர்ந்த இரட்டையர்கள் பட்டையை கிளப்பி வருகின்றனர்.

ஆஸ்திரேலியா தொலைக்காட்சி நிறுவனம் ஒன்று ஸ்பெல்லீங் பீ என்ற நீண்ட ஆங்கில வார்த்தைகளின் எழுத்துகளைச் சரியாக சொல்லும் போட்டியை நடத்திவருகிறது. இதில் நாடு முழுவதிலும் இருந்து 3000 குழந்தைகள் கலந்துகொண்டார்கள். மூன்று கட்ட தேர்வுகளுக்குப் பிறகு 50 குழந்தைகள் இறுதி போட்டிக்கு தேர்வு செய்யப்பட்டனர். தற்போது இவர்களில் இருந்து 12 பேர் மட்டும் இறுதி போட்டிக்கு தேர்வு செய்யப்பட்டுள்ளனர்.

இந்த 12 பேரில் தமிழகத்தின் வேலுரை பூர்வீகமாகக் கொண்ட இரட்டையர்களான ஹார்பிதா மற்றும் ஹார்பித்தாவும் அடங்குவார்கள். இருவரும் 50 ஆயிரம் வார்த்தைகளுக்கு மேல் தெரிந்து வைத்துள்ளனர். இறுதி போட்டி இன்னும் 2 வாரங்களில் நடைபெறவுள்ளது.

இது பற்றி இரட்டையர்களான ஹார்பிதா மற்றும் ஹார்பித் ஆகிய இருவரும் கூறும் போது இதற்காக நாங்கள் எந்தவித சிறப்பு பயிற்சிக்கும் செல்லவில்லை. நான்கு வயது முதல் வீட்டில் அப்பாவின் ஐ.பேடில் ஆங்கில வார்த்தைகளை உச்சரிக்கும் விளையாட்டை விளையாடுவோம் எனத் தெரிவித்தனர்.

இவர்களின் சாதனை குறித்து தந்தை அண்ணாமலை தெரிவிக்கையில், குழந்தைகளுக்கு சுதந்திரம் தந்து அவர்களை சொந்தமாக கற்றுக்கொள்ள அனுமதிக்க வேண்டும் என்றார்.

Source….Parvathi Arunkumar, சிட்னி…www.dinamani.com and http://www.newindianews.com

Natarajan

These ” Hunger Heroes ” are Feeding the Needy ….With the Excess and Wasted Food …”

It all started with Ankit Kawatra getting upset because food for a thousand people was wasted at a wedding. So he created a network of 750 Hunger Heroes in 20 cities, who have fed 2.5 lakh hungry people already.

“It was a fancy party at my friend’s place. The buffet had over 30 varieties of dishes and sweets. The hosts left no stone unturned to make sure the party was a big success. Being a close friend, I decided to stay back after the party and help them clean up. And I saw so many plates of food getting wasted. The caterer just dumped all the leftover food in a huge garbage bag and threw it away. We initially thought of donating the food to the needy but didn’t know how and where,” recalls Kriti Gupta from Jaipur.

There are many of us like Kriti who often don’t know what to do with food leftover from a wedding or party. Ankit Kawatra from Delhi was one such person. Until he attended a wedding where he saw food that could feed 1000 people getting wasted.

The sight of so much food being thrown away gave him the idea of starting a service that would pick up leftover food from events and donate it to the needy.

Feeding India team has provided over 2.5 lakh meals across India.

Feeding India team has provided over 2.5 lakh meals across India.

We sometimes give money to the homeless to buy food or even buy it ourselves for them. But the idea behind this service was not to buy food but use what is already available in abundance,” says Ankit.

The idea soon got converted into action and Ankit launched Feeding India in August 2014. The plan was simple — to collect excess food from parties, events and weddings and then distribute it in shelter homes.

He started by getting volunteers, or Hunger Heroes, as he named them. These heroes were selected from different locations in the city.

Ankit then launched a 24×7 helpline that people could call whenever they wanted to donate excess food.

The Hunger Heroes make sure no food gets wasted.

The Hunger Heroes make sure no food gets wasted.

But this wasn’t enough. We needed a way to get a regular supply of food, which wasn’t possible with just launching a helpline,” recalls Srishti Jain, one of the core members of Feeding India.

Therefore, for a more systematic approach, Feeding India partnered with various catering companies that would inform Ankit and his team in advance about various events. And at the end of the event, they would give them a call informing them about the amount of excess food available.

The Hunger Heroes who lived near that particular location would collect the food and, if possible, distribute it the same night in shelter homes. In case the food cannot be distributed the same day or night, it was kept in cold storage and donated the next day.

