Meet Shriya Rangarajan… From Illinois to Village Jawhar in Maharashtra…!!!

India is witnessing a radical transformation where highly qualified youngsters are giving up cushy jobs to make a difference in the lives of people in rural areas.

Manu A B/Rediff.com tracks the stories of some of the remarkable people who are working in remote villages to change the profile of rural India.

After doing her Masters in Urban Planning from the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, Shriya Rangarajan is now working on improving the living conditions of tribal women in remote villages of Maharashtra.

Shriya Rangarajan in Jawhar.

Shriya Rangarajan has come a long way from the comforts of the western world to a remote village in Maharashtra where people struggle to make both ends meet and live in sub-human conditions.

Struck by the poverty and desolation of the villagers in Jawhar in Thane district — many of whom are really talented in arts and craft — Shriya is now training them to create beautiful pieces of paper-quilled jewellery as a better source of income.

She is already in touch with online stores and other retailers who have expressed their willingness to provide a platform for selling these products.

Shriya (centre) trains women to make jewellery.

Shriya did her BTech from NIT, Warangal, and then pursued her Masters in Urban Planning from the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign after which she chose to come back and join the movement to build a better India. The country’s myriad problems have been a trigger for her to work in the rural development sector.

Instead of being in a cushy corporate environment, she looked forward to an experience in rural India to understand its pulse and take small initiatives that may help those who are untouched by development.

The SBI Youth for India fellowship, which she won, was one of the best platforms for a stint in remote parts of the country. She was assigned a project in Jawhar, Maharashtra, a predominantly tribal area where she has been working with the support of an NGO, BAIF.

Shriya found that women in Dhanoshi and Nandgoan villages, who lived on meagre earnings from agriculture and daily wage labour, were keen on an alternate source of income.

Being largely unskilled and given their poor levels of literacy, there were not many options open to them. Sriya started by teaching them simple jewellery making through paper quilling as well as basic maths and financial training.

Though I tried to teach them to make terracotta jewellery which they had initially expressed an interest in, it was too tedious and time-consuming since many of them have small kids too. Then I switched to paper quilling. They expressed greater interest in this, it was supposed to be just for practice but which they found way easier. I also taught them some basic maths like profit-loss as well as record-keeping as it was is essential for them to learn to sell their products,” says Shriya.

As most many of the women only had basic literacy levels, it was a daunting task to make them understand even simple maths. But they turned out to be very good at jewellery-making. They could see the designs and pick up the skill fast, were willing to experiment, and created a number of designs of their own after being trained. They ended up making fine pieces of jewellery, which were well received at exhibitions.

I have initiated talks with an online store, which has agreed to buy products made by these women. I am also looking at building marketing linkages for their products in cities. Currently, they are available at a local Warli artist’s store in Jawhar,” says Shriya.

A full day’s wage for a woman labourer is just Rs 100 while net household incomes are often less than Rs 3000-4000 a month. With Shriya’s project coming through, she wants to make sure that each woman gets at least Rs 40 per hour’s work. As a part of their exposure to the world outside, Shriya took six members of the self-help group to Mumbai to meet the suppliers of goods.

It was a great experience taking them by local trains. It was a bit scary because I was sure I would lose one of them by the end of the day, but funny as well. A couple of them who had never been to the city were awestruck by Mumbai. Once I told them how to talk with shopkeepers and suppliers, they quickly learnt how to deal with them, collect business cards and talk through the supply details with relevant questions,”says Shriya.

With Shriya’s support, the women participated in two exhibitions of their products.

Earlier, Shriya also had made an attempt to mobilise Warli artists to make them understand the value of art exposure. Warli art, which was originally initiated by women, now seems to be dominated by the men.

Warli paintings have a unique story to tell but most of the printed motifs used in textiles and other products etc do not convey the real story. I travelled across 25 villages and made a database of all the Warli artists I could find, but it was really difficult to convince them to work together. If they stay united and get better commercial exposure it will benefit the entire community,” says Shriya.

The pace of development in India is very slow, laments Shriya, and the everyday struggles of people living in this area seem to have no end.

Everyday women and children spend hours carrying water across two-three kilometres. It is heartbreaking to see the drudgery. Toilets and bathrooms built in the villages are often unused because of both cultural issues as well as the additional effort required to carry water and use them. It would have been better if toilets were built near the source of water. A lot of things can be run smoothly if planned well,” says Shriya.

