Meet the Parents of Sumit Nagal… Wimbledon Boys’ Doubles Champion ….

‘Even if we ate our chappatis with pickle, we ensured proper food for Sumit.’

Wimbledon boys’ doubles champion Sumit Nagal’s father tells Manu Shankar/Rediff.com about his son’s tough rise, Mahesh Bhupathi’s incredible support and the hurdles ahead.

Image: Suresh Nagal and Krishna Nagal at their Nangloi home. Photograph: Manu Shankar/Rediff.com

When you enter Nangloi, west Delhi, and ask for directions to the Nagal home, you observe a glint in people’s eyes. A hint of pride.

Sumit Nagal’s home is now a local landmark.

Local residents may not know precisely what the teenager has achieved, but the constant buzz about him on television has added to their curiosity.

Some say he is a kabaddi star, some tell you he won a medal in judo while others assert that he was part of the junior hockey team that won a medal.

They could, I guess, be excused for their ignorance since the mother and sister of Wimbledon’s latest boys’ doubles champion were national kabaddi and hockey players themselves.

Meanwhile, Suresh and Krishna Nagal are waiting for yet another journalist who wants to chat with them about their son’s success at Wimbledon.

Sumit, partnering Vietnam’s Nam Hoang Ly, defeated Reilly Opelka of the United States and Japan’s Akira Santillan 7-6, 6-4 to win the boys’ doubles title at the All England Lawn Tennis Championships, only the sixth Indian to win a Grand Slam junior title.

Yuki Bhambri was the last Indian to taste similar success at the junior level when he won the Australian Open boys’ singles title in 2009. Ramanathan Krishnan (Wimbledon, 1954), Ramesh Krishnan (French Open and Wimbledon, 1979) and Leander Paes (Wimbledon 1990, US Open 1991) are the other Indian junior Grand Slam singles champions. Sania Mirza won the Wimbledon girls’ doubles title in 2003, partnering Russia’s Alisa Kleybanova.

Suresh Nagal, a teacher at Delhi’s municipal school in Nangloi, looks back on his son’s steady rise:

Image: Sumit Nagal. Photograph: Kind Courtesy Sumit Nagal

How did Sumit get into tennis?

We got Sumit enrolled at the DDA (Delhi Development Authority) tennis academy in Paschim Vihar, when he was 7. We are fond of tennis, so wanted him to get into the sport. Everyone sends their kids for cricket coaching, so I thought of putting Sumit into a different sport.

When he turned seven, I got him a Head tennis racquet, which was expensive at that time. It cost Rs 2,000 and I could see he liked the sport very much.

Cricket is commercialised these days and that’s why I wanted Sumit to play tennis. It is such a beautiful game!

At what age did Sumit win his first medal?

Sumit won his first medal, a gold, when he was 8 at a tournament organised by the DDA, in the Under-10 category. He had talent and his coaches used to tell me that tennis comes naturally to him.

When he was 10 he would convincingly beat the Under-14 or Under-12 boys. After that he won several medals outside the country, in Germany, Canada.

Tennis is an expensive sport. What were the difficulties you faced?

Sumit practiced at the Siri Fort Sports complex, which is about 27 km away from Nangloi. So the travelling took its toll. We used to travel in packed buses.

While studying at the Modern Child School, he used to come back by 1:30 pm, have his lunch and then leave for coaching, as he had to be there by 3.

We ensured that he had a proper diet, as this is a very physical sport. Humnein chahe achaar se roti khayi ho, ladke ka dhayaan zaroor rakha (Even if we ate our chappatis with pickle, we ensured proper food for Sumit).

It was after buying a racquet for him that we built our upper floor so that he could practice upstairs by hitting the ball against the wall.

The school authorities accommodated us a lot. There were several occasions when he had tournaments, they would adjust his schedule and allow him to come to school after his matches.

Image: The cabinet filled with trophies Sumit has won. Photograph: Manu Shankar/Rediff.com

When did the jump from DDA’s coaching to the RK Khanna Academy happen?

In December 2007 Apollo Tyres asked Mahesh Bhupathi along with foreign coaches to conduct a nationwide talent hunt. They  selected 14 bright prospects and train them for the future. They had four rounds before the final selection process in Delhi.

It was there that Mahesh spotted Sumit and said there is talent in the kid. Frankly speaking, I didn’t expect him to do so well. There were more than 5,000 kids in the trials and I wasn’t expecting him to bag a place, let alone work with Mahesh.

Sumit was the youngest of them all and had to go to the academy in Bengaluru.

What has been Mahesh Bhupathi’s contribution to Sumit’s growth as a tennis player?

Whatever Sumit has achieved today is due to Mahesh Bhupathi’s help and blessings. During the Apollo Tyres talent hunt, Sumit held Mahesh’s hand and urged him to come see his game. He was pretty impressed by the kid’s confidence level.

His mother, who accompanied Sumit to the trials, did not know who Mahesh was. Once he got into the academy, Bhupathi ensured that Sumit played in Europe to gain exposure. He supported us financially big time too.

They (Mahesh and Sumit) are pretty close and speak on a regular basis, discussing finer points of the game.

Image: Sumit Nagal and Nam Hoang Ly celebrate after winning the junior boys doubles title at Wimbledon. Photograph: Kind Courtesy Sumit Nagal

Sumit also took part in the singles at Wimbledon, but failed to go through. Were you disappointed?

He was aiming for singles glory at Wimbledon, but there were lot of complications which may have hampered his singles game.

