Planes have started to roll on the country’s first runway with a bridge. Two flights — an A320 and a B737 — landed on the secondary runway at Chennai airport on Saturday, for the first time after it was extended across Adyar river at a cost of 550 crore.
The pilots had to peer out of the cockpit to control the plane’s altitude, speed and navigate because instrument landing system (ILS), which sends out signals that help a jetliner to home in on a runway, has not been installed.
An Air India Port Blair-Chennai flight was the first to land on the runway at 2.42pm and a Jet Airways flight from Goa to Chennai landed at 4.16pm. It was part of Airports Authority of India’s (AAI) efforts to commission the runway for use.
“Pilots followed visual flight rules as the runway does not have ILS. The runway was found to be fine and the landing proved that A320 and B737 can use it for landing without hassle,” said a senior AAI official.
The AAI has decided to use the second runway only when main runway is closed for maintenance. Besides the fact that it does not have ILS, there are restrictions on its usable length and available space for flight movement.
Director General of Civil Aviation (DGCA) cleared the runway as safe for use in March. Officials were satisfied with the third-party study conducted by Anna University after aviation experts raised concerns on safety of the runway bridge.
The bridge was built to extend the runway length to 11,500ft. In June 2013, DGCA asked the AAI to appoint an independent agency to evaluate the structural safety of the runway bridge. tnn
source: http://www.timesofindia.indiatimes.com / The Times of India / Home> City> Chennai / TNN / May 11th, 2014
Elango Tamilvendan, a Plus-Two student of Valluvar Matriculation Higher Secondary School in Arakkonam, has achieved something rather different. He has secured centums in four subjects — Physics, Chemistry, Mathematics and Computer Science. He scored 179 in Tamil and 181 in English taking his total to 1,160/1,200.
“I want to be a ‘sincere’ government servant after my studies in Electronics and Communication engineering at the Anna University,” Tamilvendan said, adding, “If I joined a multinational company with a fat salary package, I alone will be happy. But as a government employee, I can make hundreds of people happy.”
Topper Aspires CA
Maria Baptist Anitha of Auxilium Girls HSS in Vellore, who secured 200/200 in statistics with a group total of 798 and grand total of 1,181/1,200 and got State third rank in Statistics, desires to be a Chartered Accountant.
“I started working for the exam right from the beginning of the year. My parents and teachers extended full support,” said Anitha who secured 200 in Economics, 199 each in Commerce and Accountancy, 191 in Tamil and 192 in English.
source: http://www.newindianexpress.com / The New Indian Express / Home> States> Tamil Nadu / by Express News Service / May 11th, 2014
The pioneer of the 24-hour medical clinic in Malaysia, Dr K.M. Reddy, has died at the age of 88.
Dr Reddy, who set up 25 clinics nationwide more than 50 years ago, died in London on April 19.
Dr Romel D’Silva, who ran one of his clinics and worked with him for about 40 years, described him as “a man for all seasons, who would help people regardless of their background”.
“The clinics were his innovation, his brainchild. There were none in Malaysia at the time and so he contributed a lot in this regard,” he said.
Dr Reddy was the eldest son of a landowning family in Madras, India. After graduating from Madras Medical College, he travelled to Malaysia in 1952 to further his career in medicine, dedicating his first 10 years to government service.
He started his career at the Penang General Hospital, which was then considered the medical headquarters of Malaysia.
“He started out as a general practitioner at the Penang General Hospital looking after the TB clinic there, and later a leprosy clinic in Pulau Jerejak,” Dr D’Silva said.
“In 1957, he went on to become director and head of the Sungai Buloh leprosy settlement, the second largest leprosy settlement in the world.”
There, Dr Reddy was dedicated to eliminating public prejudice against leprosy and assisting patients in their return to society.
“He was the first to start discharging leprosy patients. However, the government at the time thought it unsafe, even though by then they were not infectious or posed any threat to society,” Dr D’Silva said.
