Indian Railways Will Replace Regular Toilets With Vacuum Toilets & This Is How It’ll Work….

If you travel by air, you must be knowing about the vacuum toilets that they have. Well, now the Indian Railways is keen to incorporate the same. Earlier, we had told you about Japan modernizing Indian Railways. And now, this!

Indian Railways will soon adopt the concept of vacuum toilets. The trial run was launched in Dibrugarh Rajdhani from September 14 at an estimated cost of Rs 3 Lakh.

The filthy and stinky toilets will soon be a thing of the past as the Indian Railways have launched the vacuum toilets.

The idea of having a vacuum toilet came up in Union Budget 2015 and was announced by Union Rail Minister, Suresh Prabhu.

What is a vacuum toilet?

What’s different in vacuum toilets is their suction system. With that, the faeces and urine are removed with a minimal amount of water (0.5 – 1.5 litres). Other than that, the toilet looks and feels exactly like the toilets used everywhere.

Working principle:

Flush toilets that use a negative pressure (vacuum) to suck faeces away.

Working: 

1. When the toilet is flushed, a strong vacuum is created inside the pipe which helps in taking the waste out successfully.

2. The waste is carried along quickly and efficiently using air instead of water.

3. The waste passes through the pump and then  discharged to the collection or treatment point of your choosing.

4. And while someone flushes the toilet, a small amount of water is used to hygienically rinse the inside of the toilet bowl.

 

Time taken: Around 5 seconds.

Another advantage: Since it uses air, so when the toilet is flushed, air is drawn into the toilet from the surrounding environment. Odours, aerosols, and nasty bacteria are removed and literally sucked out of the toilet.

With all of these steps, the stench of the toilets will be a thing of the past.

Indian Railways will soon get a whole new avatar. With Japan’s help pouring in, Indian Railways is ready for the new look. And with that, I cannot help waiting for these changes to be incorporated.

News Source: Daily Bhaskar

Source….Aparajita Mishra….www.storypick.com

Natarajan

These students launched a GoPro into space in 2013 and only just found it, along with some stunning footage….

Normally when you send something up in a weather balloon, you expect it to come back down again. But, what if you lose the ability to track your package, and the terrain it lands in is a virtually endless desert up to 80 kilometres away from your original launch location? Gulp.

That’s what happened to this group of Arizona-based university students who wanted to find out what their GoPro camera would see if they attached it to a weather balloon and sent it to the edge of space over the Grand Canyon.

The team’s video shows they weren’t exactly unprepared for the voyage, either, spending months testing parachutes, calculating wind trajectories, and custom 3D-printing their GoPro camera chassis for its maiden flight.

gopro space video weather balloon

The GoPro captured some stunning footage during its time in space.

Everything goes swimmingly at first. On launch day the students drive out to their chosen spot, 32 kilometres west of the Grand Canyon. They release the balloon, which swiftly ascends to an altitude of more than 30 kilometres in less than an hour and a half, at which point the Grand Canyon has become more of a grand indentation on the distant orb below.

However, sometimes no amount of preparation can fend off bad luck. As one of the teamrecounts in a Reddit post, due to GPS and data coverage difficulties, their package’s return to Earth didn’t go quite as smoothly as planned:

“We planned our June 2013 launch at a specific time and place such that the phone was projected to land in an area with cell coverage. The problem was that the coverage map we were relying on (looking at you, AT&T) was not accurate, so the phone never got signal as it came back to Earth, and we never heard from it….

The phone landed ~50 miles [80 km] away from the launch point, from what I recall. It’s a really far distance considering there’s hardly any roads over there!”

AT&T may well have been responsible for the group losing their device, but as luck would bizarrely have it, it would later come to the team’s rescue also. Two years after losing track of their GoPro, an employee of the company happened upon the device while hiking in the desert. She was able to identify the SIM card and return the camera – and its valuable recorded footage – to the owners.

An amazing story and an awesome video.

Read the original article on Science Alert. Copyright 2015.

