Thursday, December 31, 2009

नए साल में मिल पाएगी इन सब से मुक्ति...!!!

फरीदाबाद से नीलांजन ने नए साल की शुभकामनाएं कुछ इस तरह भेजी हैं...


"Happy New Year, May God be with you, family and friends, fulfill all your dreams in 2010 and stay happy 'n' healthy thereafter till all your life.

On a much serious Note: ...O God, give us Strength and capacity to pay- CST, VAT, TDS, Income Tax, Sales Tax, Service Tax, Property Tax, Water Tax, Professional Tax, Road Tax, Excise, Stamp Duty, Cess, Congestion Levy & etc.

Besides that don’t forget EMIs, Bribes, Donations, Beggars, Vegetables, Sugar etc. If we have some time and money left, we will do some business and fun as well!

Cheers to Indian economy. Happy 2010..."

नीलांजन, आपको और सभी दूसरे दोस्तों को नए साल की ढेरों शुभकामनाएं। नया साल आप के लिए ढेर सारी खुशियां लेकर आएगा। पक्का विश्वास है।
---धर्मेंद्र कुमार


Wednesday, December 30, 2009

नए साल की शुभकामनाएं...



नए साल की ढेरों बधाईयां... दिल्ली के विकास अग्रवाल ने बीते साल को अलविदा कहते हुए यह कार्टून भेजा है...
--- धर्मेंद्र कुमार

Sunday, December 27, 2009

Mother Knows Best...


मां 'मां' होती है। मां जैसा कोई नहीं। कहा जाता है कि... क्योंकि भगवान सबके पास नहीं जा सकता है, इसलिए उसने मां को बनाया।

दुनियाभर में पिता की तुलना में मां ही बच्चों के ज्यादा निकट होती है और यह दावा भी कर सकती है कि वह ज्यादा जानती है अपने बच्चों को। शायद इसीलिए कानूनन भी बच्चों की देखभाल की जिम्मेदारी सौंपे जाने की बात आने पर मां और पिता में से मां को ही प्राथमिकता दी जाती है।

खैर...! यह निर्विवाद है कि मां जैसा कोई नहीं...

ये कहानी आगरा से बृज खंडेलवाल ने भेजी है। मजेदार है... लेकिन पिता के वात्सल्य को भी आप यहां अनदेखा नहीं कर सकते...:) शुभकामनाएं...
---धर्मेंद्र कुमार
One boy was telling the story to his IT friends and trying to explain the Importance of domain knowledge...

One day my mother was out and my dad was in charge of me and my brother who is four years older than I am. I was maybe 3 and half years old and had just recovered from an accident in which my arm had been broken among other injuries.

Someone had given me a little 'tea set' as a get-well gift and it was one of my favorite toys. Daddy was in the living room engrossed in the evening news and my brother was playing nearby in the living room when I brought Daddy a little cup of 'tea', which was just water. After several cups of tea and lots of praise for such yummy tea, my Mom came home.

My Dad made her wait in the living room to watch me bring him a cup of tea, because it was 'just the cutest thing!'

My Mom waited, and sure enough, here I come down the hall with a cup of tea for Daddy and she watches him drink it up, then she says to him, 'Did it ever occur to you that the only place that baby can reach to get water is the toilet!?!'

Hey! ...Mothers know us very well!

Friday, December 25, 2009

Marry Christmas!




बड़े दिन की ढेर सारी शुभकामनाएं... दिल्ली से विकास अग्रवाल ने सेंटा क्लॉज पर बढ़ती महंगाई के बोझ को देखते हुए यह कार्टून भेजा है... :)
---धर्मेंद्र कुमार 

थोड़ा सस्ता हो जाए तो बात बन जाए...!

सौर ऊर्जा का उपयोग करने में कोई खराबी नहीं है। सौर ही नहीं, दूसरे ऊर्जा साधनों का भी इस्तेमाल करने में कोई हर्ज नहीं है। लेकिन, इन ऊर्जा स्रोतों के प्रयोग को दैनिक जीवन में लाने के लिए या यह कहिए कि इन्हें दैनिक जीवन का अभिन्न हिस्सा बनाने में अभी देर लगेगी। अगर कोई व्यक्ति पर्यावरण को बचाने में अपना योगदान देने की उत्सुकता के चलते अपने घर में इन स्रोतों के जरिए ऊर्जा हासिल करना चाहे तो अभी यह बहुत महंगा है। जैसा कि आगरा शहर के डॉ. संजय चतुर्वेदी का अनुभव है। उन्होंने अपना अनुभव कुछ इस तरह बांटा है...

“It is good to go green, but for your information I took a decision to make use of solar heaters and requested solar systems to erect the solar water heater for us. The solar heater was installed about 20 days back but that is not enough to give us hot water for family of six person (The temperature is very less). It also required us to have another plumbing work in all the bathrooms. So I need to get the electric geyser on even after solar water heater. In my opinion either there is some mistake in the design or we need more refinement.”

