Ashaddha Shukla 9 Vik Samvat 2070. Yugabda 5115: July 16, 2013

1. FESTIVALS: Rakshabandhan, Shravan Poornima, also called Aavani-Avattam and Upaakarma in southern part of Bharat, falls on August 20 this year. The delicate cord tied by the sister to the brother on this day pulsates with the abiding and chaste bond of love between the brother and the sister. This sister-brother relationship goes far beyond the mere personal protection of a female from a male. It also implies the basic element of an amicable and harmonious social life where all members of the society look upon themselves as brothers and sisters and as children of one common motherland. The tying of Raakhi to the sacred Bhagavaa Dhwaj at the start of the function at Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh (RSS) shakhas signifies this social and cultural aspect. 

2. RATHA YATRA IN PURI: Nearly ten lakh devotees on July 10 witnessed the world famous annual Ratha Yatra of Shri Jagannath in Puri in Odisha. Devotees from across the country and abroad descended on the pilgrim town to have a glimpse of the presiding deities – Bhagwan Jagannath, Balbhadra and Subhadra – of the 12th century shrine. Devotees poured into the sea side town since early morning to watch the ceremony and pull the three majestic and colourful chariots on the ‘bada danda’. The pulling of the chariots by ecstatic devotees was watched by millions including a host of VVIPs and dignitaries.

3. IIT-BHU STUDENTS DITCH CAP AND GOWN FOR ETHNIC STYLE AT GRADUATION CEREMONY: In the first convocation of IIT-BHU, held on July 10, 2013, the new technocrat boys were in white dhoti-kurta or pyjama-kurta and girls in white sari or salwar-kurta, when they appeared before former Rashtrapati and chief guest APJ Abdul Kalam. Kalam was surprised by the sight but later congratulated them on their decision. There were 113 meritorious students from 2010, 2011 and 2012 batches who received their gold medals from Shri Kalam. They were a total of 2,383 students including those who had taken admission in 2006-07 onwards who received their degrees on this occasion. "It was an effort to break free from the shackles of colonial practices and return to our tradition. Nothing could be more appropriate than starting this practice from the holy city of Varanasi," professor Surendra Kumar, dean of IIT-BHU, said.

4. 'RSS ACTVISTS FIRST TO HELP STRANDED PILGRIMS IN U'KHAND': RSS Akhil Bharatiya Sah-Prachar Pramukh J Nandkumar told the journalists in Bhopal on July 8, that the RSS swayamsevaks were the first to report at the calamity-striken areas of Uttarakhand to participate in relief and rescue operations to shift the stranded pilgrims to safer places. He said that the RSS swayamsevaks had reached the affected areas within 24 hours. Since the rescue work was to be done with helicopters, the first and foremost job was to prepare make-shift helipads. And these helipads were made by RSS men. They had opened 15 centers, the very next day, to provide relief to the stranded pilgrims. Nearly 200 villages were completely destroyed in this natural calamity. But setting their sorrow aside, the people of these villages helped the stranded pilgrims. This was the tallest example of humanity. Over 5000 RSS swayamsevaks drawing from other areas of the country had reached there and helping their fellow swayamsevaks in the herculean task of rehabilitation.         

5. 2 BHARATIYAS AMONG 7 GIRLS AWARDED ON MALALA DAY BY UNITED NATIONS: When Pakistani teen activist, Malala Yousafzai, celebrated her 16th birthday at the United Nations and demanded education for all children from the world leaders, she was not alone in her endeavour. Seven girls from across the world, who had done their share for children’s education, were supporting her with both word and gesture. And when Malala told the gathering that “let us pick up our books and our pens. They are our most powerful weapons. One teacher, one book, one pen, can change the world,” they all agreed.
The girls were awarded the UN special envoy for global education’s youth courage award as part of the Malala Day celebrations. The girls, two Bharatiyas among them, were awarded for their courage to promote the cause of education and dignity of women. The Bharatiya girls are 21-year-old Ashwini from Bangalore and 15-year-old Razia from Uttar Pradesh.
Ashwini was awarded for fighting against odds to study and then using her education to campaign for the right to education for children with disabilities. Visually impaired, Ashwini was brought up in a poor village in Karnataka and fought circumstances to complete her graduation. She overcame the odds, achieved great grades and got an excellent job with an IT firm. However, she gave it all up to campaign for other children with disabilities. Ashwini now works for Leonard Cheshire Disability, a Bangalore-based NGO.
Razia, a former child labourer who stitched footballs for a living, struggled against the odds and succeeded in passing Class 11. She then helped stop the exploitation of 48 child labourers and made sure that they were enrolled in school.
Urmila, 22, of Nepal; Shazia, 15, of Pakistan; Raouia, 12, from Morocco; Keshob, 18, from Bangladesh; and Aminata, 20, from Sierra Leone were the other girls awarded on the occasion.

6. I AM A HINDU NATIONALIST AS I AM A BORN HINDU: NARENDRA MODI "I am nationalist. I'm patriotic. Nothing is wrong. I am born Hindu. Nothing is wrong. So I'm a Hindu nationalist. So yes, you can say I'm a Hindu nationalist because I'm a born Hindu," Gujarat Chief Minister Narendra Modi told Ross Colvin and Sruthi Gottipati of Reuters news agency in an interview at his official residence in Gandhinagar. The Gujarat strongman was asked as to who was the "real Modi" – Hindu nationalist or a pro-business chief minister? "As far as progressive, development, workaholic, whatever they say, this is what they are saying. So there's no contradiction between the two. It's one and the same image," he said.
Asked if he regretted what happened in 2002, Modi said, “Bharat’s Supreme Court is considered a good court today in the world. The Supreme Court created a special investigative team (SIT) and top-most, very bright officers who oversee the SIT. That report came. In that report, I was given a thoroughly clean chit, a thoroughly clean chit. Another thing, any person if we are driving a car, we are a driver, and someone else is driving a car and we’re sitting behind, even then if a puppy comes under the wheel, will it be painful or not? Of course it is. If I’m a chief minister or not, I’m a human being. If something bad happens anywhere, it is natural to be sad.”
Asked if he became PM, which leader would he emulate, Modi replied, “The first thing is, my life’s philosophy is and what I follow is: I never dream of becoming anything. I dream of doing something. So to be inspired by my role models, I don’t need to become anything. If I want to learn something from Vajpayee, then I can just implement that in Gujarat.

7. 50 PER CENT OF NHS IN LAST 30 YEARS CAME UP DURING NDA RULE, ADMITS UPA: The Congress-led UPA on July 8 admitted in an affidavit filed in the Supreme Court that the BJP-led NDA in its five-year rule had constructed nearly 50 per cent of the national highways laid in the last 32 years.
The affidavit revealed that during 1997-2002, when the NDA was in power, 23,814 km of national highways were added to the existing National Highways network. This implies nearly 50 per cent of the 47,795 km of national highways constructed in the last 32 years was done during the NDA regime only. However, during the nearly 10-year of UPA rule, the total length of national highways laid is only 16,000 km.

