She Showed How It Is Possible for ONE Girl to Transform an Entire Village through Education …

Education was the last thing on the minds of Mallahipurva villagers. Especially for girls, who were considered as just extra hands to support the family. But one girl, Gudiya, fought all odds and became the first one in her village to pass Secondary School. She did not stop at just this. She started a school for other kids in her own house and made sure they embraced the gift of education too. This is how she brought about the transformation.

Mallahipurva village, located 150 kilometres from Uttar Pradesh’s state capital, Lucknow, is a perfect example of neglect and deprivation. Dominated by the mallahas, an impoverished lower caste fishing community, education was the last thing that children here had access to and women were only seen as extra working hands to make fishing nets and munj (wild grass) ropes. An added curse was the rampant production and consumption of country liquor made from the abundant Mahua flowers of the region.

It’s here that Gudiya, who is now in her mid-twenties, ushered in change by establishing a small school a few years back. She says, “I grew up in an environment where girls had no hope of ever leading a respectful life; even their mothers were alcoholics. The village boys, too, saw no scope in building a future and took to drinking early and aimlessly whiling away their time. Life was really tough. Just to get a square meal a day my parents had to make all of us work.”

Then when the mid-day meal scheme started in a nearby school Gudiya was sent there just so she would get something to eat – at least her parents had one mouth less to feed.

A girl spins the Moonj (jute) rope in her home at Mallahipurva in Rai Barielly district. (Credit: Anjali Singh\WFS)

A girl spins the Moonj (jute) rope in her home at Mallahipurva in Rai Barielly district. (Credit: Anjali Singh\WFS) –

That turned out to be a life changing decision. When I went to school, I realised what a wonderful thing education is and I decided to continue going to school,” she recalls.

Once her mind was made up, there was no turning back for this youngster, who hails from the only Brahmin family in her village and is one of 10 children – five girls and five boys. However, before going to school could be a regular thing she had to get her father, Babu Lal Sharma, to agree to her plan.

“It was not easy to convince my father. He had put me on the job of spinning the ‘munj’ ropes, which when sold got us some money to feed our family. But I didn’t back down and eventually he gave in,” she shares.

Gudiya paid for her schooling by making munj rope in her free time and her single-minded dedication was rewarded when she became the first girl in Mallahipurva to pass the Secondary School Certificate (SSC) exam in 2008.

Her father, Babu Lal, says, “I was tongue-tied when she told me the news and then gave the SSC certificate in my hand. It was a source of both happiness and apprehension for me. People in the village kept telling me that I was wrong in allowing her to do all this, but my heart said that this was her destiny, that she was meant to do this.

But passing an examination was not Gudiya’s sole ambition. She had bigger plans – she wanted to start a small school for all those children who could not afford formal education right in her village.

When she gathered the courage to speak to the elders about it and requested that some dedicated space be given to her to run the school, they flatly refused. So she once again went to her father to seek permission to allow Mallaha children to come into their home.

Being Brahmins this was considered not only sacrilegious by her parents but was also expressly prohibited by local religious heads. Nevertheless, Gudiya managed to coax consent out of her parents and to take classes IN the family verandah.

Gudiya interacts with the children at her school. (Credit: Anjali Singh\WFS)

Gudiya interacts with the children at her school. (Credit: Anjali Singh\WFS) –

The next big hurdle she had to overcome was getting the children to actually come. With around 100-odd families living in Mallahipurva and almost all the parents being addicted to country liquor, motivating them to send their children to study was far from easy.

“I went from house to house collecting children and getting them to class. Their parents were not happy and resisted my entreaties, but I never gave up. Then when a scheme called Child to Child Education was introduced by the New Delhi-based social organisation, Girija Devi Foundation, I signed up for it and attached my school to it. They helped me get books, food and even medical aid, all free of cost, for all those who came to study. Owing to this, support from parents too began to grow,” elaborates the inspiring young educator.

Of course, Gudiya did not abandon her school even after she got married and moved to Kanpur. In fact, she continues to keep a tab on what’s happening at her school from a distance, having handed over the reins to her younger sister, Soni. “My sister has studied up to Class Eight and is handling the school very well,” she says with a smile.

