Message for the Day….” Everlasting happiness can be obtained only from God…”

In this vast world, every living being desires happiness that is eternal. Where can we attain this happiness from? Beauty is happiness, and happiness is the nectarous essence of life. Which objects are beautiful in this world? A number of objects attract people in various ways. You think it is the beauty of the objects that attracts. But beauty is temporary, whether it is in human beings, birds, animals, or things. For example, this is a rose. It looks so beautiful. Its beauty gives happiness. But how long will its beauty last? It may be there till today or tomorrow. Thereafter all its petals will fall down and it will lose its shine. When it loses its beauty, it will no longer give you happiness. Thus in this world, you cannot find permanent beauty and permanent happiness. Only God is permanent in this world; the rest is temporary like passing clouds. Everlasting happiness can be attained only from God.

Sathya Sai Baba

Message for the Day….” Don’t search for faults in others and hide your own …”

Sathya Sai Baba

It is not the nature of a spiritual aspirant to search for faults in others and hide their own. If your faults are pointed out to you by someone, don’t argue and try to prove that you were right, and don’t bear a grudge against them for it. Reason out within yourself how it is a fault and set right your own behaviour. Rationalising it for your own satisfaction or wreaking vengeance on the person who pointed it out —these should not be the traits of a spiritual aspirant or devotee. The spiritual aspirant must always seek the truthful and joyful, and must avoid all thoughts of the untrue, sad and depressing. Depression, doubt, conceit — these are as detrimental as Rahuand Kethu (evil planetary influences) to the spiritual aspirant. They will harm one’s spiritual practice. When your devotion is well established, these can be easily discarded if they appear. Above all, you must be joyful, smiling, and enthusiastic under all circumstances.

Here’s How the Tricolour Is Helping Women in Jharkand Prepare Nutritious Meals!….

Orange, white and green don’t just represent the Indian national flag. These colours also signify quality nutrition and good health.

Mention the word ‘tiranga’ or tricolour to Sheela Devi, a resident of Kasudih village in Jharkhand’s Deoghar district, and her face lights up with a smile.

To her the these colours don’t just represent the Indian national flag – they are also the ones that signify quality nutrition and good health.

Sheela has taken to including all the three colours of the flag – orange, white, and green – in her family’s daily diet.

Women across 50 villages in Deoghar district of Jharkhand are cooking up the ‘tiranga bhojan’ or tricolour meal. (Credit: Saadia Azim\WFS)

Women across 50 villages in Deoghar district of Jharkhand are cooking up the ‘tiranga bhojan’ or tricolour meal. (Credit: Saadia Azim\WFS)

The orange comes from the lentils, the green from leafy vegetables, and white from rice and milk. There was a time when she, along with other women in the region, used to serve up unbalanced, carbohydrate-rich meals of rice, potatoes and, occasionally, lentils.

But ever since the ‘tiranga bhojan’, or tricolour meal approach, initiated by a local NGO  has laid emphasis on the quality and not just the quantity of food eaten, afflictions like severe malnutrition and anaemia in the district have been curtailed considerably.

In 2013, when several incidents of infant deaths were reported from Deoghar district and attributed to chronic, neonatal and pregnancy-related complications, they brought into sharp focus the problem of malnutrition that the region was facing.

This was when the Centre for World Solidarity (CWS), which is involved in activities to combat under-nutrition in the area, decided to do the hunger mapping exercise here, randomly picking 50 villages in Devipur block for the survey. The findings that emerged certainly proved to be an eye-opener.

Of the total population surveyed, 14.6% reported to be chronically ill, 20.5% was malnourished and 64.9% had some kind of disease.

Analysis of the dietary intake provided further clarity. While 90% of households mainly ate starchy foods, protein consumption was found to be low in 60% of the population. Other nutrients like iron, potassium and calcium were rarely present in the average meal. Ironically, although vegetable production was good in the area, most of produce was sent off to the markets to be sold.

Rajesh Jha of the CWS, points out, “The reality was that people were not aware of the need to have an adequate and balanced diet. When we conducted a study on nutrition security in rural Jharkhand, what came to our notice was that people just liked to eat rice and potato.”

