Friday, September 30, 2011

Nau Ratri - The count down. Day 2


When Durga gets angry, she turns Kali.

When energy is focused into a single motive, The means are created on their own and path ways are found.

Day 2

It was a difficult day and the distractions eventually won. It means that now the time is to make up time for rest of the days. Its not easy but then what good is a victory if it comes easily.

Repetition is needed and its time now for wax on wax off.

Thursday, September 29, 2011

Nau Ratri - The count down. Day 1

When Durga gets angry, she turns Kali.

When energy is focused into a single motive, The means are created on their own and path ways are found.

Day 1.

Found time to focus on the motive and short listed the topics and planned and revised. Honestly though it would require a lot more work and focus.

Monday, September 26, 2011

Mumbai Watch- Young now and would stay young.

Life will never be this easy again. New problems will come.

What is important is that we put aside some resource of ours for the future.  You are  are on the right side/wrong side of youth now. So if your passion is something you want to pursue in the future, the right time to start is now. You may for example be in to trekking or dancing but you don't know how to go about it every week. How do you find time. You find time in moments and then you get the technique of finding time and hence you find time in lengths.

In simple language- what I mean to say is to start with a few minutes on what you like and gradually increase it. Its about managing the time after all.

But costs of living are increasing and hence it is now also important that resources are also planned in monetary terms. The young age we have is a boon right now as we can enjoy the growth, take a few calculated risks and also secure ourselves. If we plan right, the new problems we face (atleast the financial ones) would be of lesser and we would be ready.

(To be continued in part 2)

By Ninad Tatke.  




Sunday, September 25, 2011

Mausam the awesome flick.

In the 80's or 90s when the masses wanted their action or drama dose, they would turn to the latest flick which packed everything in for them in 3 hours. So we had marriages, we had love triangles, or action sequences lifted from various hollywood movies. It was justified, we were able to watch 10 films worth of plot at the cost of one.

Just yesterday I glanced (saw) DDLJ on TV.

 I had not seen it for a few years and it felt good watching it again. The misadventure ful trip in Europe. Hide love seek love in the fields of Punjab. Final conflict with parents and the show of values.... Good concepts great presentation. Thus it was a great movie.

Over the years many movies have used similar concepts and formula. Few like Jab we met actually did even touch a chord.

But today I watched a movie which was not one or two movie concepts I had seen before but a collage of movies and still it managed to bore me to death.

To make it clear - Awesome - Real meaning. Something which strikes fear into one heart. From the family of Aweful. In awe of (fear of)

So why was movie Mausam Awesome

l. It had visuals (in promos) similar to 1986 - wow movie The Top Gun. But I had to watch torture for 1.5 hrs to get there and 1.45 hrs since.

2. I accidentally went to screen 3 when my seat was in screen 4 after the interval and the start of the movie seemed like the continuation of it after the interval. My God what pace and editing, A masterpiece, entire scenes can be used elsewhere and no one will know! In fact I feel some frames of sole Sonam may have been borrowed from Sawariya.

3. Why did it need history as a background. Was Harry -(The Heros name ) something like forest Gump.

4. How can people who can be entrepreneurs in a different  country not have sense to take some one contact details and share theirs.

5. Shahid Kapoor did try to beat Monish Behl's handicapped arm performance  from Hum Saath Saath Hai

6. The movie once again justified the fact that great looks and visuals can stun. In this case they also sting as the story goes no where.

7. It is a movie about love. A love a father - a great actor has shown to try and resurrect his son as a Star.

8. The movie did promote tourism - Scotland, Switzerland and even Mallukot were gorgeous.

9. The movie also made me understand that water supply pipes (big ones) are readily available in any part of the globe. They are as per this movie great hangout/hideout places.



All photos are from the net and they dont belong to me.

By Ninad Tatke.

Wednesday, September 21, 2011

Mumbai Watch - The city that stops

Mumbai was the city which never stopped. Tomorrow it will still be a city that never stops.

But Today Mumbai stops.

Not because it wants to. But because it is forced. From bus strikes, rickshaw, train strikes.

Everyone who moves about (travels) in this mad crowded city feels the pinch but are helpless.

Mumbai is all about work, and the returns from work. No one thinks of the infrastructures and the economics of it.




The following few are some pointers.


  • Firstly the crowd should ideally have common goals.
  • This can lead to unity to oppose these unions. 
  • People should start vehicle pooling i (atleast during rush hours), many people are  from the same commercial office area.
  • May be cycles can be popular again to reach from station to office.
Will be glad to know if you have an opinion.

Images: Images are from the net. I don't own any of the images. 

by Ninad Tatke.