8.  MODI DIDN’T SAY ANYTHING WRONG: VAIDYA: Former Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh spokesperson M.G. Vaidya said in Nagpur on July 13: “Narendra Modi has said the right thing. He called himself a Hindu nationalist, which is not wrong. We are also Hindu nationalists. He did not compare Muslims killed in Gujarat riots with a puppy killed by a car. He said he feels sad even if a puppy comes under the wheel of his car. I don’t think he said anything wrong. It was misconstrued because of lack knowledge of the language and a result our preconceived notions.” Lashing out at the Congress, he added:  “The Congress always speaks of 2002 Gujarat riots but what about the Godhra incident in which 57 kar sevaks were burnt alive? The riots were just a reaction to the Godhra incident. People talk about reaction, not about action. Only Gujarat riots are talked about, but the fact is that more Sikhs were killed in Delhi riots than Muslims killed in the Gujarat riots. At the time of the Delhi riots, Rajiv Gandhi was Prime Minister, but no one demanded his resignation.”

9. ANNUAL DAY OF BSK AND SVP IN AUSTRALIA: Bal Samskar Kendra and Sydney Ved Pathshala celebrated their 5th Annual Day on 29th of June. After the invocation prayer by Vaishnavi & Malavika, Dr Shobha Rudrakumar  gave a  snapshot of  VHP activities Australia wide. The drama – Satyakama & Jabala- presented by BSK Moorebank centred around education and the role of the teacher in uplifting a student. Victor Dominello, Minister for Citizenship & Communities & Minister for Aboriginal Affairs, addressed the audience and distributed the awards to all the volunteers. Councillor Lisa Lake of Holroyd Council, in her address expressed support for the new ventures undertaken by the BSK/SVP. The musical depiction by BSK, Moorebank conveyed the message that God is everywhere and is not limited to time and space!     
Vedic hymns were dedicated to Lord Ganesha & the Guru by Sydney Veda Patashaala, Baulkham Hills and Westmead. The story behind the short verse like dialog with a small girl named Kanchanamala) was interesting and captured the attention of the audience. “Ayigiri Nandini” was chanted by students from BSK Toongabbie. BSK, Moorebank staged the girls talking to the bird in a dance form.    
BSK, Homebush presented Madhurashtakam a unique poem, describing the Sweetness of Lord Sri Krishna. SVP Baulkham Hills presented “Bhagya suktam” a very important sukta of the Veda, a recitation of which in the morning adds to the happiness and success of the endeavours of that day and further. (Balasamskar Kendra (BSK) and Sydney Veda Paatashaala (SVP) are the educational projects of Vishwa Hindu Parishad helping to promote & preserve Sanskrit Language and ancient tradition of the Vedas).

10. YOGA IN SCHOOLS IS NOT RELIGIOUS INSTRUCTION, JUDGE RULES:
A San Diego (US) Superior Court judge rejected a claim on July 1 by parents in the Encinitas elementary school system that teaching yoga in the schools is an improper attempt at religious indoctrination.
The ruling by Judge John Meyer, who heard the case without a jury, means that the Encinitas Union School District can continue to teach yoga as part of a health and exercise curriculum. Yoga, the judge said, is similar to other exercise programs like dodgeball. Students attend two 30-minute yoga sessions each week. The yoga program has been supported by a $533,000 grant from a local studio that teaches Ashtanga yoga.
Encinitas Supt. Tim Baird has said that the program is worthwhile in teaching healthy exercise and eating habits. He said he hopes that teaching yoga to students will decrease instances of fighting and bullying.

11. JAMMU-KASHMIR KI ANKAHI KAHANI, a book by Dr. Kuldeepchand Agnihotri was jointly released by RSS Sah-sarakaryavah Dattatreya Hosabale and BJP veteran LK Advani in New Delhi on July 6. L K Advani said on the occasion that when the proposal was made, many leaders of the Congress had vehemently opposed it and had even termed it as a joke. The Congress leaders had said that the same provisions that were made for the other 564 princely states should also be made for Jammu-Kashmir and not any separate or special provision for it. The author of the book, Dr. Agnihotri  said that then prominent political party of Jammu-Kashmir, Praja Parishad, had organized a historical agitation over several issues in the 1950's. During this agitation several thousands of ‘satyagrahis’ were imprisoned and 15 of them fell to the bullets of the police and attained martyrdom. Shri Hosabale said that the people of the country need to know the truth of Shyama Prasad Mukherjee’s mysterious death.The Chairman of Jammu-Kashmir Study Center, Jawahar Lal Kaul thanked the author Dr. Kuldip Chand Agnihotri for bringing out the true facts of the ‘Praja Parishad’ agitation and about Jammu-Kashmir in the form of this book. Several intellectuals and prominent leaders like Vijay Kumar Malhotra, Ram Lal, Lakshmi Narayan Bhaala, JP Nadda were present on the occasion.

12. ELEPHANTS DRAW TOURISTS TO GURUVAYUR: Tourists are flocking to Lord Sreekrishna temple in Guruvayur, where it is now relaxation time for 60 elephants. After 11 months’ temple duty, rejuvenation helps them regain their health. During the month-long pampering, their weight will increase by 250-700 kg. Sathyapalan (53), a mahout, is always busy preparing food for the elephants. Under the supervision of the vet, he blends boiled rice, herbs, lentil, green gram, horse gram, medicinal plants and vitamin tablets.
Guruvayur Dewasom (temple administration body) board member N Raju said: “Elephant feeding attract hordes of tourists to the yard these days. We are planning an elephant research and study centre to attract more tourists and pilgrims.”
In Guruvayur devotees have donated the elephants as thanksgiving to the Lord.

13. REMAINS OF PRE-ASHOKAN SHRINES FROM 1300 BC FOUND IN NEPAL: New excavations have unearthed ruins of a thriving village with a shrine in Lumbini, the birthplace of Lord Buddha in Nepal, more than a thousand years before Emperor Ashoka built monuments there to spread Buddhism. Until now the earliest temples have been attributed to Emperor Ashoka, who in the 3rd century BC built a pillar and brick temple in Lumbini in his efforts to spread Buddhism across the region. Lumbini is a UNESCO world heritage site since 1997.
With the remains of a village dating back to as early as 1300 BC discovered a few hundred metres south of Lord Buddha's birthplace, the history of settlement in the region has been pushed back by a thousand years. A combined team of Nepalese and international experts worked in the excavations under a UNESCO project funded by Japan. The town of Lumbini in Nepal is where the Buddha was born as Prince Gautama Siddhartha, before achieving enlightenment more than 2,500 years ago. Lumbini was where the Buddha lived until the age of 29.