Lack of planning and improper implementation have led to more stagnation in villages.

There is a complete disconnect between policy-makers, administrators and ground realities. Each seems to be in conflict with the other, and as a result everything takes much longer to shape up,” says Shriya.

For instance, in Jawhar, people sometimes end up waiting for two hours for a bus; filling water is another time-consuming exercise, hours are wasted in utter darkness if there is no electricity. Lack of infrastructure and efficiency in the system lead to several hours being wasted on mundane things. How can students devote time to studies when they are caught in a web of problems,” asks Shriya.

There is also a general perception that if you give money to villagers their problems will be solved. She is highly critical of the government doling out subsidies and leaving the villagers to fend for themselves. Money helps, but it doesn’t help to solve their problems, she says.

It has been a grounding experience for a city-bred person like me. I had prepared myself for the worst but things were not as bad as they are portrayed,” says Shriya.

Unlike the general perception of girls not being encouraged to study, here, despite all the hardships, there are a fair number of women and children who do think of a better future. “I came across a confident girl who scored 85 per cent in her 10th standard and is studying science with hopes of becoming a doctor,” says Shriya, who believes that the students in rural areas have great potential. “If they get the right opportunities and exposure, they can really come up well in life,” she adds.

Language is a huge barrier for these tribal students. “The lack of qualified teachers, poverty and lack of facilities make matters worse for them,” explains Shriya.

Shriya plans to continue her work in the development sector. As an urban planner, she hopes to put into practice small ideas, take baby steps to bring about changes in cities and villages.

She hopes to see cleaner cities and better infrastructure in India. “Building smart cities is a good idea: it harnesses technology and facilitates better dialogue between people and their places to make things more efficient. So it’s a good initiative. But India has to improve on a range of things from proper drainage, good transport, better restructuring of the informal workforce, the list goes on,” says Shirya.

Education is one field close to her heart. In future, she hopes to be able to contribute to making school-level education more kinesthetic and application-oriented and university education more research-oriented and productive.

Indians are still obsessed with engineering and medicine, with very few opting for non-traditional fields; also, there are not many avenues for students to pursue good research. The research output is minimal, which needs to be changed,” says Shriya.

To know more about Shriya’s work, mail her at shriya.rangarajan@gmail.com

If you wish to join the movement to bring about a change in rural India or would like to contribute in any way, you can send a mail to shuvajit@youthforindia.org

Source…MANU .A.B. in http://www.rediff.com

Natarajan

 

” ‘யோகாசன சக்கரவர்த்தி’ பி.கே.எஸ் ஐய்யங்கார் “….

வாழும்போது சந்தோஷமாக வாழுங்கள். கம்பீரமாக மரணத்தைத் தழுவுங்கள்’

                    – யோகா குரு பி.கே.எஸ் ஐய்யங்கார்

குருஜி என்று இந்தியாவிலும் வெளிநாடுகளிலும் உள்ள யோகா கற்றவர்களால் அன்புடனும், மரியாதையுடனும், அழைக்கப்பட்ட பெல்லூரு கிருஷ்ணமாச்சார் சுந்தரராஜ ஐய்யங்கார் என்கிற பி.கே.எஸ். ஐய்யங்கார் சென்ற ஆண்டு ஆகஸ்ட் மாதம் (20.8.2014) தனது 95-வது வயதில் பூனாவில் இயற்கை எய்தினார் என்ற செய்தி வந்தபோது மிகவும் நெருங்கிய ஒருவரை இழந்ததுபோல நான் மிகவும் வருத்தப்பட்டேன். காரணம் நான் இப்போது கற்றுவரும் யோகா அவர் வடிவமைத்துக் கொடுத்ததுதான். எனது ஆசிரியை அவரது சிஷ்யை. எங்கள் வகுப்பில் அடிக்கடி தனது ‘குருஜி’யை அளவில்லா மரியாதையுடன் நினைவு கூர்வார். ஒவ்வொரு ஆசனத்தையும் மிக நிதானமாக மிக எளிதாக செய்யும்படி அவர் வடிவமைத்ததையும் சொல்லி சொல்லி வியப்பார்.