First and foremost, his visa was delayed. He could only go to Wimbledon a day before the tournament commenced.

Secondly, at the airport, the Air India staff were not letting him fly as he was under 18 and asked him to bring along either a coach or guardian. His coach Mariano Delfino was supposed to meet him at Heathrow.

After spending considerable time explaining that he was going to represent the country in Wimbledon Air India let him fly.

In the commotion he missed the direct flight to Heathrow and had to travel to Germany, then take a train to London before just making it to the tournament.

Naturally, he was jet-lagged and tired. How can one expect him to do well?

Despite that he took the game against Juan Pablo Ficovich in the first round to the third set.

Coaches play an important role in the development of one’s game. Do you rue the fact he doesn’t have a personal coach?

A personal coach will enhance his game. At the moment he is missing one. A coach reads match situations better and is able to tell you the difference between a correct shot and a wrong one.

In Germany, when he practices, the coach records his practice games and then points out the mistakes so that he can work on his game. Otherwise, it’s like two friends playing the game.

At the same time, we want someone who is good. Often you find people who won’t even know the full form of AITA (the All India Tennis Association) or ITF (the International Tennis Federation) and are in the position of coach at various academies.

Manu Shankar / Rediff.com

Source….www.rediff.com

Natarajan

Meet Nischal Narayanam, India’s Youngest Chartered Accountant….

NISCHAL NARAYANAM

He’s the country’s youngest Chartered Accountant but he needs to wait two more years before he can enrol in the Institute of Chartered Accountants of India (ICAI), which needs its members to be at least 21. Nischal Narayanam is only 19 years old, but he already has a postgraduate degree in commerce from Osmania University in Hyderabad.

“The journey wasn’t easy and a tough one. But I was determined to achieve it,”Nischal told The Hindu.

Narayanam’s gifted mind was recognised early. He was eight years old when he passed several Sanskrit exams equivalent to a masters degree. By the time he was nine, he was already correcting mistakes in his father’s company balance sheet. At 10, he was the world memory champion among kids, had authored volumes of books on mathematics, and had designed and developed a mathematics laboratory. That year he won his first Guinness World Record by memorising 225 random objects in just over 12 minutes.

nischal narayanam

Nischal memorises 132 random digits as he prepares for his second Guinness World Record.

The next year he was awarded the national child award for exceptional achievement.

As he entered his teenage years, Narayanam passed the Cambridge University examination and qualified the basic level exam for becoming a CA. He also won another Guinness World Record — this time for memorising 132 digits in just a minute. Two years later, at 15, he passed the second level of the CA exam, and became the youngest mentor to a company — Nischal’s Smart Learning Solutions Pvt. Ltd — which offers tools to make learning easier.

He is listed as one of the “7 brilliant brains of the world” by the National Geographic Channel, and has his own philanthropic organisation to help kids to study at free summer camp

Source….Indrani Basu in http://www.huffingtonpost.in

Natarajan

” காஞ்சி மஹிமை ….”

‘கச்சி மூதூர்’ என்று சங்க இலக்கியமான ‘பெரும் பாணாற்றுப்படை‘ முதலியவற்றிலேயே சொல்லப்படும் அந்தப் புராதனமான நகரம் மகாக்ஷேத்ரம் என்பதாக மட்டுமின்றி பெரிய வித்யா ராஜதானியாகவும் இருந்திருக்கிறது.

வடக்கே காசி மாதிரி தெற்கே காஞ்சி. “சான்றோர் உடைத்து” என்று சிறப்பிக்கப்படும் ‘தொண்டை நன்னாட்டின்‘ தலைநகரம் அதுதான். “கடிகா ஸ்தானம்” எனப்படும் சமஸ்கிருத யுனிவர்சிடி இருந்த நகரம் அது. அப்பர் சுவாமிகள் “கல்வியைக் கரையில்லாத காஞ்சி மாநகர்” என்கிறார். பல மத சித்தாந்திகளும் கூடியிருந்த இடம் அது என்று ‘மணிமேகலை‘யிலிருந்து தெரிகிறது.

பௌத்தம், ஜைனம், காபாலிகம் முதலான எல்லா மதங்களும் அங்கே பிற்காலத்தில் இருந்ததென்று மகேந்திர பல்லவனின் ‘மத்த விலாஸ ப்ரஹஸன‘ நாடகத்திலிருந்து தெரிகிறது. சரித்திரத்தில் சக்கரம் ஒரு முழு சுற்றுச் சுற்றிப் பழையபடியே மறுபடி நடக்கும்போது எந்த வட்டாரத்தில் எப்படியிருந்ததோ அப்படித்தான் திரும்பவும் நடக்கும்.

அதனால் ஆசார்யாள் காலத்திலும் அங்கே பல மதங்கள் இருந்திருக்க வேண்டும். இப்போதும் பௌத்த சிற்பங்கள் பல அங்கே அகப்படுகின்றன. காஞ்சி மண்டலத்துக்குள்ளேயே இருக்கும் திருப்பருத்திக்குன்றம் ஜைனகாஞ்சி என்கிற சமண தலமாகப் பேர் பெற்றிருக்கிறது.

க்ஷேத்ரம் என்று பார்க்கும்போது, ‘ரத்ன த்ரயம்‘ என்கிற ஈச்வரன், அம்பாள், பெருமாள் ஆகிய மூன்று பேருக்கும் முக்கியமான தலமாயிருப்பது அது. எண்ணி முடியாத கோவில்கள் சகல தெய்வங்களுக்கும் அங்கே இருப்பதில் ஏகம்பம் பரமேச்வரனின் பஞ்சபூத தலங்களில் ப்ருத்வீ க்ஷேத்ரமாயிருக்கிறது.

