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Event

New stamp commemorates late Aditya Birla

State Governor released the stamp in the presence of the Birla family; slammed other family-run businesses for lack of ethics.

The Governor of Maharashtra, K Sankaranarayanan yesterday released a commemorative postage stamp on late industrialist Aditya Birla. The function was held at Raj Bhavan, Mumbai, in the presence of other prominent Birla family members such as Kumarmangalam Birla, Neeraja Birla and Rajashree Birla, among others. The Post Master General of India was also present on the occasion.

In his speech, the Governor said, “Only five days ago, the Honourable President of India had released the commemorative stamp on late Shri Aditya Birla at Rashtrapati Bhavan in New Delhi. I am happy that we are celebrating the occasion here in Raj Bhavan, Mumbai. Although belatedly, I am glad that we are honouring one of the greatest pioneering business leaders of India late Shri Aditya Vikram Birla in a befitting manner.”

However, while praising the late business icon, the Governor slammed other businesses in India. He said, “Unlike other family-owned businesses in India, the Birla Group definitely stands out as one of the most respected business groups for two reasons. The first and foremost reason is the association and involvement of the Birlas in India’s freedom struggle. The late Shri GD Birla (Aditya Birla’s grandfather) was a close confidante of leaders like Mahatma Gandhi, Pandit Nehru, Sardar Patel and many others.

The second reason why the Birla Group is a respected name is because of the integration of ethics and values by the Birla Group with business. The name Birla at once inspires trust and confidence because of the adherence of the Group to these values.”

The Governor went on to extol the virtues of the late business leader, saying that he was “a silent business revolutionary who foresaw the winds of globalisation coming to India much before others. He was not one to blame the system for the unfavourable business atmosphere prevailing in those days. He worked his way out to put Indian business on the global level as early as in 1969. He went on to set up 19 companies outside India in countries like Thailand, Malaysia, Indonesia, the Philippines and Egypt. The postage stamp is a just recognition of his formidable work for the Birla Group and for the nation at large.”

(Picture courtesy Raj Bhavan, Mumbai)

 

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Enough said

Writing as therapy

Humra Quraishi explores why writers write – and why some of their best work comes out in times of stress.

While we hear of some new therapy being discovered or practiced in some part of the world on an almost daily basis, we have lost sight of the very word – therapy – and what it actually implies and means. In fact, each city in this country should host a regular get-together of authors and poets and writers. Give it any name of your choice; after all what’s in a name! Full credit should go to the Jaipur Literature Festival for taking the lead, and in these last couple of years, cities like Hyderabad, Mumbai, Chennai have also begun hosting their very own Literature Festivals.

Why can’t other cities and towns follow suit and host such meets? Probably they’d have to catch hold of a sponsor or two and a few willing writers who wouldn’t mind organising the event. They needn’t be large meets to begin with, and within a year or so, they could be broadened in scope and reach.

For years I been writing that if the jailor janaabs could try therapy on hapless jailed inmates, there’d be little need of those disciplining sessions that are sometimes conducted in prisons. In fact, if diary-writing be made available as an option to inmates in hospitals, jails, asylums, refugee camps, night or day shelters and other such places, then their stress-related symptoms would lessen, since writing has been proved to have the potential to heal.

In this connection, it is pertinent to remember the words of Mulk Raj Anand, who said that writing helped him recover from a series of severe nervous breakdowns. He’d once told me, “Each time my love affairs failed, I suffered a nervous breakdown and the only thing that helped me recover and brought me some relief was writing. My meeting with Sigmund Freud just after my first nervous breakdown in 1927 helped me to some extent, but it’s actually writing novels that helped me towards total recovery.”

Assamese writer and Jnanpith Award recipient Indira Goswami was also one of those writers who did not shy away from pouring out her heart into her writing, and from admitting that after her husband’s premature death that left her a young widow, the writing process anchored her and helped her regain the confidence to move on.