He left in 1965 to open his own private practice in Jalan Ipoh, Kuala Lumpur, which he ran daily until 9pm.
“His practice soon got a lot busier and it was then he thought it best that he run it for 24 hours,” Dr D’Silva said.
The clinic was equipped with advanced facilities and was staffed by four doctors.
“The original clinic was the biggest and busiest. After a while, he encouraged the doctors there to set up more branches elsewhere,” he said.
“The first branch was in Jalan Othman, Petaling Jaya, and the second in Setapak. By the time I first met him, he had set up 21 more clinics.”
Dr Reddy was a founding member of the Malaysian Medical Association. His pioneering work was at the forefront of rehabilitation projects, which the World Health Organisation and International Leprosy Association helped to develop further.
He was known to treat those in greatest need without charge. Such was his generosity that when in Bagan Datoh, Perak, he was known to receive gifts of coconuts in lieu of payment.
He moved to England in the 1970s where his five children and six grandchildren were educated and settled. Among his four daughters and a son, two of them — one daughter and the son — also became doctors.
Dr Reddy’s eldest daughter Jothi, who is a lawyer, said her father’s natural kindness and generosity carried over among his own children.
“He would often offer free services to those who couldn’t afford them,” she said.
“He was also a mentor to many and helped guide and inspire others to achieve their very best.”
Meet Fathima Shabana who’s cleared her JEE (Main) and wants to study computer science from an IIT.
It has been a week since the Joint Entrance Examination (JEE) results were released, and yet, the smile on 17-year-old Fathima Shabana’s face has still not diminished. After all, she has been working hard for the last four years; and she has just cleared the JEE (Main). This means that she has already made the grade to go to an Indian Institute of Information Technology (IIIT) or National Institute of Technology (NIT) or state engineering institutions that will offer seats on the basis of JEE (Main) merit list like the Anna University in Tamil Nadu.
If she manages to make it through to the JEE (Advanced) examination on the May 25, she might well make it into an IIT!
Fathima’s is no mean achievement, especially when you look at her background. Her father, Shahul Hameed, dropped out after Class VIII and her mother didn’t continue past primary school.
Ever since he made his way to Chennai from Siruthondanalloor village in Thoothukudi district in search of a job almost two decades ago, Shahul Hameed has been washing dishes and serving food at a pushcart eatery.
His day starts very early in the morning, before the city wakes up, and ends only by 10 at night. For all of this, he takes home Rs 300 a day.
Ever since he was told of his daughter’s phenomenal achievement, he has been a happy and proud man. “My daughter has made me very proud. She was always an extremely hard working child, and I always knew that she would pass all of her exams with flying colours. I could not afford to send her to a private school. So, I sent her and my son to a corporation school so that we didn’t have to pay for their fees and textbooks.”
“It has always been her dream to be an engineer. But I earn only Rs 300 a day; I do not have the wherewithal to send her to an engineering college. I grow distressed just thinking of shattering my daughter’s dreams. But I am sure some good soul will come forward to help her pursue her dreams,” he says, while making dosas for a customer.
Her equally proud mother, Bahira Begum, said, “Neither me nor my husband could study much. But we made sure that our children studied, and studied well at that. We thought we should give them an education even if we had to borrow money to do so. We first sent Fathima to a private school, but we soon found that we could not afford to educate our children in a private school. We had to then move both of them to a corporation school. But in spite of that, not once did I have to tell Fathima to sit down and study. She was always happier among her books than she was playing with other girls of her age. She would sit at home and write something all the time.
In fact, I would tell her to take a break and go out and play. But she never would.”
Bahira remembers that her daughter never asked her for a new dress, or expressed her desire to go watch a movie. “She was not interested in anything but her studies. Even if we called her to go out, she would not come. Even as a small child, she was obsessed with her education and always wanted to come first in class.”
“God has been kind to me. It was because of God’s gift that I was able to focus on my education. I love Mathematics and can solve mathematical problems for hours together without feeling bored,” Fathima said.
