Vaishakh Krishna 1, Vik Samvat 2071. Yugabda 5116: April 16, 2014

Devarshi Narada, also referred as Narada Muni, is main source of information among Gods and Goddesses. He is supoosed to be blessed with the ability to freely move around all three loks that are Patal, Bhulok and Swargalok.
Narada Jayanti is observed in Bhagwan Vishnu temples with special prayers, fasts and Prasad. Narada Muni is considered to be the first journalist of the world. For the past few years, the media initiatives of Sangh namely Vishwa Samvad Kendras are organizing programs where veteran journalists and others in media are honoured. --top

 

2. PUJANIYA SARSANGHACHALAK DR. MOHAN BHAGWAT’S NEW YEAR MESSAGE: Namaskar,
Wish you all a happy new year. We all know that according to our belief, Chaitra Shudha Pratipada is the first day of the cycle of creation. This is the day of Shalivahana’s victory. This is also the birthday of RSS founder Param Pujya Dr.Hedgewar. In our tradition, Varsha Pratipada is considered a day of resolution. Three things are necessary for any change to take place. First is a strong resolve.  Second, pursuing the resolution as a one-pointed goal and preparedness to sacrifice everything for it, and the third is making our lives eligible for such mission by pursuing things that align with the goal and eliminating things that are obstacles to the goal or misalign with it.
All the above mentioned qualities can be found in the life of Sangh founder Param Pujya Dr. Hedgewar. Similar examples can be found in the lives of all those first generation Sanghkaryakartas, who were moulded in the hands of Doctorji. We want to take our country, our nation to the pinnacle of glory. We pray that let there be peace, comfort and brotherhood in the entire world. Let the entire world regain its lost balance on the basis of Vasudhaiva Kutumabakam and walk in the path of righteousness. We work hard to fulfill this mission. We must keep in mind that we make this resolve our life mission. Let us devote all our energies for this sacred cause. We always put in efforts to improve those skills that are in tune with our goal while eliminating those flaws that are impediments in our goal.  We are fortunate that such a buzz has been created all around the world that we will, as a result of our relentless efforts, soon witness all the above changes not only in Bharat but also in the entire world.
Today, there is an election atmosphere in our country. Common people believe that a change in electoral outcome will eventually result in a change in every aspect. But the history does not bear a testimony to this. Change in regime is a small part of complete change. It is a necessary and useful change. But the real change is one that changes the dynamics of the society and the way a society acts. Therefore, in addition to adeptly dealing with temporary yet important challenges such as these elections, we must move forward keeping our eyes on our grand mission of reinstating Bharat, a Bharat that is capable of restoring the world’s balance of Dharma, a Bharat that is capable of building a prosperous and beautiful world, as Vishwa Guru. This mission of ours can be realized only by imbibing the above mentioned three qualities, viz. a strong resolve, complete surrender to the resolve and augmenting our strengths while getting rid of our deficiencies. Let us all resolve on the eve of this New Year to refocus on these three aspects. In the end, I conclude this short speech of mine by once again wishing you all a very happy and prosperous new year.--top

 

3.  PSLV PUTS NAVIGATION SATELLITE IN ORBIT: Bharat marched towards establishing its own navigation system on 4th April when its Polar Satellite Launch Vehicle (PSLV-C24) put into precise orbit the country’s second navigation satellite, Indian Regional Navigation Satellite System (IRNSS-1B). The 1,432-kg IRNSS-1B will form part of a constellation of seven navigation satellites.
It was the 25th success in a row for the PSLV, after it majestically lifted off from the first launch pad at Sriharikota at 5.14 p.m. After 19 minutes of flight, IRNSS-1B was put into a perfect orbit.
K. Radhakrishnan, Chairman, Indian Space Research Organisation (ISRO), said two more IRNSS satellites would be put into orbit before 2014-end and three more before mid-2015.
Mission Director P. Kunhikrishnan said the mission accuracy was such that the satellite achieved a perigee of 283 km against the target of 284 km and an apogee of 20,630 km against the targeted 20,650 km. The IRNSS satellites will be useful for land, sea and air navigation. They have civil and defence applications. --top

 

4. HSS SRILANKA RELIEF TO FIRE VICTIMS: In the last week of February, a fire accident took place in Poonduloya in Nuwaraelia district of Central Province of SriLanka. 127 members of 32 families were affected in this incident. Their houses, business and belongings were turned in to ashes with in few hours.
Volunteers of Hindu Swayamsevak Sangh SriLanka Hatton shaka planned immediate relief work. They collected essential household materials from well wishers, sorted them and prepared packets for distribution. The local temple committee organized the relief material distribution program on March 3rd. Study material was also provided to all the students from affected families. --top

