Chennai floods have passed, but this city crew continues its clean up …

Image: Chennai Trekking Club volunteers

More than 30 young people were assembled on the banks of the Adyar River next to Surya Nagar in Kotturpuram early in the morning on March 2. Armed with orange gloves and white rags, they were on a cleaning mission as part of the Chennai Trekking Club’s efforts to clear the area of all non-biodegradable waste.

According to Peter Van Geit (44), the founder of the Chennai Trekking Club, “This is the 14th session of the cleanliness drive that we are carrying out in the city. The waste that is seen on these banks has not been dumped by the locals but has been washed in during the floods. There were thick layers of garbage here but now it has reduced as we have been cleaning this place for the past two weeks.”

On the other side of the river, heaps of garbage still dot the bank, and the river runs an alarming black colour. “We can reach the other side of the river but the land is too steep for us to clean it up. The water is black in color as many illegal sewage connections are connected to the river,” said Peter.

Most of the waste that can be seen on the slope consist of cloth, glass bottles, plastic bags and other household trash. Peter and his team of volunteers have been gathering together all the non-biodegradable waste for transportation to the common dumping ground in Pallikaranai by trucks of the Chennai Corporation. –

The Chennai Trekking Club began the cleaning drive in the city two months ago, in the aftermath of the Chennai floods. “We started the relief work in different places like Cuddalore and Pulicat. Many slums were in a very bad condition and all the drainage water was inside their homes. We were helping them out in Cuddalore and Pulicat. Later, we decided to start cleaning near the Adyar and Cooum rivers in Chennai.”

The cleaning drive came about as a result of a shared passion among the club’s members for the environment, says Peter. “The Chennai Trekking club carries out trekking trips to beautiful natural locations like virgin forests, mountain ranges, rivers or lakes. Nature is very close to our hearts. So that’s where we started. It also helps to create awareness and reach out to thousands of people and sensitizing people about the issues.”

Building awareness, Peter feels, is an urgent task, as waste disposal is a crucial problem for Chennai. “There are 6000 tonnes of garbage which leaves the city every single day. Most of it ends up in water bodies, rivers and the ocean, which are our lifelines. Chennai has the highest per capita waste generation in the country. There is no segregation of waste in the city and all of it is accumulated in Pallikaranai, one of the few wetlands remaining in India. 90% of our garbage footprint can be reduced immediately by segregating dry (recyclable) and wet (compostable) waste at our home.” –

For the volunteers, many different reasons have drawn them to the initiative. Roopa, a doctor said, “I joined this initiative to help people in cleaning the place but it has changed many things for me. Now, I go home and try keeping the place clean and segregate the waste.”

Bensh, an engineer, said that he comes from an agriculture background and was drawn to an earlier tree plantation initiative. He later joined the cleanliness drive as he thinks it is the social responsibility of the people to do such things. For Mohan, it is about making new friends and enjoying time spent usefully in cleaning such places.

In the past, the group has carried out cleanliness drives in Chitra Nagar, Thiruvanmiyur, Pallaikarnai and few tree parks.

Peter Van Geit began the Chennai Trekking Club about eight years ago. “I’m a very active person in sports. I wanted a platform to connect. I set up a website and started sharing stories and images of trips and in some time people started joining me for cycling, swimming, running and trekking trips.” Now, the Chennai Trekking Club has more than 27000 members.

Besides their current cleanliness drives, the Club also carries out tree-planting initiatives, an annual coastal clean-up drive, workshops on nature, restoration of historical sites and organic farming. It also organizes trekking trips on weekends, swimming classes, triathlons and marathons.

Inspired by their example? Surely a task as large as cleaning up the city could use many more volunteers.

Source…..www.thenewsminute.com

Natarajan

 

A Government Programme in Kerala Is Turning Women into Agripreneurs…

Kudumbashree’s holistic approach towards financial empowerment has worked wonders in Kerala.

The ‘Naivedyam’, or food offering, made during different prayers and rituals for Lord Krishna at the world famous Guruvayur temple in Thrissur district of Kerala, includes about 1,200 bananas of a rare variety called ‘Pooja Kadali’. Earlier, to give this daily offering, the temple was dependent on supply from Tamil Nadu, as this special variety was on the verge of extinction in Kerala. However, now, women agriculturists are growing these bananas on 47 acres, under seven panchayats of Kodakara block, and supplying them to the temple, ensuring a taste of homegrown plantain for the revered deity.

“I am part of a five-member Joint Liability Group and we cultivate bananas, vegetables, and paddy on about 15 acres of land. We supply the fruit to the Labour Cooperative Society, which has a deal with the Guruvayur Devaswom Board, under the auspices of the State government’s ‘Kudumbashree’ programme. Around 750 women in 150 groups are cultivating bananas in our block,” says 54-year-old Shobhana Krishnamurthy of Muttathoor panchayat.

Kudumbashree, the Kerala government’s poverty alleviation programme launched in 1998, has brought about a green revolution in the state today.

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Photo source: newseq.blogspot.com

It has done this solely by tapping into women’s potential for farming and entrepreneurship.

“The Guruvayur temple only accepts ‘Pooja Kadali’ of a stipulated size (7000 apex.), so those bunches that don’t meet the criteria are then utilised for making ‘Rasayanam’, an ayurvedic preparation, in collaboration with an Ayurvedic pharmaceutical company. About 20,000 bottles of ‘Rasayanam’ are being made in our block every month,” adds Krishnamurthy.

Farming has taken off in a big way among women under Kudumbashree’s collective farming and ‘Samagra’ projects, implemented with active participation from Panchayati Raj Institutions (PRIs) and supported by a farming subsidy. Not only has the project increased agricultural production, it has also brought considerable fallow land back under cultivation and financially empowered thousands of women.

Joint Liability Groups (JLGs), structured under the National Bank for Agriculture and Rural Development (NABARD) guidelines, have been formed to ensure agricultural credit from banks for women cultivators. The JLGs come under the interest subsidy scheme of Kudumbashree, when they avail agricultural loans from banks – the state government provides a subsidy of five per cent on the seven per cent interest of agricultural loan. So far, around 10,543 JLGs have availed of loans amounting to over Rs. 123 crore under the project.

“In Muttathoor panchayat alone, 504.85 acres are being cultivated under Kudumbashree’s collective farming and Samagra projects,” shares Dhanya Vijayan, 30, Community Development Society Accountant, Muttathoor panchayat.

Data collected in 2013-14 indicates that 47,611 JLGs are cultivating on 40,218 hectares, growing paddy, fruits such as pineapple, bananas; vegetables like bitter gourd, amaranthus, snake gourd, cowpea, watermelon, bottle gourd, ginger, tapioca, ridge gourd, lady’s finger, brinjal, and chilli. Coconut and cashew are popular crops as well.

“We have debunked the theory that agriculture is not profitable. Our group ‘Aishwarya’ took a bank loan of Rs. 60,000 for cultivating the ‘Nendran’ variety of bananas on 75 cents of land, which had been lying bare. We paid off the loan in just six months. The subsidy was a big help. We made a profit of one lakh in one season,” says 39-year-old Bina Pradeep of Vallachira village.

