Category Archives: Records, All

Hosur school kid wins free trip to Nasa

Picture for representation purpose
Picture for representation purpose

Krishnagiri:

A class 10 student from remote Krishnagiri district conceived an “artificial, imaginary” planet where human beings can live, and won a free trip to the National Aeronautics Space Administration in the United States. Kiruthika, the 14-year-old girl, student of a private school in Hosur, came up with the idea of imaginary planet, ‘Aparana Basaraya’, named after the great astronomers of India, Aryabhatta and Bhaskaracharya.

The ‘Aparana Basaraya’ concept was sent as an entry for the space settlement design contest conducted annually by Nasa-Ames Research Centre for School Students. As many as 1,567 students in 18 countries, including Bulgaria, Canada, China, the Czech Republic, UAE, India, the United Kingdom and USA, sent in over 562 entries. Kiruthika’s entry did not make it to the top 10 in the contest but her idea recevied appreciation and she was offered a free trip to Nasa. Six students from Jalandhar in Punjab won the grand prize for conceiving ‘Vona’, a settlement in Mars.

KiruthikaCHENNAI29aug2014

“My passion is biology but I decided to take part in the competition after my neighbour informed me about it,” says Kiruthika. Her project is about an artificial planet which can be positioned in space. It is cylindrical at the bottom and doughnut-shaped at the top. Humans can occupy the cylindrical shaped bottom area and the doughnut-shaped area can be used by cattle and others. Oxygen, water and other essentials reache the planet through less expensive sources. The project failed to impress but the jury accepted the idea and gave Kiruthika a chance to visit

source: http://www.deccanchronicle.com / Deccan Chronicle / Home> Nation> Education / DC / Sanjeevi Anandan / August 27th, 2014

Madurai doctor to be honoured by Medical Council

Madurai :

There are many who practice medicine as profession. But, very few like Dr T Chellaiya stand out from the crowd. The 75-year-old old city doctor may be a man of a few words, but the medical community speaks more about him. They say that most of the doctors in the city approach him whenever they suffer from an ailment. Doctors who worked closely with him know his diagnosis will be simple and accurate. The general medicine practitioner who has put in 31 years of unblemished service in various government hospitals, has finally got his dues.

According to representatives of the Medical Council of Tamil Nadu he had been immaculate in his service and inspired many. However, he was not honoured by any awards. But now, the Medical Council of Tamil Nadu has proposed an award for Dr Chellaiya, which he will be receiving soon.

“It is only the second time since the Medical Council of Tamil Nadu instituted award for the medical practitioners who have rendered exemplary service to the people. In fact, we are honoured to felicitate him with the award,” said Dr K Senthil, vice-president of the council.

Apart from Chellaiya, five more doctors from the state including Dr George Abraham, a renowned nephrologist, Dr David Rajan, orthoscopy expert and Dr S Geethalakshmi, a microbiologist and presently the director of medical education will be honoured. Dr Chellaiya is the only doctor from the southern districts to get the award.

Chellaiya, a native of Salem, did his MBBS and MD in Madurai Medical College. He started working in Salem government hospital in 1965 where he worked for two years. He served in Government Rajaji Hospital, Madurai for 29 years since 1969.

Dr M Ramesh, surgical oncologist, one of his students noted him as one of the best teachers Madurai Medical College has ever seen. He used to stay with the patients in the wards for at least 10 hours. He stood as an example by his hard work. The students who followed him inculcated his habits like treating others without any bias and doing the job without any remarks. The students of Dr Chellaiya possess unique characteristics inspired by him, he said. Dr Chellaiya has taught 20 batches of students from the Madurai Medical College. At the age of 75, he is still practicing in his modest clinic on Vakkil New Street in the heart of the city. Talking about young doctors, Dr Chellaiya said “They are very brilliant. The secret is we have to be sincere to the patients and not to the hospital. Doctor-patient relationship should be good.”

source: http://www.timesofindia.indiatimes.com / The Times of India / Home> City> Madurai / TNN / August 26th, 2014

TRAVEL / The lost empire explored: The Cholas once had great power, but the world has forgotten them, writes David Keys

DEEP in the south of India lie the spectacular remains of one of the world’s most remarkable and most forgotten civilisations. In its heyday it was one of the half-dozen greatest powers on Earth. It controlled half a million square miles – more than five times the size of Britain. And under its wing literacy and the arts flourished.

