New “Malaysia Airlines ” set to Fly From September 1….

The state-run airline’s sole shareholder, Khazanah Nasional Berhad, has this week appointed an Administrator to facilitate the transfer of selected assets and liabilities from the existing Malaysian Airline System Berhad to new company Malaysia Airlines Berhad. The current business will continue to operate through to August 31, 2015, with the new operator, effectively a start-up, taking to the air from September 1, 2015.

New 'Malaysia Airlines' to Fly From September 1, 2015

Troubled Asian national carrier Malaysia Airlines will be completely revamped as a business through the remainder of the year as its new boss takes drastic action to return the loss-making operator to profitability. Christoph Mueller, who recently joined as chief executive officer from Aer Lingus has played important roles in the restructuring the Irish carrier and other European flag carriers.

The state-run airline’s sole shareholder, Khazanah Nasional Berhad, has this week appointed an Administrator to facilitate the transfer of selected assets and liabilities from the existing Malaysian Airline System Berhad to new company Malaysia Airlines Berhad. The current business will continue to operate through to August 31, 2015, with the new operator, effectively a start-up, taking to the air from September 1, 2015.

The voluntary administration follows the passing of a special Malaysia Airlines administration act by both houses of the Malaysian Parliament last year to provide for “an effective, efficient and seamless means to transition the business, property, rights, liabilities and affairs”.

The transition of the business is a key component of the 12-point MAS Recovery Plan, which was announced on in August last year to restructure the national carrier and set it on a path towards sustainable profitability. The process also includes conditional investment funding by Khazanah of up to RM6 billion ($1.66 billion), disbursed on a staggered basis and subject to the fullfillment of strict conditions.

Christoph Mueller, Chief Executive Officer Designate of the new airline, said: “This appointment does not affect our daily operations or existing reservations. All Malaysia Airlines flights, schedules, and reservations continue to operate as normal. I assure you our operations are very much business as usual.”

The ‘new’ Malaysia Airlines is expected to operate under a new brand and livery and there are certain to be changes to its network and fleet strategies, including the departure of some, if not all, the Airbus A380s in its fleet and which are used on its routes to London and Paris from Kuala Lumpur.

In this first official interview since taking over at Malaysia Airlines on May 1, 2015, Mueller has outlined more details of his management brief to Reuters. He said the ‘new’ Malaysia Airlines will operate like a “start-up” and would not be “a continuation of the old company in a new disguise,” but that “everything is new”.

“I’m hired to run the new company entirely on commercial terms and there’s very little margin for error,” he told Reuters in this week’s interview in the downtown Kuala Lumpur office of Malaysian state investor Khazanah. The airline is expected to cut its 20,000 workforce by around a third through the switch of airlines, with all those keeping employment with the state-run business doing so on revised contracts. .

Source….Richard Maslen in http://www.routesonline.com

Natarajan

Message For the Day…” Eyes with which one can see everything that is outside can not see themselves…”

 

Vikshepa is an affliction of the mind that consists of worldly distractions; various spiritual exercises (sadhanas) are undertaken to overcome it and realise the Divine. The sadhanas include meditation, concentration and performance of good deeds for achieving purity of mind. When one succeeds in overcoming Vikshepa, one is confronted with avarana (akin to a thick covering in which one is enveloped). This covering is known as maya (delusion). It envelops everything in the universe. The eyes with which one can see everything that is outside cannot see themselves. Likewise, Maya, which reveals the entire universe, cannot reveal the Divine. Because we are enveloped in Maya, we seek worldly pleasures and do not seek our own Divine essence. ‘Yaddhrushyam than-nashyathi – Whatever is perceptible, is perishable.’ In the pursuit of fleeting and impermanent pleasures, we are throwing away the permanent, the unchanging and the real elements in human life.  

Sathya Sai Baba

29 Indian-Americans among 43 Semifinalists @ National Spelling Bee competition …

Indian-Americans have dominated most of the prestigious spelling awards in the United States for several years now, and this year is no different. Out of 49 semi finalists of the annual Scripps National Spelling Bee, 25 are of the Indian origin dominating another prestigious annual event.