14. WINNERS TAKE IT ALL: It was 5:30 in the morning on July 13 in Washington, US. Too early for Varun Jain. He liked to sleep late specially as school had closed for summer vacation. His father, Vivek Jain, a California physician, was up, however, and online. He wanted to check Varun’s SAT score, which the younger son had taken three weeks ago. It was a perfect 2,400, a national record for an eighth grader. Varun didn’t have to take that test, which determines college readiness. He still has a couple of years to go. But his parents were running out of challenges for him. So, he took the test, and killed it. Varun heard the score, when woken up, mumbled “wow” and went right back to sleep, leaving it to the family to tell relatives here and in Bharat — they are from Hyderabad.
Varun is an exceptional 14-year-old. And you may leave it at that, wish him well and move on, if not for the fact that he’s part of a wave of Bharatiya-American children sweeping every academic prize in the land.

15. SIKH OFFICER GETS US ARMY TO BEND ON HIS TURBAN: The Sikhs of northwestern Bharat, wearing long beards and turbans, have battled Mughals in Punjab, Afghans near the Khyber Pass and Germans in the bloody trenches of the Somme. When Major Kamaljeet Singh Kalsi, an American Sikh raised in New Jersey signed up for the US Army, this tradition counted for nothing. Before sending him to officer basic training, the army told him that he would have to give up the basic symbols of his religion: his beard, knee-length hair and turban. Armed with petitions and Congressional letters, he waged a two-year campaign that in 2009 which resulted in the army granting him a special exception for his unshorn hair, the first such accommodation to a policy established in the 1980s. Since then, two other Sikhs have won accommodations from the army. But many others have failed. And so now, as he prepares to leave active duty, Major Kalsi, who earned a Bronze Star in Afghanistan, is waging a new campaign: to rescind those strict rules that he believes have blocked hundreds of Sikhs from joining the military.

16. BHARATIYA-AMERICAN IS SILICON VALLEY’S MILLION-DOLLAR BET: Ro Khanna is not just running for US Congress, he is sprinting. His campaign announced on July 10, it had raised over $1 million in the quarter ending June, a record of sorts. Khanna is contesting for the House of Representatives from California’s District 17, home to Silicon Valley, which appears to have put its money on him. Contributors include Yahoo CEO Marisa Mayer, Facebook COO Sheryl Sandberg, Netscape co-founder Marc Andreessen, angel investor Ron Conway and Flipboard founder Mike McCue. It’s a record for a first-time House race challenger to raise $1 million in a quarter without dipping into personal wealth. Ro — short for Rohit — is a first generation Bharatiya-American and is running against Mike Honda, a Japanese-American who is a 12-year veteran of the House of Representatives.

17. LIVE A LIFE OF DEVOTION: SANKARACHARYA: Sri Jayendra Saraswathi, Sankaracharya of Kanchi Kamakoti Peedham, has called upon people to take to the path of devotion, which is the soul of living. He was inaugurating the month-long 15th Aradhana Mahotsavam of Jagadguru Chandrasekhara Saraswathi Sankaracharya Swamigal at the Manthakara Mahaganapathy temple hall at Kalpathy, Palakkad on July 14.
The seer said, “Bhajan is the driving force in this era of life. Without Namasamkeerthanam (discourse), our life will not be full and final.” He was happy to be in Kerala because it was the great land that gave birth to Adi Sankara in Kalady.

18.  ARMY BEGINS WORK TO OPEN NEW ROUTE TO KEDARNATH SHRINE: Acting on the requests made by the civil administration and the National Disaster Relief Force, troops of Surya Command of the Army have now commenced work to open a new route to the Kedarnath shrine.
The land routes had suffered extensive damage during the cloud burst and flash floods of June 16-17, as a result of which, the access to the Kedarnath shrine remains cut off. As meteorological forecasts predict more rain in the near future, opening a new land route was the only solution to gain continued access to the shrine. Teams of Surya Command conducted a reconnaissance of the area and have commenced work to open a route along a fresh alignment. After much difficulty, the Central Command teams were successful in establishing a crossing over the Vasuki Ganga at Sonprayag on July 10, and the leading team comprising of 21 persons including four officers crossed the river and reached Gomkara and camped there for the night at an altitude of approximately 13,000 feet.
On July 11, another team with logistic support crossed the river at Sonprayag. This team will establish a staging area in the area of Gomkara. The leading team is presently opening the route to Kedarnath crossing Dev Vishnu and was heading for Kedarnath when reports last came in.
The new route is likely to follow the alignment from Sonprayag - Gomkar - Dev Vishnu - Dhungaj Giri - Kedarnath and will be approximately 20 kilometres in length, passing over an altitude of more than 13,000 feet.

