The daughter of a brick kiln worker, theatre-actress Janagi is now a star in a French movie
If someone had told Janagi five years ago that she would be starring in a French mainstream feature film, alongside Charlotte Gainsbourg (of Nymphomaniac and Antichrist fame) and French heartthrob Yvan Attal, she would have laughed in your face. But the 30-year-old Tamil actress did just that withSon Épouse (His Wife), directed by Michel Spinosa, which released early March.
The film revolves around Gracie (Janagi) who is possessed by the spirit of her friend Catherine (Gainsbourg) who dies in ‘unresolved’ circumstances. Catherine’s husband Joseph (Attal) travels to Tamil Nadu to meet Gracie and the plot unfolds thereafter. Far from being just a ‘native’ side-character, Janagi plays a prominent role and even speaks French in the film. “Learning French was the most difficult,” says Janagi, adding, “But then Michel sir, the film team and two months of French classes helped a great deal. So I could manage my dialogues during shooting.”
Born in Devasahayam Mount village, outside Nagercoil, she grew up surrounded by the Western Ghats and tall-spired churches. The youngest of four, she completed high school, but her parents did not have the means to send her to college. The choice before her was either to find a job or join her sister, Prema, at Murasu Kalai Kuzhu, a street theatre group run by the local Christian diocese.
Inspired by Badal Sircar’s Third Theatre, where the lines between the actor and the audience is blurred and those watching the play are encouraged to be active participants in the production itself, Kalai Kuzhu uses songs to spread awareness about societal issues, such as the importance of education, anti-caste messages and Dalit rights. A Christian Left ideology permeates all their works. “I really would not be where I am without the help of the Kalai Kuzhu,” Janagi says. “We used to perform Paraiyattam, Oyilattam and various other folk forms across villages in our areas. In the years I spent there, I must have seen the entire State twice over since we travelled a lot with our productions.”
In 2008, along with four other theatre-artists from the State, Janagi was invited to attend a month-long workshop on Naveena Nadagam or modern theatre conducted by the National School of Drama (NSD), Delhi. The following year, she enrolled in NSD for a diploma programme in dramatics. Janagi spent the next three years in the Capital, learning theatre skills, theory and a bit of Hindi.
In her final semester, Spinosa and crew called her for an audition. As Spinosa says, “Despite my familiarity with Tamil cinema, I had not heard of Janagi till my assistant director Revathi told me about her.” He adds, “During the audition, we realised she had all the qualities that an actress needs to have: instinct, authenticity and creativity. She had an immediate and intimate comprehension of the character she was about to play, in her appearance and her background. She was the closest to the character I had imagined. Working with her was amazing and as you will see, she did a fantastic job in the film.”
Janagi on her part was initially sceptical about the audition. “Revathi akka asked me to come attend the two-day audition held in Chennai. There Michel sir asked me to improvise and I read out scripts in Tamil and then English.” She adds, “I really didn’t think I would get through and when I was informed that I was selected , I was very happy but also really surprised.”
Janagi took to the role in Son Épouse with unexpected ease. She says, “In my village there used to be apunniyasthalam (holy place) where they brought people, who were losing their minds or were possessed, to be cured. I have seen them since I was a child. When the role was explained to me, I could understand it well since I had seen so many people in a similar situation myself.” She adds, “They used to be tied to the trees outside the church and while growing up, we children used to tease them a lot, which I feel bad about now. But we used to see them all the time in our village, and they were always completely lost in their own world. Their families came to feed them and the church Father used to say prayers to exorcise the spirits that they believed were haunting them.”
With a French movie behind her, Janagi is looking for other options. Malini 22 Palayamkottai, a thriller, where she plays a rowdy in a jail, released in both Tamil and Telugu earlier this year. Apart from this, she features regularly on a Tamil news channel, Puthiya Thalaimurai’s programmeRouthiram Pazhagu where she performs Therukoothu (traditional street drama). She is also set to travel with her erstwhile theatre group to villages near Kanyakumari, where she’ll be one of the trainers at a month-long theatre workshop.
With a promising career ahead of her, what has been her proudest moment so far? “It was when my father and mother came to Delhi to see me perform while at NSD. They didn’t really think highly of my choices till then. But when they saw me in front of all those people at the theatre festival, they found new respect for me,” says Janagi.
source: http://www.thehindubusinessline.com / Business Line / Home> Features / by Sibi Arasu / April 04th, 2014
Augmented reality games may be in their nascent stage in tier-I cities like Chennai. But, that hasn’t deterred the passion of this Madurai-based game developer, who has come up with trial version of an augmented reality game titled ‘Zombies Table.’ The demo game, which was released 20 days back in Apple Store and Google Play, has already started gaining attention among online users.