The semi finals which are scheduled on Friday will have all 49 contestants competing for a place in the finals of 88th Scripps National Spelling Bee.

S-1

14 years old Gokul Venkatachalam who finished third in 2014 is performing fairly well this year and is one of the best contenders for the prize. Another good contender is 13 years old Vanya Shivashankar, who is making a fifth appearance in the Spelling Bee. Vanya’s elder sister Kavya won the 2009 Championship. Sriram Hathwar and Ansun Sujoe were the joint winners in 2014.

The National Spelling Bee has been going on since 1925. It started with 9 contestants and this year it received participation from all 50 states. This year’s winner will be awarded with a cash prize of $ 35,000.

News Source: The Hindu

 

Source….www.storypick.com

natarajan

A’ Close Call’ For this Man ….Lucky he escaped from the clutches of bear…”

Close call ... This man climbed into a bear enclosure and punched the animal in the face.

Close call … This man climbed into a bear enclosure and punched the animal in the face. Picture: CEN/AustralscopeSource: australscope

A MAN who climbed into a bear enclosure was lucky to escape with his life.

The man was captured on camera by a passer-by who spotted him climbing over a protective fence and heading towards a female bear sitting on a rock at the zoo in the Polish capital, Warsaw.

When he reached it, the bear went for him, grabbing him by the arm, but let go when he punched the animal in the head.

The bear enclosure runs alongside a busy street where stunned onlookers watched in horror expecting to see a tragedy.

The passer-by who took the photos then posted them online.

He said he thought the man was with a mate and he suspected he was either drunk or on drugs from the way he’d been behaving.

Ouch! ... The bear bit the mans arm when he got too close. He then punched it. Picture: C

Ouch! … The bear bit the mans arm when he got too close. He then punched it. Picture: CEN/Australscope Source:australscope

Head of predatory animals at the zoo, Maria Krakowiak, said: “We do not know how the man escaped but she grabbed his arm. It then looks like he tried to hit her.

“The enclosure is heavily ringed off and no one in their right mind would try and get in there. What his thinking was, we have no idea.

“He survived but we don’t know where he went.”

Police are now searching for him.

The zoo currently has three bears which they received from a circus a few years ago.

“Sabina is the bear this man approached and he’s lucky because she is generally friendly,” Karakowiak said.

“Perhaps that’s why he survived because she is more familiar with people.

“If it had been one of the others the story would probably be different.”

Source….www.news.com.au
Natarajan

 

Why We Say ” O’ Clock ” ….?

The practice of saying “o’clock” is simply a remnant of simpler times when clocks weren’t very prevalent and people told time by a variety of means, depending on where they were and what references were available.

clock

Generally, of course, the Sun was used as a reference point, with solar time being slightly different than clock time. Clocks divide the time evenly, whereas, by solar time, hour lengths vary somewhat based on a variety of factors, like what season it is.

Thus, to distinguish the fact that one was referencing a clock’s time, rather than something like a sundial, as early as the fourteenth century one would say something like, “It is six of the clock,” which later got slurred down to “six o’clock” sometime around the sixteenth or seventeenth centuries. In those centuries, it was also somewhat common to just drop the “o’” altogether and just say something like “six clock.”

Using the form of “o’clock” particularly increased in popularity around the eighteenth century when it became common to do a similar slurring in the names of many things such as “Will-o’-the wisp” from “Will of the wisp” (stemming from a legend of an evil blacksmith named Will Smith, with “wisp” meaning “torch”) and “Jack-o’-lantern” from “Jack of the lantern” (which originally just meant “man of the lantern” with “Jack,” at the time, being the generic “any man” name. Later, either this or the Irish legend of “Stingy Jack” got this name transferred to referring to carved pumpkins with lit candles inside).