As the women have discovered, the trick to making things work in their favour is by putting in their own labour.

“Hiring workers is expensive in Kerala as daily wages are Rs. 700-750. That is why big landlords don’t make profit. We have leased land from landowners and are still able to turn in a profit because we put in the labour ourselves,” elaborates 35-year-old Surabhi Sivan, whose five-member JLG ‘Jeeva’ leased a two-acre plot to cultivate bananas.

“We paid Rs. 54,000 for the lease, gave back the bank’s one lakh rupees loan in six months and still made a profit,” she says proudly.

Across Kerala, there are many such success stories.

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Leela C.K. and Omana C.C. with the tiller machine at their paddy field. The duo attended the panchayat’s training courses and can confidently work the machines. (Credit: Ajitha Menon\WFS)

Kudumbashree lists the collective farming venture at Kaipram under Perambra panchayat in Kozhikode district at the top. Here, 170 acres of fallow land was recovered and put under paddy cultivation with the efforts of 256 women belonging to 53 groups. While the seeds were procured from Krishi Bhavan, the manure was provided by the gram panchayat, which gave Rs. 1,80,000 for equipment. The women have turned an overall profit of Rs. 20 lakh.

In another case, 30,000 women banana cultivators belonging to 6,000 JLGs pushed up banana production in Thiruvananthapuram district from 8 to 20 metric tonnes per hectare. The phenomenal change was brought about under the guidance of the Kerala Agricultural University.

Additionally, facilitated by Kudumbashree, the women executed a buy back arrangement on the produce with a private company. The JLGs leased the farming land, conducted comprehensive soil surveys, set up demonstration plots and carried out integrated pest management practices, to make the venture a model project.

Ensuring a profit has been the underlining factor in Kudumbashree’s agriculture revolution.

Towards this, gram panchayats across the state train women in using farming equipment and machinery, creating Kudumbashree’s own ‘Vanitha Karma Sena’ or Green Army.

“Money is lost if you have to pay the coconut tree climber, the tiller machine operator or the sowing machine operator. We have trained the women to operate different agriculture related machines themselves and with loans and support available to buy equipment, most groups now own and operate their machines, saving considerable amount of money,” explains Bindu Shivdasan, 40, President, Muttathoor panchyat.

There are nine women coconut tree climbers in her panchayat and several women are operating tiller and sowing machines.

Leela C.K., 60, of Palliparam village under Paralam panchayat in Thrissur district, is a case in point.

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Leela C.K. of Palliparam village may be 60 years old,  but she tirelessly works on the land and even operates heavy machines with ease. (Credit: Ajitha Menon\WFS)

Her group cultivates paddy on her three-acre plot once a year. She operates her own agriculture machines. “I attended the panchayat’s training courses and can confidently work the machines, as does my friend Omana C.C., who is 60 as well. Age is no factor and this saves the group a lot of money in wages,” remarks Leela.

Apart from their regular production, the women nurture a kitchen garden on ten cents of land, producing different leafy vegetables, brinjal, lady’s finger, beans and chilli. “We share the produce and use the vegetables ourselves. This ensures a steady supply of cost-effective nutrition for our families as the labour is ours and seeds are available free from Krishi Bhavan,” says Omana.

Bad weather can ruin the crops sometimes, as experienced by Surabhi Shivan and her group ‘Jeeva’ last year.

However, Kudumbashree’s holistic approach towards financial empowerment worked wonders.

“The micro-credit facility available under Kudumbashree allowed us to take another loan to make up the loss and this year we are sure to make a good profit,” says Shivan.

Kudumbashree has provided the wherewithal, but it is the sheer hard work, entrepreneurship and sincerity towards commitments like repaying bank loans that has seen the women in Kerala surmount challenges and hurdles such as the lack of land and finances, natural calamities and labour issues to lead a green revolution in their state. This has made them the cornerstone of the food security movement – that too in a notoriously consumer state!

Written by Ajitha Menon for Women’s Feature Service (WFS) and republished here in arrangement with WFS.

Source…. Ajitha Menon… in http://www.the betterindia.com

Natarajan

The Extraordinary Story of Janarthanan, a Mouth Painter Who Exemplifies Grit and Determination…

Janarthanan is a 24-year-old mouth artist. He lost both his hands in a devastating accident at the age of eight and has been facing each day like a challenge since then. He has won more than 150 prizes in painting competitions since 2003, including two national awards. This is his story of determination and grit, narrated with his beautiful art.

“People always feel that they can’t do something or the other because they concentrate on a lot of negativity. But remember how we used to play many different games as children? We would focus on something – a puzzle to solve or a game to finish, and be completely positive that we will be able to achieve success. If we could think that way as kids, why can’t we have the same attitude as adults? One just has to feel positive,” says Janarthanan, a young man who lost both his hands and a leg after an accident when he was 8 years old.

Today, this Chennai resident is an accomplished mouth painter and has won over 150 prizes at different painting competitions

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Janarthanan

It was March 4, 2000 – just another day for young Janarthanan who returned home after school and went to the terrace to play with his friends.

“I found a seven feet long iron rod on the terrace and started playing with it. I was spinning it while standing near the edge of the terrace and didn’t notice a high tension electric line adjacent to the building. The rod suddenly came in contact with the line,” recounts Janarthanan.

He fainted due to the electric shock and the nearest transformer burst into flames. Hearing the noise, his parents and neighbours rushed to the spot to find the little boy burnt and unconscious. He was immediately taken to a nearby private hospital but the doctors there had never seen such a case. Janarthanan had suffered 99% burns and they didn’t know how to treat him. So his father was advised to take him to the Government Stanley Hospital. A group of 13 doctors, headed by a child specialist named Dr. Seeniraj, treated Janarthanan.

As the injuries were very deep, they had to amputate his right hand up to his shoulders, left hand up to the elbow, his left leg till the knee, and the toes of his right foot.

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His family

“I was cured after eight months and eight operations. Dr. Seeniraj told my father that this child has got a second chance and it means that he will achieve something great in life. It gave my parents a lot of hope,” smiles Janarthanan.

He asked his doctor a simple question during the recovery period – “How will I go to school after all this? How will I go normally, like I used to go earlier?” And the even simpler answer to this question changed his life.

“The doctor just told me that he knows many people who write with their mouth, and I should also try. I started trying that evening only. And kept practicing for days till I finally succeeded,” he says.

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After his treatment, Janarthanan went to the Government Institute of Rehabilitation Medicine in Chennai to get a prosthetic leg. His family had spent a lot of money on his treatment by then, and this was the maximum they could afford. Soon, he started walking, after fighting immense pain with his unbeatable determination during the practice sessions.

All this while, Janarthanan also continued to practice writing with his mouth. One day, he saw his mother drawing some flowers in a notebook. It struck him then that he could try drawing and painting as well. So he did.

And after several days of hard work, he succeeded at that too – painting with poster and water colours.

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This was when some people at the rehabilitation centre advised him that he should participate in painting competitions because his work was so impressive.