Tuesday, September 13, 2011

Dr. Prakash and Dr. Mandakini Amte Lok Biradari Prakalp (LBP)


 Lok Biradari Prakalp (LBP), a project of the Maharogi Sewa Samiti (MSS), Warora, was started by the legendary social worker Baba Amte in 1973 for integrated development of Madia Gond, the primitive tribals of Bhamragad in Gadchiroli district of Maharashtra, India. The Madia Gonds occupy 150 square kilometers of dense forest in eastern Maharashtra, bordering Andhra Pradesh and Chattisgarh states. In a thousand isolated villages, they survive by hunting and gathering and shifting cultivation.

Mission
To focus on the socio-economic development of rural and tribal population. To provide better health care and educational facilities and also to promote soil and water conservation.

      “I don’t want to be a great leader, I want to be a man who goes around with a little oil can and when he sees a breakdown, offers his help. To me, the man who does that is greater than any holy man in saffron-coloured robes. The mechanic with oil can. That is my ideal in life” – Baba Amte


Baba Amte devoted his life to many other social causes also, the most notable of which were environmental awareness, wildlife preservation and the Narmada Bachao Andolan. He was deeply influenced by Mahatma Gandhi, with whom he had spent some time in Sevagram Ashram. Baba Amte was a follower of Gandhism for his entire life, dedicating his life to the cause of upliftment of the downtrodden classes of society.

In 1946, Baba got married to Sadhana Guleshastri, who was later referred to by community members as Sadhanatai or simply Tai. Their two sons, Vikas and Prakash, are both doctors. Both have dedicated their lives to social work and causes similar to those of their parents. Elder son Dr. Vikas Amte runs the Maharogi Sewa Samiti (Leprosy Service Society). Dr. Vikas, along with his wife Dr. Bharati Amte, co-ordinates operations between Anandwan and satellite projects while also running a hospital at Anandwan.


Baba Amte’s younger son Dr. Prakash Amte and his wife Dr. Mandakini Amte are running the Lok Biradari project since 1974, forfeiting the opportunity of a lucrative medical practice. Deep in the heartland of India in an isolated tribal village called Hemalkasa, Dr. Prakash and Dr. Mandakini Amte have quietly been performing miracles on a daily basis, for almost three decades. This couple provides medical care to about 40,000 tribal people every year and education to hundreds of kids. They’ve been doing this for 27 years.


Biography of Dr. Prakash and Dr. Mandakini Amte


“My father never forced me to take up this duty. When we came to the project for a picnic, Manda and I decided that we belonged to this jungle. We were firm in giving back everything that we got back in the form of education to these primitive, neglected tribals.”-Dr. Prakash Amte

Dr. Prakash Amte grew up in Anandwan, an ashram and rehabilitation center for leprosy patients in Maharashtra founded by his father, the renowned Gandhian humanitarian Murlidhar Devidas Amte, or Baba Amte. Prakash was busy with postgraduate surgical studies in Nagpur when, in 1974, he volunteered to take over a new project begun by Baba Amte among the Madia Gonds. In the meanwhile he got married to Dr. Mandakini Amte (later known as Mandatai) who left her government job to eventually start a hospital, school and an orphanage for injured wild animals including a lion, leopards and more. Dr. Prakash and his wife Mandakini abandoned their urban practices and, in a leap of faith, moved to remote Hemalkasa.

The Amtes are social and environmental pioneers. Dr. Mandakini Amte helps tribal women deal with their inhibitions and superstitions related to health care. Dr. Prakash Amte is famous for his medical work with serious injuries and illnesses, like bear bites and burns, and for caring for wild animals rescued by the Amte Animal Ark.

Their sons Digant and Aniket, who are both doctors, themselves have decided to dedicate their lives to the same cause.

Problems plaguing the Gond Community

Poverty is one of the biggest problems of this community. Their lifestyle is completely primitive. Food is also in scarcity, as the food grown through primitive farming techniques is not enough to sustain the family for the entire year. The Madia Gonds often rely on toddy and other forms of alcohol to suppress their hunger and minimize food requirements.  Moreover, houses are built using forest timber, bamboo, grass etc which do not provide them with enough shelter from the harsh seasons.                   
Health is another concern regarding the Madia Gonds. Historically the Madia Gonds were victims of ravages of small-pox and skin-diseases and a mild form of leprosy called Gondi Rog. Medical care has been virtually unheard of for this community.  Lack of several essential nutrients in their diet has rendered them vulnerable to malnutrition and other protein deficiencies.  Malaria, tuberculosis and a spectrum of other viral diseases are constant threats for them, along with several water borne and communicable diseases. There is also a high prevalence of genetically transmitted diseases like sickle cell anaemia and thalassaemia.

Additionally living in the wilderness, they are often at risk from wild animals like bears and panthers, and insects like bees and scorpions. The region they inhabit is also the hot-bed of naxal activities, and they have often been prey to naxalite violence.