Talking about the food she usually cooks, Sangita Devi, 30, a mother of four growing children in Daranga Panchayat, only confirms Jha’s observations.

She says, “Like any other tribal household, we have boiled rice and potatoes three times a day. That’s our staple meal. In fact, my children relish potato curry. We do grow vegetables at home and in the nearby fields, but they are seen as stock to be sold off.”

The hunger mapping clearly pointed to the fact that even though their diet gave the locals high levels of energy to work tirelessly in the fields, it was also one of the reasons behind the moderate to severe malnutrition and anaemia prevalent among the children and women. The survey disclosed that 9% women were severely malnourished, while 40% pregnant women showed signs of severe anaemia, with pale lower eyelids and nails.

Additionally, more than 15% of them complained of oedema or swelling. Besides irregular eating patterns, there were other factors that contributed to the dismal health scenario. Bad sanitation practices meant women, especially, developed worm infestations, which, in turn, meant low appetite and lethargy.

Additionally, only 55.3% of pregnant women were registered with the government’s Integrated Child Development Scheme (ICDS). Most of them were availing of the free or subsidised support services, only once, during their entire pregnancy.

Armed with this information, Jha and his team realised that by simply motivating women to add variety to their daily meals, they could improve the health of the community. To ensure this positive behavioural change, they introduced the tricolour meal approach in 50 villages in the block.

When activists and nutritionists of the CWS first came to Parmila Hembram, a resident of Siri village in Deoghar, to talk to her about including all the three colours of the national flag in the family meals, she was confused. What was the need to alter their age-old food habits? And what had these colours got to do with their health? That’s when she was told that her son, Pramod, would end up weak and ill, just like many of the neighbourhood children, if she did not keep a check on what he was eating. That information had her hooked.

“They told me that besides rice and potato, we need vegetables and milk to develop immunity and make the bones strong,” she says.

 Today, Pramila, who is a mother of two, is conscious of what she eats and makes it a point to incorporate food rich in iron and calcium in every meal.

This is Pramod Majhi, whose mother Pramila ensures that she gives him ‘tiranga bhojan’ for every meal. Thanks to the sustained balanced input he has grown taller, his skin is clearer and his hair is black and thick. (Credit: Saadia Azim\WFS)

This is Pramod Majhi, whose mother Pramila ensures that she gives him ‘tiranga bhojan’ for every meal. (Credit: Saadia Azim\WFS)

Money is a constraint of course, because her husband, Nirmal Majhi, a daily wage labourer, only periodically manages to find employment at the government work sites. But that has not stopped her from being innovative and resourceful.

She elaborates, “I know I need to eat ‘tiranga bhojan’ in order to be a healthy mother. I ensure that the tricolour content is present in all our meals. I have seen the difference it has made to my son. He has definitely grown taller. His skin is clearer and his hair is black and thick.”

For a steady supply of greens and other vegetables in her kitchen, Pramila has created a small food garden. The leafy pumpkin and gourd creepers hang temptingly from her rooftop. And whatever is surplus, she sells in the weekly village market to make some quick money.

According to the CWS team’s observations, none of the elements of the ‘tiranga bhojan’ are difficult to source or cultivate locally. Produce such as jackfruit, fenugreek, spinach, ‘bathua’ (wild spinach), red spinach, and a variety of beans, grow easily within a span of two months and provide the much-needed iron.

Yet, it wasn’t easy to get the women to make the switch. There were even cultural practices to contend with. In some pockets, tribal customs banned the intake of certain nutrition-rich foods like soyabean and mushrooms.

What did help, however, was the intervention of local health volunteers like Sweta Devi, 26, who, incidentally, is a graduate in Rural Development.

 Sweta Devi, (fifth from left) a graduate in Rural Development, takes her role as a health volunteer very seriously. (Credit: Saadia Azim\WFS)

Sweta Devi, (fifth from left) a graduate in Rural Development, takes her role as a health volunteer very seriously. (Credit: Saadia Azim\WFS)

“I know how difficult it sometimes can be to put food on the table in these parts. During the monsoon season, in particular, villages here become inaccessible and we have seen severe food scarcity in many households. So we try to tell everyone to utilise what is locally available and is good for health,” she says.