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He writes, draws and paints with his mouth

“Earlier, I used to feel very shy and bad about going out. But when I did finally participate in one competition, I ended up winning the first prize. It really encouraged me. Everyone was talking about my victory and there were posters about my recovery at the hospital to encourage other patients like me. Every time I saw those posters, I used to get motivated to participate in more competitions,” says Janarthanan.

He practiced his art himself and never joined any training centre to learn painting or drawing. Since his first victory, he has participated in many big and small events, winning in most of them.

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The first time he participated in a national level competition was in 2005, through Bal Bhawan in Chennai. The competition was held at three levels – zonal, district and state.

Janarthanan went on qualifying at each level to finally reach the finals, which were organized in Delhi.

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“I didn’t participate with children with physical disabilities. The competition was for everyone, and it was really tough. A few months after the event they sent me a letter saying that I was selected for the National Award and had to go to the Rashtrapati Bhavan to receive it. I didn’t expect anything like that, and it was a priceless moment. I met Dr. APJ Abdul Kalam. ‘You should be a role model for others,’ he told me. I am still living by his words,” the artist remembers.

He has won more than 150 awards since 2003, and received a recent one from musician A. R. Rahman.

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Receiving an award from A.R. Rahman

Janarthanan wrote all his exams with his mouth, including his class 10 board exams for which he was granted some extra time.

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With his desire to become a computer graphics designer, Janarthanan did a course in multimedia, followed by a visual effects course from Loyola College.

After that, he joined a media channel and worked there for three years.

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With Dr. APJ Abdul Kalam

Currently, 24-year-old Janarthanan is working as a freelancer in the field of film editing and is concentrating on learning more about film direction.

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He is exploring the filed of film direction

“I face each day like a challenge, and without the support of my parents and sister, I would not have reached so far. I just want to continue being positive and do what I love,” he concludes.

Janarthanan, you really are an inspiration for many. Here’s wishing you the very best for all your future projects.

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

Natarajan

Do You Know Tyre Furniture Is the Rage in Hyderabad’s Govt. Offices? All Thanks to This Couple.

This couple went searching for furniture for their new home. And ended up making bamboo houses for others. Now, they have moved on to manufacturing all things recyclable.

Newlyweds Prashant Lingam and Aruna were out shopping for furniture to set up their new home when they realised the market is inundated with plastic, iron, and steel furniture. They decided they weren’t going to succumb to buying something commercial but would look for eco-friendly products.

So, the Hyderabad-based couple did some research and found that bamboo furniture was very common overseas, although it wasn’t very popular in India as yet. Attracted by the idea, they started looking for manufacturers of such furniture – their search eventually took them to a far-off village in Tripura called Katlamara, on the Indo-Bangladesh border.

“This sleepy little village surprised us. There were artisans in this village who were highly skilled in working with bamboo. Though they had the skills, they were finding it difficult to sustain their trade due to lack of buyers,” says Prashant.

Sensing a future in the bamboo business, the couple decided to undertake an extensive tour of places where artisans make handicrafts and furniture from bamboo.

“Our family and friends thought we were crazy. We had just been married for a year. Aruna dropped her PhD plans while I decided to take my focus away from my business. It was a big risk. But our hard work and research eventually paid off,” he adds.

In May 2008, the couple started Bamboo House India – a social enterprise that provides livelihood opportunities to marginalised communities working in the bamboo sector.

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The organisation practises fair trade and ensures artisans are adequately compensated for their time, labour and raw materials used in making each product.

India is well-endowed with bamboo. It grows on millions of hectares of forest as well as private land. Since it is a grass, the plant is not killed when it is cut. Instead, it grows back. Bamboo can be harvested thrice a year. Because most bamboo grows in forest areas, Prashant and Aruna faced constraints in sourcing and transporting the raw material. But the couple overcame these barriers slowly. They funded their venture from their own personal savings and some money borrowed from family and friends.

Today, Bamboo House India is supported by the National Mission of Bamboo Applications, Andhra Pradesh Technology Development Centre, IIT-Delhi, and others.

After successfully creating aesthetically appealing houses, furniture, and other products made with bamboo, Prashant and Aruna decided to venture into making other eco-friendly products as well.

“Customers for whom we were building bamboo huts started requesting us to provide them with furniture also. We were wondering what new innovation we could come up with. This is when we hit upon the idea of using tyres to make furniture,” says Prashant.

This was again a challenging time for the couple. They had no idea as to how to use tyres as raw materials.

It took their research and development team almost a year to come up with the first prototype of a product.

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During the process of studying tyres, Aruna and Prashant landed up at the municipal dump yard in Secunderabad. “There were acres of end-of-life tyres just lying around. We were stunned at the sheer volume. Because tyres hardly fetch any money, the authorities wouldn’t even auction them regularly. It was a breeding ground for mosquitoes as well,” he adds.

After seeing the pathetic state of the dump yard, the couple became firm in their resolve to do something with tyres. Initially, there were accidents in their workshop as nobody had any clue about cutting tyres. But they managed to put a safe system in place finally.

Bamboo House India now makes furniture, flower pots, etc., out of these recycled tyres. And the best part is the company sells these products back to the municipal authorities.

After teaming up with the Greater Hyderabad Municipal Corporation (GHMC), the company first provided furniture to the North Zone GHMC Office. There has been no looking back since then.

Today, Bamboo House India’s goods made from recyclable materials like tyres, drums, PET bottles, etc., adorn government offices, bus stops and parks in Hyderabad.

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“The government officials are so happy with the development that they want to replicate this practice across Andhra Pradesh and Telangana. The State Bus Corporation has asked us to design furniture for bus stands. For the authorities it is a win-win situation actually. We use junk from their backyard and sell products back to them. They are also saving on a lot of money. The tyre pots last a long time compared to the cement pots they buy every year,” says Prashant.

The products are reasonably priced and cost between Rs. 500 and Rs. 1500. Bamboo House India has a margin of only 15-16% on these products.

The couple is now looking for social investors to scale up the business.

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“The satisfaction we get ultimately is not only from using eco-friendly products but also from providing employment to the men and women from underprivileged backgrounds who work with us,” Prashant says.

When asked about his vision for the company, Prashant says it would be great if other social entrepreneurs across India get inspired by this model and replicate it in different parts of the country.

For more details, visit their page on Facebook.

Source……. Meryl Garcia in http://www.the better india.com

Natarajan

This Man Sold Oranges to Build a School in His Village…

An orange seller in Mangaluru built a school for the poor children in his village. Society has repaid the favour by giving him the most beautiful gift.

In the dusty village of New Papdu in Harekala, around 25 km from Mangaluru, lives a saint. For his almost miraculous contribution to society, the people of the land have bestowed the title of ‘Akshara Santa’ or Saint of Letters on Harekala Hajabba.

Growing up as a boy in a very poor family, Hajabba always nurtured the dream of rolling beedis in the city.

However, life took another turn and forced him to sell oranges instead.

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Photo source: Facebook

“I have never been to school. At a young age, poverty pushed me into taking up a job selling oranges. One day, I encountered two foreigners who wanted to buy a few oranges from me. They started speaking to me in English and asked about the price of the oranges. But I was unable to converse with them and they left. I felt humiliated after this incident and was ashamed that the language barrier made them walk away,” he says.

