Category Archives: Arts, Culture & Entertainment

All for a green Chennai

Free:A. Anthony Raj has been distributing tree saplings to residents’ welfare organisations.— Photo: K. Pichumani
Free:A. Anthony Raj has been distributing tree saplings to residents’ welfare organisations.— Photo: K. Pichumani

For A. Anthonyraj, happiness is keeping the city green.

Greening the city by planting trees is being taken up by several residents’ associations and activists, but securing saplings for the purpose comes at a cost.

Mr. Anthonyraj, a horticulturist and landscaper by profession, has been distributing tree saplings to residents’ welfare organisations and environmental activists for more than a year. He has given away more than 1,000 saplings free of cost to those volunteering to keep their localities or multi-storeyed apartments green.

He owns a horticulture farm at Thiruporur and said the inspiration was staring at him in the face: a concrete jungle.

“I decided to provide free saplings looking at the city losing its greenery gradually. I have also apportioned a small part of my profits for this venture.”

Mr. Anthonyraj has done landscaping projects in Qatar and Singapore and holds in high regard the rigorous procedure involved in cutting avenue trees even for development purposes in those nations.

He is concerned about the lack of adequate protection for avenue trees in India.

source: http://www.thehindu.com / The Hindu / Home> News> Cities> Chennai / by R.Srikanth / Chennai – July 04th, 2015

Golden jubilee reunion

Those who completed SSLC (Secondary School Leaving Certificated) at the Hindu High School, Triplicane, fifty years ago are planning a reunion this year. The golden jubilee reunion hopes to bring together people the SSLC batch of 1965 in one of the oldest schools.

Honouring teachers, assisting in infrastructural development, and creating a scholarship fund for meritorious students from economically backward families have also been planned.

Former students who want to be part of the event may get in touch with Janardhanan at Ph: 9841210884. e-mail: janakrishjai@gmail.com. — Special Correspondent

source: http://www.thehindu.com / The Hindu / Home> News> Cities> Chennai / by Special Correspondent / Chennai – July 04th, 2015

How early Portuguese book spread religion

by K R A Narasiah

Jesuit missionary Fr Henrique Henriques (1520-1600) worked among the pearl fisheries people of South Indian coast between 1546 and 1600 -a little over half a century. He learned the local Tamil language as spoken by the Parathava community to make his conversion work easier. He had little knowledge of classical Tamil and its grammar. His goal was to instruct his missionary colleagues about the language spoken in the coastal area by the community and help in his mission. He wrote a book of grammar in Portuguese around 1549 CE and thus ” Arte da Lingua Malabar” stands as the first linguistic connection between India and the West.

Jeanne Hein, an American scholar, had been studying the life of Henriques and the period of the Portuguese in India, with a view to understand the work of missionaries from 1964. She was stuck as she could not get much help in decoding Tamil. V S Rajam Ramamurthi had come to the US in 1975 to do her PhD in Pennsylvania and met Jeanne Hein in ’78-’79. It was then that they collaborated on the project of translating the Tamil grammar book written in Portuguese into English. The translation was published in 2013. Jeanne, who died in 2013, did not know Tamil and Rajam, Portuguese. That the two managed to get the book to this shape is remarkable.

Arte da Lingua Malabar was first discovered by Fr Thaninayagam in his search for Tamil works of Europeans in South India. Jeanne acquired a microfiche of the same from Lisbon.

In Tuticorin, Henrique Henriques mastered the local language and worked hard to bring out a book of grammar for the language, as he believed that books of religious doctrines should be in local language. Henriques, apart from being the first to produce a dictionary (Tamil Portuguese), set up a Tamil press and printed books in Tamil script. The first book printed in Tamil script was “Thambiran Vanakkam” (1578), a 16-page translation of the Portuguese “Doctrina Christam”. It was followed by “Kirisithiyaani Vanakkam” (1579).

Rendering the Arte da meaningfully in English was not easy . For, Henrique took Tamil as he heard it spoken in the Parava villages and stretched it over the grammatical structure of Latin. In addition, when he Romanised Tamil, he did it in his language phonetics of 16th century .The document, at once, therefore becomes a product of Portuguese discovery relating to South India. As Caldwell records in his book ” A History of Tinnevelly”, the South Indian chieftains were interested in getting Arab steeds due to which Muslim traders were ruling the day in the coast.In fact the pearl fishermen were under their mercy as Muslims controlled the trade. The fishermen looked up to the newly arrived Portuguese who were stronger especially after they won the 14-years war at Vedalai in Kerala coast.