When she was in Class IX, a private IIT-JEE coaching institute came to her school to select good students and offer them free coaching. She was among the nine students selected after a screening test.
When she told her mother that she wanted to attend JEE coaching classes, she told her that they could not afford to send her to a tuition class. But her school head master was insistent.
“He came home and convinced us that Fathima would never get such an opportunity in her life, and that we should not deny it to her. We had to agree to send her to coaching classes.”
As the institute was far away from her home, it was past 9 in the evening by the time she got back home. “So, I would study until midnight and get up by 6 in the morning to do all the home work.”
So focussed was she on her studies that from first standard onwards, she was either first or second in school.
After scoring 83 per cent in her Class X Board exams, she went back to the same school and continued her preparation for the JEE. “I was happy after I finished the JEE (Main) exam. I knew I did well, especially my Mathematics paper. Yes, I was expecting a good result, but when I finally saw online that I had cleared the Main exam, I couldn’t believe it. I called my father and conveyed the good news to him. He was overjoyed, as was my mother.”
Bahira also was confident of her daughter getting in. “I know nothing about colleges. I only knew that she would get admission in to a very good college somewhere in India because of how hard she worked. However, in our community, we do not send our girls to far-off places. So, I hope she gets admitted to an engineering college in Chennai.”
Whenever Fathima expressed her desire to become an engineer, her mother would tell her not to dream so high because of the financial constraints they faced in the family.
Now that she is going to write the JEE (Advanced) exam on May 25, her dream is to get selected to study Computer Science at an IIT. “I love computer science. I do not have a computer at home, but we have one in our school that we get to operate. I enjoy working on the computer.”
Fathima’s brother, Arshad Saliq, who studies in Class IX, has someone to look up to now. “I also top my class, but now, I want to emulate my sister. I want to study in an IIT.”
Fathima’s dream is “to get a good job so that my father will not have to struggle as hard to make ends meet.”
The family strongly believes that it was all because of the blessings of God that Fathima could achieve something that her parents could never even dream of.
“When we thank God, we also pray that He would show us a way to give Fathima what she wants. When we let her study, not even in our wildest dreams did we think that she would make both of us, practically illiterate as we are, so proud,” said Bahira on a parting note.
source: http://www.rediff.com / rediff.com / Home> Get Ahead / May 14th, 2014
Scoring 340 out of 360, Ravi Teja A.V. of Maharishi Vidya Mandir in the city, has topped Tamil Nadu in the JEE (Main) results announced by the Central Board of Secondary Education (CBSE) Friday midnight.
An elated Ravi says he aims to get into one of the top IITs and so will work even harder for the JEE (advanced) test. Aniket Murhekar, who scored 309 out of 360 , finds computer science challenging, but could also look at other options. “As far as NITs are concerned I like NIT, Trichy. IIT-Bombay and IIT-Madras would be my other preferred options,” he said.
While Ravi was happy with the new test pattern, Aniket felt the old one provided him more flexibility and was student-friendly.
The top 1.5 lakh students who cracked JEE (main) will move on to take JEE (advanced) on May 25. Registrations will start on May 4 and end on May 9. Results will be declared on June 19.
Among the thousands who cleared the JEE (main) in the city, are three girls, Fathima Shabana, S. Shamala and L. Pavithra, students of the Chennai corporation schools, who surmounted many odds to qualify for admission to the NITs.
Shamala hopes she will be accommodated in Tamil Nadu but is ready to go to other states. She is aiming to clear the IIT (advanced) exam and so is Pavithra.
Fathima has scored the maximum among the three, with 83 marks out of 360, while Pavithra and Shamala follow her with 78 marks and 66 marks respectively. The Chennai corporation has been providing free training for its children in a tie up with FIT-JEE since the past four years.
“I spend three days a week to practice for the JEE exams,” says Fathima, who aspires to become a software engineer, but she is not sure if her family would let her pursue her studies if she gets the NIT seat in other states.