In fact, the game, which is the brain child of T S Gokul Prasath, 29, from Anna Nagar in Madurai, has already become one of the top rated augmented reality games with more than 5,000 downloads in Apple Store and Google Play.
Unlike other games, augmented reality games engage the player with the objects in real life. It has been an emerging area where lots of research and developments have been taking place. While the demo game has got instant acceptance, the Madurai youth vows to bring out the full version of ‘Table Zombie’ in the next 30 days.
Gokul completed his engineering in a city college and later pursued his MBA in International Business from a reputed college in Coimbatore. Though he was interested in application and game development from his under graduation days, he could not pursue it then. After his MBA, he got placed well-reputed companies. But his urge to become a game developer never subsided. He quit his job and started developing applications before he stared his own developing unit named SRG United Solutions in the city.
Briefing about the game, Gokul says, “The game can be downloaded at free of cost and played in smart phone or tablet. We have also linked the game with a PDF document. Once the print out is scanned through the camera after launching the application, the characters would come alive and people can play it. The demo version of the Table Zombie has been rated among the top three games in augmented reality field. There has been articles and positive feedback by users too.”
When contacted R Sivarajah, the former president of Software Industries Development Association of South Tamil Nadu (SIDA) and founder of Nativelead, an organisation to develop entrepreneurship skills of students, he said there are not many companies developing augmented reality games even in tier one cities. “It is in a nascent stage in South India,” he said.
According to this young game developer, augmented reality game is the future of all games. “In fact, that time is not too far when movie wall posters would start playing the entire trailer. Google glass could be connected to this application. This would enable us to watch the trailers through posters, which would be designed using augmented reality technique,” Gokul added.
source: http://www.timesofindia.indiatimes.com / The Times of India / Home> City> Madurai / by V. Devanathan, TNN / March 19th, 2014
It’s the holy hill, the miniature mount of miracles, the anchor you rely on when adrift in foggy doubt. Close to two thousand years ago an apostle was martyred on its summit, his gore reddening the soil. On the western outskirts of the city of Chennai (formerly Madras) on the southeastern coast of India, the hill called St. Thomas’ Mount juts up 300 feet above the sea level. The city’s airport lies just beyond the hill and, depending on the time of day and the flight path, one can get an aerial glimpse of the hill from within an aircraft landing or taking off, just as one can watch planes land and take off from atop the hill. But the hill looks so ordinary, so nondescript, that passers-by on the ground or travelers in the air scarcely give it a glance.
The hill was once wooded but today, as I trudge up the stone steps, I see bedraggled vegetation fighting valiantly to root and thrive in those few parts that are not built up with houses. Construction is in progress; newer buildings are sprouting up like kudzu along the slopes. The climb is a test of stamina; I find myself breathing strenuously and I am only a third of the way to the top. But there are convenient ledges running alongside the steps where I can sit, regain my breath. Brick-paved terraces interrupt the steps at intervals. There is the occasional flat, gray stone slab embedded in the ground, almost flush with the surface. Some bear elaborate inscriptions in Armenian. The people in the church on the hill, let alone the visitors, have little idea of what these inscriptions mean.If stones could speak, I would engage them in spirited conversation, and their answers could shed light on many things. There is much that is mysterious on this hill.The Apostle Thomas is believed to have been martyred on the summit of this hill, hence the name St. Thomas’ Mount. Thomas (the “Doubting Thomas” of the New Testament) is believed to have travelled to Northern India following Christ’s crucifixion, then by sea to Malabar (present-day Kerala) on India’s southwestern coast where he landed in AD 52, and then across the land to the opposite coast where he lived and preached until his martyrdom on the mount in AD 68 (or AD 72, depending on which historical account you buy into) where he was speared to death by an emissary of the local Hindu king while he knelt in prayer before a cross he had carved into the rock. More about this cross later.The mount subsequently became a place for pilgrimage, albeit one that tested the pilgrims’ faith and resolve for they had to surmount rock and brush and clamber across slippery slopes covered with loose, treacherous gravel. In the early 18th century, an Armenian merchant and philanthropist, Khojah Petrus Woscan, hewed out a flight of 135 steps on the wild and woody northern side of the hill. Woscan also built a bridge across the nearby Adyar River to further help pilgrims, who now no longer struggled to ford the river. People came from afar to the Mount in larger numbers now – but they always had, steps or no steps. A Latin medieval text suggests that in the 9th century King Alfred the Great of England sent an embassy to this tomb in India, long before the steps to the summit were in place. Marco Polo also visited the Mount on his travels in India.