Joao de Cruz, a convert, persuaded the Paravas to become Christians so that the Portuguese would assist them. Eighty-five leading Paravas went to Cochin to seek Portuguese assistance and all of them were baptized and on return they were instrumental in converting a vast number into Christian fold. It was in this background that Henriques arrived in the coast to find that though converted the Paravas were following the traditions of their earlier faith.

To impart the knowledge of Christianity, language had to be learned and books written in local language.

Henriques worked for eight een years on writing the gram mar of Tamil as spoken in the coast so that Tamil material could be supplied in spreading the faith. He had no idea about Tamil grammar nor did he attempt to learn it.On the other hand, for the first time he devised a grammar for a language as spoken by the people he was dealing with and shaped a linguistic structure in India for Christianity .

Rajam has taken pains to show how he wrote the letters of the alphabet and their pronunciation. Since he himself spoke 16th century Portuguese, to understand his phonetics today , a specialist of the language of that day was necessary .To add to the confusion the Tamil dealt with was that of a community of 16th century of which even Tamils have very little knowledge. “We are examining a document which describes Tamil the way a foreigner heard it. I have not corrected errors except for minor changes,” says Rajam.

(A former marine chief engineer , the author is a historian, writer and heritage enthusiast)

source: http://www.timesofindia.indiatimes.com  / The Times of India / Home> City> Chennai / by K R A Narasiah / July 01st, 2015

Woman power to the fore at inaugural

A.Preethi created a record of sorts when the drove the first Metro service. Photo: K.V.Srinivasan
A.Preethi created a record of sorts when the drove the first Metro service. Photo: K.V.Srinivasan

For Preethi, from the time she aspired to serve as a loco pilot in the Railways to driving the first train in Chennai Metro, it has been one exciting ride.

As A. Preethi was about to ease the train out of the station during the maiden run of Chennai Metro Rail from Alandur to Koyambedu, she saw her mother and niece standing on the platform, eagerly watching the proceedings.

A surprised Preethi immediately beckoned the two to get inside the train. But, her mother asked her to stay put and gestured that she would take the next train.

“I am so proud of her,” Preethi’s mother said, even as her voice choked and her eyes welled up. “Initially, I did not want her to take this job. But now, I m so happy that she’s driving this train,” she said.

For Preethi, from the time she aspired to serve as a loco pilot in the Railways to driving the first train in Chennai Metro, it has been one exciting ride. “I was absolutely thrilled. Beginning now, my concern is to drive carefully and keep passengers safe,” she added.

While she is more than happy driving along this elevated stretch, Preethi is eager to drive through the tunnels of the Metro when the underground stretches become operational.

After Preethi, it was Jayashree’s turn on the second train. Both of them bagged diplomas in electronics and communication before taking up jobs as train operators. Soon, five more women operators will join the team.

source: http://www.thehindu.com / The Hindu / Home> News> Cities> Chennai / by Sunitha Sekar  & T.K. Rohit / June 30th, 2015

Consumer activist R. Desikan passes away

Activist R. Desikan, who spearheaded the consumer movement in the State, passed away on Saturday evening at his home at Vettuvankeni. He was 83.

Born in Srirangam in 1933 to Raghavachari, who ran an automobile business and Ranganayaki, Desikan, Chairman Emeritus of Consumers Association of India, studied in Madras Christian College and later moved to Mumbai where he worked in Reader’s Digest as an advertisement manager.

“It was in Bombay at the Reader’s Digest that we met and got married. We moved to Chennai in 1972 and printed our own magazines. He then ran the South Madras News, a tabloid from 1974 to 1983 after which he got full-time into the consumer movement,” recalls Nirmala Desikan, his wife, who is Chairman and Managing Trustee of CAI. “He lived his life for the consumer, thinking about how he could improve their life. Though he came across a lot of hurdles, he still ensured that the consumer’s view point was taken to the policy makers,” she adds. The couple has two daughters. His last rites were held on Sunday evening.

S. Saroja of the Citizen consumer and civic Action Group, who has been associated with Desikan for several years now, recalls he would remember small things about people. “He would make you feel special. He was quite active till the end and even on Saturday, he was conducting discussions on how the movement should be taken forward. We were to participate in a programme next week.”

The veteran activist began working full-time with the consumer movement in the State in 1983

source: http://www.thehindu.com / The Hindu / Home> News> Cities> Chennai / by Special Correspondent / Chennai – June 29th, 2015

An app that takes Bharatanatyam to all

Chennai :

As dusk falls on Saturday, the tinkling of anklets will fill the air at the Kapaleeswarar temple as well-known danseuse Dr Ranjani Ganesan Ramesh performs along with her disciples. And the performance is all the more special as it also marks the worldwide launch of an app that will help eager students across the world learn Bharatanatyam.