“We select students according to merit and provide training for the competitive exam. Three out of a class of 22 cleared the JEE (main) this time. Five students from corporation schools have made it through the mains in the past four years,” says R. Kailasam, Tamil Nadu regional course coordinator, FIT-JEE. “We also aid the students who excel in the exams with a sum of `45,000 for higher studies,” he added.
source: http://www.deccanchronicle.com / Deccan Chronicle / Home> Nation> Current Affairs / DC / by N. Arun Kumar / May 04th, 2014
In an unusual gesture of kindness towards animals, a Tirupur-based woman who was upset after one of her cows had broken a leg, had arranged for replacing the broken leg of the cow with a specially designed prosthetic limb at the cost of several thousand rupees. Veterinary experts state that this is the first surgery of its kind in India.
Five months ago, Nirmala Jagadeesan (53) who owns around 50 cows and runs a milk producing unit in Tiruppur, noticed that one of her cows was unwell and took it to the nearest veterinary hospital for treatment. “When we tried to bring the cow down from the vehicle, it broke one of its hind legs. Veterinary doctors at the hospital advised us to take it to the Government Veterinary Hospital and College in Namakkal for further treatment and we followed the advice,” Nirmala said.
While Nirmala wanted to fix the injured leg of the animal, veterinary experts at the Namakkal College said that nothing could be done about it and sent the cow back to the farm.
“It was around that time that local veterinarian Dr. K. Ramachandran had suggested that we go for a prosthetic limb and suggested a manufacturer of such limbs based out of Nagpur,” Ms. Jagadeesan said.
Within a few days, a team of engineers from the firm reached Tiruppur and took measurements for manufacturing an artificial limb for the cow. “It is the first time such a prosthetic was made for replacing the leg of an animal,” Dr. Ramachandran says.
On May 5, a team of veterinary surgeons amputated the injured leg of the cow and replaced it with a prosthetic. “The surgery was successful and the cow got back on its feet within an hour of the surgery,” the veterinary doctor says.
More than two weeks after the procedure, the animal is reported to be healthy and mobile once again.
source: http://www.deccanchronicle.com / Deccan Chronicle / Home> Nation> Current Affairs / DC / by S. Thirunavukaarasu / May 15th, 2014
A plumber in Madurai has developed a robot that could save little children trapped in bore wells.
Last month the innovation by the 41-year-old plumber turned Instructor, Mr Manikandan at the TVS Community College in the temple town rescued a three-year-old boy who had fallen into a tube well in the Theni district of Tamil Nadu.
“It is a hand operated simple device with a built in camera that streams images from the depth. The operator can manoeuvre the robot’s arms to lift the child,” he told NDTV.
“I wouldn’t mind if this is not used, but for these accidents there should be a device. I feel proud to say this is India’s invention. I forgot all my worries when we rescued a child for the first time,” Mr Manikandan said.
Over the last five years at least six children lost their lives in abandoned bore wells in Tamil Nadu. Now experts in Tamil Nadu are reviewing the device for use by the fire and rescue department. Mr Ramesh Kuduwla, the ADGP of The Fire and Rescue Department says, “We will evaluate the device and then take a call.”
Mr Manikandan teaches at the TVS Community College which supports his mission. The Assistant Director Mr Srinivasan told NDTV, “We are sending our students and faculty where ever he wants to go as he is doing a social service. We are helping with financial help to procure modern equipment like camera and vacuum pump.”
Mr Manikandan is not seeking a patent. He just wants to save lives.
source: http://www.ndtv.com / NDTV / Home> South / by J Sam Daniel Stalin / May 09th, 2014
I was delighted to receive an invitation the other day asking me to join them in celebrating ‘Genesis Day’ on May 17, for it indicated that there was at least one group in this city that recognised its beginnings even if they were 220 years ago. The invitation came from the Alumni Association of the College of Engineering, Guindy, and it asked me to join its members in marking “the starting of CEG on 17 May 1794”.