19. VISION FOR 21ST CENTURY INSTITUTE OF NATIONAL IMPORTANCE (As envisaged by former Rashtrapati Shri APJ Abdul Kalam in the end of his address at the First Convocation of IIT-BHU on July 10, 2013)
I have, in the last ten years, met more than 3 Million university students and faculty from more than 150 universities in India and 50 universities in abroad. Based on this spirit, I wish to formulate a ‘Vision for 21st century Institute of National Importance’:
• The universities and national institutions have to prepare citizens of the future with a global outlook and be capable of serving his/her nation or nation of his/her choice.
• Science and technology and public policy are interrelated for mutual benefit and ushering in human kind’s development. This link has to be solidly built in the university education.
• Good teachers can be in any part of the world. The institution has to bring in this resource through innovative content generation in virtual classrooms.
• Technological connectivities among universities and institutions have to be pursued on a war footing using cost effective virtual classrooms.
• Cost effective continuing education possibilities are essential for citizens to be in tune with time.
• Can university education lead to sustainable development of the nation, like PURA (Providing Urban Amenities in Rural Areas)?
• With the world population increasing and resources dwindling, a mindset has to be developed for conserving and sharing the resources and look for new research for abundant resources. This calls for a “noble spirit” as well as a “research spirit.”
In summary, the 21st century national level institutions’ education is about developing enlightened citizenship for a knowledge society for peace and prosperity of nations and the world. 21st century Institutions have to be the incubator of world knowledge powerhouse. Based on my interaction with Indian and foreign institutions, I have detected certain dynamics. Wherever there is research intensity, it has enhanced quality teaching and the institutions have got a great name in the world of teaching.
Universities or Institutions from developed world with their vast experience of a century have realized the significance of research as a foundation for the university or institution. This is one dimension. The other dimension is that the student community with research focus will most aggressively ask questions. The third dimension is that the sharp gradient and accelerated development processes can give a platform for research for sustainable development. There is a large student community in the developing countries and there is an urge for higher education. Hence, we should see how we can empower them through university to university collaboration, student – faculty interaction, lab to lab collaboration, reaching out the world class quality teaching and research through a virtual reality environment with the excellent content generated.
Conclusion:
Finally, I would like to ask you, what would you like to be remembered for? You have to evolve yourself and shape your life.
You should write it on a page. That page may be a very important page in the book of human history. And you will be remembered for creating that one page in the history of the nation – whether that page is the page of invention, the page of innovation or the page of discovery or the page of creating societal change or a page of removing the poverty or the page of fighting injustice or planning and executing mission of networking of rivers.
I am sure, you would like to do something different – out of box missions, what are they?
1 Will you be remembered for a visionary action for the nation, like Prof. Vikram Sarabhai or Homi Bhabha, Prof Satish Dhawan or Dr. DS Kothari in the field of space science, nuclear science and Defence Science?
2 Will you be remembered for introducing new industrial system product, which represents a convergence of technologies for low cost high efficiency products like bionic eye?
3 Will you be remembered for creating a company which finds a place in the top 100 of the Fortune 500 companies from India?
4 Will you be remembered for facilitating the creation of PURAcomplexes (Providing Urban Amenities in Rural Areas) in the neighbourhood of your work place?
5 Will you be remembered for working and creating a validated system for the production of 340 million tonnes of food grains and value addition through food processing by the year 2020?
6 Will you be remembered for modernization of SME’s through application of new technology and innovation?
7 Will you be remembered as a discoverer or inventor of new phenomena in basic sciences?
8 Will you be remembered for promoting energy independence for the nation through the development of renewable energysystem?
9 Will you be remembered for the action oriented – “Clean home, clean environment, clean state and clean nation”
10 Will you be remembered for evolving for smart waterway for the whole country, linking the major rivers?
With these words, I once again congratulate all the graduating students and my best wishes to faculty members and professors of IIT (BHU) Varanasi for success in their mission of creating enlightened citizens towards building the knowledge society.
May God bless you
Eight point Oath for Graduating Students
1. Engineering and Technology is a life time mission. I will work, work and work and succeed.
2. Wherever I am, a thought will always come to my mind. That is what process or product I can innovate, invent or discover.
3. I will always remember that “Let not my winged days, be spent in vain”.
4. I realize I have to set a great technological goal that will lead me to think high, work and persevere to realize the goal.
5. My greatest friends will be great scientific/technological minds, good teachers and good books.
6. I firmly believe that no problem can defeat me; I will become the captain of the problem, defeat the problem and succeed.
7. I will work and work for removing the problems faced by planet earth in the areas of water, energy, habitat, waste management and environment through the application of science and technology.
8. My National Flag flies in my heart and I will bring glory to my nation.
 
20. CERTIFICATE COURSES IN SANSKRIT, ANCIENT BHARATIYA CULTURE AND BUDDHISM STARTS IN MUMBAI:     Vishwa Adhyayan Kendra, Mumbai in association with the Department of Ancient Indian Culture, Sathaye College has initiated a three months’ introductory course in Sanskrit starting from 7th July 2013. The Department has also started two other courses- Certificate Course in Ancient Indian Culture and Certificate Course in Buddhism.
The inaugural programme for all the three certificate courses was held in the Sathaye College Auditorium on 6th July 2013. It was well attended by the professors from various colleges, scholars, students, and academicians. Dr. A. P. Jamkhedkar, the eminent archaeologist and former Director of the State Department of Archaeology and Museums, Maharashtra delivered the inaugural address on the ‘Aryan Problem’. Dr. Gauri Mahulikar, Head, Department of Sanskrit, University of Mumbai, chaired the session.  Dr. Asawari Bapat, Head, Research and Innovation Centre, Vishwa Adhyayan Kendra gave the introductory remarks wherein she briefly introduced the contents of the three certificate courses and highlighted their scope and significance. Mr. Sanjay Kelapure, Prsesident, Vishwa Adhyayan Kendra, Mumbai gave a brief introduction.

21. SHRI VISHWA NIKETAN: Pravas: Shri Ravikumar sah samyojak Vishwa Vibhag will be going to SriLanka, Shri Shyam Parande secretary, Sewa International will be on a weeklong tour to Thailand from 18 July. Visitors: Shri Pravin dhir – USA.

FOOD FOR THOUGHT:
Be a lamp, a life boat and a ladder.       
Help someone’s soul heal.
Walk out of your house like a shepherd.  Jalaluddin Rumi - 13th Century Persian Sufi Poet
JAI SHREE RAM

A SCHOOL WITH A DIFFERENCE
M. J. Prabhu
Kaumaram Sushila International Residential School at Chinnavedampatti, Coimbatore, is a school with a difference. When almost all educational institutions are pressuring their students to focus predominantly on studies, this school seems to hold a different view on school curriculum. “We strongly believe in going beyond the classroom. Lessons must aim to teach students about the native culture. They must be more practical or field-oriented rather than be merely bookish,” says Mr. M. Deva Prakash, Managing Trustee of the school and Senaapathy Kangayam Cattle Research Foundation.
Every academic year, the school makes it a point to inform parents seeking admission that the school gives more importance towards the conservation of biodiversity, natural organic farming, and socially useful productive work rather than marks-based education.
“We even dissuade some parents who come to our school seeking admission for their children,” says Lalitha, founder of the school. “If they are keen that their children should secure a high percentage in the exams held for admissions to professional courses, then this school may not be suitable to them. The reception from parents and students is quite encouraging,” she says.
This is one of those rare schools where it is possible to see children ride horses and graze them in the school lawn, learn mountaineering, play with varieties of ducks, puppies of sippiparai and kombai breeds, Assam goats, and see them watch bees make honey. A small portion of the school’s playground area has been earmarked for growing vegetables, and students from 4-8 years are taught the importance of growing and consuming healthy food.
A number of organic farmers and activists make it a point to come to the school and talk to the young students about the importance of preserving native trees and cattle, as well as methods of growing healthy crops. Kangayam breed cattle are reared in the school campus along with other native animals.
“The cow dung is composted along with other decomposable waste generated in the school. The manure produced is then used by students in their little farm patches where they grow vegetables of their choice. Chemical inputs are completely avoided,” says Lalitha.
The students tend to their vegetable plants during their class timings and feel rewarded when they take the vegetables back home to be cooked.
“We also make sure that children get to eat the vegetables they grow. This encourages them to eat healthy vegetables free from toxins. As a school we feel that our project is a success when we see that our students have started making compost pits and small patches of kitchen gardens at home  too,” says Lalitha. Students also feel a sense of responsibility towards protecting more than a 100 native tree seedlings planted by them around the school campus. These trees are home to over 30 different species of birds identified in the vicinity.
Apiculture (honey bee rearing) is one of the activities that has been introduced to the students this year. Students appreciate the art of interdependence in community living by observing the functioning of honey bees in specially-made glass display honeycombs.
Children get to watch all the activities of the bee colony, and appreciate their importance as pollinators. They are made aware of the fact that almost 90 per cent of our food, especially vegetables and fruits, come from these pollinators.
Students take turns to ensure that the animals are cleaned and fed well. This helps them develop an intimate attachment towards animals around them.  (The Hindu, July 14, 2013)