This school has proved to be a great hit with the students, who quickly finish up their household chores and rush to Gudiya didi’s classes – they are still called that.

What makes this classroom doubly beneficial for the little ones is the fact that those suffering from medical problems can avail of immediate and free treatment, thanks to the added benefits of the Foundation’s education initiative.

Gudiya, along with her father, Babu Lal Sharma, and sister, Soni, outside the school that is run from the verandah of their home. (Credit: Anjali Singh\WFS)

Gudiya, along with her father, Babu Lal Sharma, and sister, Soni, outside the school that is run from the verandah of their home. (Credit: Anjali Singh\WFS)

For instance, Nita, who is in her teens, has been able to get rid of her squint just because she joined Gudiya’s classes. She was 10 years old when she underwent an eye surgery through the medical aid provided for the children at the school. Indeed, according to Nita, Gudiya’s school has been a godsend. “Before the operation I had a squint and could not see very clearly. I used to overhear my mother tell my father that I would never get married because of the way I look and would have to work all my life spinning ropes and chopping fodder for the cattle. Then I joined school and during a medical check-up the doctor suggested an operation to correct the squint. These days, I can see and read properly and don’t feel shy about meeting people,” she says.

There are noticeable changes in the attitude of the local community as well. Says Gudiya, “In the beginning I had faced a lot of ridicule and hostility. Some even threatened me and my family, saying that I was ruining the established way of life in the village. The same people, however, are extending full support today. Earlier, the children were completely neglected – they would not eat food on time, wash or dress properly. There was a lack of sanitation that contributed to illnesses. Since both parents used to get drunk from the morning onwards, there was no one to take care of the kids. It’s a very different story presently. The children have learnt a lot and come to school neat and clean. They know how to take care of themselves and their siblings as well.”

Adds Nanhu, a former Pradhan of Mallahipurva, “The school has definitely made a difference. People still consume Mahua liquor but they have understood that their children should not do the same. Some have even started giving up their drunken ways and make sure to bring their children to the school at Gudiya’s home. I hope this change continues.”

Meanwhile, Gudiya has great hopes not just for herself but for her students, “I hope that one day each child from this school takes on the responsibility to teach others.” This young woman, who became a teacher almost by accident, has understood clearly the difference a dedicated teacher can make.

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

” Could you please tell me what is the english word for this situation ….” ?

Periyava_sitting

A family went to have the darshan of Maha Periyavaal. Along with them, they took one of their family friends who lived in the USA for some decades. The friend did not have any great faith in our religion, system and especially the monks wearing the saffron; he went along with him with utterly non-interested to meet Him. He was under the impression that Maha Periyavaal was a fundamentalist, an uneducated monk. This NRI had no great respect at all for Him. Not only that, he uttered such inauspicious things about Him, ‘what does He know? Does He know English?’.

There was a big throng of devotees at the Mutt and the family was standing in a decent distance from Him. As usual, Maha Periyavaal saw this family with His graceful eyes, and called all of them near to Him.

They all went near Him, the friend too.

After all the usual courteous enquiry towards the family, the Master looked at the NRI friend and asked about his details, including his name, whereabouts, his predecessors, where he is working etc etc.

Then He asked, ‘you are born in India, and you know Tamil; your wife was also born in India and should know the mother tongue. When you two converse will it be in Tamil or English?’

The friend replied ‘We never use Tamil at home, we use only English. The same goes for the kids also.’

Then Maha Periyavaal asked, ‘before speaking, you may have to think and conceive the sentence. Is the thought process in Tamil or English?’

The friend replied, ‘That too in English only’.

Some minutes later, an old lady came to have Maha Periyavaal Darshan.

Maha Periyavaal looked at the NRI person and said, ‘This old lady is now very poor, but once upon a time she was very rich. But even after she lost all the materialistic wealth her devotion towards the Mutt, Acharya and me has never changed even a bit. Could you please tell me what is the English word which will describe this unflinching devotion, which can’t be changed by external situations? I would like to know.’