While today with clocks being ubiquitous and few people, if anybody, telling direct time by the Sun, it isn’t necessary in most cases to specify we are referencing time from clocks, but the practice of saying “o’clock” has stuck around anyway.

Source….www.today i foundout.com

Natarajan

Bai Sangli….An Unsung Hero…Who Helped More than 300 Poor Students …

This Unsung Hero is one hero provided financial help to poor students. But this is no millionaire — he made a living by pedalling a pedicab. Bai Fangli donated a total of 350,000 yuan to help more than 300 poor students continue with their studies. In 2005, he passed away at the age of 93.

For almost twenty years, to save up for his donations, Bai Fangli peddled his pedicab everyday.

His devotion started in 1987 when he was 74 years old. Bai had prepared to retire and say goodbye to his job.

Bai Fangli: Selfless donation to poor students

But after coming back to his hometown, a group of children working in the field aroused his attention.

Bai’s daughter, Bai Jinfeng said:” He asked why the children didn’t go to school. And our relatives told him that it was because they were too poor to afford tuition. My father was worried so he decided to donate 5,000 yuan to the schools in our hometown. But for him, it was all he owned.”

As soon as he returned to Tianjin, Bai went back to work. All of his earnings went to support the needy students.

His sons and daughters tried to persuade him to change his mind, as they wanted him to enjoy a relaxing life. But the father turned a deaf ear to them.

Bai Jinfeng also said:” At that time, he went out at dawn and wouldn’t return until darkness fell. He earned 20 to 30 yuan each day. After returning home, he put his earnings in a place carefully.”

Bai had always felt regretful that he was illiterate. So he hoped the next generation could change their destiny with education.

Later on, to increase his effort to assist students in need, Bai moved to a simple room near the Tianjin Railway Station. He waited for clients 24 hours a day, ate simple food and wore discarded second-hand clothes he found.

At the age of 82 years old, to his children’s surprise, Bai made another decision.

He founded an education support fund with the help of loans.

But his life driving a pedicab continued.

Xu Xiuxiang, one of the workers of Education Support Fund, said:” He never forgot when to give money to the schools and often urged us to give his earnings to the school. Each time he gave the money he felt very happy and said he had completed his mission again.”

In 2001, he drove his pedicab to Tianjin YaoHua Middle School, to delivering his last installment of money. Nearly 90 years old, he told the students that he couldn’t work any more. All of the students and teachers were moved to tears.

Bai Fangli said:” I hope the students could study hard and get a good job, and then make contributions to our country.”

A long journey of supporting and aiding students lasted two decades.

In 2005, he was diagnosed with terminal lung cancer.

Although he had kept none of his earnings for himself, he was left with his selfless spirit and love.

Source…..http://english.cntv.cn/program/china

Natarajan

Meet Abhishek Singhania …an IIT Madras Graduate who works with Farmers…

Indrani Roy/Rediff.com meets Abhishek Singhania who left a bright career at PricewaterhouseCoopers, Mumbai, to work in a food security project at Khentia village in Bengal, as a research fellow.

Abhishek Singhania with farmers

Image: Abhishek Singhania (standing extreme right clockwise). Photograph: Dipak Chakraborty/Rediff.com

Abhishek Singhania is a strange young man. Graduating in metallurgy from Indian Institute of Technology – Madras in 2012, he got himself a dream job of a consultant at PricewaterhouseCoopers, Mumbai. But unlike the youngsters of his age, the cushy job that fetched him Rs 90K per month failed to satisfy him.

Instead, he wanted to dedicate his time to a job more meaningful, an endeavour that would have a direct and positive impact on the growth of India.

“I should be working with farmers instead,” Abhishek told himself.

A few months into his job at PwC, he was sent to Jeddah, Saudi Arabia, for six months on an assignment.

“There was no problem with the consultant’s job as such but an inner voice kept pestering me that I was not meant for this. I needed to do something else,” Abhishek told rediff.com.

“I started thinking deeply about my career and my future.

“I was not sure if I would continue with my job at PwC or join the automobile sector (I am passionate about cars) or agriculture,” Abhishek said.