Ashaddha Krishna 9 Vik Samvat 2070. Yugabda 5115: July 1, 2013



1. FESTIVALS: Shayani Ekadashi or Maha-ekadashi is Aashadh Shukla 11, July 19 this year, also known as Ashadhi Ekadashi. On this day images of Vishnu and Lakshmi are worshipped, the entire night is spent singing prayers, and devotees keep fast and take vows on this day, to be observed during the entire chaturmas. These may include, giving up a food item or fasting on every Ekadashi day. It is believed that Vishnu falls asleep in Ksheersagar on Shesha nāga. Thus the day is also called Dev-Shayani or Hari-shayani Ekadashi. Vishnu finally awakens from his slumber four months later on Prabodhini Ekadashi – Kartik Shukla 11, this period is known as Chaturmas. 
This day, a huge yatra or religious procession of pilgrims known as Pandharpur Ashadi Ekadasi Waari Yatra culminates at Pandharpur, in Solapur district in south Maharashtra.
2.  Uttaranchal Daivi Apada Peedit Sahayata Samiti (UDAPSS) Dehradun, Uttarakhand : RSS swayamsevaks and its affiliated organizations were in the forefront of rescue – relief and rehabilitation efforts during the recent tragedy in Uttarakhand region where thousands of pilgrims stranded on the mountains, cut off from the world, and many of them lost their lives. Following is brief report by Sewa International Team visiting the areas affected by flash floods.
-                  Total 15 centers are being run at different places: Rishikesh, Chamba, Dhansali, Joshimath, Karnprayag, Chamoli, Srinagar, Netwar, Haridwar, Dehradun, Pokhari, Dhatyud, Uttarkashi, Guptkashi, Maneri etc.
-                  Types of Camps: Food distribution, medical camps, rescue assistance, transportation to safe places, helpline centres for relatives of yatrees, 
-                  Approx 5000 volunteers are serving tirelessly in different areas including flood affected valleys and plains like Haridwar, Rishikesh, etc.
-                  There are many places where roads are completely washed away. There is no way for the vehicular traffic to tread on. Volunteers have to walk kilometres together carrying the relief material on their backs. They are also crossing tough & high hills with the load of relief items, trying to reach far flung villages. 
-                  In Chamba, there is a camp running since 22 June where approx 10,000 people are being provided food and medical treatment regularly.
-                  Chamba is a place which is a junction which connects all four ways of Chardham Yatra (Gangotri, Yamunotri, Kedarnath & Badrinath). A huge shelter has been established in village Dikhol near Chamba where pilgrims are being provided food, medicine and everything they need.
-                  Transport assistance provided to approx 8,200 yatris from Uttarkashi & Chinyali Saudh to Rishikesh from 21st June to 24th June, by available vehicles: Bus, truck, car, sumo, jeep, tempo & police vehicles etc. 
-                  Approx 200 villages are worst affected in the floods and some of them are totally washed out. Volunteers are trying their best to reach out to these villages/villagers and provide them initial relief.
-                  Flood devastated villagers, who have been rendered shelterless, are being shifted to safer places and temporary shelters by volunteers.
-                  From the day 1 (16-June) till now 20 truck loads of relief material have been sent to flood affected areas from Dehradun alone that contains: pulses, rice, sugar, tea, spices, clothes, blankets, milk powder, water bottles, medicines, biscuits, and packed food etc. Material supplies from other centres like Rishikesh, Haridwar, etc are also being sent. Some of the camps above mentioned are being supported by various charity organizations with truckloads of raw food material. Even the civil supplies being supplied by the Uttarkhand Government is reaching our camps because of the paucity of volunteers.
-                  Army and Indo-Tibet Border Force personnel are being assisted by volunteers in rescue operations and providing the personnel with food, shelter and all other possible necessary help.
-                  Three teams from UDAPSS sent to three different locations, namely- 1.Badrinath-Hemkund Sahib, 2. Kedarnath, & 3. Gangotri-Yamunotri- for surveying the area and assessing the loss of life and property. This will help is in planning the rehabilitation program.
-                  The floods have also affected the schools, hostels run by UDAPSS, Vidya Bharati and other organizations in a big way which will surely affect the student population. One such major project which was established after the 1991 earthquake is located in Maneri (14 kms from Uttarkashi), Sewashram which is a school with residential facility. Twelve rooms of this hostel are washed away in this flood.
-                  Remaining part of hostel has been converted to a relief camp (providing food, medicines, shelter) for needy people. Rotary Club and Azim Premji Club were impressed by the Sewa offered here by the dedicated volunteers and have supported this camp with relief materials. This camp was started on 18th June. This is the nearest location to Gangotri and people started streaming in soon after the floods. Till now 7,500 pilgrims (including army soldiers) were provided food for 7 days round the clock.
-                  Women from Bhubaneshwari Ashram have been actively volunteering since the camp is established, supporting the camp with cooking food at Maneri Sewashram Camp. 
-                  70 Houses in Joshiyada village were completely washed away, causing many casualties. Rotary Club donated 35 tents to affected families and our volunteer team is providing them food, cloths, gas cylinders, medicines, blankets and all necessary items.
-                  Three relief camps in Uttarkashi district are working round the clock – Maneri, Lakshyeswar and Naitawaar.
-                  The volunteers serving in the Narayana Koti, Rudraprayag relief camp have identified 27 babies- 6months to 4 years- who have been orphaned or are left with their lone mother or grandparents due to the floods. Volunteers have already provided some sort of service for the babies and are working on their appropriate rehabilitation.
-                  The rehabilitation program will require experts in construction in Himalayan/hilly region for designing and constructing houses. Huge funding would be required for the proposed rehabilitation program in which houses, community centres, schools, clinics, etc will have to be reconstructed.  Doctors and health assistants are also needed in good number for reaching out to many flood affected villages. We would provide the details of these requirements soon.
-                  UDAPSS and Sewa International have appealed for donations. Please visit www.sewainternational.org for more information.
3. BHARAT'S FIRST EVER DEDICATED NAVIGATION SATELLITE LAUNCHED: In a landmark journey into a new era of space application, Bharat on July 2 successfully launched its first dedicated navigation satellite using the Polar satellite Launch Vehicle which blasted off from the Satish Dhawan Space Centre at Shriharikota – Andhra Pradesh.
The country's workhorse PSLV ejected IRNSS-1A satellite, the first of the seven satellites constituting the Indian Regional Navigation Satellite System (IRNSS) space segment, which has a mission life of 10 years. It is designed to provide accurate position information service to users in the country as well as the region extending up to 1,500 km from its boundary.
"IRNSS-1A was launched at a cost of approximately Rs 125 crore," ISRO chairman K Radhakrishnan said after the launch. Consisting of a space segment and a ground segment, IRNSS has three satellites in geostationary orbit and four satellites in inclined geosynchronous orbit and is to be completed before 2015.
The launch was "very precise" he said, adding that when the target of apogee was aimed at 20,650 km plus or minus 750 km, the rocket achieved an apogee of 20,625 km.
4. NATIONAL DHARMA BEE CONTEST: Dharma Bee, the first national contest of its kind in the U.S., which drew well over 3,000 children from around the country, concluded in Chicago on June 15. The Dharma Bee tested students' knowledge about Vivekananda and other Hindu leaders in a written test, oral presentation and team project. It included speech contest, poster presentation, written test and team activity in four age groups between grades K-8th grade. More than 130 children, short-listed from regional competitions, were invited to participate in the final round held in Chicago on June 15.