The man was flummoxed. He thought and thought for a while but did not know that word.

Maha Periyaval smiled and told him, ‘please take your time and let me know’.

Even after some time, he could not come up with the required word.

Then Swamiji said, ‘Can I suggest one word? Could you please confirm whether the same can convey this meaning? EQUIPOISED’.

The man was spellbound and fell on Maha Periyavaal’s Feet to Pardon him for his ego..

source….www.mahaperiavaa.wordpress.com

Natarajan

படித்து ரசித்த கவிதை ….அணு நாயகன் அப்துல் கலாம் ….

மதம் பிடிக்கா மனிதர்
மனித நேயப் புருஷர்
தமிழ் படித்த விஞ்ஞானி
தமிழுக்கு கிடைத்த ஞானி!

எத்தனையோ பேர்
இப்பதவிக்கு வந்த போதும்
நீர் வந்த போது தானே
குடியரசுத் தலைவரென்ற கோபுரப் பதவி
சந்தனத்தை பூசிக் கொண்டது!

எத்தனையோ பேர்
தொட்டுப் போன நாற்காலியில்
நீர் அமர்ந்த பின் தானே
பட்டுப் பீதாம்பரங்களின்
பாரம்பரியத்தை உதறி
பருத்தி ஆடையில் பேசிக் கொண்டது!

மனப்பாடுகள் தீர
மனப்பாடங்கள் தந்தவர்
கணப்பாடுகள் மீற
கனவு காணச் சொன்னவர்!

சின்னத்திரையிலும்,
வண்ணத்திரையிலும் நடிக்காமல்
எண்ணற்ற இளசுகளின்
மனத்திரையிலும், மானசீகத்திலும்
வாழ்ந்த கதாநாயகர்!

இவரின் வருகைக்கு பின் தான்
கரிசல் காட்டுக்கும் கனவு வந்தது
இவரின் இருக்கைக்குப் பின்தான்
இஸ்ரோ தன் சிறகுகளை சிலிர்த்தது!

சாமானியனுக்கும்
சாம்ராஜ்ய பாஷை சொல்லிக் கொடுத்த
சாக்ரட்டீஸ் நீர்
சாதிக்கச் சொல்லியே
சரித்திரத்தை சரியான
பாதைக்கு ஓட்டிய சாரதி நீர்!

எவர் வருவர் உம்போல்
எவர்வரினும் இணையோ
உம்தாள் போல்
எம்மான் நீர் வாழ்க
இந்து சமுத்திரமாய்
நீர் வாழ்க!

Source— சுசீந்திரன், சென்னை.in http://www.dinamalar.com

Natarajan

 

Message for the Day…” Understand who Could be dearest and nearest to HIM …”

One important verse in the Gita (Ch 12 Verse 20) states: Those who revere the dharmic way to immortality, and completely engage themselves making Me as their ultimate goal with all faith, are exceedingly dear to Me. What a grand idea this verse conveys! The Lord has clearly declared therein that those who have these qualities, that is, those who trust Him as the only ultimate goal and are attached to Him single-mindedly — they are dearest and nearest to Him. Note the expression, ‘righteous way to immortality’ (dharmya-amritham)used here. Ponder over it and draw inspiration from it. The nectar of the Lord’s grace is deserved only by those who adhere to the Lord’sdharma. Simple folks believe they have devotion toward the Lord, but they do not pause to inquire whether the Lord has love towards them. People who pine to discover the Lord’s love are rather rare. That is really the true measure of spiritual success.

Sathya Sai Baba

Once a Daily Wage Earner, Sanjay Latthe Receives Prestigious Award for Research on Nanoparticles …

From being a daily wage earner, to winning a distinguished grant for his research project – this is Sanjay Latthe, the man who never let financial constraints come in the way of his education.

30-year-old Sanjay Latthe was once a daily wage earner in his hometown Sangola, located in Solapur district of Maharashtra. Today, has been selected for the prestigious INSPIRE award by the Centre’s Department of Science and Technology.