She finds that with the ‘tiranga bhojan’ approach – where people are instructed not only to eat the right kinds of food but to cultivate their own small garden patches – things have become better. “Women know it’s prudent to forage or grow tricolour foods than look for a competent doctor later on,” she adds.

In Kasudih village these days, Sheela Devi is religiously practicing ‘circle garden farming’ to cook up a ‘tiranga bhojan’

 In Kasudih village, which is part of the Tatkiyo panchayat, Sheela Devi has taken to cooking ‘tiranga bhojan’ to ensure proper nutrition for the family. (Credit: Saadia Azim\WFS)

In Kasudih village, which is part of the Tatkiyo panchayat, Sheela Devi has taken to cooking ‘tiranga bhojan’ to ensure proper nutrition for the family. (Credit: Saadia Azim\WFS)

“Unlike in Siri village where irrigation is not a problem, in Kasudih, water is scarce. So I recycle the waste water from household chores and irrigate my garden, where I grow local varieties of vegetable. Not only are we eating better, but our income has increased too,” she says.

Featured image source: Flickr/pee vee

Source……Saadia  Azim in http://www.the betterindia.com

Natarajan

Message for the Day….” What is the true “naivedyam” to God …? “

Young age is like a delicious fruit. You should offer this sweet and delicious fruit to God. It is not possible to begin worshipping God after retirement in old age, when your body becomes weak, the sense organs lose their power, and the mind becomes feeble. Start early, drive slowly and reach safely. Start praying to God right from an early age. If you do not undertake sacred actions when your physical and mental faculties are strong, then when will you perform them? What can you do when the sense organs have lost all their power? Hence practice offering the fragrant flowers of your mind and heart to God with total faith from a young age. This is true naivedyam (food offering). Many people today do not make such offerings. When their senses become weak after indulging in all sorts of sensual pleasures, they think of offering them to God, akin to offering leftover food.

Sathya Sai Baba

This date in science: John Glenn first American to orbit Earth….

On February 20, 1962, John Glenn became the first American to orbit the Earth. He made three turns around the planet before returning safely.

John Glenn and Friendship 7

February 20, 1962. John Glenn became the first American to orbit the Earth on this date. He made three turns around the planet before returning safely in his space capsule, which was called Friendship 7. He followed two Russian cosmonauts in making this early orbit of our planet: Yuri Gagarin ( April 1961) and Gherman Titov (August 1961).

While Glenn was in orbit, NASA controllers received an indication that the heat shield on his craft had come loose. They instructed Glenn not to jettison the rockets underneath the heat shield during re-entry, because the rockets might be able to hold the shield in place. Fortunately, the indication turned out to be a false alarm.

Glenn returned to space at age 77 aboard the space shuttle Discovery in 1995, making him the oldest person to fly in space. His mission’s primary scientific aim at that time was to study the effects of spaceflight on seniors.

John Glenn climbs into the Friendship 7 spacecraft just before making his first trip into space on February 20, 1962. Photo via NASA

John Glenn and Friendship 7

John Glenn and Friendship 7

Here's What John Glenn saw on February 20, 1962.  Just 5 minutes and 44 seconds after launch, Glenn offered his first words about the view from his porthole: “This is Friendship 7. Can see clear back; a big cloud pattern way back across towards the Cape. Beautiful sight.” Three hours later, at the beginning of his third orbit, Glenn photographed this panoramic view of Florida from the Georgia border (right, under clouds) to just north of Cape Canaveral. His American homeland was 162 miles (260 kilometers) below. “I have the Cape in sight down there,” he noted to mission controllers. “It looks real fine from up here. I can see the whole state of Florida just laid out like on a map. Beautiful.”  Image via NASA

Here’s what John Glenn saw on February 20, 1962. Just 5 minutes and 44 seconds after launch, Glenn offered his first words about the view from his porthole: “This is Friendship 7. Can see clear back; a big cloud pattern way back across towards the Cape. Beautiful sight.” Three hours later, at the beginning of his third orbit, Glenn photographed this panoramic view of Florida from the Georgia border (right, under clouds) to just north of Cape Canaveral. His American homeland was 162 miles (260 kilometers) below. “I have the Cape in sight down there,” he noted to mission controllers. “It looks real fine from up here. I can see the whole state of Florida just laid out like on a map. Beautiful.” Image via NASA

Bottom line: John Glenn became the first American to orbit Earth on February 20, 1962. His space capsule was called Friendship 7.