குருஜி இளம் வயதில் மிகவும் சீக்காளிக் குழந்தையாக இருந்தவர். இவர் பிறந்த 1918-ம் ஆண்டு உலகெங்கும் ஃப்ளூ தொற்று பரவியிருந்தது. இவரது பெற்றோருக்கு 11-வது குழந்தை இவர். இளம் வயதில் மலேரியா, டைபாய்ட், காச நோய் இவற்றால் பாதிக்கப்பட்டு இவர் பிழைப்பாரா என்பதே பெரிய கேள்விக்குறியாக இருந்ததாம். பார்க்கவே பரிதாபமாக, எலும்பும் தோலுமாக இருப்பாராம். ‘அப்போது என்னைப் பார்த்திருந்தால் யாரும் என்னிடம் யோகா கற்றுக் கொள்ளவே வந்திருக்க மாட்டார்கள். ஒரு நாள் வெளியே விளையாடிவிட்டு வந்தால் 9 நாட்கள் படுக்கையில் விழுந்துவிடுவேன்’ என்று அந்த நாள்களைப் பற்றி வேடிக்கையாகக் குறிப்பிடுவார்.

இவரது அக்காவின் கணவரும், புகழ் பெற்ற யோகா ஆசிரியரும் ஆன டி. கிருஷ்ணமாச்சார் (இவர் நவீன யோகாவின் தந்தை என்று பெயர் பெற்றவர்) மைசூரில் தாம் நடத்தி வந்த யோகா பாடசாலையில் இவரை சேரும்படி யோசனை சொன்னதுதான் இவரது வாழ்வை திசை திருப்பியது. இந்த யோகபாடசாலை அரச குடும்பத்தினருக்காக என்றே நடத்தப்பட்டு வந்தது. வெளியாள்கள் சேரமுடியாத இந்தப் பாடசாலையில் சேர்ந்து யோகப் பயிற்சி செய்யுமாறு கூற ஐயங்காரின் வாழ்க்கை மாற ஆரம்பித்தது.

தனது 14-வது வயதில் யோகா கற்றுக்கொள்ள ஆரம்பித்து 18-வது வயதில் ஆசிரியர் ஆனார். ‘பத்து அல்லது பதினைந்து தினங்கள் கற்றுக் கொண்டேன். அந்தத் தினங்கள்தான் நான் இப்போதிருக்கும் நிலைமையைத் தீர்மானம் செய்தன’ என்று ஒரு பேட்டியில் கூறி இருக்கிறார் ஐய்யங்கார். பூனாவுக்கு வந்து தனது சொந்த யோகபாடசாலையை ஆரம்பித்தார். அங்கு ஒரு யோகாச்சார்யராக தன்னை நிலைநிறுத்திக்கொள்ள மிகவும் கஷ்டப்பட வேண்டி வந்தது.

ஐய்யங்கார் தன்னுடைய உடலையே சோதனைக் களமாகக் கொண்டு விடாமுயற்சியுடன், வைராக்கிய மனத்துடன், இடைவிடாத பயிற்சி மூலம் ‘ஆரோக்கியத்துக்கு யோகா’ என்ற தனது கோட்பாடை நிறுவினார். அடுத்து அவருக்கு இன்னொரு எண்ணம் வந்தது. நாற்பது வயது வரை ஒருவர் இந்த ஆசனங்களை சிரமமின்றிச் செய்யமுடியும்; அதற்குப் பிறகு? அறுபது வயதுக்கு மேற்பட்டவர்கள் என்ன செய்யமுடியும்? அவர்களுக்கு யோகா என்பதே கிடையாதா? ஏற்கெனவே இருந்த யோகா முறைகளை மிகுந்த கவனத்துடன் சீர்திருத்த ஆரம்பித்தார். ஹட யோகா என்பதில் இருக்கும் ஆசனங்களை எல்லா வயதினரும் செய்யும்படி மாற்றி அமைத்தார்.

உடல், புலன்கள், மனது, அறிவு, உள்ளுணர்வு இவற்றை வெற்றி கண்டுவிட்டால் ஒருவருக்கு நன்னெறியுடன் கூடிய முறைசார் மனநலம் கிடைக்கிறது என்பார் ஐய்யங்கார். இத்தகைய நிலைக்கு அப்பால் சென்றுவிட்டால் ஒருவருக்கு தெய்வீகத்துடன் கூடிய ஆரோக்கியம் அதாவது நோய்கள் இல்லாத ஆரோக்கியம் கிடைக்கிறது. இது உள்ளிருந்து வாழும் வாழ்க்கை.