As part of the award, Sanjay will receive a Rs. 35 lakh research grant and a monthly stipend of Rs. 80,000, to take his research project forward.

award

Picture for representation only. Source: Flickr

According to the department’s website, “Innovation in Science Pursuit for Inspired Research (INSPIRE) is an innovative programme sponsored and managed by the Department of Science & Technology for attraction of talent to science. The basic objective of INSPIRE is to communicate to the youth of the country the excitements of creative pursuit of science, attract talent to the study of science at an early age and thus build the required critical human resource pool for strengthening and expanding the Science & Technology system and R&D base.” The program includes students in the age group 10-32 years.

An alumnus of Shivaji University in Kolhapur, Sanjay has been granted the award for his research on optically-transparent and durable nanoparticles. He has been working on this research project for the past 8 years.

“It can achieve a breakthrough in the way we interact with basic things. For example, we have automobiles with wipers on their windshields. However, if we are able to use nano-particle coating on the glass, it will become water repellent and we will not need wipers. If iron objects receive super-hydrophobic coatings, they will not rust at all,” said Sanjay while explaining his project to The Times of India.

As of now, he is working on increasing the durability of the nanoparticle coating. While he has achieved durability of 30-50 days, he is aiming for permanent durability, for which more research is required. Sanjay has published 44 international research papers on this topic, and has also presented it at 15 research seminars across the world.

After losing his father at a very young age, Sanjay and his family – his mother, two elder sisters and one elder brother, had to work hard to make ends meet. Having very few sources of income, everyone in the family had to earn. His mother used to do some embroidery work. But Sanjay never let monetary constraints come in the way of his education.

He joined SUK in 2005 for his MSc, and in 2007 he also enrolled for a Ph.D. After this he got a chance to work as a post-doctoral research fellow in Istanbul, Turkey, and a research professor at Korea University in South Korea. He is currently working as an assistant professor at the department of technology in Savitribai Phule Pune University. –

Source….Tanaya Singh…www.thebetterindia.com

Natarajan

 

Meet 18 Year old Raman…The world’s Youngest Chartered Accountant…!!!

Ramkumar Raman, an 18-year-old Indian boy from Dubai, became the youngest CA in the world to be affiliated with ACCA. He completed the tough course in just three years and now wants to pursue an MBA.

While most students start their degree courses at the age of 18, this young boy not only finished his Chartered Accountant course, but also became the youngest CA in the world.

Meet Ramkumar Raman, the 18-year-old Indian boy from The Indian High School in Dubai.

Raman has been recognised by Association of Chartered Certified Accountants (ACCA), the global professional accounting body in the Gulf, as the youngest affiliate ever registered with them.

raman1

Raman, who is originally from Chennai, India, started his CA education in December 2012 and finished the course in three years in June 2015 by clearing 14 papers in the first attempt in Dubai. Initially, he decided to study for ACCA because he wanted to gain more knowledge in the field of accounting and finance. But he did not know that he would end up clearing it so fast.

According to Khaliji Times, Raman, hailing from a family of chartered accountants, used to get up at 6:00 am every day to study – even on holidays!

And to make sure his luck follows him to the examination hall, this superstitious boy wore the same shirt, pant, vest, socks and shoes and ate the same type of curries and rice, with potatoes, on all exam days.

Raman managed his CA studies along with his school and college studies. He usually took an average of 3.5 months to study for each exam which is held every June and December.

Many students fail to clear this hard-to-crack exam even after repetitive attempts, but Raman managed to pass all of his papers in the first attempt itself. He will now be working for three years as a CA to become a full-fledged ACCA member.

The London-headquartered ACCA has over 1,78,000 members and 4,55,000 students in 180 countries. While most of the ACCA candidates only start their journeys at 18 years of age, Raman has shown exceptional performance in the field.

He wants to obtain an MBA degree from the US, and eventually wants to follow a career in the field of investment banking.

All pics: Raman Facebook

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

Natarajan

11 Common Beliefs About Food That Are Actually Not True….

Let’s face it – we are all foodies. Some of you are complete gluttons, like me, and some might keep what they eat in check, but we all love to eat. Then again, none of us like any added problems like, obesity or cholesterol that come with eating (overeating, in my case), right!