‘Learning Bharatanatyam from Dr Ranjani Ganesan Ramesh’ is the brainchild of software professional Srinivasa Gopal. “I felt that an increasing number of people were learning things online and with the help of apps, whether it is maths, science or music. And I felt that even Bharatanatyam could be learnt with the help of an app,” says Gopal, who then contacted his friend Ranjani, who lives in Mumbai.

For the Bharatanatyam and Kuchipudi exponent, it was an idea that immediately appealed. “Since 2008-09, I had been teaching dance to students all over the world through Skype and online classes,” says Ranjani, who currently lives in Mumbai.

Her mother, dancer Savithri Ganesan, had established the Ponnambalam Golden Temple of Fine Arts in Bengaluru in the late 1980s. Ranjani began teaching as her assistant and by the early 1990s, the academy grew, with centres in Mumbai and even Arizona in the US.

“Though I began using Skype to teach them, it had its own problems – connectivity was an issue and we also had to juggle time zones,” she says. “So I was also looking for something which would help make it easier.”

Ranjani and Gopal began working on the app in June 2014. The free app, which can be downloaded only onto Android smartphones, provides various levels of tutorials — the beginner level, where Ranjani discusses theory and some hand gestures and head movements; intermediate level, and advanced level. “It is similar to what a student will experience in a classroom,” says Ranjani.

According to Gopal, it will help eager students who may not be able to go to a dance class. “It saves the trouble of commuting and is also very user friendly,” he says. “We have also put up 25 videos that you can download.”

You can search for the app in the Google playstore apps section with the search terms ‘Indian Classical Dance’; ‘Learn Bharathanatyam’. The app, which has been online for the last 50 days, has had more than 1,000 downloads. “It will be formally launched worldwide on Saturday but we are encouraged by the response we have got so far,” says Ranjani. “Even people who have learnt dance find it interesting and want to learn further items through it.”

source: http://www.timesofindia.indiatimes.com / The Times of India / Home> City> Chennai / by Priya Menon, TNN / June 27th, 2015

BVB director gets award

BVBawardCF28jun2015

K.N. Ramaswamy, director, Bharatiya Vidya Bhavan, Chennai Kendra, was awarded the ‘Honour for Veteran Secretary Office Bearer of City Sabha’ by The Mylapore Academy at its 46th Annual Award function held recently. R.K. Raghavan, former director, CBI, presented the award.

source: http://www.thehindu.com / The Hindu / Home> Features> DownTown / June 28th, 2015

Exclusive reading space for women

This library is located in the midst of auto spares shops, but that does not deter women from flocking to it. D. MADHAVAN reports

Around 15 people can be accommodated at the two-room facility.Photo: M. Vedhan
Around 15 people can be accommodated at the two-room facility.Photo: M. Vedhan

At this branch library for women, eight women seem to be supernaturally focussed as they study for their competitive examinations. They ignore the sounds that pierce the air. This library, tucked inside the auto spare parts market at Adithanar Salai in Pudupet, draws many women from the neighbourhood, for the exclusive space its offers than for its collection of books.

The library, Pengal Noolagam, is one of the two state-run libraries that is operated exclusively for women readers at “rent-free” premises. The other library for women is located on Bells Road in Chepauk.

The library has readers from various localities, including Egmore, Vepery, Pudupet, Chetpet, Zambazzar, Royapettah and Nungambakkam every day between 10 a.m. and 5 p.m. “Every year, we add 1,000 books to the collection in the library. At present, we have 40,428 books, mostly Tamil, with around 400 members,” said Elango Chandra Kumar, Chennai District Library Officer, in-charge of 158 government libraries.

Opened in December 1962, the library has a diverse collection of books including fiction, non-fiction, poetry, academic, magazines and newspapers. Around 15 people can be accommodated at the two-room facility.

“After school hours, we come to the library as a group and spend at least an hour browsing novels, books on Tamil literature and newspapers,” said V. Kavitha, a class XII student from Egmore.            According to officials of the Directorate of Public Libraries, government libraries were started after Independence to encourage women to step out of their houses for education including higher studies. Opening of such exclusive public libraries for women was one of the steps taken by the state government to give more space for women.

Of 158 public libraries in the city, 92 libraries have own buildings and 54 libraries including women libraries at Pudupet and Chepauk are accommodated in rent-free buildings.