तकनीक अभी उतनी उन्नत नहीं है कि आम आदमी को सस्ती भी पड़े और इस्तेमाल में आसान भी हो। लेकिन जब बड़े पैमाने पर उपयोग करना हो तो कोई बात बनती नजर आती है। बड़े शहरों में कुछ कंपनियों ने दफ्तरों में रोजमर्रा के कामों के लिए सौर ऊर्जा के पैनल लगाए हैं। इनके जरिए कर्मचारियों के उपयोग के कुछ छोटे-मोटे काम तथा कंप्यूटर और यूपीएस सिस्टम के लिए बैटरियों आदि के चार्ज करने की व्यवस्था की जा रही है। रोशनी करने के लिए भी इन साधनों का प्रयोग किया जा रहा है। अब चूंकि ऐसी जगहों पर इन्हें प्रयोग करने वाले लोगों की अधिक संख्या होने की वजह से लागत निकलती सी प्रतीत होती है। और, संभवत: निकल भी रही है... तो इन्हें प्रोत्साहन दिया जा सकता है। सरकारी स्तर पर भी स्ट्रीट लाइट और दूसरी ऐसी ही चीजों के प्रयोग में इन ऊर्जा स्रोतों को लाया जा सकता है। जैसा कि आगरा के ही ब्रज खंडेलवाल का सुझाव है…

“At least on the boundary walls one can have these panels.”

अब इस दिशा में कुछ काम सरकार द्वारा किए जाने चाहिए। व्यक्तिगत स्तर पर मेरा अनुभव कुछ-कुछ डॉ. संजय चतुर्वेदी जैसा ही है। इसलिए मुझे इन स्रोतों को अपने घर में अपनाने में अभी देर लगेगी... लेकिन जब ये साधन थोड़े और सस्ते होंगे तो कौन भला यह नहीं चाहेगा कि उसका मासिक खर्चा थोड़ा कम हो जाए...। यहां यह एक ऐसा ही लेख है जो मुझे पढ़ने को मिला। इस लेख में कहा गया है कि हम सबको पर्यावरण को सही रखने में अपनी भूमिका को याद रखते हुए इन संसाधनों का उपयोग करना चाहिए। आप पढ़िए इसे और अगर लगे कि वाकई हमें अपने पर्यावरण को बचाने के लिए कुछ करना चाहिए तो इन्हें इस्तेमाल करने का कम से कम एक प्रयास जरूर करके देखें... शुभकामनाएं...:)
---धर्मेंद्र कुमार

Across the globe, the need of the hour is to use renewable energy. Renewable energy is energy from natural resources, such as sunlight, rain, wind, tides, and geothermal heat. Energy sources are draining at an exciting rate, which makes it command to use the energy that is prevalent and free like solar and wind. Not only are these two resources in plenty, but they also keep our environment pollution-free.

The option of solar or wind energy is yours. If you live where there is strong sunlight, you can choose for the solar panel to accumulate the direct sunlight and convert this into power. If your region has tough winds blowing throughout the year, you could implement benefit of the wind turbine to generate wind power.

Many people suppose that it is costly to go green, but this is not true. Investing in a solar power system will give you returns in a short time, after which you will be getting free service, thus eliminating your power bill. Today, there are a number of guides available that make it very easy to make your own solar panels or wind turbine systems. They come along with video descriptions. The materials used for this is from the junk parts that are available at any local retail shop.

A solar home electricity system turns solar energy into electrical energy for the home. The solar electricity stored in the solar cells light up your house at night too. Once you set up the solar home lighting system in your house you needn't care about the electricity bill anymore. The solar heating system in your home assists to cut down your electricity bill and also economize on fuel. These heating systems are installed in a way that is pleasing to the eye and does not detract from the beauty of your home.

There are different solar power alternatives available for home use. A solar cooker does not use any fuel for cooking and it can boil, bake and roast too. You can cut down resolutely on the bills and save power. By using renewable energy in your home, you are not only saving on your electricity bill but also being environmentally amicable. You are doing your bit to lessen the demand for fossil fuels like oil, coal, and natural gas. The less these fossil fuels burn the lower the emanation of carbon dioxide, which is a major contributor to global warming, and other harmful waste.

Green energy that is clean energy should be our aim. But the first step towards it is to belittle the energy needs by taking actions like insulating/weather stripping your home and purchasing high efficiency attachments. Using renewable energy for your home will also make you feel that you are doing your share to economize power for generations to come.

(Courtsey: Thegreeno.com)

Wednesday, December 23, 2009

Mediabharti.com

Mediabharti.com: "Mediabharti Web Solutions provides various Internet and mobile value-added services. Its main services include Content providing for other media publishers, ..."

Monday, December 21, 2009

हे पार्थ! तुम इधर कहां...

दिल्ली के राकेश कुमार ने आरामबाग कॉलोनी स्थित गैर सरकारी संगठन मातृछाया में मौजूद एक नीग्रो मूल के बच्चे 'पार्थ' के बारे में यह कहानी भेजी है। पार्थ नौ महीने का है। उसकी छोटी-छोटी आंखों में सुनहरे जीवन की रोशनी नजर आती है। वह एक ऐसे घर की राह देख रहा है जहां उसे उसके हिस्से का प्यार तो मिले ही साथ ही वे खुशियां, वे मौके और हर वह चीज जो उस जैसे बच्चे का अधिकार है, मिले... आप पढ़िए इस 'पार्थ' की कहानी को और हो सके तो इसे एकलव्य बनने से रोकिए...
---धर्मेंद्र कुमार

दिल्ली के रामकृष्ण आश्रम मार्ग मेट्रो स्टेशन से कुछ ही फासले पर आरामबाग कॉलोनी है। यहां स्थित 'मातृछाया' कई अनाथ बच्चों को ममता की छांव दे रही है।

सेवाभारती संस्थान द्वारा चलाए जा रहे 'मातृछाया' में फिलहाल 15 बच्चे हैं। इनमें एक साल तक के नौ और शेष छह बच्चे सात-आठ साल के हैं। यहां के झूलों पर मुस्कान बिखेरती तपस्या, पवित्री, नेहा, पार्थ... हम सभी का ध्यान अपनी ओर खींचते हैं।