On the summit of the hill stands a church that is a hybrid of Armenian and Portuguese architecture, both peoples having contributed to its building over periods of time. Its elegance lies in the simplicity of its structure. The cool, black flagstones that pave its floors and its high arched ceilings give welcome relief from the rippling heat waves outside. That this is sacred ground and must be treated as such and not regarded as a picnic spot for romancing couples is highlighted by a sign on a wall: ‘The holiness of this place does not permit the pairs to misuse this place for their merriment.”
As my eyes adjust to the dimmer light, they are drawn to the high stone arch on the ceiling that separates the sanctuary from the nave; on the arch, the name of the church in Portuguese: Senhora da Expectacao (Our Lady of Expectation) is emblazoned. The upper part of the exquisitely ornate white and gold altar has a painting on wood of St. Thomas praying before a cross carved into a boulder. The lower part of the altar has the cross itself, sculpted on a chunk of grey rock. Thomas, so it is said, carved it himself, or at any rate, was speared to death when praying before it, drops of his blood spattering it like rose petals during his death throes.
The cross has an extraordinary reputation. It is said to have “sweated blood” — exuded fluid, which on some occasions was crimson colored — several times between 1551 and 1704, usually an annual event occurring in December. Since 1704, though, the cross has neither “sweated” nor “bled.” Yet the crowds throng to the church in December during the Feast of St. Thomas, eager and enthused, hoping that this will be the year when history repeats itself, and they will be the fortunate ones to bear witness to the miracle that has not recurred for three centuries. Bleeding crosses and other miracles, and angels making divine visitations are all part of being within the church, of accepting its faith. If you are not within the church, then you are outside of it, and have to drift and paddle around on your own. That leaves you vulnerable, unless you have developed your own spiritual muscles. So the throngs come at the Feast of St. Thomas and if the cross remains dry, then they wait with the patience of an elephant as the seasons change and the next anniversary comes around, ready to attend the festival any number of times.
Yet there are others who doubt that the Bleeding Cross ever bled a drop, or even that Thomas engraved such an elaborate stone carving. And the discovery of several similar carvings in Kerala on the west coast of India raises further questions about whether the attribution to Thomas is true. Scholars have designated these cross carvings in Kerala as the Nasrani Menorah.A cross designated as a menorah? Or vice versa? How could either of this be?To understand this better, we must time-travel to the fourth century AD, and meet Thomas Canneus, also known as Thomas of Cana (Canaan), who changed his faith from Judaism to Christianity. Thomas of Cana landed in Malabar [Kerala] on the west coast of India along and founded the community popularly known as the Syrian Christians. They had other names as well: the Thomman Christians or the Knanaya, that is, Knai’s People (after Knai Thomman, the name for Thomas of Cana in Malayalam, the local language; it also means Thomas the Zealot). In 345 AD, under Thomas’s leadership and with the blessing of Mor Yusthedius, the Patriarch of Antioch, 72 families sailed to India in three ships, the first of which bore the flag of King David. They spoke Syriac, a dialect of Aramaic, hence they were called the Syrian Christians; there is no connection with the present-day nation, Syria. They were also called the Nasrani (a variation of the word Nazarene) to indicate they were Jews who had embraced Christianity and to distinguish them from Jews who were already living in Kerala in a thriving community centered in the town of Cochin.
Converting from one faith to another is not such a facile exercise as is thought. While you might harbour the conviction that the new faith is propelling you towards salvation, can you so easily let go of old customs and relics that comforted you so often and so much down the years? And so the Nasrani designed their cross after the Jewish menorah, the stand of seven candlesticks.
In the Jewish tradition, the central candle is the main candle from which all the others branches are lit. (Interestingly, the Hebrew word for branch is Netzer, the root word for Nazareth and Nazarene – and therefore, also for Nasrani.) The Nasranis converted the middle candlestick of the menorah into an ornate cross, with three candlesticks (or images representing three candlesticks) flanking the cross on either side. These six branches represent God in the form of the burning bush. Flying vertically downward towards the cross is a dove, its beak touching the top of the cross; this represents the Holy Spirit. This menorah-cross is known as the Nasrani Menorah. It is also referred to as the Syrian Kurishu (the Syrian Cross).
The menorah is not the only aspect of Jewish tradition that the Nasrani Syrian Christians have retained. Another tradition that lives on is the partaking of the Pesaha-Appam, or unleavened Passover bread, along with Pesaha-Paalu, or Passover Coconut Milk, often flavored with unrefined brown sugar, ginger, cumin and cardamom. The Nasrani church has separate seating for men and women, and the sanctuary is partitioned off by a thick red drape until about the middle of the Qurbana (the Nasrani Mass). Until the 1970s, the Qurbana was recited in Syriac-Aramaic; the Nasrani baptism is still called by its Syriac name, Mamodisa, and follows many of the original rituals associate with this rite of passage. The Birkat Hamazon is recited after the blessing of the Holy Eucharist, and as a Thanksgiving blessing. Marriages invariably take place within the community.