Yet today, 1,000 years later, the Chola Empire is remembered only by a handful of specialist historians. If it had been European, or had given its name to some still-surviving nation, things might be different. But despite 400 years of glory, the Chola Empire disappeared from history; a sad fate for a civilisation which was among the most remarkable produced by the medieval world.

In some ways, it was the most significant of the dozen or so empires which rose and fell during India’s long, tumultuous history. It lasted some 460 years, longer than any of them. The Chola was also the only Asian empire (bar the Japanese) to have indulged, albeit briefly, in overseas expansion. It conquered Sri Lanka, the Andaman and Nicobar islands and, temporarily, parts of south- east Asia – the islands of Sumatra, Java and Bali, and the southern part of the Malay peninsula.

Most of these overseas conquests are shrouded in mystery. All that is known is that, in 1025, the Chola emperor Rajendra I dispatched an army, presumably on a large fleet, across 2,000 miles of ocean to conquer the southern half of south-east Asia. The records show that he succeeded and received the submission of large numbers of cities. Some historians believe that the Cholas then simply sailed back to India, but others suspect that Chola power persisted in some form in south- east Asia for two or three generations.

Certainly, the Chola conquest contributed

to a long process that had already started and which linked southern India and south-east Asia together in terms of trade and religion. The Indonesia/Malay region was a pivotal point in trade between China and India (and, indeed, the West), and both Java and Bali were largely Hindu. Rajendra’s conquest was perhaps the first military expression of a more general connection which had been developing for centuries.

Closer to home, in Sri Lanka, the Cholas’ overseas expansion is better documented – both in text, and in stone. Tourists today can still explore the great ruined city of Polonnaruva, founded by the Cholas as a capital for their newly conquered island territory.

But the emperor’s armies didn’t only head southwards. In the early 11th century, Chola forces marched almost 1,000 miles through India to the banks of the Ganges. Like the south-east Asian conquest, this epic ‘long march’ is also shrouded in mystery. Whether the emperor’s objectives in marching an army to the sacred river were political or purely religious is unknown. Certainly, the north of India, though temporarily subdued, was not incorporated into the empire – although holy Ganges water was carried back to a great new capital named in honour of the sacred river, and the ruler who had conquered it.

This capital was called Gangaikondacholapuram – literally ‘the City to which the Chola emperor brought the Ganges’. At the centre of their new metropolis, the Cholas built a magnificent temple and a vast three mile-long reservoir symbolically to hold the ‘captured’ waters of the Ganges. Both have survived. Under Chola rule, religion and politics grew ever closer together, with the emperor projecting himself as the representative, almost a manifestation, of God on Earth. Large temples were built, for the first time, as royal establishments. The Cholas probably built more temples than any other Indian kingdom or empire. Each temple was a masterpiece. Even today, the Chola heartland – along the Kaveri River in the state of Tamil Nadu – is full of beautiful, delicately carved temples, some the size of tiny chapels, others as big as European cathedrals. In the very centre of what was the empire, there are still 40 Chola temples in an area half the size of greater London. The most spectacular structure is the 63m-high pyramid- shaped central shrine in the city of Thanjavur, the Chola capital before Gangaikondacholapuram.

Chola art and architecture were among the finest in the world. Indeed, in cast bronze sculpture and hard-stone sculpture, Chola art is unsurpassed. Millions of figures, deftly carved in granite, can still be seen on their temples, while in museums, in Thanjavur and Madras, visitors can marvel at the artistry and craftsmanship of the bronze figurines and statues.

The Cholas not only nurtured an artistic boom; they also fostered a massive expansion in education. Political stability and imperial grants – both to the temples which ran education and to the students themselves – led to the expansion of local schools and elite colleges for higher castes. The education system – which operated from a religious perspective but also promoted literacy, mathematics and astronomy – was probably, at least in part, responsible for the development of a competent imperial administration and broadened international horizons. Some estimates suggest that literacy rose to around 20 per cent – perhaps the highest in the medieval world.

An unplanned result of this high level of education was an increase in intellectual dissidence. One of the greatest Indian religious thinkers – the 11th-century philosopher Ramanuja – was a product of the Chola empire, although he was ultimately expelled for his views. In many ways, he can be seen as the founder of Hindu monotheism with his belief in a unitary personal god, the ultimate font of love and compassion.