मातृछाया में नीग्रो मूल का अफ्रीकी बच्चा पार्थ भारतीय संस्कारों में पल बढ़ रहा है।

मातृछाया संस्थान के मंत्री पवन बंसल ने बताया कि तकरीबन नौ महीने पहले संस्था को एक अज्ञात व्यक्ति ने फोन पर सूचना दी कि मुखर्जी नगर गंदे नाले के किनारे किसी ने कंबल में लपेटकर एक बच्चा फेंक दिया है और यह बच्चा अफ्रीकी मूल का है। संस्थान की टीम फौरन वहां पहुंची और उसे यहां ले आई। आज यह बच्चा नौ महीने का है और इसका नाम पार्थ रखा गया। पार्थ सभी बच्चों में सबसे ज्यादा भला-चंगा है।

इस संस्था में मां का फर्ज अदा कर रही आया कृष्णा कहती हैं कि यहां के सारे बच्चे उनके जिगर के टुकड़े है किन्तु पार्थ की परवरिश को लेकर वह कहीं ज्यादा उत्साहित हैं।

मातृछाया संस्था की सहमंत्री सुषमा मेहरोत्रा ने बताया कि डेढ़ साल तक के बच्चे को अक्सर घर मिल जाया करता है। अभी तपस्या को दिल्ली के एक निःसंतान दंपती गोद ले रहे हैं और वे उसकी गोद देने की वैधानिक सहित तमाम प्रक्रिया पूरी करने में लगे हुए हैं। इस संस्था के केयर टेकर राकेश कुमार जी का कहना है कि फिलहाल उनकी चिंता पार्थ को लेकर है क्योंकि विदेशी मूल के होने के नाते कोई भी भारतीय परिवार गोद लेने के लिए आगे नहीं आ रहा है लेकिन उन्होंने यह भी बताया कि दिल्ली पुलिस में उच्चपदस्थ एक अधिकारी ने उन्हें आश्वस्त किया है कि अगर पार्थ को कोई भी गोद नहीं लेगा तो वह उसे गोद ले लेंगे तथा भविष्य में वह पार्थ को देश का सर्वोतम एथलीट बनाएंगे।

संस्था के मंत्री पवन बंसल ने बताया कि यहां एकाध कैंप लगाने वाले और फोटो खिंचवाने के लिए तो काफी गैर-सरकारी संस्थाएं और निजी अस्पतालों के लोग आते हैं और अपना प्रोफाइल बढ़ाकर चले जाते हैं किन्तु कोई भी लंबे समय तक मेडिकल सहयोग का आश्वासन नहीं देता, उलटे निजी अस्पतालों में बच्चों को बीमारी की हालात में दाखिला कराने पर वे काफी बेरहमी से पैसे वसूल लेते हैं।

Friday, December 18, 2009

Social Work Can Reverse Declining Brain Function

समाज, जिसमें हम रहते हैं, कभी भी किसी का उधार नहीं रखता। यदि कोई व्यक्ति अपने समाज को कुछ देने के बारे में सोचता और करता है तो समाज उसे वह ब्याज सहित लौटाता है। कभी लगता है कि किसी व्यक्ति विशेष ने अपने पारिवारिक दायित्वों पर तो ध्यान दिया नहीं लेकिन समाज के लिए कुछ करने का 'दंभ' भरा। वास्तव में ऐसा है नहीं। बस एक सोच का फर्क है। वहां उसने अपने परिवार को बहुत बड़ा पाया। उसके परिवार में सिर्फ पत्नी और बच्चे मात्र नहीं होते। उसके परिवार में देश, दुनिया और इस समाज के सभी लोग होते हैं। महात्मा गांधी की शख्सियत एक ऐसा ही उदाहरण हैं। हम में से ज्यादातर लोग बुढ़ापे के समय को समाज के लिए अर्पित करने का वक्त मानते हैं। यदि इसमें अपनी जवानी के समय को भी जोड़ दिया जाए तो... तब शायद कुछ और अच्छा परिणाम निकले... लेकिन तब शायद हमारे पास समय का अभाव होता है और हम इस कोशिश में भी रहते हैं कि कोई हम पर यह आरोप न लगाए कि हमने अपने पारिवारिक दायित्वों का निर्वहन तो किया नहीं और समाज का चले हैं संभालने....!


खैर यह एक नया शोध है जिसमें बताया गया है कि सामाजिक काम करो तो दिमाग ज्यादा फुर्तीला रहता है। पढ़ा तो बढ़िया सा लगा... आप भी पढ़ सकते हैं...:) शुभकामनाएं!
---धर्मेंद्र कुमार

Social Work Can Reverse Declining Brain Function

Volunteering to tutor children can help older adults delay or reverse declining brain function, according to a new study.

Using functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI), Johns Hopkins Bloomberg researchers found that seniors participating in a youth mentoring programme made gains in key brain regions that support cognitive abilities.

About 78 million Americans were born between 1946 and 1964. With retirement age individuals the fastest-growing sector of the US population, there is great interest in preserving their cognitive and physical abilities, especially given the societal cost of the alternative.

The study is the first to examine the effect of Experience Corps, a national volunteer service programme that trains seniors to help children in urban public schools with reading and academic success in other areas, says a Bloomberg release.