As noted previously, in Malayalam (the language of Malabar/Kerala), Thomas of Cana became Knai Thomman. Could this community bearing the Thomas name, then, have got mixed up with the Apostle Thomas? The distinctive Nasrani menorah crosses, carved by the early Syrian Christians in Kerala, may have been attributed to the Apostle Thomas, since it is quite possible to get confused with two names that are similar. That would explain how the Nasrani Menorah in the church on St. Thomas Mount, the cross that sweated blood, got linked to St. Thomas though it is unclear how it travelled coast to coast, from Kerala on the southwestern coast to St. Thomas’ Mount on the southeastern.
Could St. Thomas have carved it? The Nasrani menorah is very distinctive; it came to southern India only around 345 AD, whereas St. Thomas was said to be there three centuries earlier, between the years 52 and 68 (or 72) AD. Also, if St. Thomas had carved a symbol during that time, would it have been a cross at all? Scholars say that the cross did not become a symbol of Christianity until sometime in the late second century AD. The cross was a very visible reminder of deliberate torture, suffering and death — a hated and grisly method of public execution, besides being irrevocably associated with the death of beloved Jesus the Christ, the founder of their religion. The early Christians used, not the cross but the Ichthys (Fish Symbol) to represent their faith. Did the Apostle St. Thomas even visit the hill that bears his name?
If stones could speak, we could whisper to each of the Nasrani menorahs scattered across Kerala, and to the Bleeding Cross, and they would whisper their stories back to us, tales of hope and fear, of bravery and cowardice, of longing and satisfaction. But as that is not possible, we must wait for historians and scholars to probe back in time to determine the facts, decipher them and solve these puzzles from the past.
Historians and scholars, however, do not always agree with each other both on the authenticity of discoveries or their interpretation. After his martyrdom atop St. Thomas Mount, the remains of the apostle were taken to Edessa in Mesapotamia (modern-day Urfa in Turkey) and interred there. But there is a relic in the church on St. Thomas Mount, a finger bone, purportedly the one that probed the wounds of Christ. Along the way to Edessa, relic seekers seemed to have helped themselves to many of his other bones as well. Roman Catholic records say the Apostle was buried at Ortona in the Abruzzi region of Italy; the Greek Orthodox claim that Thomas’s skull rests on the island of Patmos in the Aegean, but leaves us unclear about where the rest of his body is, and when and why the two were separated. As one commentator put it tongue-in-cheek, if all the bony relics of the apostle that are on display in various churches and museums were collected and assembled, we would end up with one and a half skeletons.
Christians in India take pride that their religious heritage can be traced to a direct disciple of Christ. Pope Benedict XVI caused a lot of angst and heartburn among many Indian Christians when, during his September 27, 2006 speech at the Vatican, he mentioned that St. Thomas evangelized Syria and Persia and then went on to Western India, from where Christianity spread to other parts of India, including the South. In other words, the pontiff seemed to be dismissing the legend that the Apostle Thomas was ever in South India. After the cries of outrage from the Indian Christians, the Vatican took the unusual step of amending the published text of the pope’s speech.
But such doubts have been raised before, even by those in the church hierarchy. In 1729 the Bishop of Madras-Mylapore wrote to the Sacred Congregation of Rites in Rome for clarification about whether the tomb in the San Thome Cathedral of Madras was indeed that of St. Thomas. Rome’s reply was not published. A century later, in 1871 the Roman Catholic authorities at Madras were “strong in disparagement of the special sanctity of the localities [San Thome Cathedral, Little Mount, and St. Thomas Mount, the three areas in Madras associated with St. Thomas Mount] and the whole story connecting St. Thomas with Mailapur.” But in 1886 Pope Leo XIII stated in an apostolic letter that St. Thomas “travelled to Ethiopia, Persia, Hyrcania and finally to the Peninsula beyond the Indus”, and in 1923 Pope Pius XI quoted Pope Leo’s letter and identified St. Thomas with “India”. However, historians note that many ancient writers loosely used the term “India” to refer to several territories east and south of the Roman Empire – including Abyssinia, Mesopotamia, Parthia (Persia/Iran), Arachosia and Gandhara (modern Afghanistan/Pakistan), and parts of Arabia, especially the coastal territories (modern Yemen and Oman).
Historians have neither conclusively proved nor disproved that St. Thomas was ever in southern India. And the stones will not speak.
