Message for the Day…” Prayers should be Offered again and again to Receive HIS Showers of Grace …”

When people need any convenience or assistance, they approach those in authority and convey their request. So also, in the internal state, when there is no possibility of achieving and acquiring devotion, charity, peace, and truth by normal people, the great and noble, who desire to achieve these, pray to the Lord within themselves. Listening to these prayers, He Himself comes into the world and showers His grace on all people. As an example, Lord Rama and Lord Krishna incarnated answering the prayers of the sages. Similarly Saint Ramakrishna prayed to Goddess Kali to incarnate and establish righteousness(dharma) that would uproot injustice and selfishness. Thus prayers should be offered again and again for the realisation of this noble purpose. No one should become desperate and give up prayers if they don’t result immediately in the advent of the Lord. Since the ancient times, remember that the Lord has always responded to holy and sincere prayers with His Advent.

Sathya Sai Baba

” 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.

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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.

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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

Saigon Post Office …Delivers on Style …

Old world charm of the Ho Chi Minh City post office.

Old world charm of the Ho Chi Minh City post office. Photo: Brian Johnston

In this era of Instragrams and emails, sending postcards is a thing of the past. When I was young, I stamp-licked in colonial-era post offices across Asia, and picked up my poste restante at Singapore’s GPO. It’s years since I was in an overseas post office but, luckily, Ho Chi Minh City’s is hard to miss.

It looks like a petite palace on the outside, all apricot paintwork and neoclassical moulding. Green shutters are folded back like butterfly wings. Couples borrow its romantic, Paris-style backdrop for wedding photos. Inside, though, vaulted steel arches are reminiscent of a Victorian-era railway station: no surprise when you learn the building was designed by Gustave Eiffel, who had already made his name designing bridges for French and Vietnamese railways.

Completed in 1891, Saigon post office has the optimistic architecture of a time when rail travel and telegraphy were rapidly expanding. Step inside and you’ll see a frescoed wall to your left that vaunts the telegraph lines snaking over 1930s Indochina. On the opposite wall, a map shows Saigon’s then rapidly expanding suburbs.

The clock above the entrance of the Ho Chi Minh City post office.

The clock above the entrance of the Ho Chi Minh City post office. Photo: Brian Johnston

The post office was completed in 1891. It’s a clever design, light yet airy. Green-painted ironwork clashes with salmon walls and the bright yellow uniforms of post-office staff. The floor is a glory of patterned tiles. But all eyes are drawn down the main hall to a huge portrait of Ho Chi Minh with a Mona Lisa smile. His moustache is impressive, his beard a wispy tangle.

Travellers of a certain age might feel sentimental. There are rows of still-working phone booths of the sort I used in my youth to call home, after considerable discussion with operators and much clicking on the lines. Young Korean tourists find them curious, and pose for photos with the old-fashioned earpieces to their heads. It tells you something about changed times, and the relentless, exhausting speed of our modern communications.

Slow down, look around. Peer through doors and spot workers at desks teetering with documents. Listen to clanking wind chimes from the souvenir shops that have taken over the entrance arcades. At the “parcels and items for packing” counter under the Uncle Ho portrait, watch parcels being wrapped. Elsewhere, locals send flowers and buy tickets for water-puppet shows.

Curved benches inside the post office.
Curved benches inside the post office. Photo: Brian Johnston

 

A public writer sits by a wooden desk awaiting customers. Duong Van Ngo is in his 80s and has worked for 60 years in this post office. He has wrist bones brittle as a bird’s wings, a full head of grey hair neatly combed. His face is a wrinkled map of history. He must remember the Americans and even the French, and what stories he could write down if he wasn’t scribbling for other people.

I like the colonial, tropical or perhaps communist lack of hurry, measured by the slow drag of flip-flops and the turn of ceiling fans that send wall calendars flapping. Workers sit stupefied behind computers, or read newspapers. Clients stretch and wait patiently, as if they, too, have succumbed to the post office’s opium charms. Only the tourists, who are on holiday, seem in a hurry, with their snap-snap of photos. Sit on a bench and linger a while, and be rewarded by entering a wrinkle in time in the midst of a city of boom and bustle.

See www.vietnamtourism.com

Source….Brian Johnston  in http://www.traveller.com.au

Natarajan

 

Ramzan Fervour from Across the World….