Source….Peter Dockrill..Science Alert…and http://www.businessinsider.com…and http://www.youtube.com

Natarajan

 

 

Google and Indian Railways Will Soon Provide Free WiFi at 400 Railway Stations ….

Isn’t it great when we get to access the internet for free while waiting for flights at some airports? Very soon, we can experience the same luxury at some railways stations as well. According to reports, Google is partnering with Indian Railways to set up WiFi hotspots at 400 key stations across the country.

Indian Railways sure seems to be taking the lead when it comes to the country going the digital route. If all goes as planned, a recent move will turn 400 railway stations in the country into high speed WiFi zones.

Tech giant Google will partner with the Railways to make this initiative possible. All in all, this is happy news for the millions of passengers who travel on Indian trains every day.

Google

Photo Credit: Robert Scoble/Flickr

Google is collaborating with the state-run RailTel Corporation of India, a PSU which has a pan-India fiber-optic network that runs along railway tracks in both urban and rural regions. RailTel will work with Google on the platform and infrastructure development.

According to a report by Telecomtalk, this project will be given shape with the help of Google Fiber, a technology which is well known among tech enthusiasts for providing fast broadband services in USA.

This initiative is being called ‘Project Nilgiri,’ and the first phase will involve setting up WiFi hotspots across selected railways stations.

Once everything is in place, users will be able to access high speed internet, free of cost, for the first 30 minutes at the stations.

For this, their mobile number will be verified with the help of a one time password sent via text message. After 30 minutes the speed of connection will reduce but connectivity will remain.

The project will be carried out in phases and it is expected that the first phase will be completed in about four months from now.

railG

Photo Credit: Himanshu Sarpotdar/Flickr

The second phase will involve working on providing WiFi access inside moving trains. As of now, Indian Railways provides WiFi inside some moving trains like Rajdhani Express, with the help of satellite communication technology.

Earlier this year, it was also reported that Google will set up its biggest facility outside of the US in Hyderabad. According to an agreement signed with Telangana IT minister KT Rama Rao, Google will invest Rs. 1,000 crore in the approximately 7-acre campus in the state.

Source….Tanaya Singh …www.the betterindia .com

Natarajan

How This Mumbai Boy is Helping Out His Mother After His Father Died….

How This Mumbai Boy is Helping Out His Mother After His Father Died

“I want to do something, anything to help my mother,” says a young boy on the Humans of Bombay Facebook page. Dressed in a “Gangnam Style” t-shirt, a smile on his face and a newspaper in his hand, his story is short but will tug at your heartstrings.

“My father passed away, so now it’s just my mother and me living together,” he says. His age is unspecified but he’s clearly very young – here’s what he does every day before going to school, to help his mother out as best as he can.

“Every morning, from 7am to 8 am, I deliver newspapers in the area, after which I go to school,” he says, a job that earns him Rs. 1000 per month. “And although it’s not a lot… I want to do something, anything to help my mother,” he adds.

If that hasn’t melted your heart already, he goes on to say, “She’s the best — and her aloo sabzi is world best!”
It’s hard not to feel proud of this bright young boy. Read his entire post below:

“My father passed away, so now it’s just my mother and me living together. Every morning, from 7am to 8 am, I deliver newspapers in the area, after which I go to school. I make 1000 Rupees a month from this, and although it’s not a lot…I want to do something, anything to help my mother. She’s the best — and her aloo sabzi is world best!”

Source…www.ndtv.com and http://www.facebook.com….humans of Bombay

Natarajan

Now Buy an Eco Friendly Ganesha, Send it off Responsibly & Support an Elephant at the same time…

During Ganesha Chaturthi, lakhs of Ganesha idols made of plastic and plaster of Paris (PoP) are disposed of in lakes and rivers. Here is one organization that not only helps you get eco friendly idols but makes sure the visarjan is done responsibly too. What’s more, the clay of the dissolved idols can be recycled as well!