“We mostly distribute it immediately after collecting it. There are various shelter homes open 24×7,” says Srishti. The Feeding India team also has a team of experts who test the food’s quality before it is donated.

We have a very systematic approach which makes the entire process very simple and doable. People can call us anytime and we will be there to collect the food,” says Srishti.

Feeding India has now built a strong network of over 750 Hunger Heroes in 20 cities of India; they do not hesitate in performing their duties, even at odd hours.

Feeding India works in over 20 cities of India.

Feeding India works in over 20 cities of India.

“There was a time when we had to collect food for over 5,000 people in one night. We did not even have so many containers. We had to do two trips to get all the food and our Hunger Heroes got back home at 5 am. This is the kind of dedication everyone shows,” says Srishti.

Feeding India does not have any external financial support and currently runs on the personal money of the members. They do ask the caterers and event managers to pay for transport if possible.

This has been a challenge. The caterers and managers say: ‘We are giving you food, why should we also pay for the transport?’ If they don’t agree to pay, we bear the cost,” says Srishti.

Thanks to the commitment of the team, Feeding India has donated over 2.5 lakh meals across India.

To get regular access to food, the organization now partners with different corporate houses (to pick up excess food from their canteens and office parties) and restaurants. Feeding India also organises events to spread more awareness about the cause and to help people understand the value of excess food.

Ankit and his team even got India’s star chefs on board for one of their campaigns, where they talked about their love for food and how it should be used for a good cause.

“We organize small events where we make people pledge that they will not waste food. Through these small interventions we are trying to change the mindset of the people,” says Srishti.

In the future, Feeding India wants to reach out to over 50 cities in India and get more corporate partnerships so that the hungry can get food.

A 24x7 helpline number can be used to put the excess food to a better use.

We make sure that the needy get proper meals; very often people give biscuit packets and bread and think that they have donated food. But this is not enough. We want to make sure every homeless person gets a proper meal,” concludes Srishti.

If you would like to become a Hunger Hero and work with the team at Feeding India, check out their website, join their Facebook page or mail them at – feedingindia2025@gmail.com

Call the helpline for Feeding India to donate any excess food that you may have – 098711 78810

Source….Shreya  Pareek … http://www.the better india.com

Natarajan

Meet the Two Security Guards Who are Giving Everyone Life Goals….

Meet the Two Security Guards Who are Giving Everyone Life Goals

Two separate posts on Facebook describe the inspiring security guards – Balinder Singh on the left and Sagar Ashokrao Bhagat on the right.

If finding some kind of Monday motivation has been your goal, this is where you park your search. We’d like to introduce you to two very inspiring security guards – one who uses the streetlight outside the ATM he guards to study, and another, an engineer by qualification, who reads books on Java programming while manning his post at the entrance of a housing complex.

Facebook users Harsh Vats and Sreejesh Krishnan from Haryana and Mumbai respectively narrate their experiences of meeting these two inspiring security guards in separate posts.
Harsh Vats bumped into 20-year-old Balinder Singh, reading a book under a street light, when he went to an ATM to withdraw cash before Raksha Bandhan.

Curious, he asked the security guard what he was reading. Turns out he was preparing for a set of upcoming entrance exams.

Harsh asked Balinder why he chose to sit under the street light and not inside the well-lit ATM, which also had air conditioning. The young guard informed him that the AC was turned off post-midnight, and that he didn’t really mind sitting outside.

Very moved by the 20-year-old, Harsh posted on Facebook asking people to share study material to help the security guard further his dream. So far, his post has been shared by more than 10,000 people.

Like Balinder, Sagar Ashokrao Bhagat, a security guard at Woodland Heights in Mumbai’s Chandivali, has huge aspirations.

In his post, Sreejesh Krishnan explains he met Sagar when he noticed him reading a book stealthily placed between the complex’s vehicle entry register. It was a book on Java programing.
Sagar informed Sreejesh that he was in fact an engineer with a BE degree and was working as a security guard “to keep things going” while he looked for a suitable job.

An impressed Sreejesh also asked him for a resume. Many of those who’ve seen the post have requested Sagar’s CV so as to help him a better job.

Source……….www.ndtv.com and facebook
Natarajan

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

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

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

1947-ல் கூகிள், யூடியூப், ஃபேஸ் புக்……!!!