Not wanting anyone else to go through what he had experienced, his life’s mission suddenly became clear to him. From that day onwards, Hajabba worked towards setting up a school so that the poor children in his village had access to education.

His wife Maimoona would often complain, saying he was giving away money meant for their own three children. Later, she too realised the importance of his cause.

Hajabba’s dream slowly took shape in 1999, in the form of a school attached to a madrasa in his village. When it started, there were only 28 students. However, as the number of students grew, Hajabba knew he would have to shift the school to a bigger facility. So he continued to accumulate every rupee he earned towards building a proper school and ensuring the education of future generations.

In 2004, Hajabba bought 50 cents of land. However, he realised that his savings would not be enough to build a school. So Hajabba started approaching people for money. From politicians to organisations to rich individuals, he went knocking on every door.

“I once went to a very rich person’s house to seek funds for the school. But what happened was that instead of giving me money he set his dogs on me,” Hajabba says.

The unwillingness of some people to support him didn’t come in the way of his dream.

Slowly, Hajabba gathered enough money and constructed a small primary school on the land.

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Photo source: Facebook

Around this time, the media began to take notice of him too. Hosa Digantha, a Kannada newspaper, was the first to run a story on Hajabba. Soon after that, CNN IBN nominated him for its ‘Real Heroes’ award. Hajabba used his cash prize of Rs. 5 lakh towards building the school.

This was just the beginning.

Soon, recognition began pouring in from every corner. And with the recognition came the donations. Today, the school stands proudly on 1.5 acres of land in the village and has as many as 150 children studying there. From being a primary school, it has now become a secondary school.

“My duty was to only construct the school. I gave it to the government and now the government runs it. It is not only a school for Muslims. Poor children from every religion study in the school,” he says.

Hajabba has truly earned the respect of the people in his village and around the country. Many say they look up to him because the recognition and awards haven’t gone to his head. Nor have they deterred him from his real purpose — he remains humble to date. When the school was constructed, there was a proposal to name it after him. But Hajabba declined, saying he didn’t want to be in the limelight.

Hajabba is often invited to speak at various events. Universities in the region encourage him to share his story in an attempt to inspire students. In 2014, the United Christian Association decided to invite Hajabba to speak at a Christmas programme. To invite Hajabba for the event, Alban Menezes, the founder of the organisation, tried calling him multiple times.

“Finally, his son picked the phone and told me that he was admitted to Yenepoya Hospital in the city and was in critical condition. I rushed to the hospital and this is when the doctors told me there was something troubling Hajabba that was making his health worse,” says Alban.

After a lot of coaxing, Hajabba broke down in front of Alban. He told him that he was worried about not having a proper roof over his head. Hajabba, who had spent all his money for the cause of education, didn’t have any left to repair his dilapidated house.

Alban was deeply saddened by this and decided to construct a house for the man who had done so much for society.

In September 2015, Alban started constructing a house for Hajabba and it was completed in a record four months at a cost of Rs. 15 lakh.

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Photo Credit: H.S. Manjunath

While his organisation was able to raise Rs. 1.5 lakh, Alban chipped in the rest of the money from his own resources.

“I am truly overwhelmed. I am an ordinary man you see. I’m not even worth 15 rupees and these people have actually built a house for me. I have no words to express my gratitude,” says Hajabba.

This 760 sq. ft. house has two bedrooms, a kitchen, and a special enclosure for all of Hajabba’s awards and trophies.

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Photo source: Facebook

The housewarming ceremony was a special one. This communally-sensitive region witnessed a Hindu priest, a Muslim mullah and a Catholic priest conducting prayers at the ceremony. MP Nalin Kumar Kateel and Karnataka’s Minister for Health and Family Welfare, U.T. Khader, also attended the event.

“The district authorities have been very helpful. I’ve never had a gas stove in my house. The District Commissioner ensured I got a gas connection and a stove. This was sanctioned from some special fund. I feel I’ve been truly blessed,” says Hajabba.

This, however, is not the end of Hajabba’s story. He now plans to construct a Government Pre-University College in his village and has already started working towards the goal. And if his past is any indication, Hajabba will not rest till this dream is fulfilled too.

Source…..Meryl Garcia in www. the betterindia.com

Natarajan

This Auto Driver Mortgaged His Auto to Pay for the Medical Expenses of a Passenger…

K Ravichandran, a 48-year-old auto driver from Chennai, mortgaged his auto to pay for the medical expenses of his passenger who suffered a cardiac arrest during the ride.

It happened a few months ago when a passenger boarded his auto to go from Ramapuram to Triplicane. They had reached Mount Road, when the passenger, who was about 57 years old, complained of chest pains. The Good Samaritan took the passenger to a nearby clinic, where he was referred to the Rajiv Gandhi Government General Hospital.

Doctors there informed Ravichandran that the patient had three blocks in his heart’s blood vessels, and they would have to place a pace-maker for his recovery.

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PIcture for representation only. Source: Angus/Flickr

On informing his family, the passenger’s son arrived from Kolkata that night. The cost of treatment was about Rs. 1 lakh. They spoke with the hospital’s Dean and got the cost reduced to Rs. 47,000. But his son was left with Rs. 15,000 only after spending on flight tickets.

“I decided to pledge my auto rickshaw, the only property I owned and managed to pay the balance,” Ravichandran told The New Indian Express.

This Sunday, Ravichandran was rewarded by the Anna Auto Welfare Trust – an organisation that was started to motivate auto rickshaw drivers and acknowledge them for such laudable deeds. 16 other auto drivers including three women were also awarded.

Anil Khicha founded Anna Auto Trust with the view that people who visit Chennai, meet auto rickshaw drivers first. And the kind of behaviour they experience, forms their impression about the city. If the good work of drivers is appreciated, it will encourage them to do better.

According to the report, the trust has printed stickers asking passengers to send their feedback to 9243000111. Based on this feedback, they call drivers who have behaved well and honour them every month.

Featured image credit: The New Indian Express

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

natarajan

This Solar Powered Marvel of Engineering Lets a Person with Disabilities Earn a Living Anywhere!

Sunny Splendor is a great piece of engineering – a solar vehicle that works as a mobile shop for people with disabilities to start up small businesses and earn a living. It was designed by Hari Vasudevan of Ostrich Mobility, and this is how it works.

“I earn more than Rs. 4,000 a day now and can even think of sending my children to a good school,” says Umesh, a street vendor from Bangalore who lost both his legs in a road accident. Umesh used to work as a driver earlier but his life came to a standstill for about five years after the accident. He could not find any suitable source of income and things became increasingly difficult for his family. So he set up a small cart and started selling items like tea, coffee, bread, biscuits, and chocolates. But business was never very lucrative because he couldn’t move around with his cart and had to remain stationary at the same spot all day long.

After struggling for a long time to make ends meet, Umesh received the most amazing gift a few months back. He was introduced to Sunny Splendor – a mobile shop meant for people with disabilities to run petty businesses from wherever they want.

