A Crocodile Here Understands Who Is The Boss !!!

This young elephant got more than he bargained for when he ambled up to a water hole to slake his thirst.

Just moments after dipping his trunk in the water, it was grabbed by a hungry crocodile.

But luckily for the elephant, the croc had bitten off considerably more than he could chew – and the astonished bull elephant was able to whip his trunk out of the reptile’s jaws with no more than a few cuts to remember the encounter by.

The young elephant doesn't appear to see the waiting crocodile as he ambles over to the watering hole
The young elephant doesn’t appear to see the waiting crocodile as he ambles over to the peaceful watering hole in the South Luangwa National park in Zambia

The remarkable scene was captured by amateur wildlife photographer Ian Salisbury, 62, at the South Luangwa National park in Zambia.

Mr Salisbury, general manager of a safari lodge, said: ‘One of our guests had seen a crocodile try a similar attack on another elephant earlier in the day so, camera in hand, I went to see if there might be a repeat performance.

‘The action was so quick – a couple of seconds – and fortunately I had the camera pointing in the right direction. Having spent 30 years in the African bush, I realise how lucky I was to catch the scene.’

SNAP! The crocodile grabs hold of the elephant's trunk, but it soon becomes clear that he has bitten off a lot more than he can chew

SNAP! The crocodile grabs hold of the elephant’s trunk, but it soon becomes clear that he has bitten off a lot more than he can chew by grabbing the huge beast

The startled young elephant soon makes light work of escaping from the hungry crocodile's jaws

The startled young elephant soon makes light work of escaping from the hungry crocodile’s jaws, but by the startled look on it’s face you can tell he had a shock

Mr Salisbury said the elephant ‘fled rapidly into the bush’ after the attack.

The incident has remarkable echoes of Rudyard Kipling’s children’s story, The Elephant’s Child, which tells how the animals got their trunks after a crocodile grabbed a baby elephant’s nose and kept pulling it.

In a scene reminiscent of the Rudyard Kipling story How The Elephant Got His Trunk, the startled mammal gives the sneaky crocodile a fright

In a scene reminiscent of the Rudyard Kipling story How The Elephant Got His Trunk, the startled mammal gives the sneaky crocodile a fright to show him who’s boss…

source:::: story of  Emili Hall in mailonline.com UK…Photos by…Ian Salisbury wildlife photographer

natarajan

 

Humour In Civil Service Too … “Spoke with File ..No Reply From File ” !!!

source :::: Story ” Whoever Said Babus are Humourless Bunch ”  By S.R.Raghuram …in The Hindu

natarajan

 T

he bureaucracy in India in perceived as being wooden and bureaucrats are often accused of lacking in a sense of humour. My experience as civil servant in the Indian Revenue Service was, however, quite contrary. My colleagues in the Revenue and other Services often displayed sparks of humour and sparkle of wit to prove that they were doing an effective job of cutting red tape down to size in the file-strewn corridors of power.

The fun started early in the IAS Training School itself (1959). Two IAS probationers, one reed-thin and the other with a pronounced paunch happened to be together. The supercilious “Reed-Thin” (he later became a Governor) addressed the other as “Beer-Barrel” only to be shot down with the stinging retort — “I would much rather be a beer barrel than a Chinese noodle”!

At the introduction session on the first day of training, an IIT alumnus, who had been selected to the Indian Defence Accounts Servcice (IDAS) said, he had given up his post in the Indian Railway Service of Engineers (IRSE) to come over to the Civil Service stream. When someone in the gathering commented that the loss to the Railways was a gain to the defence services, our Director, A.N.Jha, retorted deadpan that it could as well be the other way round!

Later on, in the Income Tax Training College, during the new batch introduction, when M.P. Agarwal of my batch announced his name, Director, R.D. Shah interjected and asked him whether he was related to P.K. Agarwal of the previous batch. Prompt came M.P’s reply — “Not yet”!

One Assistant Commissioner who had a compulsive urge to refer to judicial pronouncements, whether relevant or not, once noted on a file that came to him for approval — “The ITO may please peruse 27 ITR 273 with profit before finalising the assessment order”. The ITO sent back the file with the note — “Perused 27 ITR 273. No profit derived, order passed.” The file went up and came back without any comment!

The same Assistant Commissioner, who was adept at avoiding responsibility, once made a noting — “Please speak with file”. The file came back in double quick time with the noting — “Spoke with file. File did not reply. For further orders please.” That put paid to further such demands.