That is the reason why we often vow to eat healthy, and try to follow certain diets that celebrities apparently follow, to get in shape. What we fail to realize is that more often than not, we end up believing in myths circulated by companies trying to sell stuff or know-it-all self-claimed diet experts. Take these 11 myths about food for example, that I used to think were true, until now.

1. Artificial sweeteners are better than sugar

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Not really. Though using artificial sweetener can decrease the calorie intake and help with your weight control, on the other hand, it might contribute to diabetes and other health troubles!

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2. You need to eat meat to get enough protein

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Nature is rich in nutrients, luckily, and you can very well get your required amount of protein without having to eat meat. Quinoa, avocado, peas etc are also quite rich in proteins.

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3. Fats are bad for you

Actually, some fats are essential for health, like monounsaturated and polyunsaturated fats, along with omega-3 fatty acids; these are normally found in nuts, seeds, olive oil, etc. They protect us from heart diseases and cancer.

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4. Fresh vegetables are more nutritious than frozen ones

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Rather than ‘fresh’ vegetable kept for long, frozen vegetables are generally frozen when they are their most fresh, with most of the nutrition value remaining intact!

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5. Fried food is always too fatty

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Though fried food is always considered one of the biggest culprits creating heart troubles and such, they are kind of wrongly accused. The health risk often depends on the kind of oil used, and how fried the stuff is, along with what stuff is being fried; just because it’s fried, doesn’t mean it’s bad.

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6. All saturated fats increase cholesterol

 

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Nope. In fact, polyunsaturated fats, generally found in corn oil or sunflower oil, help to reduce harmful LDL cholesterol, and improve the cholesterol profile of our body.

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7. Eating eggs is not exactly excellent for your health

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On the contrary, eggs are rich in several nutrients like betaine and choline that contribute towards keeping your heart healthy. Eggs are also a great source of healthy proteins.

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8. Added sugar is always bad for health

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No way. We need sugar to function properly, as it supplies ready energy to fuel our muscles, and also helps to keep our brains active. Though I wouldn’t suggest you to binge on sugar, a little bit of it won’t hurt, really.

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9. Organic food has better nutrition value

 

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There is not much extra health benefit of organic food over conventional food, a team of Stanford scientists have found after an extensive study.

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10. Carbohydrates are fattening

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Carbs are not always your worst nightmare, despite all the diets asking you to cut it down. Rather, cutting carbs down can affect your metabolism, increase stress hormones, and decrease thyroid function.

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11. Calories we eat at night stick to our body more than when taken during the day

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Your weight gain depends on the amount of calorie you are taking in, not on when you are taking it in.

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Folks, don’t just give in to excessive advertisements or slimming diets claiming to thin you down in a few days. Eat well, live well.

Source….   Anwesha Maiti…www.storypick.com

natarajan

Why Do we Touch the Feet of Our Elders….?

1. Why do we touch the feet of our elders?

Why do we touch the feet of our elders?

Touching the feet of elders as a mark of respect is an age old practice in Indian tradition. Often this practice is looked upon with derision by some people as feet are generally considered unclean and such people argue that there could be other better ways of conveying the respect. However, there are a number of reasons behind the practice of touching the elders’ feet that indicate how wonderfully beneficial and meaningful this practice is.

2. Foundations for Buildings

Foundations for Buildings

Feet are for the body as the foundations are for buildings. The entire weight of a person is borne by the feet when he stands and moves about. Except birds and some rare cases of mammals, humans are endowed with the gift of being able to walk erect in two feet. When we bend down and touch the feet of our elders, our ego is also automatically subdued and we indicate that we respect their age, wisdom, achievements and experience. Being pleased of our humility, they in turn bless us.

3. Padasparshan

Padasparshan

Usually, those that command padasparshan (touching the feet) include spiritual masters, teachers, grand parents, parents, elder brothers and senior citizens. Usually, these people have accumulated a lot of virtues, knowledge and experience. Their maturity shall have enabled them with a good insight into the truths and realities of life. The thoughts, vibrations and the words emanating from them shall be so powerful in immensely benefiting those who seek their blessings.

