குடி நீருக்கு மழை நீர் !!!

source:::Dinamalar Tamil daily…
natarajan

தொண்டி :ராமநாதபுரம் மாவட்டம் தொண்டி அருகே எஸ்.பி.பட்டினத்தில் மழை நீரை சேகரித்து ஓராண்டு வரை பயன்படுத்தி வருகின்றனர். 100 ஆண்டுகளாக இப் பழக்கம் உள்ளது.

ராமநாதபுரம், புதுக்கோட்டை மாவட்ட எல்லையில் அமைந்துள்ளது எஸ்.பி.பட்டினம். இதையொட்டி கடற்கரை என்பதால், கிணறுகளில் உப்பு தண்ணீர் தான் கிடைக்கிறது. குடிநீருக்காக ஏங்கும் மக்கள், மழைநீரை சேகரிக்க முடிவு செய்தனர். 500க்கும் மேற்பட்ட வீடுகள் உள்ள இப்பகுதியில், பெரும்பாலான வீடுகளில் குடிநீருக்காக தனி அறை கட்டி, அதில் 1,000 முதல் 2,000 லிட்டர் கொள்ளளவு கொண்ட தொட்டி அமைத்துள்ளனர். மழை பெய்யும் போது மாடியிலிருந்து கீழே குழாய் மூலம் தொட்டியில் தண்ணீர் சேகரிக்கின்றனர். தண்ணீர் கெட்டுப்போகாமல் இருக்க சுட்ட செங்கற்களை தொட்டியில் போட்டு வைக்கின்றனர்.

எஸ்.பி.பட்டினம் ஊராட்சி தலைவர் முகமதுகாசிம் கூறியதாவது: 100 ஆண்டுகளுக்கு மேலாக இப்பழக்கம் உள்ளது. வீடு கட்டும் போதே மழை நீர் சேகரிப்பு தொட்டியும் அமைக்கின்றனர். இந்த தண்ணீரை, அடுத்தாண்டு மழை பெய்யும் வரை பயன்படுத்துகின்றனர். அடுப்பு மூட்டி எழும்பும் புகை, மண்பானை வைத்து மூடப்படும். சில மணி நேரம் கழித்து மண்பானையில் மழை நீர் ஊற்றி ஆற வைத்து குடித்தால் சுவை அருமையாக இருக்கும். கிருமிகள் வராமல் தடுக்க, சுட்ட செங்கற்கள் போடப்படுகிறது. மழை நீரை வடிகட்டி சமையல், குடிக்க பயன்படுத்தி வருகிறோம். மழை காலங்களில் தேவைக்கு ஏற்ப மழை நீரை சேகரித்துவிட்டு, மீதி தண்ணீரை கிணற்றில் விடுகிறோம், என்றார்.

 

Srinivasa Ramanujan….Maths. Wizard !!!

New Delhi: Celebrating Srinivasa Ramanujan’s 125th birthday, Google posted a doodle on its homepage. The doodle features a boy trying to solve some mathematical equations and geometrical figures, which form the letters of the word ‘Google’. But who was Srinivasa Ramanujan?

Born on 22 December 1887, Srinivasa Ramanujan was an Indian mathematician who made extraordinary contributions to mathematical analysis, number theory, infinite series, and continued fractions. He was an autodidact. Living in India with no access to the larger mathematical community, Srinivasa Ramanujan came up with his own mathematical research in isolation.

Ramanujan was born in a poor Hindu Brahmin family. His introduction to formal mathematics began at age 10. He demonstrated a natural ability. By the age of 12, he mastered books on advanced trigonometry written by S. L. Loney. Ramanujan discovered theorems of his own

On 14 July 1909, Ramanujan got married to Janaki Ammal, a ten-year old bride.

In 1912-1913, he sent out samples of his theorems to three academics at the University of Cambridge. His brilliance was recgonised and he was invited to visit and work at Cambridge. He became a Fellow of the Royal Society and a Fellow of Trinity College, Cambridge.

On 26 April 1920, Ramanujan died of illness, malnutrition, and possibly liver infection at the age of 32.

In December 2011, Prime Minister Manmohan Singh declared 2012 as the ‘National Mathematical year’ as a tribute to maths wizard Srinivasa Ramanujan. Singh also declared December 22, the birthday of Ramanujan, as ‘National Mathematics Day.’