Mr. K.M.S. Reddy, who was Income Tax Commissioner in Bangalore, was a Bar-At Law. Once his steno misspelt his letterhead with the legend — “K.M.S. Reddy, Bad-At-Law.” The sporting Mr. Reddy caught the error (or was it?!) and admonished the steno: “I say Menon, I know and you know about my knowledge of law. But should you broadcast it to the entire world?” Poor Menon, he did not know where to hide his face.

When Mr. J.P. Singh was Income Tax Commissioner in Madras, he had two PAs — one an over-clever person and the other, a less intellectually endowed but pleasant officer who had come through the sports quota. Mr. Singh would always introduce them together to visitors, saying “One is wise and the other one is otherwise.” The discerning visitors could always make out which attribute referred to whom!

What takes the cake for the most ingenious circumvention of the red tape was what my IRAS batchmate, R. Srinivasan, did when he was Railways Personnel Manager at Guntakal Junction. As the Railway School did not have a budget provision for buying musical instruments for the school band, he asked the engineering department to make a requisition for pipes and drums and used the money to get flutes, clarinets, drums, tablas, etc!

(The writer’s email: sr_raghuram@hotmail.com)

Dinner to Muslim Youths …By Mahaperiavar in 1921!!!

What you will be reading below is assorted selections from a book (“ MAHAPERIYAVAL VIRUNDHU”) written by the great author Sri Ra. Ganapathi  :These cover various incidents showing the universality and greatness of Maha Periyavaa.

Even during the 1920s ParamAchArya hosted a dinner for the Muslims, whose sense of unity and patriotism ran high in those days.  Two hundred Muslim youths from an Islamic Youth Forum performed an exemplary service in the Mahamaham festival of 1921 in Kumbakonam. ParamAchArya, who was camping at Patteesvarm nearby, heard about it and sent some maTham officials to bring the Muslim youths to him. The youths were very happy that Shankaracharya had called them to his presence. They stood before him showing utmost reverence.

ParamAchArya praised their seva and heard the details about their Forum. He inquired their personal details such as native place, education, occupation and family of all the two hundred youths individually, and made everyone of them immensely happy. He also presented a silver cup as a memento from Kanchi maTham for their seva.

Like the cherry on the ice cream, ParamAchArya ended the interview with a tasty, three-course dinner to the youths.

*** *** ***

In the year 1924, Kaveri and Kollidam were overflowing with floods that threatened to merge them into a single river. Tiruvaiyaru and its surroundings were the worst affected by the floods. At that time, for nearly fifteen days, cartloads of cooked food were sent from Kanchi maTham for the thousands of poor people in the area. The food was served by the Congress workers under the supervision of Lawyer Sarangapani Iyengar, leader of the Tiruvaiyaru Congress Committee. 

The daily culinary needs of SrimaTham were reduced to the minimum, in order to use the stored provisions for feeding the poor. They worshipped the great sage who fed them as God.   The press praised this social service as the largest till then by a Sanatana Religious Institution.

*** *** ***

During the last days of the year 1931, the persecution of the Congress workers by the British government was at its peak. People and organizations were warned of stern action against any support for the Congress members. 
ParamAchArya was camping at Arani in the North Arcot district. A group of Congress members wanted to meet him. The maTham officials informed the sage that his meeting the Congress workers might create problems for SrimaTham.   ParamAchArya heard their apprehensions with concern and then said calmly, “Ask all the members of the group to come here. Also arrange for feeding them from SrimaTham.”

The stunned maTham officials carried out the orders of the sage with consternation, but there was no problem from the government.  When the Manager brought the happy news of no reaction from the British government, ParamAchArya said, “If I were to close the doors on people who want to meet me, I would not be fit to carry the title Jagatguru and sit on the throne of this Peetam.”

*** *** ***

ParamAchArya used to quote the Tamil saying ‘Feed everyone, without any distinction’ (yArkkum idumin, avar ivar ennnanmin) and explain that no distinction of any kind must be entertained in offering food. He would be delighted to explain the Keralite tradition of feeding even the thieves at night! This custom existed in the place called Cherukkunnam, Kerala, in the Annapurani temple. After feeding the bhaktas in the temple, food packets were prepared and kept tied to the trees in the night, for the use of any prowling thieves. 