"We found that participating in Experience Corps resulted in improvements in cognitive functioning, associated with significant changes in brain activation patterns," said lead investigator Michelle C. Carlson, associate professor in the Bloomberg Schools.

The study is published in the December issue of the Journals of Gerontology: Medical Sciences.
(Courtsey: IANS)

Thursday, December 17, 2009

Please Do Not Sell!

खबरों को बेचने का चलन हालांकि नया नहीं है, मीडिया में कम से कम एक पूरी पीढ़ी खबरों को बिकते हुए देखती आई है। तथाकथित 'इलीट' वर्ग की देर रात चलने वाली पार्टियों की फुल कवरेज से लेकर हालिया चुनावों में पार्टी विशेष से पैसे लेकर उनके पक्ष में 'हवा' बनाने तक इस 'व्यापार' ने लंबा दौर देखा है। अखबार को सिर्फ एक 'प्रॉडक्ट'भर मानकर चलने वाले लोगों की दिमागी उपज है ये। आगरा के केएमआई संस्थान में पत्रकारिता के आरंभिक पाठ पढ़ते समय मुझे यह अहसास था कि यह काम छोटे-मोटे गली के अखबार ही करते हैं। लेकिन, जब दिल्ली मैं आया तो देखा कि बड़े खिलाड़ी ही इस खेल को उन्हें सिखा रहे हैं। पहले थोड़ी सी 'शर्म' बाकी थी और कोने में Advt. लिखने का चलन था, लेकिन अब यह भी बंद है। अब पाठक लगा लें अंदाज कि वे खबर पढ़ रहे हैं या विज्ञापन। मीडिया बाजार में यह मसला आजकल गरम है... पत्रिका आउटलुक के संपादक विनोद मेहता का लिखा ये लेख पढ़िए... लड़ाई लड़ी जा रही है... कितनी सफलता मिलेगी इस कैंसर को खत्म करने में... पता नहीं। हो सकता है बाजार ही खत्म कर दे इसे... शुभकामनाएं...
---धर्मेंद्र कुमार

Please Do Not Sell!

Indian media doesn’t do introspection. We recommend it to others—MPs, political parties, militants, judges, scientists... They are all advised to look deep inside their own trade and clean up the rot. Meanwhile, the rot creeping into the fourth estate is studiously ignored or airbrushed, usually by organizing a “studio discussion” in which the citizen is asked: Does the media need to be accountable? Discussion over. Issue over. Fortunately, even that stratagem is wearing thin. The chicanery is conspicuous.

And yet who can deny that while our media has much to be proud of, there is increasing public disenchantment, not just with its slant, shrillness, sermonising and sensationalism, but with its core value, namely integrity. It is hardly a secret that the media is capable of misjudgement and laziness. However, what the aam aadmi seldom doubts is the “news” it transmits. That trust, alas, is breaking down.

I am not referring to the blurring of news and opinion, which itself violates the time-honored principle: News is sacred, comment is free. However, even when news and comment are mixed up, it is possible for the alert consumer to separate the two. At any rate, even in the most advanced of democracies, the media does carry ideological/party bias, which is reflected not in the editorial pages, but in the news columns. That practice, however deplorable, a free press can live with.

If all these burdens were not enough for the media in the world’s largest democracy, consider this: Sections of the media are now for “sale”. For a price, you can buy news on the front page. It is a trend which has been with us for a few years, but thanks to the exposure by the late Prabhash Joshi, P. Sainath and others, it is emerging as the single-most serious threat to our collective credibility. Indeed, the system is getting fast institutionalised, with TV channels and newspapers approaching politicians, especially during elections, with a “package” which, interestingly, is negotiable. It is an offer difficult to refuse.

I am not unmindful of the difficult times the media industry is going through. The market is too crowded, the advertising cake is too small, the economy is too sluggish. We are all furiously engaged in finding new and innovative ways to augment our dwindling revenues. Outlook (like others) is neck-deep in this skirmish. As you may have noticed, the Outlook ‘Spotlight’ feature is sponsored, the client has almost full editorial control. The only redeeming aspect is that the reader can easily spot it, since it is clearly marked on the page. News for sale is not. The purpose here is to pass off sponsored news as professional news.

Dog does not eat dog. True. In the investigation you are about to read, the intention is to shed light on a malaise which, if not treated, will surely destroy the Indian media. I hope our colleagues in the business will take it in that spirit.

Sunday, December 13, 2009

More Indian Groups Seek Statehood

नया राज्य तेलंगाना बनाने पर गंभीरता से विचार करने के सरकार के निर्णय से देशभर में सैकड़ों नए और छोटे राज्य बनाने की मांग जोर पकड़ने लगी है। वास्तव में इसके पीछे छोटे राज्यों के नाम पर हमें स्वच्छ और स्निग्ध प्रशासन देने की मंशा कम और नेताओं का राजनीतिक गणित ज्यादा है। इसीलिए शायद, चौधरी अजीत सिंह के 'हरित प्रदेश' और मायावती के 'हरित प्रदेश' की सीमाएं अलग-अलग हैं। खैर जहां करीब दर्जनभर नए राज्यों की मांग निकलकर आई है वहीं कुछ लोगों का मानना है कि कुल मिलाकर पांच राज्य ही काफी हैं। इससे खर्चों में ज्यादा कमी आएगी। वैसे भी अबतक बड़े प्रदेशों के विभाजन के बाद बनाए गए छोटे राज्यों से हमें 'मधु कोड़ा' के अलावा क्या हासिल हो गया है...। यहां अमेरिकी अखबार 'वॉल स्ट्रीट जरनल' में छपी विभूति अग्रवाल की खबर है और उस पर मेरे कुछ मित्रों की टिप्पणियां भी हैं। पढ़ लीजिए!
--- धर्मेंद्र कुमार

Some groups are renewing their push for separate states in India after New Delhi met one protest campaign's wish by deciding to allow a new state to be carved from Andhra Pradesh.