Each individual experiences two types of hunger, the material and the spiritual, in varying degrees of proportion. The most common pang of spiritual hunger is groping for answers to the eternal questions: Who am I? What am I doing here?
We are born with material and spiritual components, the gross and the ethereal. The material is easy to relate to, but the spiritual is more nebulous. Some see spiritual matters as concerned with our ultimate nature and meaning, not just as biological organisms but as beings with a unique relationship with the spirit that transcends time, space and the material sphere. Others view spirituality as the nurturing and development of one’s inner life.
In a great many minds, the institutionalization of religion is now associated bloodshed, division, incredible cruelty to other people in the name of evangelism or jihad or some other form of crusade, forcible religious conversions, and so on. It also brings images of being punished for sins or erroneous ways, many of which are all too human.
Religion aims to rise and soar above the worldly plane yet organized religions have been continuously seduced by a material focus. Atop St. Thomas Mount, you need permission to photograph the church interiors and the relics, and the granting of the permission is accompanied by a request for a donation. The staff member in charge tries to gauge where you live to suggest a donation amount. Donors are offered a book to sign in (and record the donated amount), and a glance shows that visitors from overseas have donated far larger sums than the locals.
There are two large Hindu temples north and south of St. Thomas Mount: the temple of Lord Venkateswara in Tirupati, and the temple to the Goddess Meenakshi in Madurai. The Tirupati temple is the wealthiest Hindu temple, and reputedly the richest and most visited religious shrine in the world. The Madurai Meenakshi temple is an ancient temple, famed for its stunning architectural complexity. Many such temples that draw crowds of devotees have complex queue systems to make you line up just to flit past the sanctum sanctorum and get a momentary glimpse of the deity.
But Mammon can insinuate his way anywhere, even in houses of worship. So in many temples there is more than one line. There is a line where there is no charge, and there is a line where you need to purchase a ticket. Since the first line is hopelessly long, people purchase tickets. They still have to wait, but for a somewhat shorter time. Then there are the super high-priced tickets that permit you to jump both lines and sneak up first.
Now, material houses of worship do need material means for their maintenance; this is why an offertory basket is passed around at church services. And when there are throngs of hundreds and thousands of pilgrims, there needs to be some sort of regulatory system to maintain order. But the whole notion that paying more money ushers you into the divine presence ahead of those who paid less has something repugnant about it. After all the idol is not God, it is merely an image to remind you of God or of certain aspects of God. For example, some Hindu deities are depicted with multiple heads (God is omniscient) or multiple hands (God is omnipotent). An omniscient, omnipotent God is everywhere, not just restricted to the sanctum sanctorum of the temples, or on the altars of churches or synagogues. If stones could speak, this is what the idols of the deities would say, adding that those that understand this and feel the presence of the divine all the time have no need to lighten their wallets or purses to stand in line for a long time to get a glimpse of an image.
In organized religion more attention is paid to the external aspects of religion (the appropriate vestment for priest and bishop, the proper items for a puja ceremony), and to the hierarchy within a religion, or to the rules that govern that particular faith, than to the inner experience of religion itself. A great many cling to the outer trappings. As described earlier, the Knanaya Christians have retained their Jewish traditions to the point they are sometimes even referred to as the Jewish Christians, a term that can raise both eyebrows and hackles in other parts of the world. The throngs at St. Thomas’ Mount firmly believe that the cross will bleed once more, and attribute all kinds of explanations (including the effect of their collective sins, their karma en masse) for why the flow of blood has been stanched for three centuries. Hindus who have been proselytized to Christianity bring their caste baggage with them; once Hindu Nadars and Pillais, now they are Nadar Christians and Pillai Christians, and the old eddies and undercurrents still flow strong though all of them are supposedly One in Christ.
But times have changed and are changing. Whether it is due to the advancement of science and technology and the new ways of thinking that this brings, or whether due to other factors, the wholesale reliance on belief is eroding. In bygone times, belief was the cornerstone of religion. Today, the numbers of people who place emphasis on individual spiritual experience rather than belief is growing. “I’m not religious, but I’m spiritual” — how often have you heard that phrase?
And yet, often it is their religion that has helped to unfold their latent spirituality, and still has repositories of wisdom nuggets buried within its voluminous folds, though sometimes a spirited excavation is required to find them.
If stones could speak, could they tell us the whole story of the two Thomases — the apostle Thomas and the Nasrani Thomas? As the stones at one church may say, “We’ve been resting on this very spot for centuries, and we can tell you what went on here, but you’ll have to travel to other parts of the country and talk to the stones there, and then piece all the information together.”