ParamAchArya also took delight in explaining the reference in the Sagam Literature of how the Chera king Udhiyan Cheraladhan earned the name Perum Sotru Cheraladhan (the king who was the chief host) by feeding the opposite camps of the Pandavas and the Kauravas during the Mahabharata war.

Kannappan the hunter fed Shiva Mahadev. Guhan the hunter fed Sri Rama. Here, the hunters named the Senjus of the Srisailam forest area were fed by the Paramacharaya!

During the 1934s, when the road transport facilities were very scanty, ParamAchArya was traveling with his entourage in the desolate forests of Srisailam. Somewhere on the way, they came across the Senju hunters. Mistaking them for their foes, the hunters raised their bow and arrows initially, but when they saw the sage with hisdivya tejas, they realized their mistake and became friendly.

The people who came to oppose their passage became their security guards, carrying their luggage and watching over their camps at night time. Only after safely seeing off ParamAchArya and his entourage at their next destination, the hunters assembled before them to take leave.

ParamAchArya ordered the manager to give them some cash, but they refused to touch the money. The leader of the group said something to the manager, who nodded his head in disapproval and spread out his hands. 

Paramachara snapped his fingers and called the manager to attention: “What is it that he asks for and you refuse?”

“They want to show their dancing skills before PeriyavA”.

“So you told them that I can’t see their dance because it was your opinion as manager that it was beneath the dignity of SrimaTham.”

There was not any trace of anger in ParamAchArya’s words. The manager was silent.

And the ParamAchArya, who would not witness the performance of even the great and popular dance artistes, gave them permission to dance before him, with a condition: that while any of their males could dance, only those females who hadn’t attained puberty could join the males in dance.

ParamAchArya asked them, “you might have different types of dances to suit different occasions: one for Swami (God), one for victory, one for sports and so on. What type of dance are you going to perform now?”

They gave a telling reply: “We are going to perform the dance reserved only for the closest of our relatives.”

ParamAchArya witnessed their dance, blessed them, and hosted a nice dinner for them.

*** *** ***

ParamAchArya was travelling in the Kodavasal – Koradacherry route. On the way in Tirukklambur, the slum people met him and submitted their humble offerings.

ParamAchArya heard their welfare and woes. Unhurriedly, he discussed the details with the manager as to what SrimaTham could do to mitigate their woes, either in their own capacity or with the charity of affordable devotees.

The managers and the other officials started worrying about the ensuing delay for their next camp and the following pujas. The god of the poor, however, seated himself among them, and ordered dhotis and saris for every nandan – nandini from the local textile shop. If that shop didn’t have the required goods, ParamAchArya ordered them bought at Kodavasal. He also ordered prepartion of thick sambar rice under the shades of the trees.

The manager was worried that the two or three hours time spent in these activities would delay reaching their next camp and that it would be very tedious for PeriyavA to undertake the long puja thereafter.

When he started to express his feeings, ParamAchArya said simply, “this is also a puja.”

*** *** ***

Two years after his Varanasi trip, when ParamAchArya was returning, he had to camp for three days in the Kyonjersamastanam of the hilly areas. His heart overflew with campassion at the pitiable conditions of the tribals in the area. He told the manager, “for all the three days we stay here, we should arrange to feed them.”

The manager hesitated with a request, “Those people are over a hundred and fifty families. We don’t have the facilities to cook food here.”

“Then give them as uluppai“, replied the sage.

Giving as uluppai is giving supplies of food articles, vegetables and fruits. For three days the tribals enjoyed the bounty of SrimaTham.

In the same way, ParamAchArya ordered serving three days supplies to the suffering employees of a circus company in Ilayattankudi, that was closed down.

*** *** ***

It seems that there was only one occasion in the history of SrimaTham, when rice and other food supplies were carried on the back of the SrimaTham elephant! ParamAchArya, the udAra murti created history with such an incident, to fill the udarams of the poor harijan people.

It was November 1940. The village was heavily flooded when ParamAchArya reached Tiruchettankudi from Tirumarukal. News reached his ears that over five hundred harijans in the area were suffering, as a hailstorm lashed on.

ParamAchArya hastened the officials to rush them food supplies, but was informed that it was not possible for bullock carts to pass through the rain inundated roads.

“Then you send the supplies on the back of the elephant. This place is known as Ganapateesvaram,” said ParamAchArya, poining out the harmony. “So Pillaiyar will be happy that an elephant partakes the jana seva.”

*** *** ***

The dog, according to shastras is of a low birth. The Guardian of Shastra also extended his bounty to the dogs.