Earning more than double of what he would make earlier, Umesh has now left hard times far behind and is extremely happy with his new shop on wheels.

people with disabilities

Umesh at work

Sunny Splendor was developed by Hari Vasudevan, Founder and Managing Director of Ostrich Mobility, a company that excels in manufacturing personal mobility appliances for people with disabilities.

people with disabilities

The team at Ostrich Mobility

“Umesh was able to increase his profits only because he got the chance to roam around with his shop. If one place is less crowded he moves on to the next, and keeps moving to the more crowded areas of the city,” says Hari.

For Umesh, the best thing about Sunny Splendor is that it needs zero maintenance and customers are often attracted to his shop just to find out how it works. This adds to his business and he has some very loyal customers who are amazed by his story and keep coming back to his shop.

Hari says he was inspired to design this vehicle in 2013 when K.S. Rajanna, a differently-abled man, was appointed the State Commissioner for Persons with Disabilities in Karnataka.

people with disabilities

When Rajanna sir became the commissioner, he visited my office to see the kind of things we manufacture. He asked me a simple question: ‘Why don’t you hire people with physical disabilities?’ I told him that we deal with heavy objects and it would be difficult to find a person with disability who would want to do this kind of work. Moreover, we are not some big corporate firm and it won’t be easy for us to change the complete infrastructure of the office building to make it suitable for differently abled people.”

But the question remained with Hari. He found himself thinking about developing a way to help people with disabilities find a source of income. “And the idea suddenly struck me – I decided to design an electric wheelchair in a way that it would work as a mobile shop to help people run small businesses,” he says.

The mobile shop is called Sunny Splendor because there is a solar panel attached to its roof, which helps charge the batteries it operates on.

people with disabilities

Sunny Splendor is basically an electric wheelchair designed like a three-wheeler, with a lot of space to display the items for selling. The wheelchair’s batteries can be charged with the help of electricity as well as solar energy. Eight hours of sunlight are enough to get the vehicle fully charged, and it can run for about 45km at a speed of 15km/hr after one charge. Even those who don’t have access to electricity can use it with the help of solar charging only.

There is a joystick to control the direction in which it moves and disabled people can use the vehicle to sell all kinds of things like magazines, food, toys, vegetables, and more.

Sunny Splendor is available in the market for Rs. 1.5 lakh. But many people who need it the most don’t usually have the required money to make the purchase. So Hari and his team are talking to NGOs and other organizations to make it available to people with disabilities. As of now, two people in Karnataka are using the mobile shops gifted to them by Mahindra & Mahindra (as a part of the organization’s CSR activities). Three other people have received them from the Kerala government.

Hari, who is 44 years old, founded Ostrich Mobility after completing his M.Tech course in product design and manufacturing. Prior to that, he did his BSc in Physics and BE in Mechanical Engineering, followed by seven years of work in the field of manufacturing automobiles.

“Engineering is my passion…I got a chance to meet many kids with disabilities during college because my final year project was related to making a device to help them walk. And after a visit to a school for children with disabilities, I decided that I will do something to help such people with whatever engineering I know. In 2005, I got four orders for wheelchairs from a school, and I decided to continue from there,” he recounts.

In 2007, Hari started Ostrich Mobility with the idea of making electric wheelchairs. Today, the company sells more than 22 products, including various electric wheelchairs, mobility scooters, hospital beds, and more. All the products are designed by Hari.

Hari feels that anyone buying Sunny Splendor is actually buying a business that can grow much beyond the initial investment. However, it is difficult for someone who is poor to make that investment so Hari is looking for micro-financing companies to help people purchase the vehicle.

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

Natarajan

Parents Don’t Have to Worry About Their Child’s School Bus Anymore. All Thanks to This 15-Year-Old!

Parents are often worried about the safety of their children whenever they are going to or coming back from school. Why is the bus late? Did my child reach safely? Did my child get on the bus? But not anymore! A 15-year-old has developed a solution in the form of an app.

Getting irritated because your school bus is stuck in a traffic jam due to heavy rains is one thing. But to reach home late, find your parents worried, and develop an app so they won’t be stressed the next time – that’s called combining innovation with care. Arjun S. is a 15-year-old student of Class 10 in Velammal Vidhyashram School in Chennai. He has developed an app that can help parents track the position of their children’s school buses whenever they want.

“I got the idea after a cyclone hit Chennai in 2012. I reached home late one day and my parents were really scared because they had no way of finding out if I was safe. I thought that if there could be a way to track school buses easily, it would be so much better for parents and school authorities. I was learning more about building apps and the android programming language at that time, and decided to find a solution,” says Arjun.

The young boy’s love for technology led to the development of LOCATERA – an app to find out where exactly a school bus is located at any given time, and to know if a particular child is there in the bus or not.

track a school bus

“I have been using computers since the age of two. My dad had a system and I would stack up some pillows on the chair to reach the keyboard to use some basic electronics simulation software. My parents were always careful about giving me age-appropriate tools for using the system,” he says, talking about his interest in this field.

The first app developed by Arjun was called Ez School Bus Locator. He shared it with many schools, including his own, and collected the feedback from administrators and parents about their specific requirements. “I collected the information about the schools’ basic requirements and modified the app accordingly. LOCATERA is a modified version of Ez School Bus Locator, and it came two years after the first one. Unlike other solutions that require some kind of hardware installation, all this app needs is the presence of a phone inside the bus,” he adds.

LOCATERA is basically a tri-app solution, which means three apps working together. These include the attendant, admin, and parent apps.

1. LOCATERA attendant:

track a school bus

This app captures the location of the bus and shares it with parents and the school if required. The bus attendant can install and keep it on his/her phone. The attendant adds all students to the app by scanning their Quick Response (QR) Code-based ID cards, using bar code scanning, as and when the students board or get off the bus. Student activities are recorded on the Cloud – to be used by schools in case of emergencies.

2. LOCATERA admin:

track a school bus

The admin version has to be with the administrator of the school transport system so he/she can see all the buses together, locate the position of a particular bus, get information about it, and find out which students are present in the bus at any given time.

3. LOCATERA parent:

track a school bus

Parents have to get their mobile numbers verified before they get access to the app. Once they are in, they can find the location of the bus by clicking on the ‘Bus on Map’ option. Alternatively, they can tap on ‘Bus Location’ and ‘Distance & Time’ options to find out the exact address of the bus and how soon the child will reach home. To find out if the child is there in the bus or not, they just have to select the ‘Child in Bus’ option. Parents who don’t have android phones can give a missed call to the attendant’s phone whenever they want the information. The LOCATERA attendant looks into the bank of registered numbers to find out which parent has called. He/she then sends an SMS with information about the child and the bus location.

Arjun used Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT)’s programming tool called MIT App Inventor to develop LOCATERA. It is basically a programming language tool with a more graphical user interface, instead of codes.

Arjun submitted the app to ‘Google India Code to Learn Contest 2015’ and was declared the winner. He also won the MIT ‘App of the Month (Best Design)’ award in December 2012 for Ez School Bus Locator.

Among other awards, he also received the 2014 ‘National Child Award for Exceptional Achievements for Computer Technology’, which was initiated by the Ministry of Women and Child Development, Government of India.

track a school bus

“I would like to work in the field of computer science itself, and would like to go to IIT or MIT or something like that,” says Arjun, talking about his future plans.