“It was around this time that I started preparing for Graduate Record Examinations but soon lost interest.

“For some time, I have been reading reports of farmers’ suicides and they have perturbed me a lot,” Abhishek said.

“I thought if technical people like us can train these farmers, it can lead to better production and lesser suicides”.

Abhishek returned to India from Jeddah in June 2014.

He took a break from office and visited Temathani village near Kharagpur.

“I met the farmers there and discussed the problems that they face,” Abhishek said.

“I was taken aback by their sheer lack of knowledge,” he said.

“I could understand that they did not know how to treat the soil with right kind of fertilisers for higher production.

“I also realised that the farmers did not know how to save their crops from pests.

Abhishek Singhania (extreme right clockwise) experimenting with biochar

Abhishek Singhania (standing extreme right clockwise) experimenting with biochar. Photograph: Kind courtesy, Abhishek Singhania

“I came to know that they were often using the wrong pesticides that caused more harm to the soil than good.

One fine morning, Abhishek came to IIT Kharagpur from Temathani.

“I knew that this IIT alone has an agriculture department and food technology schools.

“I heard from a cousin of mine, who is a student here, that Dr PBS Bhadoria and Dr Dilip Kumar Swain, were doing a food security project here.

“When I met them they said a project is expected to take off soon in a village nearby.

They, however, could not give me a timeline. ”

In December, Abhishek resigned from PwC and went to Pondicherry to take a look at some organic farms and startups there.

The biochar is made

Image: The biochar is made. Photograph: Kind courtesy, Abhishek Singhania

“I was integrating within me all the necessary information about agriculture,” Abhishek said.

He revisited Kharagpur IIT in February end and after a second round of discussion with Bhadoria and Swain, he decided to join, as a research fellow, the duo’s Food Security Project at Khentia village located 10 km from the institute.

The fact that his stipend would now be a meagre 15K a month did not deter Abhishek even once.

“Rather, I was happy to have finally made up my mind”, he told rediff.com.

Now, Abhishek spends hours with farmers of Khentia village, teaching them essential skills of farming.

Under this project, a barren 14 acres of land has been ‘adopted’ from 14 farmers by the IIT team.

In a collaborative approach, wherein the farmers give free labour and the IIT team the technical knowhow, the land has been treated and made ready for cultivation.

Irrigation system has been revamped and the farmers can now produce rice for their own consumption (earlier they needed to buy rice from the market).

Riding on the success of abundant production of rice, Abhishek’s team has taught the Khentia farmers to produce soyabean, sweet corn, peanut and sesame.

“Target of our project is to make these farmers self-sufficent so that apart from growing their food themselves, they can enhance their income by selling the cash crops to the retail market.

The IIT team plans to give hands on training to the farmers only for a year and once the team feels that the farmers are confident and skilled enough to run the show themselves, the team will move out to other villages of Kharagpur to replicate the same project there.

Abhishek Singhania with a dhenki

Abhishek Singhania poses with a dhenki, machine used by rural folks to produce rice from paddy. Photograph: Dipak Chakraborty/Rediff.com

Abhishek leads the team of trainers from the IIT that keeps visiting the farmers regularly.

At present, he has his hands full making a sustainable farming-cum-marketing model so that once the IIT team leaves Khentia, the farmers there can do everything on their own.

“We want the farmers to form a cooperative that will work towards their interests and well being,” Abhishek told rediff.com.

Abhishek is also making environment-friendly biochar and biogas for the Khentia farmers.

“Generally the farmers burn the plant residue on the field after harvesting. In the process, most of the carbon from the plants get transferred back to the atmosphere in the form of carbon dioxide, carbon monoxide, methane, etc thereby increasing global warming,” Abhishek said.

“Instead, if we do pyrolysis in controlled conditions, we can retain a substantial amount of the carbon in the final product (biochar).

“Biochar increases soil fertility and has many other advantages.

“Our primary aim is to develop an ideal setup for producing biochar which should be simple so that farmers can operate it, it should be inexpensive and should have high efficiency.