Source……www.earthsky.org

Natarajan

This Teacher in India Has Just Been Nominated for the $1 Million Global Teacher Prize 2016…

Robin Chaurasiya is one of the co-founders of Kranti, an NGO that empowers girls from Mumbai’s red-light areas to become agents of social change. She has been shortlisted for the $1 million Global Teacher Prize 2016. She will compete with teachers from the UK, US, Kenya, Palestine, Japan, Finland, Australia, and Pakistan.

Names of the 10 shortlisted teachers were announced by renowned scientist Stephen Hawking in London.

“I wasn’t the easiest person to teach. I was slow to learn to read and my handwriting was untidy. But, at the age of 14, my teacher, Dikran Tahta, showed me how to harness my energy and encouraged me to think creatively about maths. He made me wonder. He made me curious. He opened up new worlds to me. That is what a great teacher can do,” Hawking said during theannouncement.

Robin, who refers to her students as krantikaris (revolutionaries), runs a school for daughters of sex workers and victims of human trafficking in Mumbai.

robin2

Source: YouTube

The students are between the ages of 12 and 20 and the curriculum includes English, computers, dance therapy, meditation, photography, theatre, field trips, education through music, and more. The students are encouraged to become peer teachers and community leaders.

30-year-old Robin was born in Los Angeles and served with the US Air Force for many years. She co-founded Kranti in 2011 and volunteered with an anti-trafficking NGO in Uganda.

The Global Teacher Prize was created last year by entrepreneur Sunny Varkey of UK-based Varkey Foundation. It is an annual award given to an exceptional teacher who has made an outstanding contribution to the profession, and is widely referred to as the Nobel Prize for teachers. The top 10 have been shortlisted from 8,000 nominations and applications received from 148 countries around the world. This award celebrates the exceptional work of teachers around the world who inspire their students. The finalist will be announced on March 13 in a ceremony in Dubai.

“I hope her story will inspire those looking to enter the teaching profession and also shine a powerful spotlight on the incredible work teachers do all over India and throughout the world every day,” Sunny Varkey said while talking about Robin.

According to their website, the Global Teacher Prize Judging Academy includes public officials, head teachers, academics, journalists, entrepreneurs, company directors, scientists, and entertainment industry personalities from around the world.

You can show your support for Robin by sharing her work on social media with #teachersmatter. Watch her talk about Kranti here:

This video was originally published here.
Source………Tanaya Singh in http://www.the betterindia.com
Natarajan

This Engineer Earns for finding faults from Software Bugs in Facebook, Twitter & Zomato !!!

From hacking into the social media accounts of his friends, to finding more than 90 security flaws for Facebook – Anand Prakash has come a long way with his love for technology and interest in ethical hacking. This is his story.

It was while preparing for his engineering entrance exams in Kota, Rajasthan that Anand Prakash first became interested in hacking. “I had a smartphone and Internet packs were very costly at that time. I came across some kind of proxy setting and figured out a way to use the Internet for free,” he says. The service provider rectified the loophole after some time when many users came to know about it. But for Anand, it was the beginning of a very eventful journey towards building a career in the field of hacking – the kind that’s ethical.

“What I do now is called security research, not hacking,” he is quick to correct.

Today, the 23-year-old is a security engineer with Flipkart, uses the Internet in a more responsible manner, and has been rewarded by many organizations for finding flaws in their software or technology setups.

ethical hacking

Anand Prakash

Anand, who is from the town of Bhadra in Rajasthan, was always interested in computers.

“It was always the same with me. I used to score better in technical subjects, but when it came to subjects like geography, environmental studies, etc., I used to face a lot of problems,” he recalls.