Congresswoman Tulasi Gabbard, Chief Guest for the function, in her remarks on the occasion of prize distribution on June 16, said the Dharma Bee was not just a competition to win a medal or title as the children have taken to their hearts the teachings of the Bhagavad Gita and have found a way to understand the message. 
“By dovetailing the message of Lord Krishna in Bhagavad Gita in whatever we do, we are trying to do service in the name of Sri Krishna, and thus spiritualize it,” Gabbard said.
Pujya Swami Ishatmananda ji of Vivekananda Vedanta Society said, “Dharma” has a profound meaning namely, “that which holds.”  Dharma Bee goes to good things like honey bee goes to the choicest of flowers and pick the best, the Swami ji said while praising the apt name given to the competition.
Parents of the participating children were overjoyed on the occasion. Shreya Venkatesh, a contestant (13) from Phoenix, AZ said that she enjoyed learning (Hindu) culture and about Swami Vivekananda. Another contestant, Suhas Subramaniam (13) from San Diego felt that this was an opportunity to learn about great personalities from the national and cultural past. Subramaniam said, “I knew about Shri Krishna, but because of Dharma Bee, I got to know a lot about Swami Vivekananda.”
“We are extremely happy to report that more than 1000 Sewa (service) projects were executed by children all across the USA. Parents and children are already requesting similar future events,” said Sreevidya Radhakrishna, National Coordinator of Dharma Bee. HSS conducts a structured values education program through its 150 chapters nationwide to develop strong character and teamwork and leadership skills and to organize a dynamic and flourishing Hindu-American community. 
5.  Uttarakhand tragedy: The lesson here is: Don’t abuse Nature - A week after several hundred people have lost their lives and thousands remain untraced in the disaster that hit Uttarakhand, the authorities are coming around to the view that they had grievously erred in ignoring the warning signals which were put out by official agencies and non-Governmental organisations. Perhaps, they had believed that the red flag was merely an instance of crying wolf. The devastation that has occurred will have disabused them of this notion. Besides effectively proceeding with the relief operations, the Government — both at the Centre and in the State — must at least now revamp the entire ‘development model' which they wrongly believe is in the interests of the people. The people definitely want development, but they do not want death and destruction alongside. Unfortunately, even now, Uttarakhand Chief Minister Vijay Bahuguna is trying to play down the warnings on the pretext that not all of those were “specific”. Yet, 48 hours before disaster struck, on June 13, the Regional Meteorological Centre in Delhi forecast heavy rains across Uttarakhand. Over the next few days, the warnings kept coming, and even though they did not clarify the exact areas that would be affected, it was easy to see that the traditionally vulnerable places of Uttarkashi, Chamoli and Rudraprayag — all pilgrim hotspots at this time of the year — would be worst hit. Still, it was not until June 16 that the Uttarakhand Government issued a disaster warning. And even then, the pilgrimage was not stopped. The next day, as many as 12 bridges collapsed, leaving thousands stranded. Many of the people are yet to be rescued.
Also, long before the meteorological centre issued its warnings, the Comptroller and Auditor-General had advised against the rampant destruction of the Garhwal Himalayas. Three years ago, while assessing the environmental impact of proposed hydro-power plants — 42 are already in operation and more than 200 are in the pipeline — along the Bhagirathi and the Alakananda rivers, the CAG had said that the projects were weakening the mountains. The report also highlighted the perils of deforestation and the erosion of river beds. It pointed out that most projects had no plans for environmental protection; and even when there were provisions for conservation, such as planting a certain number of trees to offset the loss caused by construction, they were ignored. The CAG's warnings were repeated by the Wildlife Institute of Bharat in its 2012 report, commissioned by the Government, to study the feasibility of 24 power projects in the region. Not only did the WII conclude that the projects must be scrapped, it also put out a slew of recommendations to maintain the fragile eco-system of the young Himalayas. But, just as the authorities had forgotten all about the National Mission for Sustaining the Himalayan Ecosystem launched in 2008, they also turned a deaf ear to the warnings from various quarters, cautioning against such disastrous ‘development'.
The only silver lining here is the way in which our Armed Forces have conducted successful rescue operations. The National Disaster Management Authority has also sought to lend a helping hand, but it has struggled to put together a comprehensive response; it’s an area that needs urgent attention. (Editorial, The Pioneer, 24 June 2013)
6. Two manuscripts from Nepal now in UNESCO’s prestigious MEMORY: Two Nepali manuscripts of world significance are now in UNESCO’s Memory of the World Register. The Nisvasattatvasa_hita, the earliest surviving tantric manuscript, and the Susrutasamhita, the oldest document in the field of Ayurveda medicine, have been added on June 18 to the prestigious list recognizing documentary heritage of outstanding value. They are the first inscriptions from Nepal in the Register, UNESCO Kathmandu Office said in a press release on June 19.
“I congratulate Nepal for the inscriptions of the two manuscripts in the Memory of the World Register. I am confident that their inclusion in the Register contributes to creating greater awareness of the need to preserve Nepal’s memory held in the country’s archives and libraries”, said Axel Plathe, UNESCO representative to Nepal. The Nisvasattatvasa_hita Manuscript, which is deposited at the National Archives, is said to be the earliest surviving tantric manuscript and as such it is important source for the early history of tantrism. It has had a great influence in shaping other tantric texts. The 1134 year old palm leaf manuscript of the Susrutasamhita (Sahottartantra), held by the Keshar Library in Kathmandu, is considered as the oldest document in the field of Ayurveda medicine, a systematic and formal tradition of healing that became South Asia's principal medical system and has profoundly influenced all cultures surrounding South Asia including Tibet, Central Asia, China, South-East Asia and the Middle East. The two manuscripts from Nepal are among 54 new additions to the Memory of the World Register, approved on June 18 by UNESCO Director-General Irina Bokova.
7. New York's Times Square becomes yoga's Om Sweet Om: Some 16,000 yoga aficionados turned up at New York’s Times Square on 22nd June 2013, the longest day of the year for open air yogabhyas from sunrise to sunset. What has been a three-person exercise a decade ago has now grown into a thousand-stron annual event that celebrates “mind over madness”. Although in California court is an ongoing case against a school district that established a yoga program with a $500.000 grant from the K Pattabhi Jois Foundation, aimed at helping elementary schools students focus on studies, keep calm, and contain aggressive behaviour. The participants at Times Square did not take any congziance of it.
8. California Declares October Hindu American Awareness Appreciation Month: "California and our nation have greatly benefited by Hindu Americans, especially through yoga, meditation, Vedanta philosophy, ayurvedic medicine, classical Indian music, art, and dance..."
In a historic moment for Hindu Americans on June 24, the California State Senate unanimously passed Senate Concurrent Resolution (SCR 32): California Hindu American Awareness and Appreciation Month. Introduced by State Senate Majority Leader, Ellen Corbett (10th Senate District), SCR 32 designates October 2013 as California Hindu American and Appreciation Month and "recognize[s] and acknowledge[s] the significant contributions made by Californians of Hindu heritage to the state."
"As the Senator representing the 10th State Senate District, I am honored to represent constituents from many diverse backgrounds, including a significant number of Hindu Americans," said Majority Leader Corbett. "California is home to a thriving community of over 370,000 Hindu Americans that enrich our state's diversity and professional assets in fields as diverse as academia, science, technology, business, arts and literature. I thank my colleagues for supporting SCR 32 today that recognizes Hindu American contributions in California, as well as designates October 2013 in their honor."