In the 12th century there flourished an even more dissident religious movement. The Lingayats professed a sort of cynical humanism which questioned the very fundamentals of religion – the authority of India’s holy books, the Vedas (the equivalent of the Bible), and reincarnation itself. Socially, they were also radical, challenging the taboo on widows re-marrying, and condemning child marriages. This dissident movement derived much support from the lower castes.

The empire also increased the importance and institutionalisation of local government. Each group of five to 10 villages had an elected district council, which in turn had endless subcommittees dealing with everything from land rights to irrigation, law and order to food storage. Every household in a district had the right to vote – and the councils enjoyed considerable power. The Chola emperors encouraged their development, probably as a counter-balance to the power of local vassal rulers, who owed obedience to the empire.

Although the Cholas ruled for more than four centuries, they did so with a remarkable light touch. Local responsibility for local affairs was encouraged, and newly conquered local rulers were allowed to keep their titles and lands, though under ultimate Chola control.

The light touch was brought even to waging war. The Cholas exemplified the Indian principle of war – the dharma yuddha, literally, the principle of the fair fight. Battles were normally pre- arranged and fought in daylight on a level field between equal numbers of troops. Defeated princes could carry on living and prospering, but had to pay homage and cough up tribute for the emperor’s treasury and women to act as concubines and courtiers.

Presiding over this mixture of autocracy and democracy, a cocktail of religious orthodoxy and dissidence, and a surge of artistic creativity – not to mention their concubines – the Chola emperors considered themselves the rulers of the world. They did, of course, look on India as the Continent of the Cosmos.

Yet now they are forgotten, their achievements ignored by the world. There is not one book in print on the Chola Empire; nor a travel-company tour to most of their extraordinary temples.

Where to go and what to see

*** spectacular ** very interesting * interesting

1 CIDAMBARAM ** Spectacular Chola temple with rich sculpture, a magnificent pavilion with 984 pillars, and a shrine to the sun god complete with stone chariot wheels. Here, one of the Hindu trinity of gods, Siva, is said to have performed his cosmic dance of joy. A delightful story has it that Siva’s wife, Parvati, challenged him to a dance contest, which took place where the temple now stands. Siva won by way of a clever ruse. He contrived to drop his earring so that he could pick it up and put it back with his toe; his spouse was, however, too modest to raise her leg – and lost.

2 DARASURAM ** Marvellous temple built by the Chola Emperor Rajaraja II in the mid- 12th century. One beautiful pavilion – in imitation of a war chariot – has wheels and rearing horses. See also relief portraying the lives of the 63 saints of the god Siva.

3 GANGAIKONDACHOLA- PURAM *** See the magnificent and richly sculpted Brihadishvara Temple, built of granite as the centrepiece of a new Chola capital in circa AD1025. The main shrine is 160ft (50m) high. The three-mile 11th-century Cholaganga reservoir (for sacred water) also survives.

4 KALIYAPATTI * The ‘Place of Stone’. Small temple, c 900.

5 KILAIYUR * Double shrine, c 900.

6 KODUMBALUR ** Triple shrine, c 900.

7 KUMBAKONAM ** Beautiful sculptures of female dancers and musicians, the sun god and the god Siva – in the form of a divine young ascetic – adorn the Nagesvara Temple, built c 870. According to legend, this riverside temple was built where a pot was washed ashore containing the seed of creation and the Hindu bible.

8 MELAKKADAMBUR ** Chola temple, c 1100, with magnificent sculptures of mythical animals, dancing women and sages.

9 NARTTAMALAI ** Constructed c 870, the Vijayalaya Cholesvara Temple is said to have been built by the first Chola emperor, Vijayalaya.

10 PANANGUDI * Chola temple built c 900.

11 POLONNARUVA (in Sri Lanka) *** Ruins of a great city founded as a new capital for the island by the Chola emperor Rajaraja following his conquest of Sri Lanka in 993. Visit the many medieval buildings, including two Chola temples. Because they are not functioning temples, it is possible to visit the sacred innner sanctums, where one can see examples of that most important of Hindu symbols, the stone obelisk called the lingam. It represents the creativity and fertility of the human phallus and the safety and shade of the archetypal tree.

12 PULLAMANGAI ** One of the most beautiful of all Chola temples, c 910. Perfectly preserved, with miniature relief.

13 SRINIVASANALLUR ** See the 10th-century temple of Koranganatha – the Lord of the Monkey. Beautiful sculptures of medieval worshippers in their aristocratic clothes.