Writing has rescued several other writers as well. As poet-writer JP Das said, “Once, when I was going through terrible depression, I had engaged myself in translating some of my old love poems and it had a cathartic effect on me…I do not know if writing heals, but sometimes when I am not able to tell something which is weighing on my mind to anyone, I have written a poem or story about it and that has helped…”

Little wonder that JP Das is one of those bureaucrats who had the grit to take premature retirement from the Indian Administrative Service to become a full time writer. Recipient of the Saraswati Samman and the Sahitya Akademi Award, Das says that the  turning point in his life came around 1979-1980 when he was awarded the Homi Bhabha fellowship to do research on the paintings of Orissa, which he’d later published in the book Puri Paintings. “Those two years set me thinking along a broader perspective. I’d enjoyed that sense of freedom to the extent that I decided to quit the Administrative Service and take to full-time writing.’

During an earlier interview, Srinagar-based engineer-poet Syed Anwar Owais had told me that the best literature comes out of turmoil. “I have seen troubled times and my mind has had its share of trouble. Yes, the best literature comes out of social or personal turmoil. Doris Lessing wrote The Golden Notebook when she was under great strain. Poets such as Robert Graves were produced by World War I and were called war poets. Karl Popper’s The Open Society and its Enemies is a war work.’

On a personal level, I consider some volumes and the verses they carry as healers of a lasting kind. Some truly great works, some lovely poetry, all of them have helped me survive several everyday struggles, and some very harsh times.

Humra Quraishi is a senior political journalist. She is the author of Kashmir: The Untold Story and co-author of Simply Khushwant.

Categories
Event

An enCounter between art and the city

Nidhi Qazi catches up with Hong Kong-based artist Clara Cheung, who creates electricity using plastic bottles, metal waste and seawater.

Artist Clara Cheung from Hong Kong sees Mumbai’s sea water, used plastic bottles and metal waste as an opportunity. And how? She uses them all to unleash the Energy of Sea- the theme for her installation work at this year’s edition of enCounters.

I catch Clara in action at Bandra’s Carter Road promenade, a hotspot for various cultural activities the city hosts. From setting up the panel for her installation to getting down to work all details, Clara is all smiles. “My work tests the idea of how sea water of Mumbai can be used to generate electricity and help people.” ‘Best of waste’ is a known practice internationally, and Clara’s work is a case in point. She uses plastic bottles, seawater, aluminium cans and copper wires to generate electricity.

A standing panel is hung with plastic bottles cut in the shape of a bowl, and painted. The copper wires and aluminium waste from the cans have been fixed inside the cups, which are filled with saline seawater from the sea. With the forces of physics and chemistry backing them, the cups emit a faint and feeble glow, thanks to the electricity produced in the tiny bulbs attached to the copper wires.

“The amount of electricity is not great but it still gives us hope that we can find alternatives all around us. We can use the existing resources and wastes to construct something that is needed,” says Clara. A curator with the C&G Artpartments, Clara is in Mumbai for the fourth edition of enCounters.

Celebrating art in the public spaces, Powerplay enCounters is a platform that brings artists closer to common people. “We want to create a connection between art, the people and their problems,” says Claudio, co-founder, ArtOxygen – the organisation behind this project.

Claudio adds, “Such events don’t aim at producing immediate outcomes. We use arts to generate curiosity among people. Through aesthetics, we want to trigger people to question their lives, surroundings, environment. They should not be satisfied with anything and everything around them.”

The week long event closes on Sunday, January 20. A collaboration of ArtOxygen and Asia Art Projects, enCounters is a Mumbai-based the art initiative. Its previous themes in the three editions were Identities, Water and Land.

During the week, various artists from India and abroad displayed their works with the theme of Energy as the backdrop. The event had a number of workshops and interactive sessions to help artists connect with the people. One such event was the floor painting by artist Wai lun Chung whose objective was to make people think from other perspectives, apart from the obvious ones.

(Pictures courtesy Nidhi Qazi)

Categories
Diaries

‘The body achieves what the mind believes’

The Mumbai Marathon is here. A participant tells us how he’s been shaping up for the race that happens tomorrow.
by Akshay Kapur

Concluding part of the ‘Mumbai Marathon’ Diaries

Though I’ve maintained an active lifestyle, I started training specifically for the Mumbai Marathon about four months ago. I trained both outdoors and in the gym.