“Every year, we add 1,000 books to the library. At present, we have 40,428 books.”

source: http://www.thehindu.com / The Hindu /Home> Features> Down Town / June 28th, 2015

HIDDEN HISTORIES – The Madras media man

During the Emergency, Express Estates, that's now a mall, was a refuge for opposition leaders / The Hindu
During the Emergency, Express Estates, that’s now a mall, was a refuge for opposition leaders / The Hindu

June 25 was the 40th anniversary of the infamous Emergency — the then Indira Gandhi Government’s audacious attempt to stifle democracy. Very few from the South opposed it, and yet, much of the momentum for the resistance came from a feisty press baron of Madras — Ramnath Goenka, the owner of the Indian Express Group of newspapers.

Having come to Madras in the 1920s, with reportedly nothing more than “a lota and a nine-cubit dhoti,” to quote his biographer BG Verghese, Goenka was an all-India figure by the 1940s. Though his papers would later be published from many cities, Madras was always his headquarters, his residence being Hicks Bungalow on Patullos Road. His businesses operated from neighbouring Express Estates, a 23-acre property that he bought from the Madras Club for Rs. 14.85 lakhs in 1946. The quiet thoroughfare connecting the property to Mount Road is still Club House Road.

It is said that when Emergency was declared, Goenka was in the ICU of a Calcutta hospital, recovering from a heart attack. Raring to get into the thick of battle, he disconnected the tubes and “stole out to board a taxi but was detected in time and brought back”. The Indian Express came out on June 25, 1975, with a blank first editorial while the Financial Express published Tagore’s poem, Where the Mind is Without Fear.

A man who loved the good fight, Goenka challenged the Emergency in many ways. He helped in publishing Prajaniti, and its English counterpart, Everyman, vehicles that propagated the thoughts of Jayaprakash Narayan, the doughty opponent to Mrs Gandhi’s regime. The vast Express Estates was also where several leaders of the Opposition, most of them on the run from the police, could find safe haven. One among these was the firebrand George Fernandes. He had come first to the Spur Tank Road residence of tuberculosis specialist and Swatantra Party leader Dr Mathuram Santosham. On coming to know that the police were closing in, he was transferred to Express Estates.

The powers-that-be did their best to stifle Goenka and his publications. There were moves to acquire the business by media houses in sympathy with the ruling party, and when this was resisted, there were, to quote BG Verghese, “raids, court cases, a long series of pre-censorship orders, stoppages of bank advances and advertisements”— in short, all the standard operating procedures of a draconian Government. Goenka, however, stood his ground, despite being in poor health throughout. The stress that he and his family withstood then later resulted in the early demise of his son Bhagwan Das.

The battle against the Emergency gained ground and culminated in the General Elections in March 1977. That saw the landslide victory of the Janata Party and the first national debacle for the Congress. Goenka went on to fight other battles. The Express Estates is now a mall. But we do need a marker to commemorate the Marwari Media Man from Madras who fought the Emergency from there.

source: http://www.thehindu.com / The Hindu / Home> Features> MetroPlus / by Sriram V. / June 26th, 2015

In Wellesley, Nilgiris finds a link to Waterloo

Udhagamandalam :

As Europe celebrates the 200th anniversary of the battle of Waterloo, which changed the history of the continent, the Nilgiris in Tamil Nadu too has found a reason to mark the occasion. Fifteen years before leading the British troops against Napoleon in 1815, the hero of Waterloo, Duke of Wellington Arthur Wellesley, described by Queen Victoria as ‘the greatest man England ever produced’, was on the borders of Nilgiris fighting the Kerala Varma Pazhassi Raja of Wayanad. Details of this lesser known battle have been documented by the Nilgiri Documentation Centre (NDC).

As the governor of Mysore, after the death of Tipu Sultan in 1799, Wellesley had to personally intervene to put down resistance from local chieftains, including Pazhassi Raja, who were believed to have been promised material support by Napoleon himself. Within a year, Kerala Varma was wandering the jungles of Wynad to stay free and was finally captured in 1805, historical records available with the NDC confirm. NDC director Dharmalingam Venugopal says, “Though the Nilgiris is situated in a remote part of South India, its history is intertwined with national and international history”.

“Though Wellesley never visited the Nilgiris uplands, he had advocated establishing a sanatorium on the hills for British troops as recommended by John Sullivan in 1832,” adds Venugopal. According to him, Col John Ouchterlony chose the site of present day Wellington town for the sanatorium and a close associate of Wellesley, the Marques of Tweeddale, started work on a military barracks in 1851. After the death of Wellesley in 1852, the Marques suggested naming the military barracks after Wellesley. However, it was his successor, governor Sir Charles Trevelyan, who named the place Wellington in 1860. Historians too confirm the Nilgiris link to the Battle of Waterloo. Noted historian Narasiah says Wellesley fought Tipu in 1799.

source: http://www.timesofindia.indiatimes.com / The Times of India / Home> City> Chennai / by Shanta Thiagarajan, TNN / June 23rd, 2015