The Indian government's move to support a new Telangana state came after a senior separatist leader staged a hunger strike for more than a week and his supporters agitated across Andhra Pradesh and in its capital, Hyderabad.

Indian activists block a train to protest the central government's decision to support demands for splitting Andhra Pradesh state. The decision also prompted a spate of resignations by local lawmakers.

Among the groups now demanding their own state is Gorkha Janmukti Morcha, a political party that said about 20 members will go on indefinite hunger strike in an effort to persuade the government to form a separate state of Gorkhaland out of the eastern state of West Bengal. In Harit Pradesh, part of the northern Indian state of Uttar Pradesh, separatist supporters are threatening to resume their agitation. So have statehood supporters in the Vidarbha region of the western state of Maharashtra.

In West Bengal, the president of the Gorkha party, Pradeep Pradhan, said the party was urging Gorkhas to participate in a four-day business shutdown in the region starting Dec. 14. Gorkhas are an ethnic group that spans parts of Nepal and northeastern India. Pradhan says the separate state would recognize the Indian and Nepali Gorkhas who have been otherwise neglected.

So far, the Indian government has been trying to resolve the Gorkhas' demands through talks between the central and state governments and members of Gorkha Janmukti Morcha party. Pradhan said the party has a meeting scheduled with Home Secretary G.K. Pillai Dec. 21 to discuss the issue. A Home Ministry official declined to comment.

Supporters of Telangana statehood celebrate in Hyderabad on Thursday after the Indian government agreed to support their separatist demands in an effort to quell unrest.

In another separatist region in India's desert state of Rajasthan, a rally of camel-mounted activists took to the streets demanding statehood for the Maru Pradesh region. Maru Pradesh is spread over nine of Rajasthan's 32 districts. The demand is based on an "imbalance in favor of the rest of Rajasthan," said Rajpal Godara, one of the supporters of the movement.

Meanwhile, the path to Telangana statehood remains unclear, as more local legislators in the Andhra Pradesh assembly resigned to protest the prospect of a divided state. So far, 127 of Andhra Pradesh's 295 legislators have quit. The speaker of the local assembly has said the resignations won't be accepted; the assembly has been adjourned until Dec. 14. It was unclear when a resolution for Telangana statehood would be introduced in the assembly.

Prime Minister Manmohan Singh said no action would be taken "in haste."

Commenting on this, journalist Brij Khandelwal says, "The reaction from different parts of the country after union government's initiative on Telengana clearly underlines the urgent need to appoint a new States Reorganisation Commission to settle this vexing problem once for all. Ad hoc decisions forced by violent upsurges in a piecemeal manner have only harmed emotional integration of the union. The 1956 SRC invluenced by Nehru's own crazy love for unity in diversity principle, was forced to accept language as a basis of division of states. This was against the sound advice of then socialists including JP, Kriplani, Kaka Kalelkar and others who advocated smaller states. Experts then had suggested a federal unit of roughly ten million people with due consideration for population density, area, and natural resources. The Congress leaders ignored this sane advice and the nation has been paying for it. Clearly there is a case for a rational and logical redrawing of the political map of India. For this a new SRC must be announced and all matters relating to demands for new states be referred to it. Let us admit there is nothing sacrosanct about the number of state India should have. Smaller states will definitely cut into parochial and regional sentiments as in Maharashtra these days.

So let's go ahead and have 100 odd states, if that makes people feel happy and involved in the democratic process."

(Special thanks to Vibhuti Agarwal, Wall Street Journal; Brij Khandelwal, Agratoday.in)

कमिश्नर गए, बात गई!

When former municipal commissioner Shyam Singh Yadav was in Agra, he had joined Yamuna cleaning programme at Hathi Ghat and had promised he would place containers at all the ghats so that people could drop plastic and polythene bags after empltying the Puja Samigri in the river. A huge hoarding was also to be put at Hathi Ghat requesting people not to deluge the river with polythene.
However after his unceremonial departure, the orders were shelved.
It have been requesting the mayor and the present municipal commissioner to provide containers and put hoardings warning people not to drop polythene in the river but so far there has been no response.
Will the people of agra wake up and demand immediate action on it!

Mirza Ghalib's Birthday Celebration

27 दिसंबर को मिर्जा गालिब का जन्मदिन मनाया जाएगा। आगरा के गोवर्धन होटल में केक काटने का आयोजन है। मुशायरा भी होगा। आयोजन को बढ़िया तरह से मनाने के लिए लोगों से हर तरह की सहायता भी मांगी गई है। ये सहायता आप लाउडस्पीकर, बैनर, मेहमानों के लिए फूलों के हार, चाय-कॉफी की व्यवस्था करके कर सकते हैं। कुछ उभरते नौजवान अपनी कला का प्रदर्शन करेंगे।

Friday, December 11, 2009

Meeting India's Tree Planting Guru

सरकार ने 'नरेगा' लागू तो किया लेकिन क्या हो जब बिहार जैसे गरीब और कानूनी रूप से अस्त-व्यस्त राज्य में जहां 100 दिन का सालाना रोजगार मुहैया कराना मुश्किल हो जाए...। इसका हल ढूंढ़ा राजू ने... राजू ने गांव वालों को पेड़ लगाने और उनकी देख-रेख का काम सौंपा। और, उनका मेहनताना भी सुनिश्चित किया। अब नरेगा योजना के तहत आवंटित धन का सदुपयोग भी किया जा सकेगा और पर्यावरण को संभाले रखने के दायित्व की पूर्ति भी।

An Indian civil servant, SM Raju, has come up with a novel way of providing employment to millions of poor in the eastern state of Bihar.