14 SRIRANGAM *** This most important temple to the god Vishnu in southern India has exquisite carvings of female musicians. It is dedicated to a young girl called Andal who became enraptured with Vishnu.

15 SWAMIMALAI ** Regarded, mythologically, as a sort of divine weapons store, this Chola temple is dedicated to the war god Murugan.

16 THANJAVUR (also spelt Tanjore or Tanjavur) *** Once the capital of the Chola empire, this town is home to the greatest of all Chola buildings – the Rajarajesvara (or Brihadishvara) temple. Built in AD1010 by the emperor Rajaraja the Great, it is 210ft (63m) high – the tallest temple in all India. On top of its sumptuously sculpted pyramid-shaped tower is an 80-ton cupola, said to be fashioned out of a single block of granite placed there with the aid of a four-mile temporary ramp.

17 TIRUKANDIYUR * Small Chola temple.

18 TIRUKKATTALAI * The ‘temple of the holy command’, c 900.

19 TIRUPPUR * Temple, c 900.

20 TIRUVAIYARU * By uttering the mystical (and apparently meaningless) word ol, the Chola poet Sundarar succeeded in parting the waters, Red Sea style, of the Chola heartland’s great river, Kaveri, so that he and a visiting king could praise the god Siva at the temple of Tiruvaiyaru on the other side.

21 TIRUVANNAMALAI ** This temple – with stone sculptures depicting 108 classical Indian dance poses – was built in the place where Siva turned himself into what he claimed was an eternal unending pillar of fire.

22 TIRUVARUR * The temple is built at the legendary scene of a great Chola miracle of death and resurrection. The son of a Chola king – out joyriding, as princes will, in one of the royal chariots – ran over and killed a calf. A somewhat distraught cow – the calf’s mother – complained to the king, who was furious and decided to punish his son by killing him. Understandably he found this difficult, indeed morally impossible. So, obligingly, the king’s prime minister carried out the execution. Filled with sadness, both prime minister and king committed suicide. But all was not lost, for the god Siva decided to resurrect them all.

23 TIRUVELVIKKUDI * See the temple of Manavalesvara.

24 TRIBHUVANEM ** See the Kampaharesvara temple, built by the Chola emperor Kulottunga III in c 1200.

25 VIRALUR * See the Bhumisvara temple, c 880.

26 VISALUR * Small temple.

FURTHER INFORMATION

The Bharatiya Vidya Bhavan (Institute of Indian Culture) at 4A Castletown Road, West Kensington, London W14 9HQ (tel: 071-381 3086/4608) has information on Chola culture, including folklore, music and temple dancing (the institute puts on performances).

FURTHER READING

Architecture and culture: Guide to the Monuments of India, Volume 1 by George Michell (Penguin pounds 18.99), invaluable encyclopaedic gazetteer; The Art and Architecture of the Indian Subcontinent by J Harle (Yale pounds 16.95), in the Pelican History of Art Series, the best general survey; A History of India, Volume 1 by R Thapar (Penguin pounds 6.99); Hindu Art, T R Blurton (British Museum Press pounds 14.95); The Hindu Temple by George Michell (Chicago pounds 11.95), readable introduction to temple architecture; Hindu Myths translated by Wendy O’Flaherty (Penguin pounds 6.99); Hinduism by K Sen (Penguin pounds 5.99), excellent – and short – introduction.

Guidebooks: India: A Travel Survival Kit (Lonely Planet pounds 13.95) – a new edition is due in July; South India (APA Publications/Insight pounds 11.95); South Asian Handbook (Trade and Travel pounds 18.95), the best general guide.

Travel accounts: No Full Stops in India by Mark Tully (Penguin pounds 6.99), a recent view of India by the BBC’s long-time correspondent; India: A Million Mutinies Now by V S Naipaul (Minerva pounds 6.99), the latest of Naipaul’s excellent personal impressions of India; On A Shoestring to Coorg by Dervla Murphy (Arrow pounds 5.99), lively exploration of the South.