Unavailability of clean drinking water, proper food is another problem that they face. Illiteracy is another big issue, with nearly all members of the tribe being illiterate. Moreover, their poverty and illiteracy have led them to be exploited by corrupt officials and greedy outsiders.

Initiatives taken to solve the problems

At the time Lok Biradari was formed, illiteracy in the area was almost total, and medical care was unheard of. Shifting cultivation was the only kind of agriculture the tribals knew. Getting enough food was a constant struggle. Malaria was a constant scourge, as was wild animal attacks. The sole contact of the Madia Gonds with the outside world was through forest contractors and forest guards who spared no opportunity to exploit them.
Dr Prakash, and his wife, Dr. Mandakini, fresh from medical college, went to Hemalkasa. They told Baba Amte that they would spend the rest of their lives serving the Gonds. Prakash gave up his studies to specialize in surgery and Mandakini gave up her government job. The young couple settled in a doorless hut without a telephone or electricity or privacy. They practiced medicine beside the road and warmed themselves by a wood fire at night. The Madia Gonds, shy people and suspicious of outsiders, spurned their help at first. Prakash and Mandakini learned their language and patiently gained their trust. The miraculous cures of an epileptic boy with terrible burns and a man near death from cerebral malaria turned the tide. "Once a patient is cured," says Prakash, "he comes back and brings four new patients."


Hospital



"I have rarely come across people like the ones managing this project. Absolutely down-to-earth, a smile on everyone's face, Prakash Amte and his colleagues are among the most famous Indians living today."-Bhanu Rajagopalan, boloji.com



Dr.Prakash and Dr.(Mrs) Mandakini Amte have both worked tirelessly under extremely difficult conditions to help in the preservation of India's tribal people. In this particular project primary health care was given top priority. Six sub centres were started in the interior forest area, geographically wide apart from the main hospital, of which three are still functional.
The early years of the project entailed a massive struggle in the extremely difficult conditions of a thick and remote forest. The centre, started in 1973, has recently developed into a full fledged hospital having 40 beds and caters to over 45,000 patients annually. At Hemalkasa the hospital is ensconced in the surrounding dense forest, where the Madia Gond tribal patients feel most comfortable in recuperating after their treatment. Hundreds of patients come daily to the hospital traversing long and difficult terrain on foot. The Amtes treat almost 45,000 patients every year entirely free of cost and provide round the clock services for the emergency cases. The tribals have a high regard for them.




School

 A residential school (1st to 12th  standard) was started in 1976 for the tribal children now giving free education to nearly 650 students. They are provided with hostel accommodation and given free lodging and boarding facilities. All education material is also provided free of cost to them. Apart from the formal education, they are also provided vocational training and guidance, which will be useful in their day to day life. For eg: practical training in farming, seed production, dairy, bamboo craft, ceramic art, greeting cards, tailoring, health education etc. These programmes are aimed at the survival of the tribals and all efforts have been made to bring about awareness of social rights and duties through continued dialogue and social exposure.
Dr. Digant and Dr. Aniket, sons of Prakash and Mandakini Amte, also completed their schooling at Hemalkasa.
  
Preservation of Wild Life

 A small sheltered enclosure has been formed at Hemalkasa to keep orphaned babies of wild animals, thereby protecting them from merciless killing. This rescue-cum-orphanage, houses probably one of the largest one-man-collection of wild animals in the country and the world at large. The Hemalkasa community of workers live in complete harmony with a great diversity of wild animals still to be found in this relatively undisturbed, thick forest. 


 By -
Poorvi Kala
Suman Meena 
Soumya Rao 
Tanya Thomas 
Sukriti Sood    
Simi Mohan  
Manisha Harit   
Shivani Kaul   
June Paul  
Ninad Tatke             









Saturday, September 03, 2011

To mentors.

All I can say about this Ray
is the wonderful way
you contributed
our mind sways

As I stepped out in the real world
to face the bricks and bouquets
I realized the efforts and heart aches that you must have faced to chisel us.
From worthless blob of stone, to idealism, courage, dreams and concepts.

Conceptual clarity to barbaric yalps
From still lifes to draw what you want.
You were everywhere.



You were even on TV.
Fictional and yet the best I ever had.

You were even on Net.
Thoughts ideas and many more things I could get.


Like the fragmented way of life. You became rare and fragmented.

You were catch me if you can now.


You were now- rare and fragmented
And I now carried a big head -

And as I was turning into a blob.
I found a person with a new chisel

oh chisel us.
From worthless blob of stone, to idealism, courage, dreams and concepts.

And then  - may be I and people like me 

will lift the chisel too

To crave the minds of new generation of dreamers.

To take and to give. To take whats positive and to give back as much.
Yet in in that.
 No expectations, no miracles and yet with small steps and frequent barbaric yalps
We shall try to find new horizons. 

By Ninad Tatke.