During Ganesha Chaturthi last year, Shashi Shah, an IT consultant from Bengaluru, saw many people driving in their cars with beautiful Ganesha idols, headed for visarjan (ritual disposal of the idols in water bodies).

But what really caught Shashi’s eye amidst all the festivities were the idols made from PoP and covered in artificial paint.

Shashi started to think about this issue, which arises year after year, as hundreds of water bodies around the country get clogged with non-biodegradable idols that are a hazard for the environment.

He teamed up with his friend Subru, also a consultant, to start a company that not only provides eco friendly Ganesha idols but also helps people do visarjan in a responsible way

Ganesha idols are bought from local artisans near Bengaluru.

Though the idea came to their mind in 2014, the plan was finally executed only this year on August 17 when the team officially launched Mudpiez. The company not only delivers eco friendly Ganesha idols made from natural clay to your doorstep but also picks them up for visarjan in an eco friendly and responsible way.

“Everyone dumps these idols in lakes. Most of them are made from PoP, plastic and other such materials that do not get dissolved in water; this is very harmful for our environment, as we all know. However, there are already many people and organisations that sell Ganesha idols made of natural clay. So we thought of taking this initiative to the next level. We focused on two aspects — the delivery of eco friendly Ganesha idols and also their visarjan in a better way,” says Subru.

The duo went to a few villages near Bengaluru and identified three families of artisans from Narayanpura who make eco friendly idols. They partnered with these artisans and placed orders for about 500 idols. “We will place more orders as the demand increases,” says Subru.

Currently, there are 9 different varieties of idols available on the Mudpiez website. The tallest is 17 inches and costs Rs. 750, while the smallest is 10 inches tall and costs Rs. 401.

The idols are made only with clay and no colour is used.

The USP of the organization, however, lies not in providing eco friendly Ganesha idols but helping people dispose of them properly.

Instead of dumping the idols in a lake, the team plans to create an artificial tank in Narayanpur and Bannerghatta where people can do the visarjan of the clay idols.

The idols will be kept in the tank for three days till they completely dissolve and the clay will be recycled by the artisans to make other products.

To make the process of disposal simpler for people, Mudpiez also provides a service where they collect idols from individual houses and take them together to the artificial tank.

Shashi and Subru

In this way, we not only save time, energy and money, but also reduce the traffic to a large extent since people don’t have to go out of their homes to dispose of the idols,” says Subru.

This team is now planning to expand to other locations and also include other festivals like Dusshera and Bommala Koluvu.

“We are talking with artisans from Kolkata and are trying to bring them on board as well. It is a very fresh initiative and there is a long way to go,” says Subru.

Shashi and Subru are also very keen to replace the bubble wrap packing material of these Ganesha idols with paper wraps.

In addition, they plan to give about 10-15 percent of their revenues for the welfare of a rescued elephant that is currently under the care of the Wildlife Rescue & Rehabilitation Centre (WRRC), Bengaluru.

“The elephant met with an unfortunate accident and since it was a logging elephant, it was of ‘no use’ after that incident. It was abandoned in Tamil Nadu. Somehow, it reached a temple there and found shelter. One of the volunteers from WRRC saw it and informed the authorities in Bengaluru who then rescued it,” says Subru, who is associated with WRRC.

The elephant is currently in Bengaluru and needs continuous medical support. Therefore, some portion of the revenues earned by Mudpiez will be donated for the health care of this elephant.

You can place your order for an eco friendly Ganesha idol from the Mudpiez’ website here. To know more about their work, contact the team at- subru@mudpiez.in, shashi@mudpiez.in

Source…..Shreya Pareek… http://www.thebetterindia.com

Natarajan

 

The Lady Behind one of TIME’S 100 Most Influential People ….

Sheela Bhatt meets Bharti Patel, whose son Dr Vikram Patel was recently ranked one of Time magazine’s 100 most influential people, to find out her recipe for a remarkable upbringing.