His campaign to encourage people to plant trees effectively addresses two burning issues of the world: global warming and shrinking job opportunities.

Evidence of Raju's success could clearly be seen on 30 August, when he organised 300,000 villagers from over 7,500 villages in northern Bihar to engage in a mass tree planting ceremony.

In doing so the agriculture graduate from Bangalore has provided "sustainable employment" to people living below the poverty line in Bihar .

Raju has linked his "social forestry" programme to the central government's National Rural Employment Guarantee Act (NREGA) which is also designed to provide employment to poor people.

Under NREGA- initiated in February 2006 as the government's most ambitious employment generation scheme for poor people- the authorities are bound by law to provide a minimum of 100 days of employment a year to members of families living below the poverty line.

About 44% of Bihar 's population fall into this category.

"The scheme has brought benefits to thousands of families since its implementation," said a recent International Labour Organisation report.

But Raju says that Bihar- being the poorest and most lawless state of India- has not been able to spend the allocated NREGA funds.

"This is because of a lack of awareness among officials about the scheme," he said.

The poor monsoon this year has led to lower agricultural outputs, while flash floods in some northern districts have made the situation even worse, he said.

"So the idea struck to my mind, why not involve families below the poverty line in social forestry and give them employment under this scheme for 100 days?

"Under the scheme, each family can earn a minimum of 10,200 rupees ($210)."

The civil servant immediately made a blueprint of his idea and got the support of senior state officials.

In June Raju released a comprehensive booklet of "do's and don'ts" and distributed it to village heads and district officials.

His initiative meant that NREGA funds were fully utilised- in the past this has not always been the case.

"I told the villagers that they would get 100 days employment in a year simply by planting trees and protecting them. The old, handicapped and widows would be given preference," he explained.

Every village council has now been given a target of planting 50,000 saplings- a group of four families has to plant 200 seedlings and they must protect them for three years till the plants grow more sturdy.

"They would get the full payment if they can ensure the survival of 90% of the plants under their care. For a 75-80% survival rate, they will be paid only half the wage. If the survival rate is less than 75%, the families in the group will be replaced," the guidelines say.

Under NREGA rules, each worker has to be paid 100 rupees ($2) per day for 100 days in a year.

Raju even came close to planting one billion saplings on a single day.

"I started preparing for this and motivating villagers by announcing the date as 30 August," he said.

"The target for every village panchayat (council) was to plant 6,000 saplings from 6am to 6pm to achieve the target of one billion. At the end of the day, we found out that we were just just short of the target, but it was still a world record," the beaming civil servant said.

Significantly, his scheme has even stopped the migration of poor labourers from the area in search of employment elsewhere during monsoon time.

"We never thought we would get employment for planting trees and protecting them," said Paigambarpur village head Indra Bhusan, whose community- like many others- planted over 30,000 saplings mostly on both flanks of the 14km embankment which criss-crosses their village.

The saplings planted are both fruit and non-fruit trees. The non-fruit seedlings have been planted on the banks of the embankment and on state and national highways- while fruit bearing trees are planted inside the villages.

This year the central government has given more money to the scheme.

Meanwhile, the Bihar civil servant is busy collecting the facts and figures to get his feat listed by Guinness World Records.

"Bihar has edged out Pakistan from the record book," he said flashing a confident smile.

"Its all become possible due to villagers. I owe them a lot."

(Courtsey: Amarnath Tewary, BBC News)

Wednesday, December 09, 2009

'पहले कमिश्नर को तो देखें, वो इतनी बड़ी हस्ती है'

लोक संगीत को बचाने के लिए हाल ही में आयोजित की गई एक कांफ्रेंस से लौटकर आए मेरे अजीज पत्रकार मित्र बृज खंडेलवाल ने यह रिपोर्ट मुझे भेजी है। इस रिपोर्ट की खास बात बोल्ड और इटेलिक कर दी गई है...:)

Is folk music dying? How real is the cultural onslaught from the west? Can the deshi cultural streams become extinct with generation next losing interest in classical traditions?

These issues were debated at the two day national conference on folk music at hotel Grand in Agra. Dr. Lovely Sharma, the conference convener, whose passion for sitar and classical music, indeed all good music, is infectious. The zeal she demonstrated in her passionate appeal to save the musical heritage of the country found sympathetic echo from many quarters. The gathering was distinct, rather elitist, though the folk media is supposed to relate to the commoners. The mindset was reflected when Lovely Sharma was asked to welcome the living legend of Braj Folk-lore Choudhary Badan Singh. Note what she told this writer, and audible enough for people around “Pahle commissioner ko to dekhen, who itni badi hasti hain.”('पहले कमिश्नर को तो देखें, वो इतनी बड़ी हस्ती है')

Anyway, about the conference first. Folk singers and musicians from different parts of India discussing latest trends and threats, today urged music lovers to save this precious heritage from extinction.