As a student, Anand strengthened his newly acquired knowledge of hacking by experimenting among friends.

“I used to practice phishing on my friends’ accounts with their permission. It is the most basic process in hacking. It involves extracting information like usernames, passwords, etc., by sending out emails to the victims in a way that they will trust them enough to open the links,” he says. Getting access to the password of a friend’s Orkut account was Anand’s first hack.

After Kota, he joined Vellore Institute of Technology to pursue a course in computer science engineering. Anand continued to polish his knowledge about ethical hacking and different programming languages in college, and practiced whatever he learned among friends.

“Up till then, I only knew about hacking processes that involved using some automated tools. And that did not interest me after a point. Finding security flaws in systems is completely different from what I was doing then,” he says.

In the third year of college, Anand came to know about Facebook’s Bug Bounty Program. It offers recognition and compensation to security researchers who find vulnerabilities in Facebook and report them according to the organization’s responsible disclosure policy.

By then, Anand was well-versed in languages like PHP, JavaScript, etc.

“I liked to analyse codes. And when I learnt that Facebook has given monetary compensation to someone for finding a bug in their technology, I thought of giving it a try,” he says.

He utilised the Open Web Application Security Project (OWASP), which is an initiative by OWASP Foundation for the improvement of software security in different organizations around the world. The project provides users with open source study materials to understand application security over the Internet.

“I started learning with the help of OWASP, followed experts on Twitter, and read up a lot about security research. Fortunately, I found a bug on Facebook in just a month. It was a loophole that enabled me to find people online even if they had turned off their chat,” he says. Anand received his first bounty of USD 500 for reporting this issue.

Then he learned that many such organizations welcome people who find security vulnerabilities for them. And the work turned out to be so interesting that there was no turning back for the technology enthusiast. To date, he has found about 90 bugs for Facebook, and ranks fourth in the Facebook wall of fame 2015.

The highest bounty Anand received from Facebook was a sum of USD 12,500 for finding a major security flaw because of which a user could post anything on his/her profile using someone else’s account. “For example, I could post a picture, a video, or text, and it would be visible on my Facebook wall as a post from your side,” he explains.

After college, he did an internship with the Cyber Police Investigation Branch of Gurgaon Police. There he worked on finding the different strategies used by cyber criminals.

ethical hacking

After the internship

He has also reported issues to companies like Twitter and Google and has earned Rs. 1.2 crore in the process. He was able to hack into the systems of the restaurant discovery and search application Zomato to gain access to the accounts of their 62 million users. He disclosed this issue to the company and they fixed it in two day, appreciating his efforts.

“I always first report the issue to the organization without exposing it elsewhere. It is called responsible disclosure. Then I take permission from them and post about it on my personal blog if they allow it.”

But Anand is not very happy about the way many Indian companies treat security researchers:

Some companies are very responsive. They fix the bugs immediately and also give monetary compensation without much delay. But if you report bugs to many companies in India, they reply saying they will take legal action against you. The condition is very bad in terms of security here. But it is changing slowly. I have come across some companies that are now open to security research.”

With new technologies coming up every day, Anand’s hunger for learning keeps developing. His advice to those who want to pursue a career in security research: “Try and report bugs to companies in a responsible manner. And do not disclose the issue unless you have permission. Security research is a great thing if done ethically.”

Find out more about how he finds different bugs, here.

Source……Tanaya Singh in http://www.the betterindia.com

Natarajan

 

Message for the Day….” The human body is a plantain leaf, your heart is a sacred vessel and and the sacred food items are the virtues and acts of good conduct.”

Before offering to God, it is food. Once it is offered to God, it becomes free from all impurities and gets transformed into prasadam. By eating such sacred food, one will not acquire any mental impurities. We offer food to God on a clean plantain leaf. The human body is a plantain leaf, your heart is a sacred vessel and and the sacred food items are the virtues and acts of good conduct. Today to whom are you offering food? Your sacred food offering is to demons of wicked feelings such as anger, hatred, and jealousy. The left over is being offered to God. That is why you are victims of restlessness, difficulties, sorrows, and misery. Get rid of your evil qualities and offer your virtues to God with the prayer: ‘Oh God, You are the resident of my heart and You are the embodiment of love, kindness, and compassion.