வயலின் மேதை யாஹுதி மெனுஹின் அவர்களை 1952-ம் ஆண்டு சந்தித்தது ஐய்யங்கார் வாழ்க்கையில் மற்றுமொரு திருப்புமுனை. வயலின் மேதை இந்த ஆசனங்களின் சக்கரவர்த்தியை மேலைநாடுகளுக்கு அறிமுகம் செய்தார்.

‘50 வருடங்களுக்கு முன் நாங்கள் யோகா சொல்லிக் கொடுக்க ஆரம்பித்தபோது யோகா என்பது பலரும் அறியாத ஒரு விஷயமாக இருந்தது. நான் யோகா சொல்லிக்கொடுக்கிறேன்’ என்று சொன்னால் நான் ஏதோ யோகர்ட் (yogurt) பற்றிப் பேசுகிறேன் என்று நினைத்துக் கொள்வார்கள். நான் எதைப் பற்றிப் பேசுகிறேன் என்றே புரியாது அவர்களுக்கு!’ என்று தனது மேலைநாட்டு ஆரம்ப அனுபவங்களை வேடிக்கையாகக் குறிப்பிடுவார் ஐய்யங்கார்.

வெகு சீக்கிரமே ஐய்யங்கார் தனது யோகா வகுப்புகளை ஐரோப்பிய அமெரிக்க நகரங்களில் நடத்த ஆரம்பித்தார். இவரது மேலைநாட்டு பெருமையின் மூலமே இந்தியாவுக்கு மறுபடியும் யோகக்கலையின் அருமை தெரிய வந்தது. ‘ஜிட்டு’ கிருஷ்ணமூர்த்தி, ஜெயபிரகாஷ் நாராயணன் என்று பல விஐபி-க்களுக்கு சொல்லிக்கொடுத்தவர் ஐய்யங்கார். புகழ் பெற்ற எழுத்தாளர் ஆல்டஸ் ஹக்ஸ்லி, நாகரிக உடை வடிவமைப்பாளர் டோனா கரன் ஆகியோர் ஐய்யங்காரிடம் யோகா பயிற்சி பெற்றவர்கள்.

இவரது பெயர் ஆக்ஸ்போர்ட் அகராதியில் இடம் பெற்றிருக்கிறது. டைம் பத்திரிகையின் பெரும் செல்வாக்கு படைத்த 100 பேர்களில் இவர் பெயரும் உண்டு. 1966-ல் இவர் எழுதிய ‘லைட் ஆன் யோகா’ என்ற புத்தகம்தான் யோகப்பயிற்சி செய்பவர்களின் பகவத்கீதை! இந்தப் புத்தகம் இதுவரை 17 மொழிகளில் மொழிபெயர்க்கப்பட்டு இருக்கிறது.

நூறு வயது வரை வாழ்ந்த இவரது குருவிடமிருந்து இவர் கற்ற பாடம்: ‘அவரவருக்கு ஏற்ற வகையில் ஆசனங்களைக் கற்றுக்கொடு’ என்பதுதான். குருவின் சொல்படியே ஒருவரின் தேவைக்கேற்ப ஆசனங்களை வடிவமைத்தார். ‘யோகாசனங்களில் அலைன்மென்ட் என்று சொல்லப்படும் சீரமைப்பு அதாவது நேர்படுத்துதல் மிகவும் முக்கியம். அது இல்லாமல் போனால் மன அமைதி கிட்டாது’ என்பார் ஐய்யங்கார். பதஞ்சலி முனிவரின் யோகாசனங்களை சாதாரண மக்களும் சுலபமாகச் செய்யும் வகையில் எளிமைப்படுத்தினார்.