“A genius like Ramanujan would shine bright even in the most adverse of circumstances, but we should be geared to encourage and nurture good talent which may not be of the same calibre as that of Ramanujan”, Singh had once said.

It is believed that a biography of Ramanujan named “The Man Who Knew Infinity: A Life of the Genius Ramanujan,” written by Professor Robert Kanigel has made Ramanujan well known to the public at large all over the world.

Along with CV Raman and Subramanyam Chandrashekhar (both Nobel laureates), Srinivasa Ramanujan is said to be among the three great men of science and mathematics that Tamil Nadu and India have given to the world of modern times.

Sharing his thoughts on Srinivasa Ramanujan, the great mathematician, after whom the year was named as the National Year of Mathematics, Dr Kalam said, “Ramanujan lived for 33 years only. But he was an exceptional

புறத்தோற்றம் ஒரு அளவுகோள் அல்ல !!!

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மகான் கர்நாடாகாவில் 1979 – ம் வருடம் பாதயாத்திரை மேற்கொண்டு இருந்தார். பயணித்தப்பிறகு, மாலை நேரத்தில் ஓர் இடத்தில தங்குவது வழக்கம்.

அன்றும் வழக்கம்போல் காலையில் ஒரு குளத்தின் கரையில் அமர்ந்து, பக்தர்களுக்கு தரிசனம் கொடுத்து கொண்டு இருந்தார்.

அப்போது, மகானை பார்க்க இரு அந்தண இளைஞர்கள் அங்கே வந்தனர்.

தரக்குறைவான ஆடைகளுடன் , குளிக்காத தோற்றத்தோடும் , படிப்பு அறிவே கொஞ்சமும் இல்லாதவர்களை போல் காட்சியளித்த அவர்களை பார்த்த டாக்டர் ராமமூர்த்தி முகம் சுளித்தார்.

மகானை பார்க்க வரும்போது குளித்துவிட்டு, சுத்தமான அடைகளை அணிந்துகொண்டு வரவேண்டாமோ?

மகானை வழங்கி எழுந்த அவர்களை கணிவுடன் பார்த்து, மகான் கேட்டார்,

“அத்யயனம் முடிந்தாகி விட்டதா?

அவர்களும் தலையை ஆட்டினார்கள்.

“ரிக்வேதம்” சொல்லுங்கள்” என்று மகான் கட்டளை இட்டவுடன், அருவியிலிருந்து நீர் பெருக்கெடுத்து வந்தது போல், அவர்கள் வேதத்தை சொல்ல தொடங்கினார்கள்.

கண்களை மூடியவாறு மகான் அதை கேட்டு கொண்டிருந்தவர் – பிறகு அவராக கையமர்த்தியபின் தான் அவர்கள் வேதம் சொல்வதை நிறுத்தினார்கள்.

“எங்கிருந்து வருகிறீர்கள்?” – மகான் கேட்டார்.

இருபது மைல்களுக்கு அப்பால் இருந்த ஓர் இடத்தை சொன்னார்கள் இளைஞர்கள்.

“அங்கிருந்து எப்படி வந்தீர்கள்?

“நடந்துதான் வந்தோம்”

“திரும்பி போகும்போது?

“நடந்துதான் போகவேண்டும்”

மகானை பார்க்க இருபது மைல் தூரத்தை நடந்தே கடந்து வந்து இருகிறார்கள்.

உடம்பில் அழுக்கு ஏன் சேராது?

மடத்தின் மூலமாக அவர்களுக்கு புதிய ஆடைகளை கொடுத்து, உண்ண உணவு கொடுத்து அனுப்பினார், மகான்.

அவர்களை பற்றி தவறாக நினைத்துகொண்டிரு;த டாக்டரின் பக்கம் திரும்பினார் மகா பெரியவர்.

“மனிதனின் வெளிப்படையான தோற்றத்தை வைத்து, அவனது உண்மையான யோக்கியதை அறியாது மனதை குழப்பிக் கொள்ளக்கூடாது”, என்றார்.