அம்பாள் காமாக்ஷியின் காமகோஷ்டம் – ‘காமகோட்டம்‘ என்பது- அத்தனை அம்மன் சந்நிதிகளுக்கும் மூல சக்தி பீடமாயிருக்கிற பெருமாள் வரதராஜாவாக உள்ள விஷ்ணு காஞ்சியை – ‘அத்தியூர்‘ என்று வைஷ்ணவர்களின் திவ்ய தேசங்களில் சொல்வது. அதை மூன்று முக்கியமான க்ஷேத்ரங்களில் ஒன்றாகச் சொல்கிறார்கள். ரங்கமும், திருப்பதியும் மற்ற இரண்டு.

விஷ்ணு காஞ்சியைத் தற்போது சின்ன காஞ்சிபுரம் என்கிறோம். பெரிய காஞ்சிபுரம் என்பது சிவகாஞ்சி. கச்சி ஏகம்பமும் காமகோட்டமும் உள்ள இடம். ரத்ன த்ரயம் மட்டுமில்லாமல் ஷண்மத தெய்வங்களுக்குமே முக்கியமான க்ஷேத்ரம் காஞ்சி.

 

பிள்ளையார் கோவில்கள் இல்லாத ஊரே தமிழ்நாட்டில் கிடையாது. அப்படிக் காஞ்சிபுரத்திலும் அநேகம் உண்டு. அங்கே ஒரு பேட்டைக்கே பிள்ளையார் பாளையம் என்று பேர். காமாக்ஷி ஆலயத்திலேயே ஆறு, ஏழு விக்நேச்வர மூர்த்திகள் உண்டு.

கஞ்சி வரதர்

காஞ்சீபுரத்தில் வரதராஜா ‘பேரருளாளப் பெருமாள்‘ என்று விசேஷமாக, விளங்கிக் கொண்டிருக்கிறார். அவரைப் பற்றி ரசித்தமாக இரு சொல்லலங்கார ஹாஸ்யத் துணுக்கு இருக்கிறது.

“கஞ்சி வரதப்பா!” என்று காஞ்சீபுர வரதராஜாவை நினைத்து, வியாதியில் அவதிப்பட்டுக்கொண்டிருந்த ஒருத்தர் வாய்விட்டு அரற்றினாராம்.

பக்கத்திலே ஒரு சாப்பாட்டு ராமன் இருந்தான். அவனுக்குக் கொஞ்ச நாளாக ஜ்வரம். டாக்டர், ‘சாதம் சாப்பிடக்கூடாது. கஞ்சி வேண்டுமானால் கொஞ்சம் குடிக்கலாம்‘ என்று கண்டிப்புப் பண்ணியிருந்தார். “கஞ்சி எப்போ வரும்? எப்போ வரும்?” என்று அவன் தவித்துக் கொண்டிருந்தான்.

அதனாலே, பக்கத்திலே இருந்தவர், “கஞ்சி வரதப்பா” என்று சொன்னதை, “கஞ்சி வருகிறது அப்பா” என்று அவர் சொல்லுகிறாரென்று நினைத்துவிட்டான். ஆள் யாரும் வரக்காணோமே என்பதால், “எங்கே வரதப்பா?” என்றானாம்.

பிள்ளையார் கோவில்கள் இல்லாத ஊரே தமிழ்நாட்டில் கிடையாது. அப்படிக் காஞ்சிபுரத்திலும் அநேகம் உண்டு. அங்கே ஒரு பேட்டைக்கே பிள்ளையார் பாளையம் என்று பேர். காமாக்ஷி ஆலயத்திலேயே ஆறு, ஏழு விக்நேச்வர மூர்த்திகள் உண்டு.

சுப்ரமண்யருக்கு குமரக் கோட்டம் என்று தனிக் கோயில் இருக்கிறது. கச்சியப்ப சிவாசாரியார் கந்த புராணம் எழுதி அரங்கேற்றியதே அங்கேதான்.

கச்சபேச்வரர் கோவிலில் சூரியன் சந்நிதியில் “மயூர சதகம்” என்று நூறு சுலோகம் கொண்ட சூரிய துதி கல்வெட்டில் பொறித்திருப்பதிலிருந்து அது ஒரு முக்கியமான சூரிய க்ஷேத்ரமாகத் தெரிகிறது.

 

இப்படி ஷண்மதங்களுக்கும் முக்கியம் வாய்ந்ததாகக் காஞ்சிபுரம் இருக்கிறது. ஆசார்யாளுக்கு முந்தியே அப்படியிருந்து அவர் அதனாலேயே அங்கே வந்து தங்கியிருக்கலாம். அல்லது ஷண்மத ஸ்தாபனா சார்யாளாகிய அவர் வந்து தங்கியதாலேயே அது இப்படிப் பெருமை பெற்றிருக்கலாம்.

சப்த மோக்ஷபுரிகளில் தக்ஷிணத்தில் உள்ள ஒன்றே ஒன்று காஞ்சீபுரம்தான் என்பது அதன் தலையாய சிறப்பாகும். சமய முக்கியத்துவம், வித்யா ஸ்தான முக்கியத்துவம், ராஜரீக முக்கியத்துவம், வியாபார முக்கியத்துவம் எல்லாமே அந்த ஊருக்கு இருந்ததால்தான் “நகரேஷு காஞ்சி” என்று புகழப்பட்டிருக்கிறது.