இவரது தாக்கம் சீன தேசத்தையும் எட்டியது. குருஜிக்கு அங்கும் ஏகப்பட்ட மாணவர்கள். இவரது பெருமையைக் குறிக்க எட்டு தபால்தலைகளை வெளியிட்டது சீனா. ‘யோகா நம் இரு தேசங்களையும் ஒன்று சேர்க்கிறது. யோகா மூலம் நான் ஒரு நட்புணர்வை இருநாடுகளுக்கும் இடையில் ஏற்படுத்தியிருக்கிறேன். நீங்கள் யோகா பயிற்சி செய்தால் உங்கள் எண்ணங்களே வித்தியாசமாக இருக்கும். உங்கள் கால்களில் நீங்கள் நின்றால் உலகம் ஒன்று என்பதைப் பார்க்கமுடியும். நீங்கள் தலைகீழாக நின்றால் உலகமும் அப்படித்தான் தெரியும்’ என்று சீனத் தலைநகர் பீஜிங்-ல் பேசும்போது சொன்னார் குருஜி.

தனது பெயரில் ஐய்யங்கார் யோகா என்று யோகக்கலைக்கு பெயர் குத்தப்படுவதை இவர் விரும்பவே இல்லை. ‘யோகா என்பது தீடீர் காப்பி இல்லை. ஒரு பிராண்ட் பெயர் கொடுக்க. மனதையும் உடலையும் சிரத்தையுடன் பண்படுத்த வேண்டுமென்றால் அதற்கு முதலில் தேவை ஒழுங்கும், மன உறுதியும்’ என்பது அவரது கருத்து.

இவரது சாதனைப் பட்டியல் மிகவும் நீண்டது. கர்நாடக அரசு இவருக்கு ராஜ்யோத்சவ விருதும், இந்திய அரசு இவருக்கு பத்மபூஷண் விருதும் கொடுத்து கௌரவித்தன. அமெரிக்க ஃபெடரல் ஸ்டார் ரெஜிஸ்ட்ரேஷன் அமைச்சரகம் வடபாதியில் இருக்கும் ஒரு நட்சத்திரத்துக்கு யோகாச்சார்யரான இவரது பெயரை சூட்டியிருக்கிறது. புண்ய பூஷண், பதஞ்சலி விருது, வசிஷ்ட விருது என்ற பல பட்டங்களும் விருதுகளும் இவரை நாடி வந்தன. இவரைப் பற்றி திரைப்படம் மற்றும் தொலைக்காட்சி நிறுவனம் தயாரித்த 22 நிமிட ‘சமாதி’ என்கிற திரைப்படம் வெள்ளித் தாமரை விருது பெற்றது.

என்னைப்போல இந்த யோகப் பயிற்சியினால் பலன் அடைந்தவர்கள் பல்லாயிரக்கணக்கானவர்கள் உலகெங்கும் உள்ளார்கள். கற்றவர்கள் பலர் ஆசிரியர்களாகி, அவர்களின் மூலம் மேலும் பல தலைமுறைகளுக்கு இந்த யோகப்பயிற்சி பரவும். இந்த உலகம் உள்ளவரை ஐய்யங்காரின் புகழும், யோகாவும் இணைந்து இருக்கும்.

ஒருவரின் ஆரோக்கியம் என்பது அந்தச் சமுதாயத்துக்கே நன்மை செய்யும். இத்தகைய சமுதாய நன்மைக்கு பெரும் தொண்டு செய்த ஐய்யங்காருக்கு இந்த சர்வதேச யோகா தினத்தில் என்னால் சொல்ல முடிவது இது தான்: ‘நன்றி குருஜி!’

source….ரஞ்சனி நாராயணன்  in http://www.dinamani.com

Natarajan

” 57 Storey Skyscrapper in 19 Days…!!!

A simple design innovation let a Chinese entrepreneur build a 57-storey skyscraper in 19 days…

Broad Sustainable Building, a Chinese architecture company, recently constructed a 57-story, 800 apartment building in 19 working days.

It’s called Mini Sky City. The man behind it is Zhang Yue, a Chinese entrepreneur with an Elon Musk-ian streak for launching revolutions.

As the BBC reports, Zhang wants to start a revolution in building.

Which you can see from Mini Sky City’s three-floors-per-day construction.

The full video is nuts.

But as the ‘mini’ in its name implies, Mini Sky City is just the beginning.

Broad Group wants to build the tallest building in the world, higher than the Burj Khalifa in Dubai.

It’ll be called Sky City, standing a full 220 stories high.

Founder Zhang Yue tells the BBC that Broad Group will build Sky City in a fraction of the time. While it took the Burj five years to be completed, Zhang says that Sky City will only take seven months.