அவர் மனதில் என்ன நினைத்தார் என்று இவருக்கு எப்படி தெரியும்? டாக்டர் மெய்சிலிர்த்தார்…

source::::www.perivaa.proboards.com

Natarajan

Read more:http://www.periva.proboards.com/index.cgi?board=exptamil&action=display&thread=3141#ixzz2FJUawOXb

Kaveri Prasanna Maha Ganapathi Temple …

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Thiruvaiaru is a ‘punya bhoomi’ with 5 rivers flowing through it ( Cauvery, Kudamuruti, Vadavaru, Vennaru and Vettaru ). About 9 km from here is Thirupoonthuruthi and a nearby village is ‘Nadukkaveri’.

It was the year 1942. The house of Chinnaswamy Iyer. He has a son, Ramachandran and his wife is Sita.They have been married for some time and longing for a child. They are of course devotees of Periyava.

The Maha Swamy visited the village and walked through the length of it with His sishyas and devotees.

At Chinnaswamy Iyer’s house, Sita was busy doing a ‘Kolam’. Periyava, walking at a brisk pace, suddenly stopped near Sita . She was completely taken by surprise and was speechless. With tears in her eyes she prostrated before Periyava. Periva asked her, “Where is your Raman?. Saying that He entered the house, looked around and opened a room (which was actually a dumping place) which had been kept closed for a long time, dusted off the floor with a ‘thundu’ and sat down.

By this time Raman and Sita were there. He looked at Raman and said ‘go get milk from the udders of the cow in a sombu’.

Raman did as was told. Then Periva did japa and told Rama, ‘go to Kudamuruti river, pour some milk in it and the rest on the banks of the river. Dig where you poured the milk and you will hit a basement. There, you build a temple for Vinayaga. You will live happily’. So saying, He got up and left.

Raman did as Periva said, and indeed found the basement and built a Ganesha temple there. Soon after, Sita delivered a male child and they named him ‘Ganesan’.

Well, the temple ? It still stands there in Nadukkaveri – ‘Kaveri Prasanna Maha Ganapthi temple’.

source: yahoo groups…and kanchi periva forum

Natarajan

Read more:http://periva.proboards.com/index.cgi?board=expenglish&action=display&thread=3044#ixzz2E36AJPDt

இன்று யோகி ராம்சூரத் குமார் பிறந்த தினம் 1 Dec 2012…

இன்று யோகி ராம்சூரத் குமார் பிறந்த தினம்…..

கங்கை நதி தீரத்தில் பிறந்து
திருவண்ணாமலையில்
வந்து யோகி ராம்சூரத் குமாராய்
மலர்ந்துமணம் வீசி
மக்களின் தாபத்தை போக்கியவர்

தனை ஒரு பிச்சைக்காரன்
என்றே அழைத்துக்கொண்டிருந்தவர்
தன்னை அண்டி வந்தோருக்கெல்லாம்
ஆன்மீக பிச்சை போட்டவர்
அன்பை அள்ளி அள்ளி தந்தவர்.

வழக்கம்போல் ஞானிகளை நம் நாட்டு மக்கள்
என்றும் துவக்கத்தில் அறிந்துகொண்டதில்லை
அவரை துன்புறுத்தி பல கொடுமைகளை அவருக்கு
இழைத்து மகிழ்ச்சி கொண்டனர்.

ஆனால் தான் உடல் அல்ல தான் ஒரு ஆத்மா
என்று உணர்ந்துகொண்ட அந்த ஜீவன்
அதையெல்லாம் சட்டை செய்யாது
தன்னை அண்டி வருவோருக்கெல்லாம்
அன்பையும்,ஆறுதலையும், அருளையும்
வாரி. வாரி வழங்கியது.

மனமெல்லாம் இருளை நிரப்பும்
பொருளை தேடி நம் நாட்டு மக்கள்
மேலை நாடுகளுக்குசாரி சாரியாக
செல்லும் நேரத்தில் மன இருளை போக்கும்
ஞானிகளை தேடி அனைத்தையும் விட்டு விட்டு
ஓடி வருகின்றனர் மேல் நாட்டு மக்கள்.