The holy month of Ramazan is witness to the piety of millions of Muslims across the globe unified in their daily ritual of fasting and prayers. Even with the influx of modern technology which allows hand-held devices to hold copies of the Quran the singularity of faith is still as potent as it was in the past.

After going without food and water through the hot days, the faithful gather in a festive atmosphere at dusk to enjoy the communal iftar (fast-breaking meal).

The sight of a collective praying in unison and breaking bread as one people is an exhilarating one.

Rediff.com takes a look at the enthralling spectacle that is the month of Ramazan

A combination picture shows Muslims eating iftar (breaking fast) meal during Ramadan (top) and skull caps kept on a sill at the Jama Masjid (Grand Mosque) in the old quarters of Delhi, India. Photograph: Adnan Abidi/ Reuters

Worshippers attending Friday prayers (top) and a boy praying during Ramadan at Mohammed ibn Muslama mosque in Benghazi, Libya. Photograph: Esam Omran Al-Fetori/ Reuters

A view of the Istiqlal Mosque, the largest mosque in Southeast Asia (top) and a Muslim man reading the Koran inside Cut Mutiah Mosque during Ramadan in Jakarta, Indonesia. Photograph: Darren Whiteside and Nyimas Laula/ Reuters

Afghan men attend the Friday prayers at Pul-i-Khishti mosque (top) and an Afghan man praying at Abdul Rahman Mosque during Ramadan in Kabul, Afghanistan. Photograph: Mohammad Ismail/ Reuters

Muslim worshippers pray outside the Gallipoli Mosque (top) and a Muslim worshipper holding beads during Ramadan at the mosque in the western Sydney suburb of Auburn, Australia. Photograph: David Gray/ Reuters

A view of the Sehitlik-Moschee mosque after Friday prayers (top) and a Muslim worshipper reading the Koran in Arabic and German on his tablet during Ramadan at the mosque in Berlin, Germany. Photograph: Fabrizio Bensch/ Reuters

The faithful eat their iftar meal as they break their fast in front of Al-Hussein Mosque (top) and a man attending an evening prayer at Al-Azhar Mosque during Ramadan, in the old Islamic area of Cairo, Egypt. Photograph: Amr Abdallah Dalsh/ Reuters

A man offering evening prayers at the Shah Faisal Mosque (top) and a boy reading the Koran during Ramadan at Anwar-ul-Uloom Mosque in Islamabad, Pakistan. Photograph: Faisal Mahmoo/ Reuters

Believers getting ready for Friday prayers (top) and a Muslim believer holding tesbih (prayer beads) during Ramadan in Pristina, Kosovo. Photograph: Hazir Reka/ Reuters

A combination picture shows people breaking their fast (top) and a man performing evening prayers at the Memon Mosque during Ramadan in Karachi, Pakistan. Photograph: Akhtar Soomro/ Reuters

Shi’ite worshippers holding copies of the Koran on their heads (top) and a Shi’ite man holding the Koran during Ramadan at the Imam Ali Shrine, Najaf, Iraq. Photograph: Alaa Al-Marjani/ Reuters

Palestinians attend the Friday prayers (top) and a Palestinian man reading verses from the Koran during Ramadan at a mosque in Khan Younis, in the southern Gaza Strip. Photograph: Ibraheem Abu Mustafa/ Reuters

Muslim men attend Friday prayers during Ramadan (top) and the shoes of Muslim men in the courtyard of a housing estate next to the small BBC community centre and mosque in east London, Britain. Photograph: Paul Hackett/ Reuters

People break their fast during Ramadan at Al-Sheikh Ghareeballah Mosque (top) and a man resting inside the Big Mosque in Omdurman, Sudan. Photograph: Mohamed Nureldin Abdallah/ Reuters

Muslims attend evening prayers at Jamia Mosque (top) and a man attending Friday prayers during Ramadan in Nairobi, Kenya. Photograph: Noor Khamis/ Reuters

Source….www.rediiff.com

natarajan

NGO Sponsors Civil Service Aspirants From Minority Community…A Charitable Move

The Zakat Foundation of India runs welfare initiatives for the destitute and helps with the education of poor students. Upasna Pandey/ Rediff.com discover the origins of this organisation

When Shah Faesel from Jammu and Kashmir topped the Civil Services Exam in 2010, it marked the beginning of a new dream. This year a new chapter was added after Afaq Ahmad Giri joined the ranks of those who made it through the Union Public Service Commission entrance examinations.

For Dr Syed Zafar Mahmood, who founded the Zakat Foundation of India, it is a realisation of dream to enable youth from minorities to join mainstream and be empowered.