“All right,” you respond, but the stones then gently remind you that the other stones who might have been witness to significant events may no longer be there, either carted away to other unknown destinations, or simply blown into smithereens by dynamite and bulldozers clearing the land for new development. So many stones, blown up into enough silicon dust to fill up a valley, indeed, many valleys, taking with them all their collective memories.
“But why,” one of the older, wiser stones may ask, “do you want to know this? What real difference will it make? If you can trace your faith lineage down the byzantine alleyways of history to St. Thomas and directly to Christ, does that put you a cut above your fellow Christians who cannot claim such a pedigree? Which religion do you follow — the religion of Jesus the Christ or the religion built around Jesus the Christ?”
People extract meaning from symbols and imagery of religious tradition. In the beginning, this may be useful in helping to focus the distracted mind on the idea the symbol represents. But this is the means, not the end. The ninth-century Chinese Buddhist master Linji Yixuan said, “If you meet the Buddha on the road, kill him ….. Then for the first time you will gain emancipation, will not be entangled with things, pass freely anywhere you wish to go.” One can replace Buddha in the quote with Christ or Moses or any other religious figure. What is implied here is that when you convert a spiritual leader into a sacred fetish that then becomes larger than life, you miss the core essence of his teachings. And the greatest tribute you can give your spiritual preceptor is to follow his teachings. How many actually do that?
If stones could speak, perhaps one of the wise among them would say, “Don’t hang around here waiting for stone crosses to sweat, or to gawk at pieces of bone and faded paintings. Go back to your daily routine, but reach out to other people. Forgive them if their faults have roiled you, bless them, see the innocence in them, give them a real loving hug. Those are the kinds of things it all boils down to.”
And another stone might add, “We have learnt much by sitting still in the silence. And so should you. Walk barefoot on the dew-bedecked grass in the early morning, and feel it caress the soles of your feet. Enjoy the sunlight filtering through the leafy trees, and the clouds rolling across the bright blue sky. Gaze at the stars at night, pierce through space and permit yourself to soar heavenwards until you are one with them.”
source: http://www.praguerevue.com / The Prague Revue / Home> In the Stream by Vishwas R. Gaitonde / January 01st, 2014
I was happily surprised when I found the word ‘dosa’ on a menu at Indira, a small Indian restaurant a 15-minute drive away from my parents’ house in Tonami.
I don’t know why, but in Japan, in general, an ‘Indian’ restaurant means a north Indian restaurant. Their menus only have items that seem to be of north Indian-style – like chicken curries that are heavy on the gravy and naan.
I hardly see chappatis in Indian restaurants here. It is only of late that south Indian restaurants have begun coming up, and most of them are still only in Tokyo. So for south Indian food-lovers in Japan living outside of the capital, it is somewhat of a privilege to get a taste of south Indian food.
So how come the dosa on that menu, I wondered. It may be hard for you to believe, but my hometown doesn’t even have a cinema, let alone an Indian restaurant serving dosas.
To find out, I chatted with the chef, a good-looking Indian man who speaks fluent Japanese in the dialect of my hometown. He said he was originally from Kolkata and had worked as a chef in Chennai for more than 10 years. He had then worked in Malaysia and had finally settled down in Japan. He brought dosas into the menu as he saw a fellow chef serving dosas in another restaurant and realised they were very popular.
And there it was, a simple dosa in front of me. As far as I know, Indira is the first Indian restaurant serving south Indian food in my home prefecture, Toyama. Is this something to do with globalisation? It doesn’t matter. I just hope dosa will serve as a trigger and that someday, I will get idlis or even vada, bonda, curd rice and lemon rice in my hometown!
(Ms. Kondo, who lives in Toyama, spent some time in Chennai as a student)
Sixteen-member delegation meets members of the Indian Cotton Federation
Members of an African delegation have urged the cotton traders and textile mill owners here to assist them in developing cotton trade from their countries.
A 16-member delegation including Government officials and private players in cotton and textile sectors from six African countries met the members of the Indian Cotton Federation here on Tuesday.
The delegates are visiting some of the textile clusters in India, including Tirupur and Coimbatore, and having a meeting with the textile industry in New Delhi.
Vice-presidents of the Indian Cotton Federation K.N. Viswanathan and P. Nataraj told the delegates that textile mills in Coimbatore region are sourcing substantial volume of cotton from Africa. However, it is through international merchants and traders and they are interested in buying cotton directly from the African farmers and traders.
Indian trade and industry will be interested in investing in Africa and buying cotton from the African nations. Textile mills in Coimbatore region need more than 10 million bales of cotton a year and they buy most of it from Gujarat now. In the case of African cotton, there were issues such as the time taken for delivery, contamination and shade variation.