All titles available from good bookshops, and by mail order from Daunt Books for Travellers, 83 Marylebone High Street, London W1M 3DE

(071-224 2295). DK

source: http://www.independent.co.uk / The Independent / Home> Arts + Ents / by David Keys / Sunday – May 09th, 1993

Vintage showcase on 21 century roads

Around 130 cars and 40 bikes, dating between 1926 and 1975, participated in the 10th edition of the annual heritage car and bike rally — Photo: B. Jothi Ramalingam / The Hindu
Around 130 cars and 40 bikes, dating between 1926 and 1975, participated in the 10th edition of the annual heritage car and bike rally — Photo: B. Jothi Ramalingam / The Hindu

At MyTVS Heritage Rally on Sunday, one did not have to imagine what it would have been like back then.

Vintage vehicles, which are the stuff of quaint black-and-white archives, motored down Egmore roads, before arranging themselves on the grounds of Don Bosco School.

The road show of the 10th edition of the annual heritage car and bike rally, organised by Madras Heritage Motoring Club (MHMC), a vintage and classic car and bike club, drew both new entries as well as those participating for years.

V.S. Kylas, founder-secretary of MHMC, said they received the highest number of entries in this year’s edition, with around 127 cars and 40 bikes, dating between 1926 and 1975, participating.

“The response from the public was overwhelming and the footfall was around 20,000,” he said. The new entries included a 1959 Chevrolet Impala, Jaguar Mark II and an Austin London Taxicab, among others.

However, among the sparkling vintage vehicles, the ones that drew some of the largest crowds were those with photographs of the famous personalities who owned them.

Lined up were noted industrialist (late) A. Sivasailam’s 1956 Dodge Kingsway-Delux, A.V. Meiyappan’s 1938 Vauxhall 14, and Gemini Ganesan’s 1952 Ford Prefect Saloon, among others.

The road show was flagged off by Vinod Dasari, managing director, Ashok Leyland. The guest of honour was R. Dinesh, joint managing Director, TVS and Sons. Sudhir Rao, managing director, Skoda India, gave away the prizes in various categories.

S. Srivardhan’s 1938 Mercedes Benz, Naresh Bangara’s 1959 Ambassador, and Arjun Ananth’s 1966 MGB, won in the Concours D’ Elegance upto 1940, 1941-1960, and 1961-1975 categories, respectively.

Sumanth Shaganti’s 1936 Royal Enfield was the winner in the ‘best maintained bike up to 1940’ category; Sumanth’s 1943 James won in the 1941-1960 category; and R. Srinivas’ 1959 Java won in the 1961-75 category. The winners were judged by experts Raja Mookerjee and Partha Banik from Kolkata. MHMC has organised close to 60 events in the past 12 years and has 120 members now, said Mr. Kylas.

source: http://www.thehindu.com / The Hindu / Home> News> Cities> Chennai> Events / by Asha Sridhar / Chennai – August 25th, 2014

MADRAS 375 – When Madras clocked the time

In 1802, the port city of Madras, for all official purposes, was gifted with the knowledge of its ‘place’ in the world.

John Goldingham, working from the Madras Observatory in Nungambakkam, identified the longitude of the city as 80°18’30” east of the Greenwich Meridian, five hours and 30 minutes ahead of the mean time.

With the newly-instituted coordinates, days officially began at midnight, as opposed to sunrise. For the first time in the subcontinent, an official local time zone could be used.

For the mercantile British rulers, for whom the adage ‘time is money’ struck close to home, it was imperative that Madras Time remain consistent and accurate.

At Fort St. George, a time gun was shot at noon and 8 p.m., every day. The dropping of the semaphore near the marine office at 8 a.m. and 2 p.m. further kept tabs on the ticking clock.

In 1884, with the International Meridian Conference in Washington D.C, Bombay and Calcutta were declared British India’s two official time zones.

Threatening to severely complicate the functioning of the railways, the government was compelled to adopt a standard time that could function as an intermediary between the two time zones. Madras, by virtue of its equidistant positioning, lent itself to exactly this.

Madras Time thus became ‘railway time’. By the late 19 century, the entire subcontinent (except Madras) was straddling two time zones — local time and ‘railway (Madras) time’.

Jim Masseoles, an Australian historian, in his essay ‘Bombay Time’, notes that all train schedules had Madras Time printed beside the local time from then on.

Madras, in effect, clocked time for the entire country. In 1881, Sir James Fergusson, the Governor of Bombay Presidency, created quite a stir when he unilaterally passed a government resolution to shift to Madras Time, which was quickly rescinded, consequently.