IMAGE: ‘Once the doctors told me Vikram was unlikely to survive,’ recalls Bharti Patel. Photograph: Reuben NV/Rediff.com

Time magazine’s list of 100 most influential people of 2015 featured four Indians: Prime Minister Narendra Modi, Chanda Kochhar, managing director and CEO, ICICI Bank, Microsoft CEO Satya Nadella, and Dr Vikram Patel, co-founder of the Goa-based NGO Sangath which provides mental healthcare to communities with low resources.

Dr Patel, a psychiatrist, has been focusing on global mental health(external link), his passion being to raise his voice for the human rights of individuals with mental disorders. He is also a professor of international mental health at the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine.

Dr Patel’s body of work has been published in Lancet, the well-respected medical journal, and he has created immense awareness in the field of mental healthcare. As the Sangath Web site notes, ‘Dr Patel studies how to treat conditions like depression and schizophrenia in low-resource communities, and he’s come up with a powerful model: Training the community to help.’

Dr Patel,  is known for his research in finding the link between mental disorders and poverty, and ranks along the likes of German Chancellor Angela Merkel and Japanese novelist Haruki Murakami because of his pioneering work. He is one of the founders of the Centre for Global Mental Health, having served till recently as its joint director.

In Delhi he is associated with the Centre for Chronic Conditions and Injuries at the Public Health Foundation of India.

As the co-chair of the Grand Challenges in Global Mental Health (external link), Dr Patel is passionate about identifying research priorities in global mental health. His book, Where There Is No Psychiatrist, is considered a must read for those serving people with mental disorders, while it teaches the rest of us how to approach mental health.

However, the story is not about how Dr Patel reached the pinnacle of success.

At a time when we see Arushi Talwar’s convicted parents in prison or another parent, Indrani Mukerjea, in police custody suspected of having murdered her daughter, something inside society’s soul gets shaken.

Sheela Bhatt spoke to Bharti Patel, Dr Patel’s ageing and ailing mother, who narrates her extraordinary emotion-soaked struggle to bring up her child who saw death thrice before he went to regular school. And how 100 mothers may have contributed to the greatness of the men and women on Time‘s 100 most influential list.

Bhartiben is the Mother India of the 20th century for more than one reason. Her story highlights patience, wisdom, grit, value-based parvarish and boundless faith in God. A combination of value systems that provided the divine touch to Dr Vikram Patel, her loving son.

I have three children. My only son, Vikram, was born in 1964. In traditional Gujarati families the first boy is given the ‘Yamuna snan’ (a special shower for babies) at the Shrinathji temple. He was born healthy and we went to the Nathdwara temple for that baby bath. I don’t know what happened soon after, but he was found to have chronic asthma. It was difficult for a toddler. He used to have cold and cough, but the doctor said it was more serious than that.

Once the doctors told me he was unlikely to survive. Actually, on three occasions, we had lost all hope about Vikram. He came close to death, but by God’s grace he survived, every time.

My mother-in-law had died early and I had to join my father-in-law Bhagwatprasad Patel (B R Patel) when he was appointed India’s ambassador to Belgium. We stayed there for four years. My father-in-law was a distinguished ICS (Indian Civil Service, which precded the Indian Administrative Serice) officer who once headed Air India. I got the courage to shift because I thought I would find a cure for Vikram in a foreign land.

Asthma, when it afflicts a child, is more painful than when it does adults. During an asthma attack a child finds it difficult to breathe, as it happens to adults, but because he is innocent and does not know why it is happening to him, it is difficult to handle for him.

Such children have many allergies too. Vikram had a chana (gram) allergy, he could never have Gujarati Kadhi as it contains gram flour. Even today Vikram can’t have chana or any dish with it. He can’t have most of the yellow items in a Gujarati kitchen.

Since his asthma was so intense we had no clue how long he would live, so we did not think much about his education. My father-in-law thought even if he survives, he won’t pass the 12th standard. He was always in and out of hospitals. But somehow, God saved him.