In the year 1927, a dog came to SrimaTham camp on its own and started keeping vigil. After his biksha was over, ParamAchArya ordered that the dog be fed. Strangely, after tasting the food from the maTham, the dog stopped accepting food from anyone else. 

The dog used to trot under the palanquin known as mena which carried ParamAchArya. Sometimes it would run between the massive, moving legs of the elephant! When the palanquin was parked, it would step aside to a distance and watch the sage descend and walk, wagging its tail.

At one time, the officials thought that the dog had become mad and ordered a servant to leave it in a village, about forty kilometers away from their camp. No sooner had the servant returned, than the dog also had got back to the camp! From that time, until its death, the dog kept vigil and also kept a vow not to take food until it had a darshan of ParamAchArya.

As he resumed his divine duties after a short rest following his biksha, ParamAchArya would first inquire if the dog was fed.

*** *** ***

There was an incident when ParamAchArya served food for an entire army of dogs.

He was observing chAturmAsyam at Vasanta Krishnapuram near Tirukkovalur in the year 1947. The peak of Tiruvannamalai hill, about twenty kilometers away, was visible from that place. ParamAchArya used to perform a puja for the mountain that was Lord Siva’s form at where he stayed, with a darshan of the peak.

During one such puja, when he was meditating, a dog came and put its mouth to the water in the kamandaluh. The people around were very much upset by this happening, and a devotee who was a retired government official, stoned the dog, which ran howling, and stopped at a safe distance. 

ParamAchArya’s eyes opened at the anxious hubbub. He looked at the people aroud him and ordered: “Collect all the available dishes from the houses of the agrahAram. Also bring bucketfuls of water.”

The volunteers group that included retired official went around and brought the food and water. As aramAchArya gestured, the dog that was standing at a distance came near and stopped hesitatingly. As he gestured a second time, soemthing very strange happened.

An army of dogs came from nowhere and calmly arranged themselves in a row, without showing any signs of hurry for the food that was before them. ParamAchArya offered food and water to the dogs through the retired official who had stoned the dog earlier.

“Life without God is like an unsharpened pencil 
– it has no point.”

source::::input from a friend of mine

natarajan

 

“OM ” Is Not Just A Mantra…But Also A Medicine…

Aum is medicine, not just mantra.

AumPramila Krishnan | Deccan Chronicle | Chennai::  Abdul Khader chants ‘Aum’ 30 times during his walk at Gill Nagar park every morning and swears it has significantly helped in healing his acute arthritic pain.

“I used to pray seated in a chair because of acute knee pain from arthritis acquired from long hours of doing business standing. Thanks to the yoga asanas, breathing exercises and the chanting of ‘Aum’, I am now able to kneel on the mat for my namaz five times a day,” said the 50-year-old grocer of MMDA colony in the city, talking excitedly about the wholesome healing experienced at the government yoga and naturopathy college hospital near Anna arch.

“When the doctors explained that chanting ‘Aum’ is not religious but provides therapeutic gain, I readily agreed to follow that. I am happy I did it,” Khader told Deccan Chronicle.

Dr Kanimozhi, assistant professor of yoga, says she had prescribed ‘Aum’ chanting for even cancer patients, along with other naturopathy medicines. “The chant controls the secretion of stress hormones and acts as a pain reliever. It is scientific as the chant creates a neuro and psycholinguist effect while a positive aura forms around your body when you do it.”

There are several patients at the hospital — including Muslims and Christians — who have benefited from chanting ‘Aum’, prescribed along with yoga asanas and nature healers, and gained relief from ailments such as pain, insomnia, stress, stuttering and other speech difficulties.

The case of 55-year-old Edwin, a senior army officer tormented by ankylosing spondylitis for over a year, is another example. He has healed from chanting ‘Aum’ and practising asanas and breathing exercises.

“Edwin’s case sheet reveals that after two months of practice, he could flex his joints and his sleep cycle got normal,” said Dr P. Prabhu, expressing happiness that more and more patients are turning to ‘Aum’ and other natural healers.

Courtesy: DC.
 source:::::input from a friend of mine ….
natarajan

Posted in Hindu HeritageHindu Scriptures and Hindu ResearchHindu way of Life | Tagged:  |

“When HE Stands Up For You…No one Can Stand against You ” !!!