– தெய்வத்தின் குரல் ஐந்தாம் பகுதி

(ஸ்ரீ சங்கர சரிதம்)

Source….www.tamil.thehindu.com

Natarajan

” Britain Must Pay Reparations to India….”

British troops in Calcutta, with rifles at the ready, clearing a street after Hindus and Muslims used firearms against each other. (Pho

British troops in Kolkata after a religious clash

 

At the end of May, the Oxford Union held a debate on the motion “This house believes Britain owes reparations to her former colonies”. Speakers included former Conservative MP Sir Richard Ottaway, Indian politician and writer Shashi Tharoor and British historian John Mackenzie. Shashi Tharoor’sargument in support of the motion, went viral in India after he tweeted it out from his personal account. The argument has found favour among Indians, where the subject of colonial exploitation remains a sore topic. Here he gives a summary of his views:

Indian economy

At the beginning of the 18th Century, India’s share of the world economy was 23%, as large as all of Europe put together. By the time the British departed India, it had dropped to less than 4%.

The reason was simple: India was governed for the benefit of Britain. Britain’s rise for 200 years was financed by its depredations in India.

By the end of the 19th Century, India was Britain’s biggest cash-cow, the world’s biggest purchaser of British exports and the source of highly paid employment for British civil servants – all at India’s own expense. We literally paid for our own oppression.

Grey line

De-industrialisation of India

Britain’s Industrial Revolution was built on the de-industrialisation of India – the destruction of Indian textiles and their replacement by manufacturing in England, using Indian raw material and exporting the finished products back to India and the rest of the world.

The handloom weavers of Bengal had produced and exported some of the world’s most desirable fabrics, especially cheap but fine muslins, some light as “woven air”.

Britain’s response was to cut off the thumbs of Bengali weavers, break their looms and impose duties and tariffs on Indian cloth, while flooding India and the world with cheaper fabric from the new satanic steam mills of Britain.

Weavers became beggars, manufacturing collapsed; the population of Dhaka, which was once the great centre of muslin production, fell by 90%.

So instead of a great exporter of finished products, India became an importer of British ones, while its share of world exports fell from 27% to 2%.

‘Clive of India’

Robert Clive, Baron Clive of Plassey, (1725 - 1774), British soldier and governor of Bengal, circa 1755.

Lord Clive was an enigmatic figure in the history of the British Empire

Colonialists like Robert Clive bought their “rotten boroughs” in England with the proceeds of their loot in India (loot, by the way, was a Hindi word they took into their dictionaries as well as their habits), while publicly marvelling at their own self-restraint in not stealing even more than they did.

And the British had the gall to call him “Clive of India”, as if he belonged to the country, when all he really did was to ensure that much of the country belonged to him.

Bengal famine

As Britain ruthlessly exploited India, between 15 and 29 million Indians died tragically unnecessary deaths from starvation.

Famine victims in Bengal, November 1943

Four million Bengalis died in the Great Bengal Famine of 1943

The last large-scale famine to take place in India was under British rule; none has taken place since, since free democracies don’t let their people starve to death.

Some four million Bengalis died in the Great Bengal Famine of 1943 after Winston Churchill deliberately ordered the diversion of food from starving Indian civilians to well-supplied British soldiers and European stockpiles.

“The starvation of anyway underfed Bengalis is less serious than that of sturdy Greeks,” he argued.

When officers of conscience pointed out in a telegram to the prime minister the scale of the tragedy caused by his decisions, Mr Churchill’s only response was to ask peevishly “Why hasn’t Gandhi died yet?”

Myth of ‘enlightened despotism’

British imperialism had long justified itself with the pretence that it was enlightened despotism, conducted for the benefit of the governed. Mr Churchill’s inhumane conduct in 1943 gave the lie to this myth.

An Indian man takes a photograph of a painting depicting the Jallianwala Bagh massacre in Amritsar on April 12, 2011

Hundreds of people at a public meeting were shot dead by British troops at the Jallianwala Bagh

But it had been battered for two centuries already: British imperialism had triumphed not just by conquest and deception on a grand scale, but by blowing rebels to bits from the mouths of cannons, massacring unarmed protesters at Jallianwala Bagh and upholding iniquity through institutionalised racism.

No Indian in the colonial era was ever allowed to feel British; he was always a subject, never a citizen.

Indian railways

 

7th April 1951: A locomotive constructed for the Indian Government Railways by the North British Locomotive Company of Glasgow, on show at the Festival of Britain on London's South Bank.

The railways were intended to help the British get around’

The construction of the Indian Railways is often pointed to as a benefit of British rule, ignoring the obvious fact that many countries have built railways without having to be colonised to do so.

Nor were the railways laid to serve the Indian public. They were intended to help the British get around, and above all to carry Indian raw materials to the ports to be shipped to Britain.

The movement of people was incidental except when it served colonial interests; no effort was made to ensure that supply matched demand for mass transport.

In fact the Indian Railways were a big British colonial scam.

British shareholders made absurd amounts of money by investing in the railways, where the government guaranteed extravagant returns on capital, paid for by Indian taxes.

Thanks to British rapacity, a mile of Indian railways cost double that of a mile in Canada and Australia.

It was a splendid racket for the British, who made all the profits, controlled the technology and supplied all the equipment, which meant once again that the benefits went out of India.

It was a scheme described at the time as “private enterprise at public risk”. Private British enterprise, public Indian risk.