In their enthusiasm, the alumni were not quite correct; that date marked the birth of the Survey School in Fort St George. That technical institution, the oldest Western-style one outside Europe, was what grew into the College of Engineering. I wonder whether the College itself remembered the occasion and marked it — or, lost as it is midst the numbers that constitute Anna University today, did it leave it to the Alumni?
This August 22 will mark the 375 year of the founding of Madras and I look forward to that birthday being celebrated fittingly. But apart from celebrations, it would be fitting to remember that modern India developed in three stages from that day in 1639: the Age of Trade till 1757, the Age of Expansion till 1858, and then the Age of the Raj till 1947 when a New India was born. It was during the second stage, after the victory at Plassey, that the British, in fact the English East India Company, began thinking of ways and means of consolidating their position in India. The first steps to such consolidation included raising an Indian army, providing forts and fortifications for that army, and discovering, in the exploratory sense, the territories it was to move into and develop and protect. A fundamental need for all that was surveying and military engineering.
A definition of an engineer dating to this period stated, “An able expert man who, by perfect knowledge of mathematics, delineates upon paper, or marks upon the ground, all sorts of forts and other proper works for offence or defence. He should understand the art of fortification, so as to be able not only to discover the defects of a place, but to find a remedy proper for them, as also how to make an attack upon, as well as to defend the place. Engineers are extremely necessary for these purposes.” Such a definition, understandable in the context of the times, meant ‘engineers’, technical personnel, if you will, with skills in surveying, civil construction, and basic mechanical work.
It was to train such personnel that Fort St George decided to set up the Survey School at the urging of Michael Topping, the Chief Marine Surveyor. The Government Survey School opened for its first intake on May 17, 1794. The first eight boys were personally selected by Topping, mainly from the Male Orphan Asylum, on the basis of their knowledge of Arithmetic and writing in English. The School, headed by Topping as an extra assignment, was intended to produce apprentices capable of undertaking surveys, construct and repair tanks, and ensure a continuous supply of water for irrigation.
It was this School that became the Civil Engineering School in 1858 and, the next year, the College of Civil Engineering. It became the College of Engineering in 1862 and added Guindy to its name when it moved there in 1920. Its contribution to India, leave alone the Madras Presidency, over the years has been significant. That its genesis has been celebrated is something to warm any heritage-lover’s heart.
Saravana Bhavan in the NYT
By the time these lines appear, India is likely to have a new Prime Minister. But even he is unlikely to get the spread the New York Times magazine gave the Saravana Bhavan chain and its owner, P. Rajagopal, on May 7. What I received was a story in 13 A4-size sheets with the heading ‘Masala Dosa to die for’! The reference to death might have been complimentary; it might also have been a pointer to a third of the story which details the murder Rajagopal was charged with in 2002 and whose final verdict is yet to be given. Meanwhile, Rajagopal continues to expand his South Indian fast food empire.
At last count, according to Rollo Romig who has written this magazine-length profile, there were 33 Saravana Bhavan restaurants in India and 47 in a dozen other countries, from Sunnyvale in California to Hong Kong by way of Paris. And all of them serve a standard, high quality fare using the freshest of ingredients, a formula established by the founder.
Rajagopal arrived in Madras as a teenager from the deep South in 1968. He’d had little education, had during his journey cleaned tables in a hole-in-the-wall ‘restaurant’, and learnt to make tea the way those frequenting roadside tea stalls liked to drink it. But an eatery was not what he started that year — it was a small neighbourhood grocery to which he added a couple more in the area in due course. When the groceries proved losers, he began to look at food as an option — after a visitor to one of his groceries complained there was no place in K K Nagar to get good food at modest prices. And so was born Rajagopal’s first restaurant in 1981 in K K Nagar. It was a losing proposition to start with, but as word spread about the quality of its food, the cost, the hygiene and service, it began to be a winner, leading to the opening of other branches in the city.