IMAGE: Dr Vikram Patel’s parents, Harshad and Bharti Patel. Photograph: Reuben NV/Rediff.com

During his childhood he needed to be given an injection every day, and had the strictest possible diet restrictions. Most items in my kitchen were not acceptable to him. When we returned from Belgium to our Marine Drive home in Mumbai, he was admitted to the Campion school where he excelled. In fact, in Belgium, where the medium of instruction was French, Vikram learnt the language very fast. He would mostly top his class in all subjects.

What was unique about Vikram was that although he was sick, he never harassed me. Initially I was very strict with him to ensure that he studied. But when I saw he was sick all the time, hardly eating anything, I left him alone to make his own schedule.

He had always wanted to be a doctor. Seeing his physical condition everyone would laugh at his dream. How could a seriously ill boy, who may not even live long enough, become a doctor? But Vikram was determined. He would bag all the prizes in school in science, math, geography etc.

He passed the 12th standard on the merit list. He had a permanent handicap because he could not participate in sports as he was sick, so he never got that added advantage of extra marks. Due to breathing problems he could not run. I remember how Vikram was upset in the morning when his 12th standard result was due. He said, ‘Ma, I will get less marks because sports marks will not be added to my grand total. I will get less than 98%.’

When he was admitted for the MBBS he went to do his internship in Goa where his friend Gauri, who is now his wife, gave him the form for the Rhodes Scholarship. He filled it although I was sure that Vikram won’t get in because of his physical condition.

Vikram shared with me his plan, but I didn’t share it with the family. My husband Harshad and I were delighted when Vikram came back from Goa and said he wanted to go to Jamshedpur to meet Rusi Mody of Tata Sons who was to conduct the Rhodes Scholarship interview along with some other well-known people. It was very big news for me.

My son, who could only plan his life one day at a time, had been selected for an interview along with 15 others. Six people including Mody were on the panel. The selection process went on for four days.

Vikram is essentially a simple person. Even though he has asthma, he never allows a coolie to handle his luggage, he manages his own bags. He was asked to wear a suit to one event for the scholarship process, so his father got someone’s suit for him. He doesn’t wear a suit even now. Till he got his MBBS degree he had not worn a suit. Till then he never even had his own shirt! He would wear his grandpa and father’s old shirts. He wore slippers for a long, long time.

I still remember how Vikram called from Jamshedpur to say, ‘Ma, I got all six votes (of the selectors panel)! It was a record for the Rhodes Scholarship process in India then. I went down on my knees to thank Thakorji (Lord Krishna) profusely.

Vikram was so sick and he was suffering so much that sometimes I would plead to Thakorji to please take him away, I could not bear to see his pain. We had no hope for him. Even my mother had lost hope.

In Belgium nobody was ready to admit him while my daughters were accepted everywhere. My mother could not help me much in bringing him up as he was so sick.

Education is very important for me, I never allowed my children to ignore their studies. I got married at an early age. I had a degree from Sophia College and wanted to pursue my career, but my mother-in-law told me to leave aside advance studies and manage the household instead. I told all my three children that I would be rigid about ensuring that all of them study well.

Once you study, stand on your own feet and show me your first salary after which I will not come in your way. I will see to it that you marry the person you want.

I strongly believed that the future lies in good education. We never had huge amounts of money, my husband Harshad was a professional, not a businessman. What would my children do without money to invest in them? So I wanted them to be well educated.

My in-laws and other relatives from Dharmaj (a town in Gujarat) were conservative, but my faith in education was strong. My elder daughter Natasha did her MPhil from JNU. She was selected by the French government for a doctorate at Sorbonne University. She now works in London for a multinational bank, heading a department. My younger daughter Sheena stood first in Maharashtra in her final MA exams; her subject was French literature. She is in Paris right now.

Vikram was in Goa for many years, but for his son Farai’s studies, they have got a house in Delhi. My grandchildren are doing excellently in their studies.