Grey line

British aid

In recent years, even as the reparations debate has been growing louder, British politicians have in fact been wondering whether countries like India should even receive basic economic aid at the expense of the British taxpayer.

To begin with, the aid received is 0.4%, which is less than half of 1% of India’s GDP.

British aid, which is far from the amounts a reparation debate would throw up, is only a fraction of India’s fertiliser subsidy to farmers, which may be an appropriate metaphor for this argument.

Britons may see our love of cricket or the English language, or even parliamentary democracy, conjuring up memories of the Raj as in television series like Indian Summers, with Simla, and garden parties, and gentile Indians.

For many Indians, however, it is a history of loot, massacres, bloodshed, of the banishing of the last Mughal emperor on a bullock cart to Burma.

Grey line

Indian soldiers in world wars

More than two million Indian soldiers participated in World War Two

More than two million Indian soldiers participated in World War Two

India contributed more soldiers to British forces fighting the First World War than Australia, Canada, New Zealand and South Africa combined.

Despite suffering recession, poverty and an influenza epidemic, India’s contributions in cash and materiel amount to £8bn ($12bn) in today’s money.

Two and a half million Indians also fought for British forces in the Second World War, by the end of which £1.25bn of Britain’s total £3bn war debt was owed to India, which was merely the tip of the iceberg that was colonial exploitation.

It still hasn’t been paid.

Return the Koh-i-Noor diamond’

he Queen Elizabeth The Queen Mothers priceless crown, containing the famous Koh-i-noor diamond, rests on her coffin on a Gun Carriage pulled by the Royal Horse Artillery to Westminster Hall.

Maybe Britain could kindly return the Koh-i-Noor diamond’

What’s important is not the quantum of reparations that Britain should pay, but the principle of atonement.

Two hundred years of injustice cannot be compensated for with any specific amount.

I, for one, would be happy to accept a symbolic pound a year for the next two hundred years, as a token of apology.

And maybe Britain could kindly return the Koh-i-Noor diamond to the country it was taken from!

Source…..www.bbc.com

Natarajan

China Set To Open World’s Longest And Highest Glass-Bottom Bridge…

china

 

Courtesy of Haim Dotan Ltd. Architects and Urban Designers

China will soon finish construction on what will be the world’s tallest and longest glass pedestrian bridge, floating 300 meters above a canyon in the Zhangjiajie National Park. Designed by Israeli architect, Haim Dotan, the Zhangjiajie Grand Canyon Glass Bridge will be 380 meters long, six meters wide and feature a transparent glass floor.

“The Zhangjiajie Glass Bridge was designed to be invisible as possible — a white bridge disappearing into the clouds,” said Dotan.

The bridge will comprise two side steel beams, a structural glass deck, handrails and side suspension cables, with the capacity to hold up to 800 people at a time. The Zhangjiajie Grand Canyon Glass Bridge will also contain a bungee jumping spot and be used as a runway for fashion shows.

Construction is expected to wrap up in July, with the bridge officially opening to the public in October 2015. This follows the country’s recent inauguration of the world’s longest glass skywalk in Longgang National Geological Park in Chongqing.

China Set To Open World’s Longest And Highest Glass-Bottom Bridge originally appeared on ArchDaily, the most visited architecture website in May 2015.

Source….by Katie Watkins
This article originally appeared on ArchDaily http://www.huffingtonpost.com

Natarajan

Life in the Most Crowded Place on the Earth ….!!!

Santa Cruz del Islote is a squeeze.

Santa Cruz del Islote is a squeeze. Source: Supplied

THERE are no doctors. Electricity runs for just five hours a day. There’s no running water or sewerage system, with fresh water dropped off by the Colombian navy once every three weeks.

Welcome to Santa Cruz del Islote — and make sure you breathe in! This teeny tiny picturesque Caribbean island is insanely crowded. It’s just .012 square kilometres, but somehow 1200 people manage to inhabit it, making it four times as densely populated as Manhattan.

Located in the archipelago of San Bernardo, it lies two hours from Cartagena, Colombia. According to local legend, it was discovered about 150 years ago by a group of passing fishermen from the coastal town of Baru, 50 kilometres away.

They found something very attractive about the island — it had no mosquitoes, a rarity in the area. So they set up camp.

Santa Cruz del Islote

It’s arguably the most densely populated island on Earth. Source: Picture Media

These days, there are 90 houses, two shops, one restaurant and a school. Space is so limited that many of the structures extend onto the water, and the isle is part artificial.

And with no high-rises, everyone is squished onto the ground level.

The only empty space for people to visit is a courtyard which is half the size of a tennis court.

Life is actually quite relaxing, although cramped.

Life is actually quite relaxing, although cramped. Source: Supplied

Most of its residents work on nearby islands, and life here is described as peaceful, with children well-behaved and doors never locked.

“Life here is calm and delightful,” says 66-year-old Juvenal Julio, a descendant of the Islote’s founders, told the Toronto Star. “We don’t have violence, we don’t need police, we all know each other and we enjoy our days.”

Stunning. Picture: A TripAdvisor traveller

Stunning. Picture: A TripAdvisor traveller Source: Supplied

Despite the lack of crime, there is a lone security guard. He’s stationed there because Colombia funds a school on the island which is attended by 80 children, and law states that there must be a guard for every school.

Not that they need it, with children described as “docile” by their teachers.

When death strikes, the bodies are taken to a neighbouring island for burial, as there’s no room for a cemetery.