He also started a company named LateraLogics in 2012, which has several products including some other apps that Arjun has developed over the past three years. Currently, only the demo version of LOCATERA is available on Play Store, for all three stakeholders. Those who want to use the complete version can fill out the LOCATERA Flexi Plan Enquiry Form to receive the pricing details for that particular school. Arjun keeps receiving constant feedback from the schools that are already using it.

As he is also preparing for his board exams, Arjun has a tough time juggling his studies and his passion. “But I somehow manage it,” he says.

track a school bus

Arjun at the award ceremony

He also likes to play the keyboard, and is a badminton enthusiast in his free time.

“We have been supporting Arjun from a very young age…He has always been passionate about technology. We gave him the right kinds of tools from the start and he has always been serious about what he does. He does a lot of research and discusses his ideas before finalising anything. We are also in touch with the state and Central government to see how the app can be implemented all over the country. The Ez School Bus Locator version is free of cost and it is being used in more than 10 countries right now. We think it can be used in India as well,” says Arjun’s father Santhosh Kumar.

The agreement for using the app for one academic year includes a one-time activation fee (per child, per year) and a monthly maintenance fee option (per month, per child). After a successful pilot project in his school, Arjun is having discussions with other schools for implementation the same. Trial runs have been scheduled for some schools in Tamil Nadu, Kerala, and other parts of the country as well.

The agreement for using the app for one academic year includes a one-time activation fee (per child, per year) and a monthly maintenance fee option (per month, per child). After a successful pilot project in his school, Arjun is having discussions with other schools for implementation the same. Trial runs have been scheduled for some schools in Tamil Nadu, Kerala, and other parts of the country as well.

“Look for problems around you and get inspired by them. You’ll see a lot of opportunities to make this world a better place using your own skills,” is Arjun’s advice to other youngsters like him.

Download the demo versions of the app here:
LOCATERA attendant
LOCATERA admin
LOCATERA parent

You can find other details about installing the app here.

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

Natarajan

படித்தது ….மனதை தொட்டது …”வேர்களை இழந்து விட வேண்டாம்….”

காமராஜரின் இல்லத்தில் ஈ.வி.கே.சம்பத், குமரி அனந்தன் இருவரும் அவரோடு உரையாடிக் கொண்டிருந்தனர். அப்போது காமராஜர், “ஏம்பா…இந்த கோயில் கோபுரங்களை எல்லாம் ஏன் உசரமா கட்டியிருக்காங்க?” என்று கேட்டார். ஒருவர் சொல்லின் செல்வர், மற்றொருவர் இலக்கியச் செல்வர். கேட்கவா வேண்டும்…“அது நமது ஆன்மிக, கலை, கலாசாரப் பண்பாட்டுப் பெருமை, அழகு, அடையாளம்” என இருவரும் காரணங்களை அடுக்குகின்றனர்.
“அட… அதுக்கெல்லாம் இல்லைப்பா” என்று மறுத்த காமராஜர் கூறினார், “அந்த காலத்தில் ஒரு ஊரில் இருந்து இன்னொரு ஊருக்குப் போகணும்னா நடந்துதான் போகணும், சாலை வசதி, வாகன வசதியெல்லாம் கிடையாது. அப்படி போகிறவர்கள் தாகத்தோடும், பசியோடும் போவார்கள். எங்காவது கோபுரம் கண்ணுல தென்பட்டதுண்ணா… கோபுரம் இருந்தா கோயில் இருக்கும், கோயில் இருந்தா மக்கள் இருப்பார்கள், மக்கள் இருந்தால் நம் பசியும், தாகமும் தீர்வதற்கு வழி பிறக்கும் என்பதை அடையாளப்படுத்தத்தான் கோயில் கோபுரத்தை உசரமா கட்டியிருக்காங்க!” என்று பதில் அளித்தாராம்.
எனக்கும், உங்களுக்கும் கோயில் கோபுரத்தைப் பார்க்கும் போது இந்த எண்ணம் தோன்றியதுண்டா? பெருந்தலைவருக்கு மட்டும் தோன்றியது என்றால் என்ன காரணம்? அவர் எப்பொழுதும் மக்களைப் பற்றி மட்டுமே சிந்தித்துக் கொண்டிருந்த தலைவர் என்பதால்தான்.
மேற்கண்ட தகவல், தமிழகப்பண்பாட்டின் உச்சத்தைத் தொட்டுக் காட்டுவதாக அமைந்துள்ளது. விருந்து முதலான நம் பாரம்பரிய மரபுகள் அனைத்தும் மனிதத்துவம் சார்ந்தவை. இத்தகைய நம் பாரம்பரிய பண்பாடுகள் பலவற்றை இன்று நாம் இழந்து வருவதோடு,
இலக்கிய வாசிப்பின்மையால் அது குறித்த சிந்தனைகளையும் இழந்து வருகிறோம்.கவிதை சொல்லும் சேதி பூதை தேசிகன் பாடிய கவிதை ஒன்று.
‘என் பாட்டியின் மாமியார்
என் பாட்டியிடம் சொன்னாளாம்…

இந்தப் பானையில் அரிசி
இருக்கிறது
இந்தப் பானையில் உளுந்து இருக்கிறது
இந்தப் பானையில் புளி இருக்கிறது’
என்பாட்டி என் அம்மாவிடம் சொன்னாளாம்…
‘இது அரிசி இருந்த பானை
இது உளுந்து இருந்த பானை
இது புளி இருந்த பானை’
இப்போது என் அம்மா
என் மனைவியிடம் சொல்கிறாள்…
இது அரிசிப்பானை இருந்த இடம்
இது உளுந்துப் பானை இருந்த இடம்
இது புளிப்பானை இருந்த இடம்’
அரிசி போய், அரிசி பானை போய், அரிசி பானை இருந்த இடம் மட்டும் இன்று காலியாக இருக்கிறது. இந்தக் கவிதை, நமது பாரம்பரிய பண்பாட்டுச் சரிவை மிகச் சரியாக அடையாளப்படுத்தி உள்ளது.
விரிந்து கிடந்த திண்ணைகள்
ஒரு காலத்தில் திறந்த மனசு போல வீட்டு வாசல் கதவு திறந்திருக்க… வருகின்றவர்களை அரவணைப்பதற்கு விரியும் கரங்கள் போல வீட்டின் முன் இருபக்கமும் திண்ணைகள் விரிந்து கிடந்தன. ஒரு யாசகனோ, வழிப் போக்கனோ அதில் அமர்ந்தால் தாகமும், பசியும் நீங்கிச் செல்வதற்கு உத்தரவாதம் இருந்தது. இன்று கிராமங்களில் கூட வீடுகளின் முன் திண்ணைகளைக் காண முடியவில்லை.
அதனால்தான், “அன்றைக்குத் தமிழர்கள், முன்பின் தெரியாத மனுசாள உபசரிக்க, வீடுகளுக்கு முன்னால் திண்ணைகளைக் கட்டி வைத்தார்கள். இன்றைக்கோ நாய்களைக் கட்டி வைக்கிறார்கள்” என்றார் திருமுருக கிருபானந்த வாரியார்.
வேர்களை இழந்துவிட்டு விழுதுகளின் பலத்தில், நிழல் தேடும் சமூகமாக நாம் மாறிவருகிறோம். நமது பண்பாடு வளர்த்தெடுத்த அர்த்தமுள்ள வாழ்வியல் மரபுகளை, மீட்டுருவாக்கம் செய்ய வேண்டிய காலத்தில் நாம் வாழ்ந்து கொண்டிருக்கிறோம்.