“Till now we have done five experiments with 3 different set ups.”

“If my experiments on these products is successful here, I’ll carry them to other villages as well,” he told rediff.com.

As he guided us around the Khentia village in the scorching May heat, sweats covered Abhishek’s forehead.

But his smile spoke for itself how much he enjoyed this new assignment of his.

Isn’t this rigorous farm work tiring?

“Na didi, it’s fun. I had always dreamt about doing something meaningful in life. After a long wait, I have got an opportunity to follow my dream,” said a beaming Abhishek.

Abhishek Singhania poses with a rice storage container

Abhishek Singhania poses with a rice storage container. Photograph: Dipak Chakraborty/Rediff.com

Once his research at IIT-Kharagpur gets over, Abhishek wants to set up a firm that will lend technical assistance towards integrated farming.

After completing his research, Abhishek wants to travel to villages all over Bengal to interact with farmers and share his experience and knowledge with them.

“At present, with the current population, implementation of National Food Security Act requires 61 metric tones of foodgrains annually,” said Abhishek.

“Moreover, India needs to double its agricultural productivity by 2040 to reduce the supply and demand gap.”

These statistics, Abhishek said, outline the need for research in the field of food production.

“I am happy to be a small part of this gigantic research,” he told rediff.com.

Asked if he missed his high profile career at PwC, the young farming enthusiast said, “Not in the least. I am being true to my soul. I have transformed my passion into my profession.

“All that I ever wanted was to have a car of my own. I drive a Hyundai i10 now. What more can I ask for?” Abhishek said.

“For the entire six months of my stay at Jeddah, I stayed at Radisson. But here at Kharagpur IIT, I am staying in a small hostel room with a common washroom.

“The huge difference between my living arrangements here and there never bother me for a minute.

“We get only one life. Why waste it chasing frivolous things?”

Indrani Roy / Rediff.com in Kharagpur

Source………….www.rediff.com
Natarajan
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Message for the Day…” Handover your wealth of Love to God…”

Youth today are becoming exceedingly greedy and totally selfish, harboring feelings of hatred and jealousy. Their lifestyle of enjoying worldly and carnal pleasures (bhoga) will result in diseases (roga).In ancient times, youth and saints alike, lead a life of sacrifice and sense control (tyaga and yoga) and enjoyed peace and joy. When going on a tour, people like to carry sufficient money for expenses and when they finish the journey or reach the goal, they deposit or hand over the remainder to a trustworthy friend and sleep soundly. All of you are blessed with the wealth of love from the moment of your birth. In this field of worldly activity (Karmakshetra), it is very difficult to safeguard the treasure of love (Prema). Therefore you need to find a faithful friend to hand it over – and the only true friend is God. So hand over the wealth of your love to God, and lead a secured life filled with peace and joy.

Sathya Sai Baba

” ‘Ugly Indian’ is Cleaning up Dirty Cities….”…An Inspiring story…

Bangalore is inspiring people across India to transform the cities they live in, one mile at a time, finds Indulekha Aravind.

It is perhaps the best kind of uprising – without banners, newsroom debates or vehement netas.

Instead, what it does have is a simple but effective slogan: “Kaam Chalu, Mooh Bandh!” (roughly translated as ‘Stop Talking, Start Working’).

The residents of Bangalore might be familiar with the work of The Ugly Indian, an anonymous group born in 2010 with the aim of making the city cleaner.

When you pass a recently painted red wall near a surprisingly clean pavement, for instance, you know it is their handiwork. Four years after the movement kicked off, it seems to be inspiring similar “risings” in other cities and spin-offs in Bangalore itself.

Image: A subway cleaned and decorated with paintings. Photograph, courtesy: The Ugly Indian

On August 15 this year, a group of 200-odd volunteers turned up at MG Road in Bangalore to create a ‘model mile’ by cleaning up the pavement, planting saplings and painting road dividers.