அவர்களில் ஒருவர்தான் இந்த ஞானியை
பற்றி வெளி உலகத்திற்கு தெரிவித்தவர்.
பிறகுதான் அனைவரும் அவரின்
தெய்வீக தன்மையை உணர தொடங்கினர்.
இன்று அண்ணாமலையில்
அவரின் ஆசிரமம் அவரின்
பெருமைகளை பரப்பிக்கொண்டிருக்கிறது

அவர் ஜபித்த மந்திரம்:

ஓம் ஸ்ரீராம் ஜெயராம் ஜெய ஜெயராம்
ஓம் ஸ்ரீராம் ஜெயராம் ஜெய ஜெயராம்

அவர் நமக்களித்த மந்திரம்

யோகிராம் சூரத்குமார்
யோகிராம் சூரத்குமார்
யோகிராம் சூரத்குமார்
ஜெயகுருராயா

தான் என்ற அகந்தை கொண்டவனுக்கும்
மதம் கொண்டவர்களுக்கும் மகான்களின்
மகத்துவம் புரியாது.

அது நம் மனதில் இருக்கும் வரை
இறைவனின் தத்துவம் புரியாது.

எப்படி ஒரு நாயால் ஒரு தேங்காயை
எவ்வளவு முறை உருட்டினாலும்
அதை உடைத்து அதன் உள்ளே
இருக்கும் தேங்காயை தின்ன முடியாதோ.
அதுபோல்தான் நாமே கடவுளை தேடுவதும்
.
இறைவனை அறிந்துகொண்ட
மகான்களின் பாதங்களை பற்றினால்
நம்மைபல பிறவிகளாக பற்றிக்கொண்டு
நம்மை துன்பத்தில் ஆழ்த்திக் கொண்டிருக்கும்
அறியாமையிலிருந்து
நம்மை விடுவித்துக்கொள்ளும் வழியை
நமக்கு உபதேசிப்பார்கள்.

அதற்க்கு அவர்களிடம் நம்மை பூரணமாக
அர்ப்பணிக்கவேண்டும்.
பலன் எதிர்பாராமல்அனைத்து உயிர்களுக்கு
தொண்டு, இயன்ற அளவிற்கு
தர்மமும் செய்யவேண்டும்.

அப்போதுதான்அசுத்தஎண்ணங்களால்
நிறைந்துள்ள நம் மனம் சுத்தமாகும்.
சுத்தமான மனதில்தான் இறையுணர்வு உண்டாகும்.

அப்போதுதான் தேவையற்ற விஷ யங்களிருந்து
நம் மனம் விடுபட்டு. உண்மை பொருளைநாடும்

.எத்தனையோ பிறவிகளை கடந்து வந்து விட்டோம்.
இந்த பிறவியிலாவது. அருணை மகானை
நினைந்து நம் எண்ணம் ஈடேற பிரார்த்திப்போம்.

ஜெய். குரு மகராஜ் .

source::::: input from one of my friends….
Natarajan

Talakadu….Forgotten by the Sands of Time…..

Talakadu in Karnataka—a confluence of history and myths.

By    in yahoo life style    

Natarajan

  • The temple at Talakadu

    – The temple at Talakadu

It is the classical Indian story. A tale told by gods and demons, filled with kings and queens, replete with curses and boons. There is a little bit of history here, blended with some geology and topped with legends and myths. Set on the banks of the river Cauvery, this saga dates back to the 4th century and has certain intriguing elements, defying the very laws of nature. This is the tale of Talakadu, the erstwhile capital of the Ganga Dynasty which is now partially buried under sand dunes. Many rulers have reigned over this once flourishing city, but today it is a lost forgotten town, blown over by the sands of time

Talakadu

It was a natural curiosity to unearth the secrets of Talakadu that drove us from Bangalore one Sunday morning. It was one of those beautiful moments. The weather was just right. An eagle scooped down and soared away with the same ease. A herd of goats clamored for attention. Flanked by the verdant greenery, we passed fresh dewy fields, lotuses jostling for space in ponds, flitting butterflies and a few scattered hamlets. We saw glimpses of rustic life as various stages of harvest were in progress. The entire scene was an ode to the countryside. We ambled on for a couple of hours on the Mysore Road and took a detour at Maddur, passed Malavalli en-route to this sacred, historic town.