ஃபேஸ் புக், வாட்ஸ் அப் போன்ற சோஷியல் மீடியாவின் காலம் இது. ஏதாவது ஒண்ணு நடந்தா போதும் அடுத்த நொடியே அது தொடர்பான கலாய்ப்புகள் சமூக மீடியாவை நிறைத்துவிடுகின்றன. இப்பவே இப்படி இருந்தால் நாடு விடுதலை அடைவதற்கு முன்னதாகவே இந்த இணையம் வளர்ச்சி பெற்றிருந்தால் எப்படி இருந்திருக்கும்? இப்போது முன்னணியில் இருக்கும் ஃபேஸ்புக், வாட்ஸ் அப், ஃபிளிப்கார்ட், இன்ஸ்டாகிராம், கூகுள் போன்ற பல தளங்கள் அந்தக் காலத்திலேயே அறிமுகமாகியிருந்தால் எப்படி இருந்திருக்கும்? நினைக்கவே சுவாரசியமாக இருக்கிறதா?

இந்த எண்ணமே சுவாரசியம் தருவதால்தான் இந்த ஐடியாவை அடிப்படையாகக் கொண்டு, சுதந்திரத்துக்கு முன்னரே இணையம் வந்திருந்தால் எப்படி இருந்திருக்கும் என யோசித்திருக்கிறது இன்1947 என்னும் விளம்பர நிறுவனம். அப்போது இந்த இணையங்களில் எல்லாம் என்ன நடந்திருக்கும் என்று கற்பனை மவுஸைத் தட்டி யோசித்திருக்கிறார்கள். கூகுளில் எதைத் தேடியிருப்பார்கள், யூடியூபில் எந்தப் படத்தை அதிகம் பார்த்திருப்பார்கள், அன்று ஐஆர்டிசி வெப்சைட்டில் நிலை எப்படி இருந்திருக்கும்… இப்படி ஒவ்வொன்று குறித்தும் சுவாரசியமான கிரியேடிவ் டிசைன்களை உருவாக்கியுள்ளது அந்நிறுவனம்.

அவற்றை வசீகரமான படங்களாகக் கொண்ட ஒரு ஆல்பத்தை உருவாக்கித் தனது ஃபேஸ்புக் பக்கத்தில் பதிவிட்டது இன்1947. இதற்கு பெருவாரியான வரவேற்பு கிடைத்திருக்கிறது. ஆயிரக்கணக்கானோர் இந்தப் பக்கத்தை விரும்பியதுடன் சகட்டுமேனிக்கு ஷேர் செய்து தங்கள் சந்தோஷத்தை மற்றவர்களுடன் பகிர்ந்துகொண்டார்கள். அந்தப் படங்களில் சில இங்கே இடம்பெற்றிருக்கின்றன.

முழு ஆல்பத்தையும் காண: https://goo.gl/H0auG2

Source….www.tamil.thehindu.com

Natarajan

For the First Time in India, a President Will Become a Teacher for a Day …

Students of XI and XII standards from Dr Rajendra Prasad Sarvodaya Vidyalaya, Delhi, will be a part of a unique classroom this September. They will be taught by President Pranab Mukherjee, who is going to step into the shoes of a teacher for a day. It will be a memorable class for these students, indeed.

Some students in Delhi will get a chance to learn from a very special teacher on September 4 – the eve of Teachers’ Day.

A guru (teacher) much like the soft and skilful hands of a potter, moulds the destiny of shishya (student). The student with devotion and humility acknowledges the debt of the teacher. Society respects and recognizes the merit and scholarship of the teacher,” said President Pranab Mukherjee in his address to the nation before Independence Day this year. And very soon, he will become the first Indian President to wear a teacher’s cap.

president

Source: Flickr

The President will teach these students in a joint class held for both the standards. The lecture will be conducted on the ‘knowledge floor’ of the school which is located in the Presidential Estate. He will also address about 100 teachers after the class.

He gave consent for this idea after it was proposed by Delhi Chief Minister Arvind Kejriwal, and Deputy CM Manish Sisodia. This step is a part of Delhi Government’s programme called ‘Be a Teacher’, in which famous personalities from different fields will take lessons in government schools and will inspire students about the various career options.

“The President of India will take class, as a teacher, for a single day as a mark of respect to the teachers in Delhi Government schools. We celebrate Teacher’s Day in honour of a teacher (S. Radhakrishnan), who became the President of our country. This will be yet another milestone when the first citizen of India will interact with the students and teach them the lessons of life,” said Manish Sisodia in a press conference.

This is the first time in India that any president will become a teacher for a day. Earlier, both Pranab Mukherjee and the late former President A. P. J. Abdul Kalam have met and interacted with students. Teachers’ Day will surely be a memorable one for these students who are getting an opportunity to interact with the President.

Source… Tanaya Singh ….  www. thebetterindia.com

Natarajan