But despite the squeeze, locals love the lifestyle, with one telling the Star “It’s a glorious life.”

Source….www.news.com.au

Natarajan

This Video Clip will Make Your Day … Have a Cheerful Day !!!

A fishing trip in Alaska’s Day Harbor turned into the whale-watching trip of a lifetime.

Brad Rich, an Alaskan fisherman, caught an amazing display of humpback whales feeding on video.

It started out looking pretty calm:

Then Rich says, “I hear ’em,” and the whales erupt from the water, mouths agape and blowholes spouting:

Throughout the incredible encounter Rich’s uncontrollable laughter and sometimes profanity-laced exclamations are priceless.

“I was just in awe,” Rich told KTVA Alaska, “I knew that humpbacks do this group feeding. So I knew what was happening as soon as it happened. But to be in the middle of that, to actually experience that as to just watching it, it was the most awe-inspiring thing, it’s the most amazing thing to have ever happened to me.”

The humpbacks, which migrate to Alaska in the summer and fall, are engaging in a unique feeding behavior called “bubble net feeding.”

The whales swim below schools of little fish or krill and blow a circle of air bubbles out of their blowholes as they spiral upwards towards the surface. These bubbles surround their prey and form a type of net. The bubbles push their food into a small ball that makes easy pickings for the whales as they surge upward with mouths wide open.

Brad Rich was lucky enough to see it firsthand, and we were lucky that he shared it on YouTube. Check out the video:

Source……Cody Sullivan in ….www.businessinsider .in  and http://www.you tube.com

Natarajan

“டெல்டா மார்ட்:”…. விவசாயிகளின் வாழ்வில் ஒரு சின்ன ஒளிக்கீற்று !!!

வால்ட் மார்ட்’க்கு எதிராக போராட்டங்களை நடத்திய காவிரி டெல்டா உழவர் உற்பத்தியாளர் அமைப்பினர், 1000 விவசாயிகளை உறுப்பினர்களாக கொண்ட காவிரி டெல்டா உழவர் உற்பத்தியாளர் நிறுவனமான ‘டெல்டா மார்ட்’ என்ற நிறுவனத்தைதிறந்திருக்கிறார்கள்.

இயக்குநர்குழு, ஆலோசனைக்குழு, மையக்குழு ஆகிய மூன்று அடுக்கு நிர்வாக முறையை கொண்டு செயல்பட்டு வரும் இந்நிறுவனம், தஞ்சை பெரியார் மணியம்மை பல்கலைக் கழகத்தின் தொழில் நுட்ப வணிகக் காப்பகத்தின் ஆலோசனை மற்றும் வழிகாட்டுதலுடன் செயல்படுகிறது.

வேளாண்மைத் தொழில்நுட்பங்களை விவசாயிகளுக்கு தெரியப்படுத்துதல், மண்வளம் மற்றும் சுற்றுச் சூழலை பாதுகாத்தல், உற்பத்தி செய்யப்படும் பொருட்களை மதிப்புக் கூட்டுதல் உள்ளிட்ட பயிற்சிகளை தருதல், விவசாயி உற்பத்தி செய்யும் பொருளை இடைத்தரகர்கள் இல்லாமல் விவசாயியே விலை நிர்ணயம் செய்ய வேண்டும் என்ற உயர்ந்த நோக்கத்தோடு உருவாக்கியிருக்கிறார்கள்.

 

“டெல்டா மார்ட்டை நாங்கள் உருவாக்கியதன் நோக்கம், விவசாயிகளிடையே உற்பத்தி செய்கின்ற பொருளை, இடைத்தரகர்கள் இல்லாமல் நேரடியாக நாங்களே குறைந்த விலையில் நுகர்வோருக்கு கொடுக்க வேண்டுமென்பதே. அதுமட்டுமின்றி விவசாயிகளுக்கு தேவையான இடுபொருட்களையும் வெளிமார்க்கெட் விலையைவிட மிகக் குறைவாக கொடுப்பதற்கும் ஏற்பாடு செய்திருக்கிறோம். ‘நம்மால் முடியும்!’ என்ற தன்னம்பிக்கையை ஒவ்வொரு விவசாயிடமும் உருவாக்கவேண்டும் என்பதும்  எங்கள் டெல்டா மார்ட் துவக்கத்தின் முக்கிய நோக்கம்.

இந்தியாவின் முதுகெலும்பாக இருக்கின்ற உழவர்கள், தாங்கள் உற்பத்தி செய்கின்ற பொருளை விலை நிர்ணயம் செய்ய முடியாத நிலை உள்ளது. சுதந்திரம் அடைந்து 50 ஆண்டுகளுக்கு மேலாகியும், விவசாயி இடைத் தரகர்களாலும், அரசுகளாலும் இன்னும் அடிமைப்பட்டுத்தான் கிடக்கின்றான். அதை களைந்து விவசாயிகளிடையே விழிப்புணர்வை ஏற்படுத்த வேண்டுமென்பதற்காகவே இந்த அமைப்பை உருவாக்கி இருக்கிறோம். காவிரி டெல்டா உழவர் உற்பத்தியாளர் நிறுவனத்தை தமிழகத்தின் ஒவ்வொரு மாவட்டத்திலும், பிறகு ஒவ்வொரு ஒன்றியத்திலும் நிறுவ திட்டமிட்டிருக்கிறோம்.