Heaven and Hell
One day A violent samurai warrior with a reputation for provoking fights for no reason arrived at the gates of a Zen monastery and asked to speak to the master.
Without hesitating, the Master went to meet him.
‘They say that intelligence is more powerful than brute force,’ said the samurai. ‘Can you explain to me what heaven and hell are?’
Master said nothing.
‘You see?’ bellowed the samurai. ‘I could explain quite easily: to show someone what hell is, you just have to punch them. To show them what heaven is, you just have threaten them with terrible violence and then let them go.’
‘I don’t talk to stupid people like you,’ said the Zen master.
The blood rushed to the samurai’s head. His brain became thick with hatred.
‘That is hell,’ said the Master, smiling. ‘Allowing yourself to be upset by silly remarks.’
Taken aback by the monk’s courage, the samurai warrior softened.
‘And that is heaven,’ said the Master, inviting him in. ‘Not reacting to foolish
provocations.’
When you Kneel down in front of  Sai, He stands up for you and
when He stands up for you, No one can stand against you…     
May Sai bless us all with Patience so that we can feel the bliss of Heaven ,right here on this earth. 
source::H.Deepa in  http://debu7370.blogspot.com/
natarajan

Message For the Day…Make ” Namasmarana ” a Daily Habit….

Singing the glory of the Lord is highly sacred. When you sing the Names of the Lord (Namasmarana), the snakes of bad qualities will come out. Namasmarana is like the piped musical instrument (Nadhaswaram), that attracts the snakes of evil qualities and draws them out and away from you. You must repeat the Lord’s Name in order to get rid of your negativities. Sing unto Him from the depth of your hearts, without any inhibition, with total dedication. Only then you can experience divine bliss. Today the Universe is facing a lot of problems due to lack of this habit. Young or old, rich or poor, educated or otherwise, everyone must do Namasmarana. Make this habit the very breath of your life. Let each and every cell of your body be filled with the Divine Name. Nothing else can give you the bliss, courage and strength you derive from singing the Lord’s Glory. 

Sathya Sai Baba

 

விபூதி உருவான கதை !!!

namavali075

ஸ்ரீமகாலஷ்மிக்கு உகந்தது திருநீறு

 

பர்னாதன் என்பவன் உணவையும் தண்ணீரையும் மறந்தவனாக சிவனை நினைத்து கடும் தவம் புரிந்தான்.ஒருநாள் அவனுக்கு கடுமையான பசி எடுத்தது. தவம் கலைந்தது. கண்ணை திறந்தான். அப்போது அவனை சுற்றி சிங்கங்களும் புலிகளும் பறவைகளும் என பல வன உயிரினங்கள் யாவும் காவலுக்கு இருந்தது. பசியால் முகம் வாடி இருந்தவனை கண்ட பறவைகள் பழங்களை பறித்து பர்னாதன் முன் வைத்தது.

இது ஈனின் கருனையே என்று மகிழ்ந்து பசி தீர கனிகளை சாப்பிட்டு முடித்து மீண்டும் தவத்தை தொடர்ந்தான். இப்படியே பல வருடங்கள் கடந்தோடியது. தவத்தை முடித்து கொண்டு சிவவழிபாட்டை தொடங்கினான். ஒருநாள் தர்பைபுல்லை அறுக்கும் போது அவன் கையில் கத்திபட்டு ரத்தம் கொட்டியது.

ஆனால் அவனுக்கோ எந்த பதற்றமும் இல்லை. குழந்தைக்கு ஆபத்தென்றால் தாய் பதறுவதை போல பதறியது ஈசன்தான்.

சிவபெருமான் வேடன் உருவில் தோன்றி, பர்னாதன் கையை பிடித்து பார்த்தார். என்ன ஆச்சரியம்…. ரத்தம் சொட்டிய இடத்தில் விபூதி கொட்ட ஆரம்பித்தது. வந்தது தாயுமானவர் என்பதை அறிந்தான். “ரத்தத்தை நிறுத்தி சாம்பலை கொட்ட செய்த தாங்கள் நான் வணங்கம் சர்வேஸ்வரன் என்பதை அறிவேன். இந்த அடியேனுக்கு தங்கள் சுயஉருவத்தை காணும் பாக்கியம் இல்லையா?“ என்று வேண்டினான் பர்னாதன். ஈசன் தன் சுயரூபத்தில் காட்சி கொடுத்தார்.