“Ever since 2010, when Shah Faesal, who was the first from Jammu and Kashmir topped the civil services, we have seen a steady rise in awareness and interest in the national exams and we are supporting such aspirants,” says Dr Sayed Zafar Mahmood, founding president of Zakat Foundation of India and Interfaith Coalition for Peace, which has been sponsoring civil service aspirants from Muslim and other minority communities.

The ZFI was set up in 1997 by Dr Zafar, who retired as a chief commissioner, income tax, in 2009.

He started with running welfare initiatives for the destitute and helping pay of tuition fees of poor students, support for widows, single women, among others.

But in 2007, Dr Zafar realised that more needed to be done.

I was inspired by Sir Syed Ahmad Khan who in 1887 started the Mohammedan Civil Services Fund Association to finance the travel of Muslims to London to write the ICS examination. The Sir Syed Coaching and Guidance Centre for Civil Services was set up in 2007. In eight years, 63 of its students have cleared UPSC including the 15 in the current year, the 63 include seven Christians. Of the 40-odd it sponsored this year, 26 cleared the UPSC prelims and 15 made it to the selection list,” he said.

Dr Zafar explains the reasons for setting up ZFI.

“Among Islam’s five basic pillars, ‘zakat’ is the third. According to this mandate, each Muslim has to annually donate as charity 2.5 per cent of his wealth and annual savings. In addition, there is the ‘sadaqah’, an optional means of charity extending to all that is not needed by the family,” Dr Zafar.

“The ZFI is a registered trust and it undertakes the organised collection and utilisation of zakat, sadaqah and other charitable donations. I got an opportunity to organise the Haj pilgrimages as part of the Indian consulate in Saudi Arabia, which was a great learning opportunity. Also, I served on the Sachar Committee, appointed in 2005 to ascertain the socio-economic condition of Muslims in India. The Committee travelled and met departments, miniseries across states, it was an exhaustive exercise. The main findings were that Muslims are lagging behind every field and there is need for institutional measures. I realised that the community needs to also take responsibility,” recalls Dr Zafar.

There is an annual written test and interview for selection of ZFI `fellows’ and the focus is to get an all India representation. “We are more keen to have girl aspirants as their representation is the poorest but there are not many coming forward for the coaching,” laments Dr Zafar.

Zainab Saeed of West Bengal, qualified for UPSC on her third attempt this year. She toldRediff.com that “there need to be many more ZFI like organizations in smaller cities and towns. I came to Delhi to attend free mock interview sessions which were organised by ZFI, which proved very helpful.”

“The core purpose is to assimilate Muslims, in more numbers, from different parts of the country, into the mainstream governance of the country. We need to inspire them, sponsor them and help prepare them better for the civil services. We organise orientation sessions across backward areas across the country to build awareness, I start by showing photographs  of North Block and South Block and young district collectors, police officers, and revenue officers. I urge the youth that they could sit in these offices by appearing for civil services. This creates impact and there are people who show faith in ZFI,” shares Dr Zafar.

Over the years, more people have shown confidence in giving charity for the civil service coaching program of ZFI.

ZFI allows students to choose best coaching institutes in Delhi. “ZFI provides hostel accommodation and we pay for the coaching fee which is around Rs 1.75 lakh per aspirant. It is around a 20 month cycle for each aspirant which includes preparation for prelims, mains and interview level,” explains Dr Zafar.

Dr Zafar says that “Civil services are the most fair and institutionalised way of empowering people from diverse backgrounds. But unfortunately, sufficient numbers of Muslims are not appearing for civil services exams.”

Yunice R Ismail, ZFI fellow from 2013, now posted as assistant collector in West Bengal, toldRediff.com that “in the poorer parts of the country, there is ignorance about the benefits and empowerment one gets by joining the civil services. Also, the coaching centres there are not of high quality.”

Ismail, who belongs to Kerela, hopes to be part of the orientation for Muslim dominant areas such as Malappuram in the state. He is also using social media to reach out to create awareness about civil services.

“We need to bring more community role models and instil confidence in the youth,” he adds.

Shahnawaz came to ZFI in 2013 and has attempted once to clear UPSC prelim exams.

“I have been focusing on my strategy to crack the prelims and then the interview. At ZFI, we get exposure to a diverse group of aspirants so we benefit in our preparations. Also, the group discussions, which are organised are enriching as these are done by retired or serving bureaucrats and prove to be beneficial. I spend around 12 hours every day for preparations and am confident I will make it in the next attempt,” said Shahnawaz.