It’ll come complete with everything you need to “live vertically,” like an indoor farm or a helipad.

The key? A little hack called modular construction.

The Modular Building Institute defines it like this:

Modular construction is a process in which a building is constructed off-site, under controlled plant conditions, using the same materials and designing to the same codes and standards as conventionally built facilities – but in about half the time. Buildings are produced in “modules” that when put together on site, reflect the identical design intent and specifications of the most sophisticated site-built facility – without compromise.

Modular design has been used at a smaller scale for a while now.

We probably know it most intimately through the work of Ikea, a company with a  furniture empire that has come to dominate the world.

Here’s how Ikea describes its sectional sofas:

The great thing with a modular sofa is that you can create your own combination, so you get exactly what you want. Then you can adapt or add on to what you have if your needs change. And with our big choice of styles and covers, it’s easy to get the look that suits you, too.

Broad Group’s skyscrapers are kind of like the Ikea sofas of construction

As BBC reports, the process for building is the same: steel comes into Broad Group’s factories, and it gets welded into modules like a column or cross beam.

Then those modules get trucked out.

Crane them up.

And snap them into place, Tetris-style.

“With the traditional method they have to build a skyscraper brick by brick, but with our method we just need to assemble the blocks,” company engineer Chen Xiangqian told the Guardian. “This is definitely the fastest speed in our industry.”

To read the full BBC feature on Broad Sustainable Building, go here.

Source….Drake Baer in http://www.businessinsider.in

Natarajan

9 Plants that would Protect You From Mosquitoes…

9 Mosquito-Repelling Plants You Can Grow at Home

Mosquitoes are a serious nuisance; from that terrible buzz near your ear when you’re trying to sleep, to the itchy, swollen bumps they leave after biting you. If you didn’t know, it’s only the females of the specie who bite us. Male mosquitoes prefer to feed on nectar, generally avoiding humans.

Mosquitoes can also be a health-risk – they can transmit diseases through their bite (including Malaria, Yellow Fever, West-Nile Fever, and more). In-fact, mosquitoes are responsible for more human deaths than all the wars in our history combined.

You can buy gadgets and products that repel these nasty bugs, but they’re all temporary and can be irritating or dangerous. Instead, you can grow certain plants that repel mosquitoes naturally:
Lemon Verbena: This lovely plant has a light citrus scent and can be added to tea for both flavor and it’s calming effect on the digestive system. You can plant it in the ground or in a deep pot and let it scare away those nasty bugs. Make sure it has a good supply of water and sunlight.

Mosquito Repellants

Cloves: Cloves are the flower buds of theSyzygium aromaticum plant. You can plant it around the yard to enjoy its mosquito-repelling properties, as well as use the cloves to spice up food.

Mosquito Repellants

Mint: Most common as an added flavor for tea, mint also has powerful mosquito-repelling properties. All species of mint are useful repellants. Mint needs sunlight and plenty of water to grow. You can plant it in your garden or in pots. If you choose to put it in your garden, be aware that it likes to spread, and can sometimes take over and kill weaker plants.

Mosquito Repellants

Rosemary: A favorite herb for savory dishes, it’s also a potent repellent. Plant it in your garden or in deep planters and let this lovely bush grow and take care of your mosquito problem.

Mosquito Repellants

Lemon Thyme: A natural mosquito repellent, lemon thyme is also a great herb for seasoning dishes. Plant it in pots to get lovely little plants around the house, or in your garden to control mosquito population.

Mosquito Repellants

Lavender: The scent of lavender is often a favorite for many people, and it’s commonly used in aromatherapy for its soothing properties. For mosquitoes, however, it’s a very strong repellent. Plant them in your garden or in pots in your house and enjoy the scent of the beautiful purple flowers.

Mosquito Repellants

 

Floss Flower: These lovely tiny flowers are superb at repelling mosquitoes.

Mosquito Repellants

Make sure you only grow them in a pot, as they tend to overgrow in the soil and take over the entire garden. Make sure they’re out of reach of children and animals, as they can be toxic.

Pitcher Plant: These carnivorous plants grow natural pitchers, filled with appealing-scented nectar to lure bugs in. Once the bugs get inside the pitcher, they can’t get out again and are digested by the plant. Plant them in planters by window sill and enjoy their mosquito-capturing properties.