 

“உனக்காகவே இந்த சாம்பலை உருவாக்கினேன். அதனால் இந்த சாம்பல் இன்று முதல் விபூதி என்று அழைக்கப்படட்டும். உன் நல்தவத்தால் விபூதி உருவானது. அக்னியை எதுவும் நெருங்க முடியாததை போல விபூதியை பூசி அணிந்து கொள்பவர்களின் அருகில் துஷ்டசக்திகள் நெருங்காது. விபூதி என் ரூபம். அதற்கு நீயும் துணையாக இருந்த வா“ என்று ஆசி வழங்கினார் சிவபெருமான்.

விபூதியை கட்டை விரலாலும் மோதிர விரலாலும் சேர்த்தெடுத்து மோதிர விரலால் நெற்றியில் இட்டுக்கொள்ள வேண்டும். ஆனால் கட்டை விரலும் நடுவிரலும் சேர்ந்து விபூதியை எடுக்கக்கூடாது. கட்டைவிரலாலும் நெற்றியில் விபூதியை வைக்க கூடாது என்கிறது சிவபுராணம்.

விபூதியால் என்ன நன்மை? என்று ஸ்ரீ ராமர், அகத்திய முனிவரிடம் கேட்டார். “பகை, தீராத வியாதி, மனநல பாதிப்பு, செய்வினை பாதிப்பு இப்படி எது இருந்தாலும் தொடர்ந்து விபூதியை அணிந்து வந்தால் அந்த பிரச்சனைகள் விலகும்“ என்று அகத்திய முனிவர் ஸ்ரீ ராமருக்கு உபதேசம் செய்தார். ஸ்ரீமகாலஷ்மிக்கு உகந்ததும் விபூதி. அதனை விரும்பி விபூதி கலந்த நீரில் தினமும் அவள் நீராடுகிறாள். திரு என்றால் மகாலஷ்மி. அதனால்தான் விபூதியை திருநீறு என அழைக்கிறோம்.

“மந்திரம் ஆவது நீறு வானவர் மேலது நீறு
சுந்தரம் ஆவது நீறு துதிக்கப் படுவது நீறு
……….
வேதத்தில் உள்ளது நீறு வெந்துயர் தீர்ப்பது நீறு
காண இனியது நீறு கவினைத் தருவது நீறு
தேசம் புகழ்வது நீறு திரு ஆலவாயான் திருநீறே“

 

source :::: Reblogged from  mahaperiavaa.wordpress.com of Mahesh

natarajan

Spectacular Railway Stations Around The World !!!

The world's most spectacular railway stations

New York’s Grand Central Terminal turns 100 this week. To mark the anniversary, Telegraph Travel has chosen 20 of the most impressive railway stations around the world.

 

Grand Central Terminal, New York

Built in 1913, Grand Central is an elegant, elaborately decorated monument to railway history. It has more platforms (44) than any other station in the world, and has appeared in dozens of films, including Men in Black, Carlito’s Way, Bad Boys, and The Godfather, helping make it one of the city’s most visited tourist attractions.

There is plenty to explore inside, including The Campbell Apartment cocktail bar, the Whispering Gallery (in front of the Oyster Bar restaurant), and the food market.

 

The world's most spectacular railway stations

St Pancras International, London

This gothic masterpiece was completed in 1868 and recently restored. The facade is the grandest of any British railway station, and behind lies a spectacular pointed-arched train shed of iron and glass: in its day the widest clear-span structure in the world.

The world's most spectacular railway stations

Estacion de Madrid Atocha, Madrid

Madrid’s largest railway station opened in 1851. Its frontage is certainly handsome but the most spectacular feature lies within: a vast plaza filled with plants, tropical flowers and even rare turtles. A sombre memorial to the 191 victims of the 2004 Madrid train bombings stands above the station.

 

The world's most spectacular railway stations

Chhatrapati Shivaji Terminus, Mumbai

Originally known as Victoria Terminus, this historic gothic station – completed in 1888 – is one of the only train hubs in the world to be recognised by UNESCO. It is still used by around three million commuters each day and featured in the film Slumdog Millionaire.

 

The world's most spectacular railway stations

 

Shinjuku Station, Japan

It might not be the most aesthetically pleasing train station, but Shinjuku makes our list for logistical reasons. Around 3.5 million people use it each day, making it the world’s busiest transport hub. There are 36 platforms and over 200 exits.

 

The world's most spectacular railway stations

Estacao de Sao Bento, Porto

The most notable feature in Porto’s Sao Bento station are the wonderful tile panels depicting scenes from Portuguese history. They are the work of Jorge Colaco, and show events including the Battle of Valdevez and the Conquest of Ceuta. The station itself opened in 1916.