Our family was clean in money matters. My father-in-law and husband earned money the legitimate way. We never even earned interest from investments. Vikram once informed us that a Mumbai medical college offered seats for Rs 2 lakhs (Rs 200,000) each. My father-in-law got angry and scolded him, ‘Do you want me to pay Rs 2 lakhs for your future? Go inside your room and don’t show me your face!’ It was against his principle to pay for education. My father-in-law did not even allow tuitions, he believed a good school is your tuition.

After hearing that, Vikram immediately left with his sister for Lonavla. In the late afternoon we received a telegram and I was scared. We always lived in constant fear of getting bad news about his health. I sat at the table before opening it, as I thought it may be about Vikram’s health, he was so weak. I thought the telegram was from my daughter in Lonavla. But it read, ‘Congratulations! Vikram Patel is in merit list!’

I was overwhelmed, my son who had dim hopes of surviving since many years, had made it as a topper. My son didn’t need money for education, he made it on his own.

Vikram, as I said, is a simple man. He hardly watched TV when growing up. He doe not SMS, but calls me. He is not addicted to Twitter or Facebook. All the time he writes, writes and writes. There are many papers to his credit.

He did his degree in psychiatry and his PhD as well. When his wife Gauri was studying, he managed the home and kitchen. Both of them stayed in Zimbabwe for three years for a project. While studying they had no money at all.

We never expected such high recognition like being nominated to Time magazine’s 100 most influential people list. After doing his MBBS he saw the malpractices in the medical profession and is dead against it. So he decided to not practise, but serve the poor by taking up teaching.

My son has travelled to many, many, villages. He has noted that in villages there are no psychiatrists and people suffer mental disorders silently. In Goa he trained local girls and boys. He developed the manual at Sangath to handle such cases. Even without setting up hospitals and dispensaries, he helped the local people treat their relatives and neighbours who were suffering from mental disorders.

He started out in a small corner provided by a local hospital where he had done his internship. He started very small, with just a table and few chairs and had some four, five poor men and women to help. He took me there to show what he was going to do. He wanted to train, for free, poor people to treat mental disorders in villages. We had no money to invest.

When I saw his table and chair in Goa I wondered, ‘How will he ever come up in life?’ Vikram asked me, ‘Ma, you are thinking of my future?’ I asked him ‘Who will give you money?’ He worked step by step. He got so much recognition for his work that his institution was awarded the best NGO. He worked with families of rape victims, suicide cases and took interest in settling them.

WHO wanted his medical manual for mental health. As long as you distribute it for free, he told WHO, you can translate it into as many languages as you want. It was distributed in 70 countries.

Vikram has retained his Indian passport as he wants to settle down only in India. Even now he has to follow diet restrictions. He has very weak eyesight, it’s a hereditary problem. He can’t eat dhoklas or khandvis. Gauri doesn’t store grams in her house. In his early days most times I gave him mixed vegetable soup and fish.

I am a believer of Pushti Marg (of the Vaishnav sect). My son always greeted me with ‘Ma, Jai Shri Krishna’ whenever he called me. I ensured that he accepted the Brahma-Sambandh (initiation into the Pushti Marg). It is a sacred procedure(external link) of the Pushti Marg sect. He did it when he was young. He believed in all these at a young age, but doesn’t do all this now. He stopped suddenly. He even stopped saying ‘Jai Shri Krishna.’ I didn’t say anything.

Some years ago he said he wanted five minutes with me. He then sat down with me and asked why I had not questioned him about why he had stopped saying ‘Jai Shri Krishna.’ Vikram then narrated his sorrowful experience at the KEM hospital (the King Edward Memorial hospital in parel, north-central Mumbai, one of Mumbai’s leading civic hospitals).

One day he said he got the body of a married woman for post-mortem. He was surprised to see that she was still a virgin. He then found out from her husband that they lived in a single room with a large family, including the in-laws. After marriage they could never get any privacy. They had no time, no money and no place to meet privately and consummate their marriage.