The volunteers were employees of various companies in Bangalore who had come forward to take part in Adopt A Mile, an initiative launched by five friends working in tech companies.

“We were wondering what we could do to change things in the cities. So, we decided to take a stand in their transformation at an individual level by bringing about change one mile at a time. We talked to the companies where we work as well as CEOs of other firms to get their employees involved in adopting a mile,” says A Ramachandran, one of the founders and an executive in an IT company.

They are currently in talk with few companies to include them in the movement . They could either beautify and maintain the mile or even build skywalks and other infrastructure in partnership with civic agencies.

“We are not talking about picking up garbage or filling potholes, which is the job of the Bruhat Bengaluru Mahanagara Palike,” says Ramachandran.

By involving companies, the group also hopes to bring in the rigour of the corporate sector into the programme by publishing quarterly results on the website www.adoptamile.in and by conducting audits of the adopted stretches of road independently.

“For instance, if a company is found to have failed in its responsibility in maintaining that “mile” the agreement with it can be cancelled,” explains Ramachandran. The volunteering could also become a team-building exercise for the employees who participate. The entire effort, he says, has been in partnership with The Ugly Indian.

And it’s not just Bangalore. On Friday, photographs appeared on The Ugly Indian Facebook page about ‘Rajahmundry Rising’, where a ‘spot’ in the Andhra town filled with garbage, near a decrepit wall which was being used as a urinal, has been transformed into a clean, bright quarter with a bench and potted plants.

The Facebook page of the Andhra Pradesh group chronicles its efforts through at least a couple of other ‘spot fixes’ and it would warm the cockles of even a cynic’s heart.

In August, it was Mumbai’s turn, when a bunch of enthusiasts got busy on a Sunday morning and spruced up, what seems to have been, an eyesore in Worli. Bhubaneswar too has a group that calls itself “Stopp Us”, reports Times of India.

It has already cleaned up four walls in the city and have plans for many more. “Risings’ have also taken place in Vijayawada, Meerut, Salem, Gurgaon, Kanpur and Visakhapatnam, among others.

The Ugly Indian started off with a simple enough premise. If you want to make a change, begin by doing something instead of just sitting back and blaming the government or “the system”.

The modus operandi is ‘spot fixes’, where a particular area in a city is chosen and a group of volunteers, usually brought together via email, turn up to clean and beautify it. People in the vicinity are asked to monitor it to help ensure it is maintained. As a volunteer at two such spot-fixes a couple of years ago, I can vouch that the emphasis is on working, not socialising.

 

The entire operation was supervises by a small group of people, who also chipped in.Volunteers are given gloves, masks, paint and brushes and roll up their sleeves and plunge in.

After cleaning and painting, small dustbins, or TereBins, are placed so that litterbugs no longer have an excuse. The materials are bought with Rs 100-200 contributed by each volunteer at the spot fix, usually numbering 10 to 15.

Unfortunately, The Ugly Indian’s “moo bandh” principle also extends to media queries and email requests for interviews were met with “we do not respond to the media”. This would also be in keeping with its principle of anonymity and no single person taking centre stage.

 

A wi-fi hotspot & pavement cafe at a former dirty spot on MG Road, Bangalore

But the group does add: “All we can say is that all the growth around the country is totally spontaneous and ‘inspired’ – nobody from Bangalore is going to other cities, or even talking to anyone.”

The exception seems to have been an ‘Ask Me Anything’ on Reddit, where a volunteer clarified: “We are trying to move from an underground guerilla-type movement to one where citizens collaborate with elected officials.”

Requests for “spot fixes” and “risings” have been coming in even from Pakistan, Bangladesh, Indonesia and a few other countries, adding “Our only agenda is to convert despair to hope.”