4. Way of Touching the feet of Elders

 

There is a particular way of touching the feet of elders. The person touching their feet must bend down in front of them with the back hunched and hands stretching forward. Usually, when the hands are stretched to touch their feet, it is advised that the hands are crossed in a way the right hand touches their right foot and the left hand touches their left foot. Yet another prescription states that the left hand should touch their right foot and the right hand should touch their left foot.

5. Positive Energy

Positive Energy

In either case, when the hands touch the feet, there is a closed circuit establish between those seeking the blessings and those blessing them. The result is a highly positive energy flowing from their feet to the other person transferring a lot of good will and healing energy. Also, the person whose feet are touched usually stretches his or her hands to touch the upper head of the person with a gesture of blessing. This connection forms yet another circuit again transferring energy and blessings.

6. Benefits

It is matter of fact that only elders who seek your well being and those who are noble in their attitude and conduct are to be touched thus. Generally one’s grand parents, teachers, parents, elder brothers and noble people would naturally bless from their heart genuinely seeking the welfare of those who touch their feet. Therefore, this act shall confer incomparable benefits. Psychologically this act confers humility and cultivates a sense of respect enjoining people in the right path.

7. Hindu Tradition

Hindu Tradition

The Hindu tradition states that by touching the feet of elders, people are blessed with strength, intellect, Knowledge and fame. The underlying symbolism of this act is that the elders have walked on this earth longer than you and have accumulated a great amount of wisdom. You can in fact immensely benefit even from the dust that their feet have gathered all along the way.

Source….www.speakingtree.in

Natarajan

Finding Indian food in ‘alien’ land….

Finding Indian food in 'alien' land

Long vacations in the UK, US and south-east Asia no longer involve the culinary nightmares of 20 years ago for Indian tourists. When they tire of bland local fare, there’s no dearth of Indian restaurants, run by the vast Indian diaspora and reasonably authentic, to get a taste of home.

The news, though, is that these destinations are becoming passé. Increasingly, it’s to countries in Indo-China, the Balkans, West Asia (the parts that are still peaceful, that is) and South America to which rich and upper middle-class Indians are heading to spend the generous forex allowance the Indian government now permits.

But as a Vietnamese restaurateur once told me, “Indians no eat all foods; velly big ploblem”. True enough, Indians with their many particularities of diet can find mealtimes a chore in many countries off the regular tourist beat. Yet where many Indians go boldly, can be far behind?
As the listing here shows, there are Indian options available in cities from Dubrovnik to Peru for tourists who are so inclined. The names can be misleading, however: Oh Calcutta in Auckland, an award-winning restaurant, bears no resemblance to the well-known Bengali restaurant chain in India.

The restaurant, run by a chef called Meena Anand, has the standard north Indian/Mughlai fare. This, sadly, is true of almost all the menus on offer — the infinite varieties of the Indian sub-continent are largely absent. In Luang Prabang, the stunning UN heritage town in Laos, Nisha restaurant will give you an authentic dhaba experience: it offers, among other things, aloo ghobi, aloo mutter, “Dhal Fry” and rotis. It could be a comforting break from a bewildering local menu that may contain: dog, frog and, yes, even beef!

A gourmet itinerary

 

Vietnam
Mumtaz Restaurant
Ho Chi Minh City

 

Foodshop 45
Hanoi

 

Laos
Nisha Restaurant
Luang Prabang

 

Taj Mahal Restaurant
Vientiane

 

Cambodia
Dosa Corner
Phnom Penh

 