In many ways, Madras Time was the precursor to the Indian Standard Time (IST), established in 1906. Interestingly, even when Madras had to shift to IST, the city lucked out by resetting its clocks merely nine minutes in advance.

source: http://www.thehindu.com / The Hindu / Home> News> Cities> Chennai / by Nitya Menon / Chennai – August 22nd, 2014

Villagers seek heritage tag for Vagaikulam tank

Tirunelveli :

To protect thousands of migratory birds taking shelter in their village tank, Veerasamuthiram panchayat in Kadayam union in Tirunelveli has urged the government to declare it as a bio-diversity heritage site. In a grama sabha meeting held on Independence Day, the village panchayat passed a resolution appealing to authorities to declare the Vagaikulam tank a heritage site so that more conservation measures could be mooted.

According to Agasthyamalai Community-based Conservation Centre (ACCC) of Ashoka Trust for Research in Ecology and Environment (ATREE),

which carried out a study, Vagaikulam is an important nesting area for many migratory bird species and it is the only safe roosting site in an area of over 100 square kilo meters. It attracts over 10,000 birds and half of them migrate to the area on every winter season.

So far 90 species of birds have been recorded in Vagaikulam tank, including cormorants and herons. Eight species are migrants coming from Europe and four are from Himalayas. Twenty species of birds like black headed ibis, glassy ibis, oriental darter, black crowned night heron, little cormorant, Indian shag, spoon bills nest mostly on the karuvel (accacia nilotica) trees, which were planted by the social forestry division, said M Mathivanan of ACCC.

However, 80% of these nesting trees have been cut down after they were auctioned and villagers have taken up a legal battle to protect the remaining trees, said A Nagoor Kani, president of Veerasamuthiram panchayat. “The contractor has applied for fresh felling orders hence we have decided to safeguard our tank and birds,” he said.

During the grama sabha meeting, they passed resolution to declare it as bio-diversity heritage site and prevent further felling of trees. The villagers also invited Alankulam MLA, Rajendra for the meeting and he planted a tree inside the tank. The villagers are now planning to plant more trees in the tank area. “The birds give us an identity and many research scholars and college students come here to see birds. We want our tank to be protected,” said R Poomani, a panchayat ward member of Veerasamuthiram. “After Koonthankulam, a bird sanctuary in Tiruenveli district, Vagaikulam is next big nesting site for migratory birds in the district. A bio-diversity heritage tag will help villagers to save their tank and protect these migratory birds,” Mathivanan mentioned. Having passed the resolution, the villagers have decided to apply to National Bio-diversity Authority office in Chennai for recognition.

source: http://www.timesofindia.indiatimes.com / The Times of India /Home> City> Madurai / TNN / August 24th, 2014

Kid Literature Writer,TN Novelist Among Akademi Awardees

Chennai :

Era NatarajanCF24aug2014Two Tamil writers were on the list of Sahitya Akademi award recipients across the country — Era Natarajan of Cuddalore, who is known for his contribution to children’s literature, and R Abilash, a novelist and poet based in Chennai.

While Natarajan was among 23 chosen for the Bal Puraskar, Abilash was on the Yuva Puraskar list of 21 awardees. The awards carry `50,000 and an engraved copper plaque.

Natarajan  (50) hails from Lalgudi in Tiruchy district, has 27 years experience in teaching and now serves as principal of the Krishnasamy Memorial Matriculation Higher Secondary School, Cuddalore. Besides being a double MA — in English and Psychology — he has an MS (Education Management) as well.

Natarajan came into the limelight after his book Ayeesha, which dwells on the problems faced by a schoolgirl, was released in 1996. Over one lakh copies of the book have been sold so far. It is also a textbook in seven autonomous colleges and three universities. Ayeesha was made compulsory learning for government school teachers when they underwent training under the Sarva Shiksha Abhiyan project. Natarajan has also authored several scientific novels for children and many of them have been translated into Telugu, Konkani, English and French.

Vignana Vikaramathithyan Kathaigal for which Natarajan has won the Bal Puraskar, too is a significant contribution to children’s literature. “During my 27 years of teaching experience, I learned a lot from children and they have now taken the form of books. I dedicate the award to all veteran writers who had dedicated their entire life to children’s literature, particularly Azha Valliappa and Paavanan,” Natarajan told Express.