9. Mahendraparvata, 1,200-Year-Old Lost Medieval City In Cambodia, Unearthed By Archaeologists: A lost medieval city that thrived on a mist-shrouded Cambodian mountain 1,200 years ago has been discovered by archaeologists using revolutionary airborne laser technology. In what it called a world exclusive, the Sydney Morning Herald said the city, Mahendraparvata, included temples hidden by jungle for centuries, many of which have not been looted.
The expedition used an instrument called Lidar -- light detection and ranging data -- which was strapped to a helicopter that criss-crossed a mountain north of Angkor Wat for seven days, providing data that matched years of ground research by archaeologists. It effectively peeled away the jungle canopy using billions of laser pulses, allowing archaeologists to see structures that were in perfect squares, completing a map of the city which years of painstaking ground research had been unable to achieve.
It helped reveal the city that reportedly founded the Angkor Empire in 802 AD, uncovering more than two dozen previously unrecorded temples and evidence of ancient canals, dykes and roads using satellite navigation coordinates gathered from the instrument's data.
Jean-Baptiste Chevance, Director of the Archaeology and Development Foundation in London who led the expedition, said it was known from ancient scriptures that a great warrior, Jayavarman II, had a mountain capital, "but we didn't know how all the dots fitted, exactly how it all came together".
"We now know from the new data the city was for sure connected by roads, canals and dykes," he said. The discovery is set to be published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences in the United States.
"We need to preserve the area because it's the origin of our culture," secretary of state at Cambodia's Ministry of Culture, Chuch Phoeun, said.
Angkor Wat was at one time the largest pre-industrial city in the world, and is considered one of the ancient wonders of the world.
It was constructed from the early to mid 1100s by King Suryavarman II at the height of the Khmer Empire's political and military power.
10. BHARATIYA American youngsters trace the footsteps of Swami Vivekananda in America: more than a century after Swami Vivekananda travelled to America, youngsters of Bharatiya origin, are hitting the trail and visiting places where the Swami visited, stayed and delivered lectures. The program named 'Vivekananda Express' has been facilitated by the Hindu Swayamsevak Sangh USA, to mark the 150th birth anniversary celebrations. As part of the series of visits planned, over a hundred young professionals of the Silicon Valley and students of nearby Universities and schools visited the First Unitarian Church of Oakland where Swami Vivekananda gave a speech in the year 1900. The speech is known to have brought many residents of Berkeley in contact with his message and later led to the establishment of the Vedanta Society at Berkeley.
11.  Muslim body urges President to reject Interlocutors’ report on J & K: A delegation of Muslim Rashtriya Manch (MRM) called on Rashtrapati Pranab Mukherjee and urged him to direct the Union Government to reject the report and recommendations of the Dilip Padgaonkar Committee on Jammu and Kashmir. The delegation included MRM Patron Indresh Kumar, former Union Minister Shahnawaz Hussain, MRM National Convener Mohd. Afzal and others.
The delegation also urged Rashtrapati to direct the Government to scrap the controversial Article 370 guaranteeing special status to the state of J & K.
The MRM had collected 8, 04,598 signatures of the Muslims in Bharat demanding total rejection of the report of the interlocutors and scrapping of Article 370.
The Memorandum said that the MRM believed that the report and recommendations made by the interlocutors appointed by the Government of Bharat on Jammu and Kashmir issue were detrimental to the national security, and injurious to social harmony. J & K has been the integral and inseparable territory of Bharat, and any compromise with the territorial integrity of J & K should not be tolerated.
The memorandum stated that Article 370 which guaranteed special status to J & K was in fact responsible for the backwardness of the state.
12. BrahMos can't be intercepted in next 20 years: Pillai: "The equivalent of BrahMos is yet to built. And, in the next 20 years, it cannot be intercepted by an enemy," says A Sivathanu Pillai, scientist, and CEO and MD of BrahMos Aerospace sharing the vision for the future trajectory of growth for the iconic missile technology developed jointly by Bharat and Russia.
Pillai, also Chief Controller (R and D), DRDO and hailed largely as the "father of BrahMos" mentions "missile technology" as one of the 10 key and "unique leap-frog technologies" for building a securer and greater future of Bharat, "driven by youth power" in a new book which he has co-authored with the former President APJ Kalam.
Titled "Thoughts for Change: We can Do It", by two renowned scientific minds aims to be a clarion call to the youth of Bharat to "reclaim its ancient scientific wisdom" even as it exhorts them to embrace and work towards building a future where "multiple technologies will intersect and interoperate".
BrahMos, developed jointly in a strategic partnership between Bharatiya DRDO (Defence Research and Development Organisation) and Russian NPO Mashinostroyeniya, is a stealth cruise missile with a range of 290 km and travels at a speed of Mach 2.8 to 3.
The name BrahMos is a portmanteau formed from the names of two rivers, the Brahmaputra of Bharat and the Moskva of Russia.
13. RSS or Its functionary Indresh Kumar has no role in Malegaon Blast Case; says NIA:The National Investigation Agency (NIA) which is probing the Malegaon blasts of 2006 that rocked the Muslim-majority textile town, believes that the RSS was never in favour of carrying out the terror strike. According to the NIA, Indresh Kumar did meet RSS member Sunil Joshi in Jaipur a few months before the Malegaon lasts. During that meeting, Joshi had told Kumar about the plan to carry out an attack in Malegaon. Kumar is believed to have told Joshi that neither he nor the Sangh would support an act of terror. During the meeting, Kumar reportedly said the RSS does not support the eye-for-an-eye ideology propagated by Joshi and others.
14. In a first, girls among IIT entrance test toppers: The 16 year-old, Sibbala Leena Madhuri, originally from Thirupathi and now based in Hyderbad, is one of the first two girls ever to feature in the top 10 ranks of the entrance exam to the Indian Institutes of Technology (IITs). Her rank is eighth; the other girl, Aditi Laddha from Ratlam, Madhya Pradesh (Delhi zone), is sixth.