Today, Rajagopal’s elder son Shiva Kumaar looks after the overseas operations and has been opening one Saravana Bhavan in each of several cities worldwide where there is a large expat Indian population. By ensuring that the food tastes just like what is served in its Madras outlets, he has been cashing in on homesickness, ‘the tastes of home’. He is candid about it; his restaurants are for the Indians and those who know South Indian food; if other foodies and the locals come in, that’s a bonus.
In Madras, Rajagopal’s younger son, Saravanan, manages the Indian business. And this wanted-to-be-an-engineer has brought the scientific element into management. Saravana Bhavan must be one of the few home-grown Indian food chains, if not the only one, that has a laboratory that’s busy every day. The lab tests food daily from all the Madras branches to ensure the same quality is being maintained. It also tests how labour-saving can be done. And what new flavours of ice creams can be created.
But what seems to have struck Romig as the chain’s greatest asset was its workers — 8000 in Madras alone — almost all village boys trained the ‘Annachi’ Rajagopal way, to his exacting standards and willing to accept his discipline, but “personally” loyal to him. In return, their perks in the U.S. are “fantastic enough even for Silicon Valley,” says Romig, who goes onto quote a Madras employee who half in jest said, “The only thing you can do with your salary is put it in the bank and save it. They take care of everything else.”
When the postman knocked…
– Meetings in Madras on May 1, 1923 may have demanded that May 1 be declared a holiday (Miscellany, May 5), but it took the Government 27 more years to make that a reality, writes reader Ramineni Bhaskarendra Rao. It happened only after the Republic was born. There had before been another appeal that International Workers’ Day be declared a holiday by the Government of India, recalls reader Rao. That was in April 1936 and the call was made by Prof. N.G.Ranga of Pachaiappa’s College and P Ramamurthi of Triplicane. They also demanded that all workers in prison for trade union activities be released on May 1. That date became a day of significance, Reader Rao narrates, because on May l, 1886 the United States committed itself to an 8-hour working day which had been agitated for there from the first years of the 19 Century. When many factories refused to implement the eight-hour working day, there was a mass protest in Chicago on May 4 that resulted in violence. Several workers were killed by the police, and an Englishman and six Germans, immigrants all, were arrested. Four of those tried, all Germans, were sentenced to death, the other three to life imprisonment. When the dust settled, the eight-hour day became the norm and May 1 was declared International Workers’ Day.
– Reader Thomas Tharu regrets that Prof. R.A. Kraus, who played a significant role in setting up IIT-Madras, has all but been forgotten and wonders whether anyone has detailed information about him. He also wonders what happened to the history of IIT-M written by IITian Ajit Narayanan for the golden jubilee in 2009 and whether that might have any information on Prof. Kraus. I’m surprised that reader Tharu makes no reference to the intriguingly titled pictorial history, Campaschimes, by Kumaran Sathasivam and Prof. Ajit Kumar Kolar — he was responsible for the excellent but little-known IIT-M museum — brought out in 2011, with a promise of a second more detailed volume in due course. Surely he would have received a copy given that he is mentioned in the acknowledgements made in the book. Be that as it may, Campaschimes does tell a bit of the story starting with a July 16, 1956 Indo-German agreement which had, tucked away in it, the following: “The two Heads of Government agreed that in co-operation between the two countries a technical teaching institution is to be set up in India for which the Federal Government will make available teaching staff and equipment (and) will endow scholarships (for) Indian students to attend German technical Institutions.” Once land was allotted to it in 1958 by the Madras Government, work on setting up the Institute began in earnest. A planning committee chaired by Dr A L Mudaliar was charged with formulating the education programme, but there’s no more said about all this in Campaschimes except that L.S.Chandrakant, Deputy Educational Advisor, Government of India, was appointed Special Planning Advisor, IIT-M, in 1959 and his German counterpart, Prof Robert Kraus, was designated Special Commissioner representing Germany. The lack of more information on the founding of the Institute is what reader Tharu regrets. He particularly feels Kraus deserves better, given his record. Kraus had spent most of his teaching life in China where he set up a technical university in Shanghai. When this was destroyed by the Japanese, he was in Germany and immediately began planning on resurrecting it inland, but World War II intervened. After the War, he set up Kharagpur’s Mechanical Engineering Department in 1953 and remained its first head till the German Government gave him the task of helping set up IIT-M. He remained a popular figure on the Madras campus till he left in 1964.