One day, the couple decided to go to Juhu beach for some privacy. That evening, they were robbed by goons and in the scuffle the wife died before they could rape her. Vikram asked himself, ‘Where is god? What was the crime of that woman?’

He has started saying ‘Jai Shri Krishna’ again.

Sheela Bhatt / Rediff.com

Source…www.refiff.com

Natarajan

Heartwarming photo of Danish officer and Syrian refugee goes viral….

The heartwarming image of a Danish officer playing with a Syrian refugee girl is going vi

The heartwarming image of a Danish officer playing with a Syrian refugee girl is going viral. Source: Reddit

AS the Syrian refugee crisis unfolded, we saw hundreds of pictures of people crossing the Danish border in search of a better life.

We have seen tragic images of men, women and children weeping and struggling as they set off on foot — walking down seemingly endless desert roads, or cramped among thousands of others and waiting to cross numerous borders.

But amid all the coverage of the horrific crisis comes a heart-warming picture of a Danish officer playing a game with a Syrian refugee girl, as a group of asylum seekers walk along the Danish-German border towards Sweden.

The beautiful interaction was caught on camera.

The beautiful interaction was caught on camera. Source: Reddit

The photo quickly went viral after it was shared on Reddit. Danish newspaper BTreported they were playing a game in which the officer would hold his wedding ring in one hand, and the girl would have to guess where it is.

Police assistant commissioner Knud Reinholdt told BT: “The picture shows that even though we have a task we must solve, we are also dealing with people who are in a difficult situation that nobody wants to be in.

“We have to deal with children who have experienced a lot of things and who have travelled far, so if we can make life a little easier for them, as in the pictures, then it’s worth it. It does not cost anything.”

With more than 380,000 migrants and refugees having crossed the Mediterranean since January, Europe is struggling to cope with the worst refugee crisis it has faced since World War II.

Syria’s civil war has accounted for half of all crossings so far this year, which claimed 240,000 lives after four and a half years.

Prime Minister Tony Abbott has announced that Australia will take 12,000 Syrian refugees within a year, on top of Australia’s current refugee intake.

Source….www.news.com.au

Natarajan

Out-Of-This-World’ Photos Sent by Mangalyaan That Made Us Say WOW! ….

Ever since it began its mission in space, the Mars Orbiter Mission (MOM) spacecraft has been clicking some stupendous images, opening a window into outer space so all of us can enjoy the view. Here’s how the craft has kept us entertained and spellbound with witty comments and incredible photos.

India’s very own Mangalyaan, which has been orbiting Mars since about a year now, keeps sending some really amazing shots from out there. And people at Indian Space Research Organization (ISRO), being as gracious as they have always been, keep releasing those pictures, so all of us can get a piece of the breathtaking wonder.

All the pictures are taken by the Mars Orbiter with its Mars Color Camera (MCC). Each image is magnificent in itself, and gives us the privilege of watching something which is literally out of this world, and situated millions of kilometres away – it’s nothing but incredible that we can view them in such high resolution from the comfort of our couches. All thanks to MOM.

Here are few marvels from ISRO’s photo bank that literally took our breath away: –

Taken just a few days after launch, this one shows India. What a view! –

mom1

First image of the Earth by MCC of Mars Orbiter Spacecraft taken on Nov 19, 2013

Impact crater located SW of Huygens crater

Looks like an image out of a science fiction novel, doesn’t it?

Source….www.thebetterindia.com

Natarajan

How Savithri Has Been Playing Mother to Destitute Elderly Women for 37 Years …

In 1978, Savithri Vaithi started an old age home, Vishranthi, for abandoned and destitute elderly women in Chennai. Thirty-seven years later, and at the age of over 80 now, Savithri still spends her time taking care of these women who have no one else to rely on. Here’s her story.

Savithri Vaithi’s wrinkled face hides hundreds of stories about the homeless elderly women she has taken care of and their painful days that she has tried to ease. With no family to take care of them, these destitute women have landed up at Savithri’s doorstep and she has taken them in, with kindness and compassion, one by one.