The steps may be small but it is important that a beginning has been made. More such efforts are needed to take the nation forward and ensure that no one is left behind.

Image: Students participate in mock interview sessions organised by ZFI. Photograph: ZFI

Upasna Pandey in New Delhi for http://www.rediff.com

Natarajan

 

A Humble Request from Your Heart to YOU….Pl Listen…

Hello, I’ve been feeling a bit low these days, especially during the weekends and on Monday mornings.

You keep your liver, lungs and stomach happy with a lot of alcohol, cigarettes and food that is rich in fat and cholesterol.

Well my friend, I feel neglected because I work overtime trying to function to keep you alive, guess why? It’s because I’m built to love, I’m a heart after all and love is what I’m good at.

However, I feel suffocated, and it would be nice if you could do me a little favour which will help me, help you to continue loving your friends and family by keeping you alive.

Here’s what you can do…

Source….www.rediff.com

Natarajan

” Eid Mubarak…What is Eid Al-Fitr …?

Eid al-Fitr sweets

A Palestinian man sells sweets at a Gaza City market on July 15, 2015, ahead of the Eid al-Fitr festivities, celebrating the end of the holy Muslim fasting month of Ramadan. Mohammed Abed/AFP/Getty Images

Millions of Muslims worldwide will break a monthlong fast this weekend with the joyous holiday of Eid al-Fitr, and there will be no shortage of food, prayers or gifts. Eid al-Fitr, also known as Eid ul-Fitr or Eid, celebrates the conclusion of the dawn-to-sunset fast during the Islamic holy month Ramadan and the beginning of the Islamic month of Shawwal.

When Is Eid Al-Fitr?

Ramadan ends and Eid al-Fitr begins when the new moon is spotted in the sky. This means the start of the Eid holiday can vary in different parts of the world. Muslims in the United Kingdom, Kuwait, Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates will celebrate Eid al-Fitr on Friday, while Muslims in other nations, including Bangladesh, will observe the holiday on Saturday.

Eid al-Fitr 2014 in India

Indian Muslim devotees offer Eid prayers on the first day of the Eid al-Fitr festival among the ruins of the Feroz Shah Kotla fort and mosque in New Delhi, July 29, 2014.  PRAKASH SINGH/AFP/Getty Images

How Is Eid Al-Fitr Celebrated?

The holiday often begins with morning prayers and a small breakfast, marking the first daylight meal in a month. People decorate their houses and get dressed in new or clean clothes. Families and friends exchange gifts and gather for feasts, which often feature sweet, traditional delicacies. In the Islamic faith, it is forbidden to fast during Eid al-Fitr.

“On Eid, you are encouraged to eat all the things that are too rich, too sweet, too creamy for a normal day,” food blogger Sumayya Usmani told the New York Times. “The whole day is dedicated to rejoicing in having food on the table.”

Many Muslims also celebrate Eid by delivering food donations to those who are less fortunate.

Eid al-Ftir 2014 in Yemen

Yemeni girls show their hands decorated with traditional henna designs in the Yemeni capital, Sanaa, on July 29, 2014, as they celebrate Eid al-Fitr. During Ramadan, observant Muslims do not drink, eat or have sexual relations between dawn and nightfall.  MOHAMMED HUWAIS/AFP/Getty Images

How Do Muslims Greet Each Other On Eid Al-Fitr?

During the holiday, Muslims will greet one another with Eid Mubārak or Eid Saeed, which translate loosely to “Happy Eid” or “Blessed Eid.”

Eid al-Fitr 2014 in Pakistan

Pakistani Muslim devotees offer Eid greetings after prayers on the first day of the Eid al-Fitr festival at Badshahi Masjid in the city of Lahore on July 29, 2014.  Arif Ali/AFP/Getty Images

What Are Some Quotes From The Quran That Muslims Share On Eid Al-Fitr?