The shipments need to be regular and the infrastructure problems should be sorted out.
They are willing to assist the African sector. However, they need to know more about the volume of production in each country, the marketing season, Government norms, taxation, and security. This is the fourth African cotton delegation to Coimbatore in the last three months.
Milan Sharma, head-Africa Initiatives of IL&FS Cluster Development Initiative, told presspersons that the visit is organised as part of the Central Government’s Cotton Technical Assistance Programme for Africa.
The IL & FS is the programme manager for the project that aims at capacity building and technology transfer for development of the cotton sector in seven African countries.
Project
The project is on till 2015. It includes establishing a knowledge cluster in Benin, bio pesticide laboratory in Uganda, and skill development schools in Nigeria and Malawi. These will be in association with agencies such as the Central Institute for Research on Cotton Technology and the Directorate of Cotton Development. The programme has been extended for trade co-operation. An Indian delegation will visit the African countries this year, Ms. Sharma said.
Exposure
The visit is to give an exposure and create awareness on the cluster concept.
The delegates were from Benin, Burkina Faso, Chad, Nigeria, Uganda, and Malawi. They explained about cotton cultivation in their countries, facilities available and steps taken to sell cotton directly to buyers in countries such as India.
source: http://www.thehindu.com / The Hindu / Home> News> Cities> Coimbatore / by Special Correspondent / Coimbatore – March 05th, 2014
Billionaire investor Ram Shriram is on a hush-hush trip to his hometown Chennai, where he delivered a lecture at the Indian Institute of Technology on Monday that was completely out of bounds for the media.
The founder of SherpaloVentures and one of the earliest investors in search giant Google spoke on “What Drives Innovation at Stanford and in Silicon Valley” at a closed-door event at the 620-acre campus that was open only to the faculty and students as well as a few special invitees.
source: http://www.articles.economictimes.indiatimes.com / The Economic Times / Home> News> News By Industry> Services> Silicon Valley / ET Bureau / March 05th, 2014
The students created 2,493 handmade pollution masks in 30 minutes
Students of the Sri Krishna College of Engineering and Technology have created a record for making 2,493 handmade pollution masks in 30 minutes, says a release from the college. Elite World Records has recognised the feat and issued a certificate.
Attempt
The release said that the students made the attempt as part of the Entrepreneurship Week 2014 celebrations, which the National Entrepreneurship Network promoted. Santikar Young, Designated Adjudicator, South Asia, Elite World Records, was present to judge the attempt.
The students created 2,493 masks between 11 a.m. to 11.30 a.m.
The release quoting S. Malarvizhi, Chairperson and Managing Trustee, said that the objective was creation of awareness in the people that pollution prevention masks could be easily made.
The college principal and the vice-principal received the record certificate from the designated adjudicator, the release added .
source: http://www.thehindu.com / The Hindu / Home> News> Cities> Coimbatore / by Staff Reporter / Coimbatore – March 04th, 2014
After ‘Kancheepuram Silk’, ‘Madurai Malli’, and Coimbatore wet grinders, makers of “Tirunelveli Halwa”, famous for its taste and long shelf life, and Tuticorin macaroons, an Indianised dish of European macaroons, are trying to get Geographical Indication (GI) tag.
With the GI tag helping the producers in better marketing, especially overseas, more and more producers are seeking to get the registration conferred on products definite to a geographical territory. Speaking at a meeting attended by 20 halwa manufacturers from Tirunelveli and three macaroon manufacturers from Tuticorin to discuss the possibility of getting the GI tags, officials said whether it was ‘Madurai Malli’ (jasmine) or wet grinder of Coimbatore, the tag had made them more famous and helped farmers and manufacturers to get a better price both in the country and abroad.
Additional Public Prosecutor Sanjay Gandhi said GI tag for the halwa or macaroon was possible only if the makers come together and apply for the tag as an association. The officials said there was a problem in getting GI tag for halwa since it was doubtful whether the owners of “Iruttukadai”, whose halwa is the most famous, would join others to get the recognition.
Assistant Registrar of Trade Chinnaraja G.Naidu said 21 products from Tamil Nadu had so far received GI tag while an equal number of others, including makers of ‘Srivilliputhur Palgova’ (milk sweet) have applied for it.
source: http://www.thehindu.com / The Hindu / Home> News> National> Tamil Nadu / by PTI / Tirunelveli – March 01st, 2014
The battle for the title of ‘oldest family in the world’ may not be over soon. Just when 13 Manja siblings from Shimoga had staked their claim in the Guinness Book of Records for the spot, another family originally from Thanjavur wants to correct that. While the Shimoga family’s collective age is 880 plus years, the new contenders – a family of 11 siblings – say their ages total a whopping 899 plus years, adding up the months and days too.
