8-Year-Old Girl Donates Her Piggy Bank Savings To Help Out Farmers In Maharashtra…

Sometimes it is not the big things that make a difference but the small gestures that touch the heart.

An 8-year-old girl named Rasika Joshi saw a picture of Aamir Khan with Maharashtra CM Devendra Fadnavis. Being a huge fan of Aamir Khan, she asked her father, Manoj Joshi, what was Aamir Khan doing with the CM.

To which he replied that he is giving a cheque to the CM for the relief fund to help the farmers who lost their crops to bad weather and are struggling to survive now.

Inquisitive, Rasika asked if her photo would be clicked if she donated the money to which her father said yes. That excited Rasika and she decided to give her piggy bank donations to the farmers to help them.

Image source

Her benevolent gesture impressed her family as well as the Maharashtra CM who said he was touched by her gesture. He assured that no matter what, her savings would reach the farmer.

Her father was elated by the CM’s response to the little girl’s plea and his reaction to it.

Earlier, many celebrities including Ajinkya Rahane, Akshay Kumar, Nana Patekar etc have donated funds to aid the farmers in drought-stricken Maharashtra. The recent rainfall has brought relief to some of the areas, however, many areas still remain dry with people struggling to make the ends meet.

Will there be another Rasika Joshi to help them out and show them love?

News Source: TOI

Source….Shubhi Dixit ….www.storypick.com

Natarajan

” With or Without Religion You have Good People doing Good Things…”

“With or without religion, you would have good people doing good things and evil people doing evil things. But for good people to do evil things, that takes religion.” – Steven Weinberg

Humanity touched new heights when in an act of goodwill, Muslims in small town of Lonand, Maharashtra, decided to postpone Eid celebrations to Sunday because original date clashes with 1000 year old Hindu Tradition of Varkari.

E-4

Varkari is a Vaishnava religious movement inside of the bhakti profound convention of Hinduism. The Varkari custom has been a piece of Hindu culture in Maharashtra since the thirteenth-century CE, when it was framed as a panth amid the Bhakti Movement.

Since animal-slaughtering during Eid did not go down well with Pilgrims & age-old Varkari tradiations, Muslims decided to postpone the celebrations to Sunday as a goodwill gesture.

E-5

This should be a lesson for people across the globe who misuse religion to create division between communities.

News Source: Zee News

Source….www.storypick.com

Natarajan

In This Village No House has Front Doors… Not Even Banks … !!!

In This Village, Nobody has Front Doors. Not Even the Bank.

A family gathers outside their house in Shani Shignapur village in Ahmednagar, Maharashtra. (Agence France-Presse photo)

SHANI SHINGNAPUR:  Members of the Gade family proudly show off a stash of rupees kept in an unlocked tin barrel in their bedroom, despite their home not having a front door.

In Shani Shingnapur village in Maharashtra, residents see little need for such security, thanks to their belief in special protection from the Hindu deity Shani.

As farmers trundle the roads in bullock carts piled high with sugarcane, they pass rows of homes bearing empty door frames — a village tradition that goes back for generations.

“Years ago, Shani came in the dreams of devotees and told them you don’t need to put any doors on your homes,” housewife Jayashree Gade told news agency AFP.

“He said: ‘I will protect you’. That’s why we don’t have any doors.”

According to legend, an iron and stone slab washed up in a nearby river during a flood more than 300 years ago, and began oozing blood when cattle herders poked it with a stick.

In a vision to a villager later that night, the slab was revealed to be an idol of Shani, and today it stands in an open square adorned with garlands of flowers, drawing crowds of pilgrims.

Shani, who is believed to be manifested in the planet Saturn, is considered so mighty that his shrine cannot be kept under a shelter — and he will not let thieves in the village of open homes go unpunished.

Some villagers said they put loose panels against their door frames at night, but only to keep out wild animals.

Similarly, the local branch of state-owned UCO Bank prides itself on its “lockless” status. Although money is kept in a strongroom, the front of the building has just a glass door with no lock, to avert stray dogs

“We have no trouble,” said bank official Nagender Sehrawat, gesturing to the queue of customers when asked if they were happy with the arrangement.

Shani Shingnapur’s reputation has been somewhat dented in recent years by reports of a few thefts. In 2010, a visitor from the North complained that cash and valuables worth 35,000 rupees  were taken from a vehicle.

According to a pamphlet handed out at the shrine, Shani Shingnapur is not just free from theft but from all sinful behaviour, a “model village” in contrast to the corrupt outside world.

“Professional robbers, thieves, dacoits, non-vegetarians, drunkards, never come here,” the pamphlet confidently stated.
“If they come, they behave like gentlemen.”

Story First Published: January 06, 2015 10:48 IST
SOURCE::::www.ndtv.com
Natarajan
Jan 6 2015