Mosquito Repellants

Cadaga Tree: (AKA “Cadagi”, oreucalyptus torelliana) – These beautiful trees are natural barriers for mosquitoes, who hate their scent. Plant a few of these in your garden and let nature free you of those pesky biters.

Mosquito Repellants

Source…www.ba-bamail.com

Natarajan

” Free Rides ….Animals No Exception …”!!!

Animals Going for a Free Ride!

This racoon was scared out of the brush by approaching humans, who took an unforgettable photo of it riding a crocodile! Thankfully, the brave little traveller got off its dangerous boat before anything happened.

He’s not the only one going for a daring free ride, though. There are at least few more animals just as opportunistic, scroll down to see their hilarious photos!

animals riding other animals

Richard Jones

 

animals riding other animalsHendy Mp

The first rodent bird-rider soars to freedom

animals riding other animals

Martin Le-May
“I’m not sure I picked the best ride, I’m already 2 weeks late for my meeting.”

animals riding other animals

Hendy Mp

Can I get off now? Heights make me dizzy.”

animals riding other animals

“THIS way, noble jumper! To adventure!”

animals riding other animals

Nordin Seruvan

A pretty grumpy passenger.

animals riding other animals

Shi Khei Goh/Media Drum

I’ll be a gentle rider, please don’t eat me..

animals riding other animals

Beauties and the beast.

animals riding other animals

Careful doggie, that’s a tall order…

animals riding other animals

Is this how it’s done?”

animals riding other animals

Tell me when it’s over so I can open my eyes.

animals riding other animals

Source….www.ba-bamail.com

Natarajan

Mumbai Rains….

Mumbai Rains: 5 Dramatic Pics

Heavy rain in Mumbai overnight has hit train services with operations suspended between the Chhatrapati Shivaji Terminus (CST) and Kurla on the crucial Central Railway line.
Rain in Mumbai Hits Public Conveyance
Widespread waterlogging has forced bus routes to be altered
Rain in Mumbai Hits Public Conveyance
Rain in Mumbai Hits Public Conveyance
Rain in Mumbai Hits Public Conveyance
If heavy rain continues and coincides with the rising tide, it could increase waterlogging and lead to a flood-like situation.
Rain in Mumbai Hits Public Conveyance
Source …www.ndtv.com
Natarajan

” When Bengaluru Found a Crocodile on a Main Street … !!!

When Bengaluru Found a Crocodile on a Main Street

The crocodile that Bengaluru residents found on a main street.

  Commuters in Bengaluru were somewhat startled to discover a crocodile on a main street.

Till they realized that the reptile wasn’t real.

The life-sized croc was created by a local artist named Baadal Nanjundaswamy, who wanted to protest a giant pot hole that has not been fixed in the northern part of the city for days. On Thursday, he painted the area around his crocodile to look like a pond.

“Everyone has the potential to express themselves in his or her own way. This is my way of communicating a grievance,” the artist told The Indian Express.

The 36-year-old tagged local city officials and the police to the images that he posted on social media. The pothole was covered up today,reports ABP news.

The pothole has been fixed by authorities, the artist posted on Facebook today)

Source…www.ndtv.com

Natarajan

 

NASA’s Mission to Pluto …!!!

It’s been over 3,000 days and nearly three billion miles since NASA’s New Horizons spacecraft set out for Pluto.

It’s a mission that faced countless roadblocks and setbacks before it ever got off the ground. Now the spacecraft is closing in on Pluto and its moon system that sit at the very edge of our solar system.

This will be the first time we’ve ever visited the distant dwarf planet.

The National Space Society put together an incredible video preview of the history-making moment. It has the vibe of a movie trailer, complete with epic narration and stunning visuals, and it perfectly captures why space enthusiasts are so psyched about the New Horizons mission.

The video sweeps you through a timeline of the last half century of space exploration using beautiful images of each planet we’ve explored, starting with Venus in 1962 and ending with Neptune in 1989.

New Horizons will reach Pluto and its moons on July 14, and they will be “the farthest worlds ever to be explored by humankind,” the video says.

So far that the sun appears as a faint dot:

And the moment we reach Pluto, we’ll get an up close look at a world no one has seen before. All we’ve glimpsed of Pluto are fuzzy, far-away images captured by the Hubble Space Telescope. New Horizons will send back images thousands of times closer.