விவசாயத்தை மட்டுமே செய்து வந்த விவசாயிகளுக்கு சந்தையை பற்றி தெரியாது. கஷ்டப்பட்டு உற்பத்தி செய்யப்படுகின்ற பொருளை, இடைத்தரகர்கள் எப்படியெல்லாம் விலை நிர்ணயம் செய்கிறார்கள் என்பதை அவர்களுக்கு பயிற்சி கொடுத்து, உற்பத்தி செய்வதோடு சந்தைபடுத்துவதிலும் அவர்களை தேர்ந்தவர்களாக்குவதற்கு இந்த அமைப்பு வழிசெய்யும்.

விவசாயிகள் பிள்ளைகள் விவசாய தொழிலில் ஈடுபடுவதில்லை. காரணம் போதிய வருமானம் இல் லாதது. இன்றைய காலகட்டத்திற்கு ஏற்ப நவீனத்தன்மை இல்லாததால், ஆர்வம் இல்லாமல் மாற்று வேலைக்கு செல்கிறார்கள். அவர்களையெல்லாம் விவசாயத்தின் பக்கம் திருப்பும் வகையில் இந்த நிறுவனம் விவசாயிகளுக்காகவும், நுகர்வோர்களுக்காகவும் பாடுபடும்” என்கிறார் காவிரி டெல்டா உழவர் உற்பத்தியாளர் நிறுவனத்தின் செயல் இயக்குநர் பாண்டியன்.

மற்றொரு செயல் இயக்குநர் பன்னீர்செல்வம் கூறுகையில், “120 விவசாயிகள் தங்கள் நிலங்களில் உற்பத்தி செய்யும் பொருட்களை இங்கு விற்பனை செய்து வருகிறோம். எங்கள் நிறுவனத்தின் உறுப்பினர்களின் பொருட்களை மட்டுமல்ல மற்ற விவசாயிகள் உற்பத்தி செய்யும் பொருட்களையும் நாங்கள் கொள்முதல் செய்கிறோம். எங்களின் நோக்கம் இடைத்தரகர்கள் இல்லாமல் கொள்முதல் செய்து, உற்பத்தி செய்யும் விவசாயிகளுக்கு அதிக லாபம் கொடுக்க வேண்டும் என்பதுதான்.

உழவர் சந்தை, மார்க்கெட்டுகளைவிட எங்கள் டெல்டா மார்க்கெட்டில் விலை குறைவாக கிடைக்கும். அதாவது  வாழைப்பழ தாரை ரூபாய் 250க்கு விவசாயிகளிடமிருந்து வாங்கும் வியாபாரிகள், அதை விற்பனை செய்யும்போது ஒரு பழம் 5 முதல் 7 ரூபாய் வரை விற்கிறார்கள்.

அதே வாழைப்பழ தாரை டெல்டா மார்க்கெட் விவசாயிடம் ரூ.400 க்கு வாங்கி 5 ரூபாய்க்குள் விற்கலாம். இதில் நுகர்வோருக்கும் லாபம். டெல்டா மார்ட்டுக்கும் லாபம். விவசாயிகளுக்கும் லாபம் தரும்.

அதுதான் எங்கள் டெல்டா மார்ட்டின் நோக்கம். இயற்கை விவசாயம் செய்த தேங்காய் 30 ரூபாய்க்கு விற்கிறார்கள். அதே தேங்காயை 20 ரூபாய்க்கு நாங் கள் தருகிறோம். சாதாரண தேங்காய் வெளிமார்க்கெட்டில் 15 ரூபாய் என் றால், எங்களிடம் 12 ரூபாய்க்கு கிடைக்கும்.

இதுமட்டுமில்லாமல் விவசாய இயந்திரங்களை நாங்களே கம்பெனிகளி டமிருந்து வாங்கி, அதை விவசாயிகளிடம் விற்பனை செய்யவும் முயற்சி எடுத்து வருகிறோம். ஒரு டிராக்டரை வாங்கி விற்பனை செய்தால் 50 ஆயிரம் வரை லாபம் கிடைக்கிறது.

 

இதிலிருந்து கிடைக்கின்ற லாபத்தை, ஆயிரம் உறுப்பினர்களுக்கும் அவர்கள் செலுத்தியிருக்கிற முதலீட்டுக்கு தக்கபடி  லாபத்தை பிரித்துக்கொடுப்போம். எங்களின் அடுத்த இலக்கு ஆயிரம் டெல்டா மார்ட்டை டெல்டா மாவட்டத்தில் உருவாக்க வேண்டும் என்பதே” என முடித்தார்.

நலிந்து போன விவசாயத்தின் இருள்படர்ந்த நிலப்பரப்பில் ‘டெல்டா மார்ட்’ என்ற சின்ன ஒளிக்கீற்று தென்படுகிறது. ஆயிரம் விவசாயிகளின் கூட்டு முயற்சி அடுத்த தலைமுறையினரை காக்கட்டும்.

வாழ்த்துவோம் விவசாயிகளை!

– ஏ. ராம்
படங்கள்:
கே. குணசீலன்

Source…www.vkalathurseithi.com

Natarajan

” This Ola Auto Driver from Bengaluru is a Social Media Sensation today….”…How ?

Ghasamfar Ali K. and his wife, with Ranjani Shanker

Ghasamfar Ali K. and his wife, with Ranjani Shanker

One man can make a difference. Read to know why Ghasamfar Ali K. made the news

Less than a month ago, auto driver Ghasamfar Ali K., picked up a passenger in Bangalore at 8.30 p.m. and drove her to her destination.