 

The world's most spectacular railway stations

Haydarpasa Terminal, Istanbul

Eastern Europe’s busiest station, Haydarpasa Terminal occupies an atmospheric waterside location. It opened in 1872.

 

The world's most spectacular railway stations

Tanggula Mountain Railway Station, Tibet

At 5,068m above sea level Tanggula is the world’s highest train station. It is found on the Qingzang railway line which runs from Qinghai to Lhasa, in Tibet. Telegraph Travel’s Fionnuala McHugh embarked on a 4,000 mile rail journey from Hong Kong to Lhasa last year, including a stop at Tanggula. CTS Horizonsoffers packages to the region, including train tickets.

 

The world's most spectacular railway stations

Hauptbahnhof, Berlin

Berlin’s new Hauptbahnhof opened in 2006. It is a colossal steel and glass structure with tracks on two levels. 1,800 trains stop there each day, and around 350,000 passengers pass through.

 

The world's most spectacular railway stations

Yaroslavsky Station, Moscow

One of nine railway stations in Moscow, Yaroslavsky is notable as the western terminus of the Trans-Siberian Railway. It first opened in 1862, but has been rebuilt several times.

 

The world's most spectacular railway stations

Helsinki Central, Finland

One of the Finnish capital’s most recognisable landmarks, Helsinki Central is known for its granite cladding, clock tower and for the two pairs of statues that dominate its facade. It opened in 1862 and around 200,000 passengers use it every day.

 

The world's most spectacular railway stations

Kuala Lumpur Railway Station, Malaysia

Built in 1910, Kuala Lumpur’s main railway station is noted for its architecture, which combines both Eastern and Western designs. Visitors can stay at the Heritage Station Hotel, found within the building.

 

The world's most spectacular railway stations

Kanazawa Station, Japan

The futuristic station at Kanazawa, in Japan’s Ishikawa Province, is entirely elevated and covered by a large roof. The Tsuzumi Gate, built in 2005, dominates the frontage. Inside is a large shopping mall and seven platforms.

The world's most spectacular railway stations

Ushuaia, Argentina

The Southern Fuegian Railway was originally built to serve the prison of Ushuaia, but now operates solely as a heritage railway following the prison’s closure in 1947. The ‘End of the World’ station – five miles west of Ushuaia – is a popular tourist attraction.

 

 

The world's most spectacular railway stations

Gare du Nord, Paris

Gare du Nord is by far the busiest railway station in Europe, with around 190 million passengers using it each year. It was inaugurated in 1846, making it one of the world’s oldest, and has an imposing facade, designed by Jacques Hittorff. Eurostar passengers arrive here from London.

 

The world's most spectacular railway stations

Union Station, Chicago

This is a major hub for inter-city trains in America, and even if you are just passing through Chicago by rail you will need to stop at this vast station. It is mostly underground, covering around nine and a half blocks of the city.

The Great Hall in the centre of the station is one of its most impressive features, a 110-foot (34 m)-high atrium capped by a large curved skylight.

 

Flinders Street Station, Melbourne

The most used station in Melbourne, with more than 100,000 commuters passing through each day, Flinders Street Station a real landmark in the city, and is especially photogenic when the city’s trams pass by. The building was completed in 1909.

 

The world's most spectacular railway stations

Antwerpen-Centraal Station, Belgium

Dubbed the “Railway Cathedral” due to the monumental size of its main building, Antwerp’s main station was designed by the Bruges architect L Delacenserie.

It has a huge dome and eight smaller towers, six of which were destroyed during the 1950s, then reconstructed in 2009, along with several ornaments including large lion statues. The interior is known for its luxurious decoration, with more than 20 different kinds of marble and stone.

 

 

 The world's most spectacular railway stations

 

Luz, Sao Paulo

Orginally built in the 19th century, this station was actually assembled in Glasgow, before it was moved to and re-constructed in the Brazilian city.

It gradually fell into decline before locals realised its grandeur and a major renovation project began in the 1990s. It is also notable for housing the Museum of the Portuguese Language.

 

The world's most spectacular railway stations

Hua Hin, Thailand

One of the oldest stations in Thailand, Hua Hin’s main feature is an ornate Royal Waiting Room that lends it a unique and exotic appearance.

 

source:::: The Telegraph UK

natarajan