Sathya Sai Baba

Message for the Day….” Anger is the enemy number one….”

People crave worldly happiness. If you analyse properly, this is the disease, and the resultant suffering we experience is its medicine and remedy. In the midst of these worldly pleasures, one rarely entertains the desire to attain the Lord. Besides it is necessary to analyse and discriminate every act of a person. It is this analysis which will give rise to the spirit of renunciation. Without this effort, renunciation is difficult to obtain. Miserliness is like the behavior of a dog; it has to be transformed. Anger is enemy number one of the spiritual aspirant; it is like spittle and has to be treated as such. And untruth is even more disgusting — through untruth, the vital powers of all are destroyed. It should be treated as scavenging itself. Theft ruins life; it makes the priceless human life cheaper than a pie; it is like rotten and foul smelling flesh. Moderate food, moderate sleep, love (prema), and fortitude will help in the upkeep of the health of both body and mind.

Sathya Sai Baba

THE LEGENDARY TOILETS OF SINGAPORE AND THE FLUSHING LAW….

Over the years the city of Singapore has been described by many as one of the cleanest on Earth with roads and toilets being “clean enough to eat off“, which is perhaps to be expected from a city where it’s illegal not to flush a public toilet.

The reason why toilets in Singapore are so insanely clean can be traced back to the work of Lee Kuan Yew, Singapore’s first and arguably most popular prime minister. Kuan Yew rose to power in 1959 and continued to serve as Singapore’s leader for 31 years until he decided to step down in 1990. When Singapore became an independent nation in 1965, Kuan Yew is noted as being instrumental to the the small city-state being able to so quickly transform itself from being a “poor port from the bottom rungs of the third world” to being one of the most profitable and prosperous economies on the planet.

Kuan Yew accomplished this through a series of reforms aimed at making the country an overall nicer place to live including:

  • Enacting legislation to make prosecuting corrupt officials easier as well as “relentlessly pursuing” corruption wherever he encountered it.
  • Paying civil servants decent wages to ensure the jobs would be tempting to Singapore’s best and brightest and giving them bonuses based on how well the Singapore’s economy does on a yearly basis.
  • Inviting foreign corporations to set up shop in his country to create reliable employment for his citizens and foster international relations.
  • Establishing the Housing and Development Board to help house residents without homes into newly built apartments. Further, unlike most nation’s public housing, Singapore’s is quite nice, places people actually want to live.
  • Drafting legislation to plant tress and clean up the cities waterways and rivers which were notably filthy. Kuan Yew was so serious about making Singapore cleaner, he famously promised that if his dream wasn’t a reality by 1986 and he was still in charge, that he’d personally hunt down whomever was responsible for the failure and shoot them. Because he wasn’t playing around.
  • Creating the Water Planning Unit, which was tasked with helping the country become less dependent on water from Malaysia, which was threatening to cut off their water supply after Singapore gained independence. This initiative, like so many others he enacted, was a resounding success, with Time magazine later calling Singapore “the global paragon of water conservation.” In fact, their system is so efficient that they even can, and do, process non-potable waste-water into high-purity drinking water.
  • Imposing stiff taxes on car ownership and enacting the Clean Air Act as well as creating the Anti-Pollution Unit, to help keep Singapore’s air pollution levels at an acceptable, healthy level.

By far Kuan Yew’s most infamous policies though were his incredibly strict rules in regards to public cleanliness, most if not all of which carry hefty fines if you’re caught breaking them. For example, not flushing a public toilet is considered a crime in Singapore and if you’re caught flouting it, you will be given an on the spot fine of about 150 dollars, more if you’re a repeat offender. Likewise, littering carries an equally heavy fine of about 300 dollars or more, depending on the size of the item. Smaller items like candy wrappers usually incur a lesser fine, whilst things like soda cans can net you a trip to court and even a caning if you’re caught.