  • “Hold to forgiveness, command what is right; but turn away from the ignorant.” – al-A’raf 7:199
  • “…And eat and drink until the white thread of dawn becomes distinct to you from the black thread [of night]. Then complete the fast until the sunset…” – Surat Al-Baqarah [2:184-190]
  • “Those who believed and led a righteous life are the best creatures.” – al-Baiyinah [98:7]
  • “O ye who believe! Fasting is prescribed to you as it was prescribed to those before you, that ye may (learn) self-restraint.” – al-Baqarah 2:183

Source….Morgan Winsor in www. ibtimes.com

Natarajan

How a Differently Abled Student’s Letter to Nike is Now Changing Many Lives…

How a Differently Abled Student's Letter to Nike is Now Changing Many Lives

Image Courtesy: Screengrab taken from YouTube video uploaded by Nike Basketball

A 16 year old cerebral palsy had a very simple request. He was going to college soon and wouldn’t have his parents there to tie his shoelaces for him. So he wrote a letter to one of the biggest shoe brands in the world and put it up on social media.

And it was Matthew Walzer’s 2012 letter to Mark Parker, Chief Executive Officer of Nike, that resulted in an invention that will help millions of differently abled people in the world.

“I wanted to say look, this is a real issue; these are daily challenges that millions of disabled people face,” says Matthew Walzer in a video released by Nike. It explains how designer Tobie Hatfield and the company came up with the idea of a “wraparound zipper system” that makes getting in and out of shoes much easier for those who face difficulty while using their hands.

“I’ll never forget that night. Taking them out of the box and putting them on – I just felt this wave of independence that I never got to experience before,” says Matthew.

The video makes for a beautiful watch, not only because of the shoes they present to Matthew. They also surprise him by introducing him to one of his favourite sportstars.
Take a look at video below and always remember Tobie Hatfield’s words: “At some point, some people become less able sooner than others. But eventually, we all become less able.”

Source….www.ndtv.com and http://www.you tube.com

Natarajan

‘Turmeric may help treat diabetes’….

Curcumin, a substance in turmeric, combined with an omega-3 fat may delay or prevent the onset of type-2 diabetes.

Curcumin, a substance in turmeric, combined with an omega-3 fat may potentially delay or prevent the onset of type-2 diabetes, researchers, led by an Indian-origin scientist, say.

Health scientists from the University of Newcastle’s Nutraceuticals Research Group, led by Professor Manohar Garg, are seeking 80 recruits for a new clinical study to find out whether the Indian spice combined with an omega-3 fat can delay the onset of type 2 diabetes or prevent it altogether.

“The root cause of type 2 diabetes is systemic inflammation, which impacts insulin secretion and function,” said Garg.

“We want to nip the inflammation in the bud,” he said.

“This study will use two bioactive compounds that we find in food — curcumin and omega—3 fat. Both are very important anti-inflammatory agents,” Garg said.

Curcumin, derived from turmeric, is part of the ginger family and commonly used for food colouration. Its healing properties are well known in India.

“Turmeric has been used for centuries to promote healing of bruises, sprains, wounds and inflammation,” he said.

Nowadays in India the level of curcumin (turmeric) intake has dropped considerably as people switch to Westernised fast foods, and it parallels with a significant rise in type 2 diabetes cases. In fact the disease is now an epidemic in India and may soon be the number one health burden,” said Garg.

The randomised control trial will test both compounds, with the recruitment group being segregated into four.

One will get curcumin only, the second will get omega-3 fat only, the third will receive both, and the fourth will serve as a control group.

The capsules contain 200 mg of curcumin and one gm of omega-3 fat respectively.

People who are prone to develop diabetes because of impaired glucose tolerance or impaired fasting glucose, and who are aged between 30 and 70, may be eligible.

“The anti-inflammatory mechanisms surrounding curcumin and omega-3 fats are different, so we want to test if they complement each other and have treatment synergies beyond their individual effects,” Garg said.

“Our thinking is that the combination is safe, free of any side-effects and may prove to be as effective as drugs used for management of diabetes,” he added.

Keywords: turmericancient Indian medicineUniversity of Newcastle research

Source….www.the hindu.com

Natarajan

1996…ஜூலை 17….மெட்ராஸ் சென்னை என மாறிய நாள் …

அடுத்த மாதம் தனது 376-வது பிறந்த நாளைக் கொண்டாடவிருக்கும் ‘சென்னை’ மாநகரம் 17 ஜூலை 1996 வரை ‘மெட்ராஸ்’ என்றே அழைக்கப்பட்டது. தென்னிந்தியாவின் வாசல் என்று அழைக்கப்படும் சென்னைக்கு நெடிய வரலாறு உண்டு. கி.பி. ஒன்றாம் நூற்றாண்டு முதல் உலகெங்கிலும் இருந்து வர்த்தகர்கள் சென்னையைத் தேடி வந்துள்ளனர்.