We were rather unprepared for this.  At the first glance, it was just a prosaic picnic spot, overcrowded with swarms of loud local tourists and besieged by persistent guides. We made our way towards the river bed, where the Cauvery flowed at her own pace. It presented an unusual, yet a stark picture. There were huge mounds of sand by the banks of the river, like a beach. With a canopy of tall eucalyptus trees spread out from the sand, it felt like being in the middle of a forest. The dense shrubbery, some lively birds and monkeys dangling between the branches completed the picture.

The mounds of sand were everywhere, like small hillocks, some as high as even 15 meters. It was a steep climb, as the feet sank in with each step. It was an inexplicable sight; nobody could fathom where the heaps of sand came from. The fertile soils of the Cauvery basin seemed to have become fine particles of soft sand by sheer magic. While the answer may be with a geologist, my local guide narrates this legend.

Urban legend

A curse of a woman he says is the cause of this sand blown town, an erstwhile fertile capital of several dynasties that ruled over Karnataka. A tale filled with greed and lust for power. It was the time when Talakadu and Srirangapatna were under the Vijayanagara Empire. The death of the last Viceroy, Srirangaraya provoked the Wodeyars of Mysore to declare war. As Srirangapatna fell, the Wodeyar ruler sent his soldiers to covet the jewels of the late Viceroy’s widow, Alamelamma. As she fled from her pursuers, she is supposed to have jumped into the Cauvery, uttering the curses. My guide gets all dramatic as he proclaims the curse, “May Talakadu be always covered with sand and may the kings of Mysore always remain without heirs.”  The locals fear the curse as they say that it has come true. Talakadu is mysteriously engulfed with a sea of sand and the family tree of Mysore rulers show a large number of adopted heirs.

The story moves from being a mere myth to some startling historic discoveries as well. Recent excavations have unearthed temples from these mounds of sand and each dynasty has left their architecture stamp on them.  My guide points out that 30 such temples are still buried underneath the sand dunes as we climb our way to the excavated areas

Panchalingas

Talakadu is famous for the Panchalingas – the temples dedicated to Lord Shiva called Pathaleshwara, Maruleshwara, Arkeshwara, Vaidyanatheeshwara and Mallikarjuna .Of these, the first two are the oldest, built by the Ganga kings. The locals here say that the Shivalinga in the former is said to change color according to the time of day – from red in the morning to black in the afternoon and white in the night. To us though, in the cool afternoon, it was simply black.

We paused to give our feet a bit of rest and heard the story of Tala and Kada, the two hunters, after whom my guide says, this town is named. One more story, this time, it fuses a bit of religion as well. A sage, Somadutta and his disciples were killed by wild elephants when they were doing their penance. They were said to be reborn as elephants in the same forest.  Two hunters, Tala and Kada watched the ritual of the elephants offering prayers to a silk cotton tree and out of curiosity, axed the tree down, only to find it bleeding. A voice then instructed them to heal the wound with the leaves and the blood miraculously turned milk which immortalized the hunters and the elephants as well. A temple later was built here around the tree, and the place became known as Talakadu.

We resumed our journey and reached the Vaidyanatheeshwara, the largest of them all, which was built by the Cholas. All these temples are neatly thatched and embedded in pits as we climbed down to visit them. Remnants of the bygone era were seen in some scattered stones, broken pillars, an ancient well and even some idols. The Pancha Linga festival is celebrated with much fanfare once in 12 years during the Kartika season, where the temples are allowed for worshipping. The last festival happened in 1993 and the next scheduled late this year. The lost and forgotten township sees throngs of devotees only during this period, while at the rest of times; it remains a desolate spot, with a few picnickers.

Besides the Panchalingas, another magnificent temple stands out even in the ruins. The Keerthi Narayana temple dedicated to Lord Vishnu, built by the Hoysalas, to celebrate the victory of Talakadu over the Cholas. Scattered stones lie all over the place along with the pillars, stone inscriptions and some carvings are still prevalent. The main temple, intricately carved houses an eight foot tall idol of the deity.

Excavations, they say have unearthed a 12-foot tall stone mandapa along with remnants of Garuda kamba. Work by archaeologists is still in progress here, as we stroll among the many stones, which my guide claims are ‘originals’. It looked like each piece of stone was being numbered and the mantapas were being rebuilt to recreate the splendour of the past.