மாறிய காட்சிகள் அதிகாலையில் வீடுகளுக்கு முன்னால் சாணம் மெழுகி, தண்ணீர் தெளித்து, மாக்கோலம் இட்ட காட்சிகளை இன்று கிராமங்களில் மட்டுமே காணமுடிகிறது. நகரியப் பகுதிகளில் அடுக்குமாடி குடியிருப்புகளில் அடைபட்டுக் கொண்ட தமிழர்கள் ஸ்டிக்கர் கோலம், பெயின்ட் கோலத்தில் திருப்தி அடைந்து விடுகின்றனர். மண் முற்றத்திற்கு எங்கே செல்வது?
வீடுகளுக்கு முன்னால் அடுப்பு கூட்டி, கரும்புகள் நட்டு, அறுவடை நெல்லின் புத்தரிசியை புதுப்பானையில் சர்க்கரையுடன் இட்டு, முந்திரி, ஏலம் மணக்கப் பொங்கலிட்டனர். பொங்கி வழியும் வெண்நுரையில் வாழ்வின் வசந்த அபிவிருத்தியைக் கண்டு, ‘பொங்கலோ! பொங்கல்!’ என்று ஆனந்தக் குரல் எழுப்பினர். இத்தகைய குடும்பங்களில் ஒருவராக இருக்கும் பேறு, இன்று எத்தனைத் தமிழர்களின் வாரிசுகளுக்கு வாய்த்திருக்கிறது?
எங்கள் வீட்டில் புது மண்பானையில் புது அரிசிப் பொங்கலிட்டது உண்டு. மாடுகளைக் குளிப்பாட்டி கொம்புகளுக்கு வர்ணம் பூசி அவற்றை போசித்தது உண்டு. இன்று வீட்டில் மாடுகளும் இல்லை, பொங்கலைக் கொண்டாடிய மூத்த தலைமுறையின் மனசும் இல்லை.
இன்றும் பொங்கல் பானையின் தலையில் வெண்நுரை பொங்கி நிற்கும் காட்சியைப் பார்க்கும் போதெல்லாம், என் பாட்டன், தமிழ் அடையாளத்துடன் தலையில் தொப்பியோ, தலைப்பாகையோ அணிந்திருந்த கம்பீரத் தோற்றம்தான் நினைவிற்கு வருகிறது.
இது ஒருபுறம் இருக்க, தமிழர்களை ஒருங்கிணைத்த கூடிக் குதுாகலிக்கச் செய்த பொங்கல் விளையாட்டுக்களும் அருகிவிட்டனவே. பொங்கலின் கொண்டாட்டங்களான உறி அடித்தல், சடுகுடு, மாடு பிடித்தல், சிலம்பம் போன்ற வீர விளையாட்டுக்களை அரிதாகவே சில கிராமங்களில் நடந்ததை பார்க்க முடிந்தது. இந்த வீர விளையாட்டுக்கள் எல்லாம், கிராமங்களின் அசல் முகம் என்பதற்கு இனி திரைப்படங்களின் பதிவுகள் மட்டுமே சாட்சிகளாகி விடுமோ?
தேசபாதுகாப்பு என்னவாகும் ஜல்லிக்கட்டு கூட இன்று விமர்சனத்துக்கும், சட்ட ரீதியான தடைக்கும் உள்ளாகி நிற்கிறது. ஜல்லிக்கட்டு போன்ற வீர விளையாட்டுக்களைத் தடை செய்து விட்டால், தேசத்தின் வருங்காலப் பாதுகாப்பே கேள்விக் குறியாகி விடும்! தேசப் பாதுகாப்பிற்காக ராணுவத்திற்கு ஆள் எடுத்தால், நம் கிராமங்களில் இருந்து தான் ஆயிரக்கணக்கில் இளைஞர்கள் செல்வார்கள். ஏனென்றால், இயல்பான ஆற்றலை, முனை முகத்து நிற்கும் துணிச்சலை வீர விளையாட்டுக்கள் மூலம் அவர்கள் பெற்றுள்ளதுதான் காரணம்.
ஜல்லிக்கட்டு போன்றவை தடை செய்யப்பட்டால், வீரம் சார்ந்த விளையாட்டுக்கள் முக்கியத்துவம் இழந்தால், அது தேசத்தின் பாதுகாப்பையே உறுதியில்லாமல் ஆக்கிவிடாதா?
எனவே இயற்கையைப் போற்றல்! வேளாண்மையைக் கொண்டாடுதல்! உழவுக்கும் தொழிலுக்கும் உடன் உழைக்கும் ஜீவன் மாடுகளைச் சிறப்பித்தல்! வீரத்தை விளையாட்டுக்கள் மூலம் வளர்த்தெடுத்து அதனை சமூகப் பாதுகாப்புக்கு உரியதாக்கல்! ஜாதி, சமய அடையாளங்களைக் கடந்து, பண்டிகைகள் மூலம் ஒன்றுபடுதல் என தமிழனது பண்பாட்டு மரபுகளைப் போற்றுவோம்!

Source…….
-பேராசிரியர்.மு.அப்துல்சமது,தமிழ்த்துறை, ஹாஜி கருத்த ராவுத்தர் கல்லுாரி,உத்தமபாளையம்.93642 66001

http://www.dinamalar.com

How a school dropout built a Rs 60 crore business…? …An Inspiring Story !!!

From extreme poverty to building a company worth Rs 60 crore, Raja Nayak’s incredible rags-to-riches story is an inspiration.

Raja Nayak

At 17, Raja Nayak ran away from home.

Like millions before him, he wanted to escape the punishing life that poverty inflicts on its victims.

“I knew I had to earn money. I wanted to earn big money. That was my only focus then,” Raja Nayak, 54, tells me as we settle down in his plush new office in Bengaluru for the interview.

“I had realised as a young boy that it was very hard for my parents to send me and my four siblings to school. My father did not have a steady income and my mother had little to make ends meet often pawning whatever little valuables she had,” he says.

The penny dropped when Raja was loitering with his neighbourhood friends and was persuaded to watch a Hindi movie.

It was the 1978 film, ‘Trishul’, where a penniless Amitabh Bachchan eventually goes on to become a real estate baron.

Those three hours in the dark theatre ignited Raja’s mind and future path as it were.

“I was really taken up by the story. It felt so real to me. Suddenly, I believed that it was possible to make my dreams come true. I wanted to be a real estate baron too,” Raja says with a smile, quickly brushing off the source of his inspiration.

Riding on this belief, he escaped to Mumbai (Bombay then).

But it wasn’t going to be that easy, was it?