The two-day national conference on Indian Folk Music: tradition and trends in the Taj city ends Monday evening with adoption of a charter setting out priorities and outlining action programmes to popularise Indian folk-lore, music, songs handed over by generations of gifted artistes rooted in the ethos of the society. More than a 100 artistes, exponents, researchers and musicians are participating in the conference organised by Kritika Kala at Grand Hotel.

Dr. Lovely Sharma, (the only D Lit holder in Sitar) conference convener said "considering the falling interest in classical and folk music, particularly of the younger generation, in the wake of cultural onslaught from the west, there is great need to reinvent and re-package folk and traditional music to make them compatible with today's tastes and needs. We have therefore called this "meeting of the minds" to look for ways to do this." The ideas would be presented in the form of a perspective paper and circulated among lovers of Folk music and songs so that this stream gains momentum and recognition from the right quarters. Dr. Satya Bhan, the only surviving exponent of Haveli Sangeet, a stream of Bhakti movement, lamented "the younger people do not just want to learn, they do not show interest in even hearing folk or classical music. The fault is ours, the seniors' who make no effort to expose them to good singing." Badan Singh Choudhary, five time legislator from Fatehpur Sikri, and author of Braj Lok Geet (a 300 page treatise and collection of folk songs of Braj Mandal) wanted some concrete steps taken to preserve the rich heritage handed. He wanted CDs of good folk music and songs produced at subsidised costs by the state.

"If we do nothing, it will die its own natural death," he warned.

Dr. Sandhya Rani Shakya, head of the Bareilly Women's College said "folk music was the heart while classical the mind. We have to strive for a balance and satisfaction of both." Udaipur University's Dr. Anjna Gautam said the folk music and songs were deeply rooted in the rural ethos and culture. Folk music reflected the variety, richness and depth of the rural culture in Rajasthan, she added. Madhurima Pachauri, a researcher said there was a tendency to lump together tribal and folk music, but the two genres differ vastly. "Folk music is a mere rustic reflection of the larger Indian society, the rural reality, tribal music often represents a distinct cultural tradition and an identity of a group," she added. The conference delegates were regaled with some folk music and songs presentation from different parts of India including Kerala.

Tuesday, December 08, 2009

Clay Balls!

A man was exploring caves by the Seashore. In one of the caves he found a canvas bag with a bunch of hardened clay balls. It was like someone had rolled clay balls and left them out in the sun to bake. They didn't look like much, but they intrigued the man, so he took the bag out of the cave with him. As he strolled along the beach, he would throw the clay balls one at a time out into the ocean as far as he could.

He thought little about it, until he dropped one of the clay balls and it cracked open on a rock. Inside was a beautiful, precious stone!

Excited, the man started breaking open the remaining clay balls. Each contained a similar treasure. He found thousands of dollars worth of jewels in the 20 or so clay balls he had left...

Then it struck him. He had been on the beach a long time. He had thrown maybe 50 or 60 of the clay balls with their hidden treasure into the ocean waves. Instead of thousands of dollars in treasure, he could have taken home tens of thousands, but he had just thrown it away!

It's like that with people. We look at someone, may be even ourselves, and we see the external clay vessel. It doesn't look like much from the outside. It isn't always beautiful or sparkling, so we discount it.

We see that person as less important than someone more beautiful or stylish or well known or wealthy. But we have not taken the time to find the treasure hidden inside that person.

There is a treasure in each and every one of us. If we take the time to really get to know that person, then the clay begins to peel away and the brilliant gem begins to shine forth.

May we not come to the end of our lives and find out that we have thrown away a fortune in friendships because the gems were hidden in bits of clay. May we see the people in our world as they truly are.

Now, Incentives For Keeping Tourist Sites Clean

By Kavita Bajeli-Datt
Municipality and village heads will soon have ample reason to keep tourist sites in their area spic and span. The government is planning to offer them incentives as it strives for "a culture of clean destinations".

"We are planning to give incentives to municipal chairmen and sarpanchs on keeping tourist destinations in their area clean," Tourism Minister Kumari Selja told IANS.

"We need to create the culture of clean destinations. We should take pride in our national heritage. Giving incentives would be one way of maintaining these monuments and destinations," she added.

"We need to inculcate the habit of keeping sites clean. The habits are not there. If there is no pride, we will not be able to do it."

The tourism minister said they would soon be launching a massive media campaign to highlight the initiative and increase awareness.

"Educating people and creating awareness among them is very important. We have to take pride in ourself and our heritage," said the minister, who also holds the charge of housing and urban poverty alleviation.

"A traveller just wants a clean bed and toilet. Hygienic and cleaner facilities makes a lot of difference," Selja told.

There are more than 3,650 ancient monuments and archaeological sites and remains of national importance, which are preserved by the Archaeological Survey of India (ASI). There are also 30 World Heritage Sites, including the Taj Mahal and Fatehpuri Sikri (both in Agra in Uttar Pradesh), Humayun's Tomb and Qutub Minar and its monuments in Delhi.

These monuments belong to different periods, ranging from the prehistoric period to the colonial period and are located in different geographical settings. They include temples, mosques, tombs, churches, cemeteries, forts, palaces, step-wells, rock-cut caves, and secular architecture as well as ancient mounds and sites which represent the remains of ancient habitation.

Although, majority are kept spruced up by the ASI and sometimes NGOs, encroachments and urban slums that come up around these sites are major problems.

The tourism ministry is also sprucing up infrastructure at 20 new destinations and circuits that can be covered by visitors within three to four days. Besides, 40-odd ghats on the banks of Ganga - from Varanasi to Kolkata - are being upgraded.

The major focus, Selja said, was on building infrastructure and keeping the sites clean to attract more tourists to India.