source: http://www.thehindu.com / The Hindu / Home> Features> MetroPlus> Society / by S. Muthiah / Chennai – May 18th, 2014
Percussionists from the city made an attempt to set a Guinness record
The sun couldn’t scorch the spirit of a thousand drummers from having a crack at the Guinness World Records. Organised by the Stage Light Music Artist Union (SLMAU) to gain recognition and raise funds for its members, they were attempting to break the record, which was previously held by 798 drummers from the U.K., who played for six minutes and 30 seconds.
Led by ‘Drums’ Sivamani, the well-known percussionist, who started his career as a stage artiste, the group of over a 1,000 drummers was supposed to play for a little more than 10 minutes.
It was a logistical nightmare: how do you instruct a crowd (that also comprised kids as young as three) of over a 1,000 to set up their drum-kits? Thanks to the hardworking volunteers, it was possible.
On the day of the performance, the star-percussionist was walked into the venue accompanied by Tamil folk artistes performing the traditional Karagattam.
After taking the stage, Sivamani said that he would like to teach the group the first lesson he received from his master. “This is my gift to you,” he said and performed the two-stroke ‘Daddy-Mommy’ routine and its many variations.
As the sun was going down, the countdown began. After a minute’s silence for the blast victims, Sivamani began swishing his sticks. Unexpectedly, the group missed Sivamani’s beats right from the first 20 seconds. It took a while before the sounds got synchronised. Soon after, a volunteer announced that the group had successfully broken the old record.
source: http://www.thehindu.com / The Hindu / Home> Features> MetroPlus / by Udhav Naig / Chennai – May 05th, 2014
Acquainting oneself with the rich legacy of the city they live in, unraveling the hidden facets and discussing interesting details as they take a guided tour of the city- heritage walks are keeping the history enthusiasts in the city on their toes. Testimony to that are the recent Old Coimbatore Heritage Walk and the Perur Payanam, as a part of the annual celebrations of the city that had students and history enthusiasts in full attendance.
Entrepreneur Shankar Vanavarayar, one of the organizers of the heritage walk, had told us, “Coimbatore is laced with both ancient and modern architecture. One of the ideal steps to preserve the heritage and let the generation next know about it is by imparting knowledge on the subject and documenting all the buildings in the city.”
Historian CR Elangovan, who is quite kicked about these heritage walks, enthuses that they are an ideal way to impart lessons on the legacy of a place. “This is, in fact, the best way to educate the current and future generations about the legacy of a city. Teachers do talk about the history in a classroom setting, but there is nothing like going to the venue and seeing it yourself. Live tour leaves a lasting impact. Coimbatore doesn’t have a very rich history to boast about and most of the heritage buildings here are only 200 years old. These walks help people take a trip down memory lane.”
RJ Krishna, though seconds Elangovan that heritage walks do their bit, he maintains that there are other modes of passing on the knowledge. “Heritage walks do help unravel great facts, but it shouldn’t be restricted to history students and closed groups. For instance, when the Semmozhi Maanadu happened in Coimbatore, almost every wall in the city on the road that led to the Maanadu venue had writings about the richness of Tamil language. This was an easy way to reach out to the masses in Coimbatore and the purpose of the event was served well. Something on those lines with writings or illustrations that depict the history of Coimbatore on the walls before and during the heritage walks and weeks would be another way to reach everyone. This way, we can reach out to a larger group.”
source: http://www.timesofindia.indiatimes.com / The Times of India / Home> City> Coimbatore / by P Sangeetha, TNN / May 05th, 2014