On Monday, K V Rajagopal, an 87-year-old retired railway executive currently living in Bangalore, responded to a report in TOI dated February 16 on the Manja family, and claimed that his family beat them in the age battle.
Their family hailed from Thanjavur but later migrated to Nagpur, said Rajagopal, elaborating, “We are a family of 12 siblings of whom 11 are alive. The eldest is 92 years old and youngest, 73. Both live in the US. The collective age of the Manja family adds up to 880 plus and it struck me that we 11 siblings are older by 19 years.”
Rajagopal, the third son of G V Rajagopal and Ranganayaki who are now deceased, says all his siblings were born before Independence. “We have witnessed the freedom struggle as our father was a freedom fighter. All my five aunts studied on scholarships abroad during those days itself,” says Rajagopal.
Theirs is a cosmopolitan family, pipes in his daughter Priyamvada Srinivasan. “Gujaratis, Marathis, Jews, Americans, a German and Punjabi are all in it. I am happy to be a part of this rich old family,” she says.
Currently the family has 43 members. But they have never met at one place together. “We all have flown the nest. We had an ancestral house in Nagpur, where no one lives now. Even our childhood photographs are not with us. As six of my siblings live in the US, one each in the UK and Geneva and other two in Nagpur, we hardly get to meet together at one place, but we are in touch with each other,” says Rajagopal.
“But we are not in any race. I am yet to decide on giving a representation to the Guinness authorities,” he adds. The current holders of the record are London-based Brudennel family with a collective age of 855 years.
NEWEST AND OLDEST?
Rajalakshmi Raghavan (92) lives in the US
V Srinivas (89) lives in Nagpur
K V Rajagopal (87) lives in Bangalore
V Kannan (84) lives in the UK
Kalyani Raghavan (82) lives in Geneva
Dr Maithili Schmidt (80) lives in the US
Sulochana Glazer (79) lives in the US
Rangachari Raghavan (77) lives in Nagpur
Dr Renuka Sethi (76) lives in the US
Badra Raghavan (75) lives in the US
Susheila Bhagat (73) lives in the US
source: http://www.timesofindia.indiatimes.com / The Times of India / Home> City> Bangalore> Namma Metro / by Sunitha Rao, R – TNN / February 18th, 2014
Wild Wing Trust plans to groom students to adapt to urban environment
For the students in Classes V, VI, VII and VIII in the Forest Department’s tribal middle school in the middle of forest in Top Slip, students have been having teachers from across the globe. The students and teachers meet at the predetermined time, watch and listen to one another, engage in the teaching-learning process and sign out for the day to catch up the next day for the next lesson.
This interaction among the tribal students and teachers across the globe had been made possible with the active involvement of Wild Wing Trust and support of eVidyaloka, an online organisation that facilitates e-learning.
Wild Wing Trust’s Managing Trustee C. Saravanan said that the organisation’s volunteers decided to help the tribal children after studying the forest and tribal community for long and coming to the conclusion in their education and empowerment lay the future of the forest.
The volunteers started off by visiting the school on weekends to help the children by providing cots, books, etc and meeting their other requirements. But that did not bring about the expected change. It was then that they decided to partner with eVidyaloka to improve the teaching-learning process.
With the help of software and other professionals from Coimbatore who worked abroad and were willing to teach the children, the Trust volunteers provided television sets, network connectivity to bring together the children and the teachers through a video conferencing system.
The online teachers complemented the teachers at the school in that they shared the teaching but provided additional resources like showing video clips, demonstrations, etc. to the students to help them understand better. Mr. Saravanan said that the online teachers also stuck to the Samacheer Kalvi syllabus.
And, the result of the online intervention has been good. Headmistress Vanaja Durairaj said that the students’ commitment towards had improved. “They listen more, study well and also come well groomed to the school.”
The Wild Wing Trust did not stop with that, though. It also took a group of students, who were interested in sports, to interact with cricketer Rahul Dravid in Bangalore. “This was part of our confidence building measure.”
The Trust’s next plan was to groom the students to adapt to urban environment so that they did not drop out of school when they head to the plains to pursue Class IX and X. Field Director of Anamalai Tiger Reserve (ATR) Rajiv K. Srivastava and Range Officer Xavier recently infused more life into the school by sourcing more teachers and bringing in more activities for the children.
The old building had been renovated to provide an ideal ambience. Forest Department sources said that they were encouraging the new teaching-learning activity so that the tribal children received quality education.
source: http://www.thehindu.com / The Hindu / Home> News> Cities> Coimbatore / by Karthik Madhavan / Coimbatore – February 17th, 2014