15. Hindi hot favourite among firangs: Hindi is the new favourite with foreign students in Delhi University. For the first time, 10 Chinese students have applied for Hindi in DU this year. Candidates from 10 other countries have also applied for Hindi course. Moreover, there has been a marginal increase in number of foreign aspirants. Students from over 100 nations have registered this year as against 90 in 2012.
According to the foreign students registry of the university, while the maximum applications have been received for Bachelor in Management Studies, commerce and political science, the surprise trend has been the growing interest in Hindi. While aspirants from neighbouring countries like Nepal, Bhutan and Bangladesh used to come for Hindi course, it's the interest of the Chinese students which is noteworthy.
16. 14th century Jain manuscript now a global treasure: Shantinatha Charitra a text written in Sanskrit, that describes the life and times of Shantinatha, the 16th Jain Tirthankara has been included in the most prestigious list of the worlds greatest documents. UNESCO’s world heritage body on June 19 included the Bharatiya entry in the Memory of the World Register 2013 and said the story is of lasting value to humankind.
The manuscript talks about peace, non-violence and brotherhood and was composed and written in the late 14th century.It contains 10 images from the life of Shantinatha in the style of Jain paintings from Gujarat. UNESCO said the document is an universal message of friendship, global peace and unity with integrity.
It also describes historical facts and professes high moral and cultural values. The illustrations found in this manuscript are oldest specimens of miniature painting.These illustrations are beautifully drawn in multi-colour and are examples of a highly evolved style of painting. As these illustrations are rarest of rare, their preservation and protection is necessary for humanity. These are the best and oldest examples of miniature paintings while the story itself is of lasting value to humankind, UNESCO added.
The manuscripts are owned by Lalbhai Dalpatbhai Institute of Indology. It was donated by late Muni Punyavijayji who had inherited it through family. The Lalbhai Dalpatbhai Institute of Indology has a rich collection of nearly 75,000 rare manuscripts.
17. Anderson council opens with Hindu mantras: The Anderson City Council had its first historic Hindu invocation on June 18, containing verses from world's oldest existing scripture. Hindu statesman Rajan Zed delivered the invocation from ancient Sanskrit scriptures before the City Council. After Sanskrit delivery, he then read the English translation of the prayer.
Zed recited from Rig-Veda, the oldest scripture of the world still in common use, besides lines from Upanishads and Bhagavad-Gita. He started and ended the prayer with "Om".
18. Nepali community in Australia gift Buddha statue to PM Gillard: Nepali community in Australia has presented a gift of Buddha statue along with a letter wishing world peace to the Prime Minister of Australia, Julia Gillard.  Gillard thanked for the gift and expressed her happiness to "have an opportunity to decorate her office with statue of Buddha as a peace symbol".
19. Incredible India! Now in all UN languages: To attract more Chinese and Germans tourists, who are among the high spenders on tourism annually, Ministry of Tourism has floated tenders for agencies to convert the Bharatiya tourism website — Incredible India — in all United Nation languages plus four other foreign languages.
Ministry of Tourism has also set themselves a target of six months for the job. “We have also hired translators for converting the website, which is so far accessible in English to five remaining UN languages - Arabic, Chinese, French, Russian, Spanish along with Japanese, Korean, Italian and German,” said an official from the Tourism Ministry.
20.  Now, rail link till Katra: Travel for devotees to the famous Vaishno Devi shrine will become more comfortable with trains expected to go right up to Katra, the shrine's base camp, from August. Railways is going to open the 25-km Udhampur-Katra rail link in August as work on the difficult route is almost complete.
The Udhampur-Katra rail route to be completed at an estimated cost of Rs 960 crore passes through hostile terrain, making it an extremely challenging railways project. The route consists of seven tunnels and 30 small and big bridges, including - a 185-feet high tunnel. A total of seven tunnels span over 10 km of the 25-km stretch.
21.  LONGEST RAILWAY TUNNEL OPENS: A11-km-long tunnel across the treacherous Pir Panjal mountain range on the Banihal-Qazigund railway line in Jammu and Kashmir, dedicated on June 26 by Prime Minister Manmohan Singh, is the longest such transportation passage in Bharat. About 1,300 workers and 150 engineers worked tirelessly overcoming all odds for the last seven years to accomplish the engineering marvel. The tunnel passes approximately 440 metres below the existing Jawahar Road Tunnel.
22. PM's daughter honoured for pioneering work in human rights law: Prominent legal activist Amrit Singh has been honoured for her groundbreaking work in the field of human rights law, along with a number of other noted Bharatiya-Americans including US Congressman Ami Bera and USAID chief Rajiv Raj Shah. Singh, 43, the youngest daughter of Prime Minister Manmohan Singh is a senior legal officer for National Security and Counterterrorism at the New York-based Open Society Justice Initiative. She received the India Abroad Publisher's Special Award for Excellence 2012, at the event organised by 'India Abroad' on June 21.
23. SHRI VISHWA NIKETAN: Pravas: Visitors: Shri Indravadan Gandhi and family - UK, Susri Anita Patel- Kenya.
FOOD FOR THOUGHT: Dr. Hedgewar had dived deep into past history and recognized certain basic truths: Ours was not a nation born just yesterday. It has been here since ages, in fact long before other nations of the world appeared on the stage. Nor was it primitive or uncivilized. When most of the modern nations of the West were not yet out of the jungles and the world had not even heard of Jesus or Mohammed, our country was universally revered for its achievements in every sphere of human activity – science, arts, commerce, philosophy and spirituality. And all this was made possible by the endless efforts and sacrifices of the Hindu people. This fact has been acknowledged in glowing terms by all the great historians – foreign as well as Indian, old and modern. This is precisely why this land has been called Hindusthan, the cradle-land of the Hindus – which only goes to show that this is verily a Hindu Nation, i.e., Hindu Rashtra. – Dr. Hedgewar the Epoch-Maker by B. V. Deshpande and S.R. Ramaswamy.
JAI SHREE RAM