We had walked for more than a couple of hours, deeply engrossed in the continuous banter of our guide. Our feet caved in many a time, as we scaled the steep sand dunes. In the last two hours, we had traveled back to several centuries. We paused for a moment, taking in the sight. The silence was overwhelming. The voices of the past were buried under the layers of sand. We sat there, trying to build castles, but the wings gently swept them down. This, we realized was the destiny of Talakadu -the confluence of the historic and the holy spirit, where myths and legends merged, but were all completely swept away by the blasts from the past.

Getting there 

Talakadu is just three hours by road from Bangalore, en route to Mysore. It is about 130 km from Bangalore, which is the closest airport. You could drive down from the Kanakpura Road or take the good old Mysore Road upto Maddur, past Mallavalli and proceed on the road towards Kollegal. About 5 km before the detour for Shivanasamudra Falls, there are sign boards indicating Talakadu, 22 km to the right. The road is bad in patches and very often, it is long and winding, without any landmarks or signboards. 

On Diwali Day Think of Young Kids of Sivakasi who Swelter in the Heat to Make Your Diwali Sparkle!!!!

Diwali: Spare a thought for children of Sivakasi

source:::::: Article by Sriram Balasubramaniam in IBN lIVE Blog…

Natarajan

One of the first things that we would be looking in a yearly calendar is the day Diwali would be celebrated. The Indians living in India would be itching to celebrate while the Indians living abroad would make sure their Indian holiday plans are in sync with Diwali time. Joy derived from triumph of good over evil is the hallmark of Diwali. However, there are certain sections of people who need to be remembered, the same people who are the catalyst for making your Diwali as colourful as you want to be.

Every year, 90 per cent of the crackers for Diwali are made from a small place called Sivakasi in South India. This is the capital of the fireworks industry in India and one of the leading centers across the world. After Lui Yang, the Chinese city which is leader in the world production of crackers, Sivakasi is the next hub for global fireworks industries. This is something that we should be proud about, however, this empire has been built on a model of extreme low wages and high casualty rates. According to the Tamil Nadu Fireworks and Amorces Manufacturers Association (TNFAMA), 237 lives have been lost over the last 12 years in fireworks manufacturing plants. In September this year, 39 people lost their lives in a fire at Om Shakti Fireworks in Sivakasi due to lack of adherence to safety norms and regulations in the town. The flouting of safety norms is a norm rather than an aberration in the fireworks industry especially amidst the unorganized and small companies operating across the sector. Even though there has been widespread condemnation by civil society over the state of affairs in Sivakasi, year after year you see a similar situation unfolding. While accidents could happen in any city which produces firecrackers, it rarely happens with the sheer consistency and magnitude of Sivakasi in recent times. Besides the issue of safety, the issue of child labour has plagued the industry for long.

Lets come to terms with this fact; most of the crackers that you are bursting today have had involvement of child labour at some level or the other. Though this is alarming, it is not surprising considering the magnitude of child labour in the fireworks industry across the country. Child labour is regrettably rampant as much in many other industries but the exploitation of children to make crackers that are dangerous is simply unacceptable. According to a UN study published in the mid 1990’s there were 30,000 people employed in the match industry and 3,000 people employed in the fireworks industry in Sivakasi; all in between the age of 6-14. Some estimates suggest that the daily wage for these workers is less than 150 Rupees a day; an abysmal reality that makes it almost on par with the minimum wage for workers in the fireworks industry which has been set at Rs 99.98 per day. Besides the economics, the question is why should the children be doing what they are doing? Shouldn’t they be taken care of by the society and the state? What happened to the self acclaimed goal of education to all? All of these questions point to a greater role needed to be played by both the state and the society at large.

There has to be a systematic response from the government in terms of legislation that tightens the safety norms and action on the ground with more investment in safety monitoring systems. A report from the BBC states that Petroleum and Explosives Safety Organisation (PESO) had just 4 officers overseeing over 1,000 companies and factories in Sivakasi over the last year. Is this good enough? There has to be an increase in manpower in monitoring mechanisms and enhanced law and order which cracks down vehemently on the firecracker owners who are flouting rules. Though there have been raids on companies flouting the law, the issue requires more investment and action. Legislation such as the Child Labour (Prohibition and Regulation) Act of 1986 could be revamped to discourage children from working in family owned businesses etc. In addition, there has to be a sustained effort to educate the public, especially the people in the rural areas, on the impact of this on the children’s future in the years to come.