Kuan Yew’s biggest bugbear, however, was chewing gum; he hated it with such a passion that since the 1990s, gum has been outright banned in the country. This was later (partially) repealed in 2004 and gum is now okay to be brought into the country in small quantities and dentists are allowed to prescribe it for certain medical conditions.

While this may seem a tad extreme, Kuan Yew’s annoyance with gum chewing wasn’t without precedent. You see, prior to the ban in 1992, the government was spending upwards of 150,000 dollars a year to clean it up and vandals were using it to disrupt the sensors on the country’s newly built subway trains, stopping their doors from shutting and in the process causing huge delays. After the ban, cases of such gum littering plummeted and the associated costs of cleaning it up dropped to negligible levels.

If you’re wondering how exactly Singapore enforces these dozens of laws, it’s mostly accomplished usinghundreds of undercover police officers who have the power to issue on the spot fines to anyone seen flouting them. Officers are known to check toilets after they’ve been used and even install security cameras if they receive multiple complaints on a particular toilet, to catch offenders in the act.

Perhaps our favourite Singapore cleanliness fact is that many of Singapore’s elevators have “Urine Detection Devices” which will lock the doors of an elevator and summon the police to your location to arrest you if it detects that you’re relieving yourself in one.

All of this may seem excessive, but the results really speak for themselves; today, Singapore is largely considered one of the world’s leading economies and the city itself is one of the most industrious, safe, clean, nicest to live and richest on Earth. In fact, Singapore is currently enjoying 16 consecutive years on the top spot of the “world’s most livable cities“, and is also generally considered the world’s best city for businesses. Not bad for a place that was up until about 50 years ago or so described as a “swampy land mass“.

Bonus Facts:

  • There’s a charity in Singapore called the Restroom Association Singapore (RAS). Set up in 1998 by a man called Jack Sim, who later went on to found the World Toilet Organization (WTO), RAS has backed numerous campaigns to educated the public about the benefits of toilet cleanliness and even offers awards to exceptionally clean restrooms in the public and private sectors. Their stated mission is to, among other things, “investigate and find out the root cause of dirty toilets. We must identify the needs of various users including tourists and foreign workers so as to promote better designed toilets that cater to these needs. We must constantly source for the best practices in cleanliness, design and maintenance of public toilets and review our local standards. Together with the government and other strategic partners, we must continue to raise awareness among the community on public health issues and educate the users on good toilet etiquette.” Sim was reportedly inspired to start the RAS when he heard Kuan Yew’s successor, Goh Chok Tong say “we should measure our graciousness according to the cleanliness of our public toilets”. Today, Singapore’s toilet facilities are the envy of the modern world and Sim has used his clout in the world of toilets to help bring safe, clean toilet facilities to millions in the third world through the WTO. Sims has since earned the rather awesome honor of being called “a Hero of the Environment” by Time magazine. Not bad for a guy who just wants everyone to have a clean toilet to pee and poop in.
  • Despite being only a small city-state with a few million residents, Singapore is one of the most prosperous nations on Earth. So much so that it is often referred to as one of the “Four Asian Tigers”, a phrase used to describe the countries of Singapore, Taiwan, Hong-Kong and South Korea, all of which are noted as being economic powerhouses despite their relatively small size.
  • Though his rule wasn’t without controversy, Lee Kuan Yew is generally regarded as being unquestionably instrumental to the country’s transformation from a small port town into the shining utopia-esque city it is today. When Kuan Yew passed away in 2015, many officials spoke of his “unwavering dedication” to making Singapore a fundamentally better place for those who lived there. As you’d expect for a world leader who served for several decades, Kuan Yew has had a number of colorful quotes attributed to him over the years including: “Even from my sick bed, even if you are going to lower me into the grave and I feel something is going wrong, I will get up.” and our personal favourite, If you can’t think because you can’t chew, try a banana” when asked if Singapore’s stringent cleanliness laws would “stifle the people’s creativity“.
  • To date, the highest fine given to a litter bug is 19,800 Singaporean dollars, given to a man who repeatedly threw cigarette butts out of his high-rise apartment building’s window.

Source…..www/today i  foundout.com

Natarajan