Some people train really intensively for the Marathon, but I made sure that my normal training duration did not exceed one hour, six days a week. Prior to the Marathon training, I did a lot of compound activity and functional training. Training for the upcoming run on Sunday has had a very beneficial effect on me – it has helped me remain very focussed on my fitness goals. Running this particular Marathon has always been an amazing experience for me.

I modified my fitness regime for the Marathon a bit – I incorporated more of cardiovascular endurance and muscular endurance exercises. I have also been following a very good eating pattern, reducing my carbs and fat intake and increasing protein intake. I’ve been leading a very disciplined lifestyle overall. I didn’t hire a professional trainer to guide me for the training, but the team at my gym has given me a lot of guidance and motivation.

When I first participated, I wanted to push my fitness to the next level. And every time I have participated in the Marathon, I have crossed another barrier that I never imagined I would. I guess the body achieves what the mind believes!

Akshay Kapur is 30 and works as a sales manager.

(Picture courtesy Akshay Kapur and hindubusinessline.com)

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Listen

Surabhi Saraf live in Mumbai

The San Francisco-based musician performed for the first time in India on Thursday, at Mumbai’s Max Mueller Bhavan, Kala Ghoda.

Surabhi Saraf performed at Mumbai, and India, for the first time ever. The School of the Art Institute of Chicago MFA degree holder played two tracks from her debut album, Illuminen EP, in which, in her own words, she “layers the sound of my voice over the droning percussions of aged fans that are augmented by lights and live video, creating an immersive soundscape.”

She played Illuminen, which she exhorted the audience to listen to with their eyes closed. This was an attempt by the artist to “draw the focus inward, negotiating ideas of entertainment, experience, sensation and sensationalism with the conviction that it is actually the numbing of certain sensory realities that generates crucial moments in socio-cultural transformation.” Watch the clip of the track below:

Her other performance, Spinning Four, was about “a visually rich immersive sonic experience that stimulates external senses. From my memories of Indian classical music to the multiplicity of sounds emerging from old mechanical fans, this performance deals with the phenomena on which we all depend, wind and breath. I layer the sound of my voice over the droning percussion of the rotating blades of aged fans powered by electric motors. Once on the air, these sound waves become electrical impulses and data that are manipulated through my laptop in real-time.”

(Picture courtesy surabhisaraf.net)

 

Categories
Big story

Want registered house documents for free?

If you’ve purchased or rented a house, you can get the registered documents online, free of cost for a week.
by The Editors | editor@themetrognome.in

The State Government made a new Internet facility operational since yesterday – using the site igrmaharashtra.gov.in, you can now download registered property documents without having to depend on your real estate broker to deliver the same to you, or stand in line at the local registration office. However, you can download these documents free of cost for just a week – thereafter, you will be charged a lumpsum amount for the entire document.

The website is part of the Government’s e-initiative to shift the process of property registration in Maharashtra, online. At present, the website is operational on a pilot basis in 14 of Mumbai’s 23 registration offices. The Government plans to extend the service to all centres in Maharashtra soon. Documents for transactions made between the years 2002 and 2011 are available for download.

To access the site and get your registered agreement, you must know such details as the CTS Number, village name, the document number, etc. Downloading of the document takes about 30 minutes. However, the site is not very user-friendly: for instance, a first-time user would not know that he/she needs to look for the ‘eSearch’ field on the left of the home page to begin looking for the registered document, in the first place. Besides, not many users would be stumped by the transaction not progressing beyond the ‘Property details’ page, since users have to enter only the first three letters of the ‘village’ that the registered property falls under.

In the near future, Maharashtra State could also be the first in the country to roll out a process where registrations of rental properties could take place online, followed shortly by other property deals. The State is also mulling a model where registration personnel could be called home for the process.

(Picture courtesy hindubusinessline.com)

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