“Who knows what wonders await us at these new horizons.”

We’ll have to wait and see.

NASA is already counting down the days, hours, minutes, and even seconds until the arrival.

You can watch the whole video below, which we definitely recommend:

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

Natarajan

” When Pandit Nehru Stood on his Head …”

Ahead of International Yoga Day, it seems the entire world has been swept up by the yoga craze.

As the world gears up for this one-of-a-kind event, where people across the world will contort their bodies into various postures, here’s a rare image of the country’s first Prime Minister Pandit Jawaharlal Nehru practising the sirsasana (supported headstand).

This is what what the former PM wrote on the sirsasana. “Among my exercises one please me particularly — the shiorshasana, standing on the head with the palms of the hands, fingers interlocked, supporting the back of the head, elbows on the floor, body vertical, upside down. I suppose physically this exercise is very good; I liked it even more for its psychological effects on me. The slightly comic position increased my good humour and made me a little more tolerant of life’s vagaries.”

Source….www.rediff.com

Natarajan

” Never Imagined My Son would come this far….” Thanks to Anand Kumar of Super 30 of Bihar…

Photographs: M I Khan

Yet another year, and yet another tale of success for Super 30, the scheme run by Anand Kumar in Bihar that tutors children from poor and modest backgrounds to gain entrance into the hallowed Indian Institutes of Technology (IITs).

Twenty-five out of the 30 students made the grade this year when the results of JEE-Advance were announced Thursday, June 18.

The mood at Anand Kumar’s residence, from where he runs Super 30, was upbeat. The successful students basked in the glory of their considerable achievements.

One of the Super 30 students got into the University of Tokyo this year and so did not take the JEE-Advance, and gave his place to another student.

Anand Kumar selects 30 meritorious students every year, mostly from poor families, and grooms them for the IIT entrance test. The students live with him for the duration, entirely at his expense.

The aim of the exercise is to ensure that anyone with the requisite ability can make it to the prestigious institutes.

Students whose fathers are daily wage earners, roadside vendors, and drivers have passed the test and ensured a bright future for themselves.

“Super 30 is just a big family for me. My wife, brother, mother and all my team members are attached to it. In today’s materialistic world, this is what gives me solace and strength to carry on,” says Anand Kumar, the remarkable man behind this successful venture.

Among the successful students this year is Dhananjay Kumar, whose father is unemployed. His mother runs a small shop in the village of Patori in Samastipur. He has just one pair of clothes that he wears all year round.

Another student is Sumit Kumar, a resident of Masaurhi. His father, Satyendra Kumar, is an agricultural labourer.

Abhinav Verma is from Nalanda. His father too is an agricultural labourer and the family is very badly off.

“Had it not been for Anand Sir’s Super 30, my son would not have been able to study at all. How can I afford all this? He was another father for my son,” said Yogeshwar Kumar, an agricultural labourer whose son Prem Pal made it to the JEE-Advance.

Neeraj Kumar Jha from Madhubani got a good rank. His father, Bhagwan Jha is a driver in Kolkata. “I had never imagined that my son would come this far.

“He was bright, but I did not have the resources. It was sheer good fortune of my child that he got Anand Sir, who took the burden off me. Today, what he has done for my son is something I could have never imagined doing even for my closest relatives,” said an emotional Bhagwan Jha.

“We worked hard. We could seek any help from Anand Sir or other teachers at any time. He was always there. If any of us fell ill, he took personal care of us,” Neeraj Kumar said.

One of the students, Sujit Kumar, was doing the test again this year after failing last year.

“He was our 31st student as he wanted to appear for the JEE again, but could not do so by staying at home due to poverty. He stayed here and made it. His passion helped the other students too,” Anand Kumar said.

Bhagawan Jha said he heard of Super 30 from the newspapers. “Luckily, my son impressed Anand Sir and that was the turning point in his life.”

Satyam Kumar had to stop studies twice because there was no money to pay his fees.

“At Super 30, the only pressure was to study well. Everything else was taken care of. My parents did not have to bother about anything,” says Kumar who is happy with his performance.

At a time when government funding for education is meagre and the quality of education poor, children from disadvantaged backgrounds who have a concerned, caring mentor can truly count themselves blessed.

M I Khan in Patna

Source….www.rediff.com
Natarajan