Taste Budz
Phnom Penh
Samsara
Siem Reap
Croatia
Royal Indian Restaurant
Zagreb
Incredible India Cuisine
Dubrovnik
Iran
Taj Mahal
Tehran
Jordan
Tandoori Oven
Amman
Peru
Guru Kebab & Curry
Lima
Brazil
Taj Bar
Iguasu
Gopala Hari
Sao Paulo
Veggie Govinda
Rio
Mexico
El Tandoor
Mexico City
New Zealand
Oh Calcutta
Auckland
Chilis Bistro and Tandoor
Wellington
Maharaja Indian Restaurant
Christchurch
The Spice Room
Christchurch
China
Masala Art
Shanghai
Punjabi Indian Restaurant
Beijing
South Africa
Royal Punjab
Johannesburg
Bukhara
Cape Town
Portugal
Passage to India
Lisbon
Data courtesy: Ashish Chadha, group managing partner, Leisure Ways, New Delhi
 Source…www.business-standard.com
Natarajan

Meet This Man who had an opportunity to own Rs 10 Million …Yet He Denied it …


Read why Sudhakaran, who barely earns Rs.10,000 every month working hard in his small shop, once gave away the opportunity to pocket Rs. 1 crore. Not only this, he also once found a gold chain in a train which he returned to the police. Know more about the amazing man who has restored our faith in humanity.

Today was a specially blessed day for me—I met a truly blessed man this morning. I first heard about him some months ago, and when I recently discovered that he worked in the town where I’ve been staying for the last month or so, I decided I just had to meet him.

45 year-old K. Sudhakaran runs a little shop, selling sweets, juice, cold-drinks and lottery tickets, in a market in Kanhangad, a town in northern Kerala. This soft-spoken, unassuming man shot into the news last year when he did something truly remarkable. One morning, P. Ashokan, a regular customer of his, called him up and asked him to set aside ten lottery tickets for him. Later that day, Sudharakan learned that one of those tickets had won the first prize—a whopping ten million rupees!

Sudhakaran outside his shop.

Sudhakaran rang up his father at once. “Call up Ashokan right away and give him the news!” his father told him. Sudhakaran did as his father instructed. Ashokan could hardly believe his ears when he learnt what had happened!

Ashokan had not paid for the tickets. Nor had Sudhakaran told him the ticket numbers. And so, Sudhakaran didn’t have to tell him that one of the tickets that he had set aside for him had won the bumper prize. He could easily have pocketed the money had he wanted to—that wouldn’t have been considered illegal. Had he wished, he could have bagged the ten million rupee prize for himself.

What was it, I asked Sudhakaran, that had led him to choose the course that he did.

Lottery tickets for sale.

Lottery tickets for sale.

My father always told me that if you need to, you can even beg, but you must never snatch other people’s rights,” he replied.

Did he at all hesitate to call Ashokan? Did he think twice about what his father had told him to do? Was he, at least for a moment, tempted to claim the money for himself?

No, not at all! I knew that what my father had said was perfectly right,” Sudhakaran said as he drew out a passport-size picture of his father from a note-book and handed it to me to see. “My parents taught me to be honest, to do what is right, to consider everyone, rich and poor, as equal,” he continued. “My mother and all my other relatives were all very happy with what I had done. They all said that I had done the right thing.”

A couple of months ago, Sudhakaran was back in the news—and for a similar reason. He had found a gold chain while travelling in a train and handed it to the police, who managed to trace its owner!

Sudhakaran’s little shop—which he’s taken on rent—is the sole means of livelihood for his family of six, including a daughter who is physically-challenged. Sudhakaran manages to earn around Rs. 10,000 a month from it, and it’s demanding work. He is up every morning, at around 4:30, and takes the train from his village to Kanhangad—a journey of more than two hours each way. He works seven days a week, taking a day off only once in a while.

This man could have been a millionaire had he not listened to his heart and his father and kept the prize-winning lottery ticket for himself instead. But he has no regrets at all about his decision.I know what I did was just what I should have,” he says unhesitatingly.

Try to do as much good as possible and to refrain from doing bad—that way, you can lead a happy, meaningful life, Sudhakaran tells me as he hands me a lemonade and gets back to work.

I slowly sip the lemonade as I watch this amazing man dealing with his customers. I’ve never seen anyone like him before. I know I am truly blessed to have met him—and I’m sure you agree!

– Roshan Shah

Source….www.the betterindia.com

Natarajan