He returned home heartbroken, but his mind was constantly engaged in finding the right break.

Today, Raja has a total turnover of Rs 60 crore from his various enterprises that include MCS Logistics, a company he established in 1998 in international shipping and logistics, Akshay Enterprises that’s into corrugated packaging, Jala Beverages that manufactures packaged drinking water, Purple Haze that is in the wellness space with three beauty salon-and-spa centres in Bengaluru.

Nutri Planet (with three other directors and partners) that is working with Central Food Technological Research Institute (CFTRI) to bring products like energy bars and oil made out of Chia rice.

Besides these, he also runs schools and a college under the banner of Kalaniketan Educational Society for the underprivileged and disadvantaged sections of society.

Raja is also the President of the Karnataka chapter of Dalit Indian Chamber of Commerce and Industries (DICCI), where he says, they are inspiring the disadvantaged sections of society to dream big.

“We are making them aware of the opportunities available to make their dreams come true,” he says.

The first take: Small but sure

Son of Dalit migrants from a village in Karnataka, Raja was born in Bengaluru (Bangalore then) and spent the first 17 years of his life in the city without much exposure to the life outside.

Back then in the late 70s and 80s, Bangalore was a sleepy town. But I had this Punjabi friend, Deepak (who is no more), who had seen many more places than I because his father had a transferable government job. We lived in the same locality and I would end up spending most of my time with him.”

Raja gave up studies while he was in first pre-university course (PUC), and with Deepak as his partner, decided to sell shirts on the footpath.

“I had seen people selling wares on the footpath and some traders had even offered us money to sell it for them. We realized if they could make a good business out of this, why not us?” recalls Raja, who was quick to grasp this as an exciting opportunity.

Between them, the two friends collected Rs 10,000 and set out for Tiruppur in Tamil Nadu, a major garment and textile hub.

“My mother would sometimes hide some money in kitchen containers, and because I was her favourite she gave it to me.”

In Tiruppur, they bought export reject surplus shirts for Rs 50 each. They bundled them in a state road transport bus and came back to Bangalore, setting up ‘shop’ on the footpath outside the Bosch office.

“We had seen hawkers outside their gate before and thought it would be a good place to start, more so because it was near our neighbourhood,” says Raja.

It was a perfect plan. Most of the shirts that they had bought were either shades of blue or white.

The male employees of Bosch have a blue shirt as their uniform.

During the hour-long lunch break, Raja and his friend had sold all the shirts at Rs 100 each, making a tidy profit of Rs 5000.

“I had never seen so much money in my life. I was ecstatic,” Raja tells me, reliving that fantastic moment from his past.

Intoxicated by this early success, the two friends reinvested the amount and included more items to sell, going from one place to another to procure them.

“It was like we had wheels on our feet. This was just the beginning. We were not resting till we had made lots of money,” he says smiling.

They would buy cotton hosiery items and inner wear in kilos and set up stalls at large exhibitions employing a few boys to manage them. Whatever was left over, they would hawk them on footpaths.

In three years, they had set up a well-oiled business.

The two friends diversified into Kolhapuri chappals and footwear.

“Till now, no one had asked me which caste I belonged to. Most often people associate cobblers with the Dalit community, and it was here that I would be asked about my caste,” says Raja, replying to my earlier question if his caste ever came in the way of his business.

The bold scene: Take risks

According to Raja, “In all our businesses, we never lost any money.”

However, his friend had to move out of Bangalore, leaving Raja to continue the business on his own.

Around 1991, in the post liberalisation era, Raja started a corrugated packaging business, Akshay Enterprises, with another partner who had the knowhow of this market.

He says, “Wherever there was an opportunity, I encashed it.”

Real estate was also booming around this time, and Raja invested in property, making and reinvesting neat sums along the way.

So you see the pattern? He wanted to make money like everyone else, but what separated him from others was that instead of just wishing or whining, he kept his ear to the ground for any opportunity and never shied away from hard work.

“Like many people, I have also faced hurdles, but fortunately, the risks I took in business paid off,” says Raja.

It is in his personal associations and interactions that, he says, he was cheated by many people but refuses to elaborate.

“I often say this to people and students when I am invited to address them. Do not take my life as an example. It was all luck.”

But seriously, was it just luck?

If so, may be then fortune favours the brave. Because as Raja believes, taking risks is important if you want your dreams to come true.

“My neighbours and friends who I grew up with are still where they were — either employed in some company as clerks or as labour. Sometimes they come to me asking for money which I give. But those days, their condition was better than mine. Their father had a job, they went to school. I could not. But today, I share the dais with the VIPs of India. It is not only because of money. It is because of all the hard work and status I have built over the past 35 years,” he says, emphasising how the risks he took paid off.

The silent, angry young man Raja claims that he never faced discrimination based on his caste. Perhaps, he is being politically correct.

But sometimes silence speaks more than words.

Consider this — In the same lane where Raja and his family lived in Bengaluru in a house smaller than his new office where we are meeting (it is the latest Purple Haze outlet which was inaugurated earlier in the morning), Raja went on to build a four-storey building that houses his office on the top floor and his school below.

The school was started because not only was he unable to complete his education, but his sister was also denied admission.

“When I had some money, I rented a small house, hired a few teachers and started a nursery school for underprivileged children,” he informs me.

Clearly, the soft-spoken, suave entrepreneur I am talking to was an angry young man once.

There’s also this prejudice in society about not eating or drinking water from a low caste person.

So Raja decided to venture into the food business.

Though the eatery he started has shut down, the bottled drinking water venture, Jala Beverages, is doing well in the market.

The romantic interlude

The other driving force behind Raja’s multiple business ventures was his life partner, his wife Anita. “I kept diversifying because I knew there was someone to look after these businesses,” he says.

Anita came to Raja’s school looking for a job when she was around 16.

She is also a school dropout from a poor Dalit home. Her father was an autorickshaw driver.

Anita started helping around the school and later learned the administrative ropes.

“We actually eloped and got married in a temple. The only witness was one of the school staff,” reveals Raja, adding, that till today they do not have a formal marriage certificate.

A happy end

A lot has been written and debated about the suicide of a promising Dalit student in Hyderabad University recently, but stories like Raja’s give hope to the millions who feel oppressed because of a discriminating society like ours.

“I did not climb up using any reservation provisions. Nor have my children studied under any reservation quota (he has three sons). I put them in my school because I believe you do not need a fancy building to learn better. For me, a good school was where good English was taught.”

Raja says that it is not concessions, but connections that he seeks as a Dalit.

 

“Unfortunately, people from my community are only after government jobs. They do not look at self-employment favourably. At DICCI, we are trying to make them aware of the opportunities available to them. We want to have job creators rather than job seekers,” he says.

Though it took Raja a lot more than three hours to turn his life into a miracle that he witnessed on the silver screen as a teenager, he still has one big dream. “I want to be in the Rs 100-crore club. There are some companies there. Toh unse bhi milenge (I shall rub shoulders with them too).”

Yeah, that’s a great leveler.

For as Raja says, when it comes to business only money talks.

Source……….Dipti Nair Mumbai  in www. rediff.com

Natarajan