Just another journey, as far as he was concerned. Except, by the next morning, he had become a social media celebrity. In less than a week, people were recognising him on the street. And last weekend, the same passenger travelled from her hometown in Chennai to Bangalore, turning up unexpectedly at his home to say ‘thank you.’

Back in Chennai, the passenger, Ranjani Shanker, a marketing consultant and musician, talks about how that seemingly ordinary journey made an impact on not just her, but thousands of people across the country. In Bangalore for a short holiday, she found herself stranded in the city at night. “I needed to go to Kanakpura Road, about 38 km away, and I just could not get a cab.” She finally tried the Ola Auto app on her phone and Ghasamfar Ali accepted the ride.

Before he began driving, however, he warned her that a large part of the route would be through deserted roads. “He said, “the light is very low and it will be lonely — I need to tell you that. But don’t worry.” Despite being nervous, she decided to get into his auto anyway, instructing him to stick to a route she picked via Google Maps. “About 15 minutes into the ride, the roads got dark. I was worried — but he kept checking on me, saying ‘Are you ok, madam? Don’t worry’.”

When she reached Kanakpura, where a friend was to pick her up, she jumped out of the auto in relief. “It was not a city road, but at least there were tea shops, and some light.” However, her friend was delayed — stuck in traffic. “Ghasamfar then insisted on waiting with me for 20 minutes till my friend arrived. And it was those 20 minutes that made me write that Facebook post.”

She wrote the story as soon as she got back to her hotel that night. “I’ll be honest — I did have a feeling it would be popular, but I did not expect it to become the sensation it did.” In an hour, there were 400 Likes. By morning, there were 2,000. “I was like, whoa, I’ve never seen so many Likes on a post,” Ranjani laughs. “Then 4,000, 5,000… now it’s at 17,500.” With almost 2,800 shares. But that’s not all. It’s also gone viral on a number of online news sites.

Why did this post get so popular? “That’s something I’ve been thinking about,” Ranjani says, “I feel it’s the lack of positive news that’s made it stand out. We hear so many negative stories — especially about cab and auto drivers. Men who are rude, who are offensive and dangerous.” She talks about how women, in particular, related to her post. “I think women understand that fear of a dark, lonely road, because they’ve all felt it.”

Meanwhile, Ghasamfar has been making waves in Bangalore. Says Ranjini, “He’s a local hero now: he’s been on radio stations, three newspaper articles and television. The local Commissioner of Police also felicitated him and posted the picture on their Facebook page.”

Ola finally got wind of the story and wanted to reward Ghasamfar. “They decided to pay off his autorickshaw loan. And they called to ask me if I’d like to join in and surprise him at his home,” says Ranjini.

She agreed enthusiastically, and Ola flew her Bangalore last weekend. “He was so surprised when I walked into his house!” She says, “My family was insistent that I give him something as well, as a token of our appreciation and respect.” So she gave him a watch, after which he introduced her to his wife and five-year-old son.

Ranjani then says with a smile, “As we were all sitting together and drinking tea, he said, “Madamji, I don’t even know why I’m famous. I hear it’s because of Facebook. I know what Facebook is… But what is a ‘Like’?”

Source….Shonali Muthalaly in http://www.the hindu.com

Natarajan

This Epic Image of Earth will Floor You….

NASA’s Earth Polychromatic Imaging Camera captures stunning view of the entire sun-lit side of Earth.

This colour image of Earth, taken by NASA's Earth Polychromatic Imaging Camera (EPIC), a four megapixel CCD camera and telescope on July 6, 2015, shows Earth as seen on July 6, 2015 from a distance of one million miles.

This colour image of Earth, taken by NASA’s Earth Polychromatic Imaging Camera (EPIC), a four megapixel CCD camera and telescope on July 6, 2015, shows Earth as seen on July 6, 2015 from a distance of one million miles.

Clicked from 1.6 million km away in space, a NASA camera on the Deep Space Climate Observatory (DSCOVR) satellite has returned its first stunning view of the entire sun-lit side of Earth.

DSCOVR is equipped with the Earth Polychromatic Imaging Camera (EPIC) that took the new photo on July 6.

EPIC captures a series of 10 different images in a variety of wavelengths, from near infrared to ultraviolet light, which can be analyzed in a number of different ways.

“Just got this new blue marble photo from @NASA. A beautiful reminder that we need to protect the only planet we have,” US President Barack Obama tweeted on his official @POTUS handle.

The images clearly show desert sand structures, river systems and complex cloud patterns on planet Earth.

“This first DSCOVR image of our planet demonstrates the unique and important benefits of Earth observation from space,” said NASA administrator Charlie Bolden in a statement.

“I want everyone to be able to see and appreciate our planet as an integrated, interacting system,” he added.

The primary objective of DSCOVR is to maintain the nation’s real-time solar wind monitoring capabilities, which are critical to the accuracy and lead time of space weather alerts and forecasts.

“DSCOVR’s observations of Earth, as well as its measurements and early warnings of space weather events caused by the sun, will help every person to monitor the ever-changing Earth, and to understand how our planet fits into its neighbourhood in the solar system, Bolden noted.

NASA will use the camera’s observations to measure ozone levels in Earth’s atmosphere and plant growth on the ground.

It will also help build maps showing the distribution of dust and volcanic ash around the globe, among other things.

“The high quality of the EPIC images exceeded all of our expectations in resolution,” said DSCOVR project scientist Adam Szabo.

“There will be a huge wealth of new data for scientists to explore,” he concluded.

Source…www.the hindu.com

Natarajan