17-ம் நூற்றாண்டில் ஆங்கிலேயர் சென்னையில் கால்பதித்த பின்னர், இந்நகருக்கு வேறு விதமான அடையாளங்கள் உருவாகத் தொடங்கின.

 

1639-ல் கிழக்கிந்திய கம்பெனியைச் சேர்ந்த பிரான்சிஸ் டே, ஆண்ட்ரூ கோகன் ஆகியோர் செயின்ட் ஜார்ஜ் கோட்டை இப்போது உள்ள இடத்தை வாங்கினார்கள். அந்த இடத்தை விற்ற அய்யப்பன் நாயக்கர், வேங்கடப்பன் ஆகியோரின் தந்தை சென்னப்ப நாயக்கர் நினைவாக, கோட்டைக்கு வடக்கே உள்ள ஊர் சென்னைப் பட்டினம் என்று பெயரிடப்பட்டது. இதற்கு முன்னர் 16-ம் நூற்றாண்டில் போர்த்துகீசியர் சென்னைப் பகுதிக்கு வந்தனர். 1522-ல் சாந்தோம் என்ற துறைமுகத்தை நிறுவினர். அப்போது அவர்கள்தான் சென்னையை ‘மெட்றாஸ்’ என அழைத்தனர்.

அதன் பின்னர் 1688-ல் இரண்டாம் ஜேம்ஸ் மன்னர், மதறாஸ் நகரை முதல் நகரசபையாக அறிவித்தார். இதன் மூலம் இந்தியாவின் முதல் நகராட்சி என்ற பெருமையை மதறாஸ் பெற்றது. ராபர்ட் கிளைவ் தனது ராணுவத் தளமாக மதறாஸைத் தேர்ந்தெடுத்தபோது பிரிட்டிஷ் அரசின் இந்தியக் குடியிருப்புப் பகுதியில் இருந்த நான்கு மாகாணங்களில் ஒன்றாக அறிவித்து, ‘மதறாஸ் மாகாணம்’ எனும் பெயர் சூட்டியது. ஆனால், 1746-ல் செயின்ட் ஜார்ஜ் கோட்டையையும் மதறாஸ் மாகாணத்தையும் பிரெஞ்சு அரசு கைப்பற்றியது. மீண்டும் 1749-ல் மதறாஸை ஆங்கிலேயர் கைப்பற்றினர். அதனை அடுத்து திருவல்லிக்கேணி, புரசைவாக்கம், எழும்பூர், சேத்துப்பட்டு ஆகிய கிராமங்கள் சென்னைப் பட்டினத்துடன் இணைக்கப்பட்டன.

அதன் தொடர்ச்சியாக, இந்தியாவின் முக்கிய நகரங்கள் ரயில் மூலம் சென்னையுடன் இணைக்கப்பட்டன. இப்படியாக ஐரோப்பியர்களின் வருகையால் பொருளாதாரத் தலைமைப் பீடமாக வளர்ந்தது மதறாஸ். சுதந்திரத்துக்குப் பின்னர், 1947-ல் மதராஸ் மாகாணத்தின் தலைநகரமாக மெட்ராஸ் தேர்வானது. மொழி வாரியாக மாநிலங்கள் பிரிக்கப்பட்டபோது, அதுவரை மதறாஸ் மாகாணம் என்றழைக்கப்பட்ட மாநிலம் 1969-ல் ‘தமிழ்நாடு’ என பெயர் மாற்றப்பட்டது. மெட்ராஸ், சென்னை என்று இரண்டு பெயர்களில் இந்நகரம் அழைக்கப்பட்டுவந்தது. அந்தக் காலகட்டத்தில் முக்கிய நகரங்களின் பெயர்கள் மாற்றப்பட்டுவந்தன. 1991-ல் திருவேந்திரம் நகரின் பெயர் திருவனந்தபுரம் என்று  அதிகாரபூர்வமாக மாற்றப்பட்டது. 1995-ல் மும்பை என்று பெயர் மாற்றம் கண்டது பாம்பே. 1996 ஜூலை 17-ல், மு. கருணாநிதி தலைமையிலான திமுக ஆட்சியில், ‘மெட்ராஸ்’ அதிகாரபூர்வமாக ‘சென்னை’ என்று பெயர் மாற்றம் செய்யப்பட்டது.

Source…..www.tamil.the hindu.com

Natarajan