Yuva Puraskar winner R Abilash hails from Padmanabhapuram in Nagercoil and now resides in Chennai. He has been awarded for his novel Kaalgal published by Uyirmmai Publications.

Abilash, a novelist, poet, essayist and translator in Tamil, is a PhD scholar and the  books authored by him include Intiravu Nilavin Keezh,  an anthology of translated modern Haiku poems, Cricketin Marum Nirankal, a collection of sports articles, and Bruce Lee — A Biography.

source: http://www.newindianexpress.com / The New Indian Express / Home> States> Tamil Nadu / by T. Muruganananadham / August 24th, 2014

‘Doyens of Madras’ honoured

Prominent city personalities were honoured at the awards ceremony on Saturday Photo: K. Pichumani / The Hindu
Prominent city personalities were honoured at the awards ceremony on Saturday Photo: K. Pichumani / The Hindu

Historians, chroniclers and natives of the cities of Tamil Nadu should make the history and tradition of their places known to the world, said Governor K. Rosaiah.

Historians, chroniclers and natives of the cities of Tamil Nadu should make the history and tradition of their places known to the world, said Governor K. Rosaiah.

He was addressing the audience at Doyens of Madras–2014, an award ceremony organised by the Ambassador Group on Saturday.

Eight persons — M.S. Swaminathan, agricultural scientist, Prathap C. Reddy, founder of Apollo Hospitals, V. Baskaran, former Indian hockey team captain, A. Vellayan, executive chairman of Murugappa Group, B.A. Kodandaraman, chairman and managing director, Viveks, Bhaskar Ramamurthi, director of IIT-Madras, Priyadarshini Govind, director of Kalakshetra, and Vijay Amritraj, tennis player — received the award.

In his speech, Mr. Rosaiah said every place in Tamil Nadu should come out with celebrations like the one just observed in Chennai.

He said Madras stands as a symbol of national integration, growth, peace and prosperity.

“Above all is its uniqueness in preservation of its rich tradition and culture,” said the Governor.

He said the places and buildings in localities like Mylapore and Triplicane may have changed, with multi-storeyed and commercial buildings cropping up, but the lifestyle around the temples and the street houses haven’t changed much. “These are really marvels of Madras,” he said.

The role played by various forums, organisations, historians, and the media, especially The Hindu, in conduct of Madras Day celebrations, are laudable and stands for emulation, said Mr. Rosaiah.

He also stressed the importance of enlightening the youth of our historical past, rich traditions and culture.

Some of the awardees too shared their memories about Madras with the gathering.

source: http://www.thehindu.com / The Hindu / Home> News> Cities> Chennai / Staff Reporter / Chennai – August 24th, 2014

The tale of an unsung doctor

Ratnam Pillai
Ratnam Pillai

Ratnam Pillai, a Hyderabad-based doctor, worked as medical assistant to Sir Ronald Ross who linked mosquito bite to malaria in 1897. The proud possession for the four grandchildren of Dr. Pillai – Shela, Shirley, Franklin and Samuel – are the medals.

The whole world remembers the contribution of Sir Ronald Ross, the doctor who linked mosquito bite to malaria on August 20, 1897 and won a Nobel Prize for the discovery. A very few, however, know that there was a Hyderabad-based doctor, Ratnam Pillai, who was a medical assistant to Dr. Ross at the military hospital for Indian soldiers in Begumpet during the epochal discovery.

While the contribution of Dr. Pillai was largely left unsung, his grandchildren still cherish his priceless memorabilia, which they could salvage from getting lost in time. Staying in a modest house in West Marredpally, Secunderabad, Dr. Pillai’s grandchildren have been fighting for due recognition to their grandfather’s work for quite some time.

“He did his medicine from Royapuram Medical School in Madras and joined Indian Medical Service as hospital assistant at Military Hospital, Bolaram and later at Begumpet hospital with Dr. Ross. He has served Indian soldiers in the Burmese war and was promoted as Subedar Major,” says his granddaughter, Shela Paupens.

The proud possession for the four grandchildren of Dr. Pillai – Shela, Shirley, Franklin and Samuel – are the medals.

“My grandfather was awarded silver medals by the British Government for his meritorious service. In fact, he also has received an honorary sword for his work. You can clearly see his name written on the edges of these medals,” says a proud Samuel.

RatnamMedalsTELANGANA23aug2014

‘Contribution has gone unnoticed’
Historians point out that the contribution of Indian soldiers and the doctor in malaria research has largely gone unnoticed.