“It is not an old age home where kids can drop their mothers off. It is a home only for those who have no one and nowhere to go,” explains Srilekha, Savithri’s niece, brought up by her.

Several hundred women have knocked on the doors of Vishranthi in all these years, looking for some help and rest in their twilight years. Savithri has given them the dignity they deserve.

Savithri (center) along with Srilekha (right) at the CNN IBN awards.

Savithri is 80 and not in very good health now. “But she is still worried about all those ladies living in Vishranthi. She still has the final say and she will always be the soul behind this initiative,” says Srilekha.

Savithri started working in the social sector when she was just 16. She worked in the slums of Choolai in Chennai, as part of a group called ‘Barefoot Walkers’ who would take care of the health, education and other needs of the slum dwellers.

Later, she started a book bank, educated underprivileged kids, and worked for the homeless and needy.

Savithri with one of the earliest Governor of Tamil Nadu Late Shri Prabhudas Patwari who laid the foundation of Vishranthi for the buidling on which it stands tough to this day

Savithri with one of the earliest Governors of Tamil Nadu, Late Shri Prabhudas Patwari, who laid the foundation of the building on which Vishranthi stands to this day –

But it was Vishranthi that gave Savithri’s life a new purpose. She started it in the late 70s with support from Help Age India and Dr. Natrajan, a geriatrist at the General Hospital in Chennai.

“The idea was to bring together some housewives who wanted to do something in their free time and leverage their energy to do something good for the elderly. Savithri started identifying abandoned women at the railway stations, roadside, etc., and bringing them to her old age home. Gradually, the news spread and hundreds of women started coming to Vishranthi,” says Srilekha.

Wife of A.V. Meiappa Chettiyar donated an acre of land in Palavakkam and Help Age India raised funds for the construction of the building. And this is how Vishranthi moved from a small rented house to bigger premises that now house over 150 elderly women and a staff of about 50.

For all of them now, Savithri is the family that they had once hoped would give them respect and peace in their old age.

From providing them with healthy food to having them undergo regular medical checkups, Savithri makes sure that they lack for little. And eventually, she performs their last rites with the dignity and grace they deserve.

Savithri is a new family for the abandoned destitute women.

We have welcomed new women here and even seen their deaths. We get attached to all of these ladies. It is very difficult to see them die,” says Srilekha.

“In earlier times, women were not allowed to go to the cremation ground. But Savithri went there every time one of the ladies from our old age home was taken there. She received strong opposition but she stood against that boldly. Thanks to her, those challenges are not being faced by us now because she raised her voice against them back then,” she adds.

After a woman dies in the old age home, the staff at Vishranthi arrange to donate the organs of the deceased. They try to trace the family to participate in the last rituals. But if the family cannot be found, the women are cremated with due respect.

“These old age homes are full of stories of hundreds of women — each one more heartbreaking and thought provoking than the other,” says Srilekha.

Though Savithri is very sick and immobile to take care of the home by herself now, the administration of Vishranthi is being ably carried out in the same standard that she had set, by a Board of Trustees which changes every two years.

She is leaving behind a legacy that we all will cherish. Her dream is our dream now and we will make sure we keep growing and taking care of these needy women,” concludes Srilekha.

To know more about their work, contact them at – vishranthi.trust@yahoo.com or lekha.shri@gmail.com

Source…www.the betterindia.com

Natarajan

Lalbaugcha Raja’s magnificent statue unveiled ahead of Ganesh Chaturthi….

 

Picture credits: Yogen Shah

With Ganesh Chaturthi around the corner, the iconic statue of Lalbaugcha Raja was unveiled in the city of Mumbai. This year, the statue has an added touch of grandeur that symbolizes the joy and vigor of the festival.

 

The statue sits in a palace like set up, made of different coloured glasses that add to the surreal beauty of the magnificent work done by the craftsmen.

Source…..www.ibnlive.com

Natarajan