To volunteer for a spot fix or learn how to organise one, send an email to theuglyindian@gmail.com. More details on www.facebook.com/theugly.indian

Indulekha Aravind ln  

Source…..www.rediff.com

Natarajan

 

 

“ஆணவம் அழிவுக்கு வழி வகுக்கும் …”

பாரதப்போர் முடிவில் கிருஷ்ணர் தேரில் அமர்ந்தபடி,””அர்ஜூனா! போர் தான் முடிந்து விட்டதே! இனியும் ஏன் நின்று கொண்டிருக்கிறாய். தேரை விட்டு இறங்கு!” என்றார்.

“”மைத்துனா! நீ என்னை போரில் வெற்றி பெறச் செய்தாய். மகிழ்ச்சி! ஆனால், வெற்றி பெற்றவனை, தேரோட்டி தான் கையைப் பிடித்து இறக்கி விட வேண்டும் என்ற சம்பிரதாயம் உண்டே! அதை மறந்து விட்டாயே! அப்படி செய்வது எனக்கும் பெருமை அல்லவா! நீயோ என்னைக் கீழே இறங்கு என்று ஆணையிடுகிறாய். இது என்ன நியாயம்? ”

அர்ஜுனனின் வார்த்தைகளை கிருஷ்ணர், காதில் வாங்கிக் கொண்டதாகவே தெரியவில்லை. “”தேரை விட்டு இறங்கு!” என்றார் கண்டிப்புடன்.

வருத்தத்துடன் அர்ஜுனன் கீழிறங்கினான்.

அப்போது அவர்,”” தேரின் பக்கத்தில் நிற்காதே! சற்று தள்ளி நில்!” என்றார் அதட்டலுடன்!

அர்ஜூனனால் கிருஷ்ணரின் அதட்டலைப் பொறுத்துக் கொள்ளவே முடியவில்லை. வெற்றி பெற்ற மகிழ்ச்சி கூட மனதை விட்டு அகன்றுவிட்டது. ஒன்றும் புரியாதவனாய் தள்ளி நின்றான்.

வாடிய முகத்துடன் நின்ற அவனைக் கண்டு புன்னகைத்த கிருஷ்ணர், தேரிலிருந்து குதித்து ஓடிச்சென்று, அர்ஜுனனை இறுகக் கட்டியணைத்துக் கொண்டார். அந்த கணமே தேர் தீப்பற்றி எரிந்தது.

“”பார்த்தாயா? தேர் எரிகிறது! அதனால் தான் உன்னை இறங்கச் சொன்னேன்!,” என்றார் புன்முறுவலுடன்.

“தேர் ஏன் எரிந்தது?’ அர்ஜுனன் ஏதும் புரியாமல் கேட்டான்.

“”அர்ஜூனா! போர் புரியும்போது கவுரவர்கள் உன் மீது பல அஸ்திரங்களை ஏவினர். அவற்றின் சக்தி அளவிட முடியாதது. தேரில் நானும், தேர்க்கொடியில் அனுமனும் இவ்வளவுநேரம் அதை தடுத்துக் கொண்டிருந்தோம். அதனால், அவை வலிமையற்றுக் கிடந்தன.
தேரை விட்டு நான் குதித்ததும், தேர்க்கொடியில் இருந்துஅனுமனும் புறப்பட்டு விட்டான். அஸ்திரங்களின் சக்தி தலைதூக்கியது. தேர் பற்றி எரியத் தொடங்கிவிட்டது.
உண்மை இப்படி இருக்க, நீயோ போரில் வெற்றி பெற்ற உன்னைக் கவுரவிக்கவில்லை என்று வருத்தப்படுகிறாய்.

வெற்றி பெற்றதும் “நான்’ என்னும் ஆணவம் உனக்கு வந்து விட்டது. ஆணவம் அழிவுக்கு வழிவகுக்கும் என்பதை மறந்து விடாதே,” என்று அறிவுரை கூறினார்.

தேர் பற்றி எரிந்ததுபோல, அர்ஜுனனிடம் இருந்த ஆணவமும் பற்றி எரிந்து சாம்பலானது.

இறைவன் காரணமில்லாமல் நமக்கு கஷ்டம் எதையும் தருவதில்லை !

Source……Input from a friend of mine

Natarajan