Society needs to stand up and address these concerns. I am not suggesting we boycott crackers but why not contribute to the upliftment of communities in the Sivakasi belt in the form of public private partnership? Why not work on evolving the best practices that the world’s leading fireworks manufacturing city Lui Yang has? Why not try and provide education tools to these young kids who are sweltering in the heat with their lives on the line? Why not just think about all that we could do to mobilize non governmental resources for this cause? Why not start thinking about all this during an auspicious day such as Diwali?

As you celebrate this Diwali, spare a thought for the people of Sivakasi; after all, they are the ones who make your Diwali sparkle

Wish you a very Happy Diwali!!

TRIVANDRUM INTERNATIONAL AIRPORT….A NEW GATEWAY TO INDIA….

Wednesday, 15 August 2012 1:43 PM
SOURCE:::: “THE HINDU”    TRIVANDRUM…
 Nice photograph of equally nice terminal….I am naturally going back to my Trivandrum days  espicially to the DAY …NOV 1 2006….when Hon. PM laid the foundation stone for this terminal and the DAY on which Bhoomi Pooja was performed for the beginning of construction activity at site…some time in the first week of FEB 2007…..I had the unique opportunity of participating in that pooja  in my capacity as Airport Director of  TVM Airport  and placed bricks alongwith precious stones and coins in the first pit dug on that day amidst pooja mantra slogams ….
Very nice to note that this airport is becoming a new gateway to our country ….
Natarajan

Thiruvananthapuram new gateway to India

S. ANIL RADHAKRISHNAN

DREAM VACATION: The Thiruvananthapuram international airport is joining four other airports to become a gateway to India for holidaymakers.Photo: S. Mahinsha
The HinduDREAM VACATION: The Thiruvananthapuram international airport is joining four other airports to become a gateway to India for holidaymakers.Photo: S. Mahinsha
At Thiruvananthapuram airport for citizens of 11 countries
God’s Own Country will soon become the fifth gateway to India for holidaymakers from 11 countries who can get tourist visa on arrival (T-VoA) as the international airport here will join the airports in Delhi, Mumbai, Chennai and Kolkata in issuing this passport to a dream vacation.
Citizens of Finland, Japan, Luxembourg, New Zealand, Singapore, Cambodia, Vietnam, the Philippines, Laos, Myanmar and Indonesia can get T-VoA. The Union Ministry of External Affairs has approved it for the citizens of France, Germany and Russia, and nod from the Bureau of Immigration (BOI), which functions under the Union Ministry of Home Affairs, is awaited.
Being introduced as part of a plan of the Union Ministry of Tourism to double the number of foreign tourists visiting the country in three or four years, T-VoA is expected to give a fillip to the burgeoning tourism sector of Kerala. The State registered 7,32,985 foreign tourist arrivals in 2011, earning Rs. 4,221.99 crore in foreign exchange. The recently unveiled tourism policy of the State targets 30 lakh foreign tourist arrivals by 2021.
The Airports Authority of India has informed the State government about the move to introduce the visa. The authority, which manages the airport, has informed the BOI that it is ready to allocate a facilitation centre, an exclusive visa desk, facilities for taking photographs of the visiting foreign nationals, a foreign exchange counter, a holding area, signboards and other infrastructure at the international terminal, official sources told The Hindu.
Thiruvananthapuram figures along with Goa and Bangalore on the shortlist of the BOI for granting T-VoA. Since the AAI has informed the bureau that the facilities sought are in place, T-VoA is expected to be introduced soon, sources said.
The bureau has approached the State police to get officials of the rank of sub-inspector deputed to the visa desk.
A tourist can get a visa on arrival with a maximum validity of 30 days. BOI norms say the objectives of the visit should only be recreation, sightseeing and meeting friends or relatives and no other purpose or activity. Those applying for the visa should not have a residence or occupation in India and should hold a passport with minimum six-month validity.