Till October this year, about 4.02 million foreign tourists visited India. The figure was seven percent lower compared to the corresponding period last year. In 2008, a total of 5.37 million tourists had visited India.
(Courtesy: IANS)

Monday, December 07, 2009

Hurry For What?

You can see clearly how important it is to think in advance every event in every day. You will no doubt have experienced the opposite of thinking your day in advance, and one of the repercussions of that is having to rush and hurry.

If you are rushing or hurrying, know that those thoughts and actions are based in fear (fear of being late) and you are "fixing up" bad things ahead for you. As you continue to rush, you will attract one bad thing after another into your path. In addition to that, the law of attraction is "fixing up" more future circumstances that will cause you to rush and hurry. You must stop and move yourself off that frequency. Take a few moments and shift yourself, if you don't want to summon bad things to you.

'Indian Journalism Is At A Crossroads'

Mumbai: The phenomenon of paid news in the media has become entrenched as an institutional malpractice, especially evident in the coverage of the recent Lok Sabha and Assembly elections. Can something be done to restore lost ethics in an environment where commercial interests are increasingly driving and degrading journalism?

Distinguished mediapersons presented various aspects of the problem and likely solutions at a panel discussion on “Journalism for Commerce,” organised by the South Asian Free Media Association (SAFMA) here on Saturday.

“Indian journalism is at a crossroads. When we shirk our basic duty of being the purveyors of facts in order to empower public opinion towards a more robust democracy, we commit the same crime as a parliamentarian who sells his or her right to ask questions for money,” said Vinod Sharma, Political Editor, Hindustan Times.

“Powerful sections within the media are offering covering packages to political parties. The enormity of this problem has not sunk in the media completely,” said SAFMA president KK Katyal.

Driving home the need for drastic steps to rein in the practice of paid news, P. Sainath, Rural Affairs Editor of The Hindu, warned: “Either we finish it or it finishes us. There will be no space, no scope for legitimate journalism if this process expands any further.” He put his finger on hyper commercialisation pervading every sector, including the media, over the past 20 years as the root of the problem. “It goes hand in hand with the rise of corporate and money power in politics.”

Sainath said statistics from data collected by the National Election Watch showed an increase of 338 per cent in the average asset growth of re-contesting candidates for the recent Maharashtra polls. The average value of an MLA was Rs.4 crore, that of a re-elected MLA 4.6 crore and of a re-elected Minister Rs.4.9 crore. Of the 288 MLAs, 184 were crorepatis. Between the 2004 and 2009 elections, there was a 70 per cent increase in the number of crorepati candidates. An average MP was worth Rs.5.1 crore, a Union Cabinet Minister Rs.7.6 crore and the combined, declared wealth of 543 MPs was in excess of Rs.2,800 crore.

With respect to the media, Sainath cautioned: “The fact that there is no distinction made between the corporate sector and the media is extremely serious.”

Some of the characteristics of the paid news pages he highlighted were the absence of any negative line against a candidate covered and the blacking out of rivals, small parties and candidates. “Even big candidates are blacked out if the opposing one has paid a fabulous sum,” he said.

“The scale of the malpractice is a new trend. So is the multimedia nature of media packages and a shift from individual corruption to a structured industry. With copies worded by ad agencies, it has become a coordinated and integrated exercise.”

Looking for a possible solution, he said: “Either we self-regulate or somebody else will. And that kind of intervention will be most unwelcome to those who fulfil their legitimate function as a free press.”

Sainath advocated strengthening the existing regulatory bodies such as the Press Council of India. The Election Commission had a stronger role to play in curbing misuse of the press and money power in politics. “As a society, we have to move towards greater restraints and regulation of monopolies in general. There are risks involved, but it is the duty of the rest of the press to shame [the perpetrators],” he said.

The only political viewpoint came from panellist Ravi Shankar Prasad, BJP Rajya Sabha member. Given the “eyeball catching” news on television, which affected the quality of content, he asked for a transparent system of TV ratings. Stripped of its utilitarian value, news would become a product, editors would become brand managers and journalists salespeople, he said.

(Courtesy:The Hindu)

Wednesday, December 02, 2009

2010 Economic Forecast: Slow Growth With Chance Of Stagnation

Washington (USA)(Mediabharti Syndication Service) 02 December: Positive third quarter economic statistics have been greeted with cheers and proclamations that the "Great Recession" is over, but economist Steve Fazzari is not convinced that it's time to celebrate.

Consumer spending, the engine that fueled economic growth for the past two decades is "out of gas" according to Fazzari. "I continue to worry that the household sector cannot support growth over the next few years the way it did before the recession."


With consumer spending accounting for 70 percent of GDP, he considers it a "matter of arithmetic" that the economy will stagnate over the next few years if American households curtail their spending and borrowing to repair their balance sheets.


"We may see a good quarter here or there," Fazzari says. "But there is no obvious source of medium-term sales growth for business in the next few years to replace the recent consumption boom."


Fazzari documents the extended consumer shopping spree that fueled economic growth in a paper published last year. The research shows how consumer spending was accompanied by a dramatic rise in household indebtedness. Credit cards were maxed out and real estate assets leveraged to extreme levels. Fazzari posits in the paper that household debt is not only a source of growth for the economy but also a risk of collapse. A conclusion that proved to be prescient of the massive home foreclosures, bank failures and collapse of the credit markets that led to the global economic crisis of 2008.
All Rights Reserved With Mediabharti Web Solutions. Powered by Blogger.