“The hospital was meant for Indian soldiers, who had malaria and the research was done on them. In fact, Dr. Pillai had played a vital role in malaria research, but his contribution was not acknowledged,” says historian Anuradha Reddy.

Interestingly, a large number of members from Tamil-speaking community had migrated to Secunderabad in the early 1800s after the signing of subsidiary alliance between Nizams and the British. “We believe that Dr. Pillai too migrated from Madras to Secunderabad during this period,” she says.

Family memebers of Rathna Pillai, who worked as a deputy under Ronald Ross, showing his medals and Sword of Honour in Hyderabad on Tuesday. Photo: D. Chakravarthy
Family memebers of Rathna Pillai, who worked as a deputy under Ronald Ross, showing his medals and Sword of Honour in Hyderabad on Tuesday. Photo: D. Chakravarthy

The family members too lament lack of recognition.

“When he died in 1943, we were told by our relatives that he was draped in the British flag and laid to rest in Bhoiguda cemetery. We have tried to find the grave, but unfortunately could not succeed. All we have are his medals and accounts of his work with Dr. Ross. The government should commemorate Dr. Pillai’s contribution too,” the grandchildren demand.

source: http://www.thehindu.com / The Hindu / Home> News> Cities> Hyderabad / by M. Sai Gopal / Hyderabad – August 09th, 2014

The house of lords

There’s a little known story about Sir C P Ramaswami Aiyar, corroborated by a piece of furniture. It stands plain and tall, so tall in fact that it keeps the writer on his feet and denies him the luxury of a chair. “So he wouldn’t nap,” explains Nanditha Krishna, Sir CP’s greatgranddaughter, “It had been predicted that the child, CP, would never pass an exam in his life, and it was to counter that forecast that his father had the table built.”

It continues to stand long after its prodigious student’s passing, preserved in a corner of a suite on the first floor of The Grove, CP’s house on Eldams Road. Arranged alongside are a day bed, a writing desk and a few of his personal effects. The house itself is a monument to his life — of professional ambition, political fervour and common domesticity. Built in 1885-86 by CP’s maternal and paternal grandfathers, it was erected on a plot of land that was part of an expansive property called The Baobab, after an eponymous tree. The land had belonged to John Bruce Norton, whose son Barrister Eardley Norton was one of the founders of the Indian National Congress.

Norton sold part of his property in 1875 to P Chentsal Rao Pantulu (first Registrar General of Madras), who in turn offloaded part of it to Conjeevaram Venkatasubbaiyar, CP’s maternal grandpa. He had the house built in the colonial style with a colonnaded front porch, but suitably adapted within to house the practical and cultural exigencies of south Indian living, like a ‘kalyanakoodam’, a hall reserved for marriages.

The house structurally is as it was, even though it has lately been put to alternate use — as the office of the C P Ramaswami Aiyar Foundation, lecture hall, research centre, library and art gallery. Although old rooms have found new purpose — the C P Art Centre was originally a cowshed; the Venirul Art Gallery once housed a boiler, saunas and massage rooms; the kalyanakoodam made for a convenient lecture hall; three big suites upstairs have been absorbed into the Indological Research Centre, and a bathroom is now part of the library.

The foundation has adopted a ‘use as is’ approach, fitting in modern amenities without compromising the original form and material. “I refused to put in a false ceiling in the kalyanakoodam just to accommodate a few split ACs, so I had about eight split ACs installed around the hall, kept the old ceiling fans and added a few new ones and replaced the CFLs with LEDs to keep the place from overheating…,” says Krishna, director of the foundation, walking us past Burma teak pillars, Belgian ceilings, and Venetian floors still in impeccable condition.

The foundation spends `2-3 lakh every year on maintenance. To save the couple of hundred photographs and prized art collection (including an 8-ft Roerich portrait of CP), it has sheathed the backs and sides of the frames in transparent plastic. It’s a historic house that has welcomed all rank and file of man and beast — from Ramsay MacDonald, to Mahatma Gandhi, Jinnah, Nehru, Annie Besant, Indira Gandhi and “any dog in Madras that wished to make it their house”. Political visitors apart, little else has changed.

source: http://www.timesofindia.indiatimes.com / The Times of India / Home> City> Chennai / by Joeanna Rebello Fernandes , TNN / August 22nd, 2014