 

5.  BHARAT BORN POET VIJAY SESHADRI WINS 2014 PULITZER PRIZE: Bharat born poet Vijay Seshadri has won the prestigious 2014 Pulitzer Prize in the poetry category for his collection of poems "3 Sections." The 98th annual Pulitzer Prizes in Journalism, Letters, Drama and Music were announced on 14th April by Columbia University.
It is a "compelling collection of poems that examines human consciousness, from birth to dementia, in a voice that is by turns witty and grave, compassionate and remorseless," the announcement said. His poems, essays, and reviews have appeared in several prestigious publications including the American Scholar, the Nation etc.
Born in Bangalore in 1954, Seshadri came to America at the age of five and grew up in Columbus, Ohio. He currently teaches poetry and nonfiction writing at liberal arts college Sarah Lawrence in New York. Seshadri is the fifth person of Bharatiya origin to bag the prestigious award and would receive $10,000 as reward.--top

 

6.  DRI WORKERS TRAINING CAMP IN CHITRAKOOT:  “For some time a kind of distrust has developed in the society about the people working in social life. We are the workers working selflessly and with a missionary zeal. Our personal conduct and life should be inspiration for others. The lives of Nanaji and Deendayalaji are still lighthouse for us in this regard,” said RSS Sarkaryavah Shri Bhaiyaji Joshi. He was addressing a gathering of Deendayal Research Institute (DRI) workers at a training camp organised at the Krish Vigyan Kendra, Ganeewan in Chitrakoot on April 5.
A total of 72 workers from different parts of the country and their project chiefs attended the three-day camp from April 4-6. Vice president of DRI Shri Shankar Prasad Tamrakar, general secretary of DRI Shri Bharat Pathak and organising secretary Shri Abhay Mahajan were also present on the occasion.--top

 

7. ITANAGAR PUT ON BHARAT'S RAILWAY MAP:  Arunachal capital Itanagar was put on the country's railway map on 7th April with the first passenger train of about 400 commuters arriving at Naharlagun near Itanagar.
The train with 10 passengers and two goods compartments, towed by a diesel engine, left Dekargaon at 7a.m. and arrived Naharlagun at 12.30 p.m., covering a distance of 181 kilometers. Itanagar thus becomes the second state capital among the eight north-eastern states after Guwahati to be put on the railway map of Bharat.
"Shouting 'Jai Biswakarma' slogans, people in their traditional attires all along the route in Assam welcomed the train and offered puja while many boarded the train with the railways offering a free ride.
Informing about the arrival of the train, Chief Minister Nabam Tuki during his road rally at Itanagar had announced that Rajdhani and Shatabdi Express would be introduced soon to link Arunachal to national capital Delhi.--top

 

8. STATUE OF FIELD MARSHAL SAM MANEKSHAW UNVEILED: 3rd April 2014, marked the birth centenary of Field Marshal SHFJ Manekshaw, MC, one of the most illustrious Generals of the Bharatiya Army.  Popularly called, ‘Sam Bahadur,’ he was the epitome of soldiering and visionary military leadership.  He was a key architect of Bharat’s glorious military victory over Pakistan in the 1971 War, which led to the birth of Bangladesh. 
To honour the legendary General and inspiring leader, his ‘Statue’ was unveiled and a Book titled, ‘Field Marshal Sam Manekshaw – The Man and His Times’ was released on 3rd April 2014, at the Manekshaw Centre, Delhi Cantt. The proceedings began with a welcome address by Lt Gen Rameshwar Yadav, Director General of Infantry. The event was attended by Mrs Maja Daruwalla, daughter of the legendary leader, accompanied by her husband.
Gen Bikram Singh, the Chief of the Army Staff, unveiled the Field Marshal’s Statue and released the Book on his life and times. He called upon the serving officers, especially from the younger generations, to draw inspiration from Field Marshal Manekshaw and commit themselves to seeking professional excellence, in service of the Nation.
A number of events were also organised at Ooty & Coonor, the place where he chose to spend his final days. A 14 km Marathon was organised from Ooty to Wellington, statue of Field Marshal Manekshaw unveiled at Wellington. In addition, a prayer meeting and wreath laying was organised at the Parsi-Zoroastrian Cemetery at Ooty.--top

 

9. FOUNDATION STONE LAID FOR JANAM TV: Foundation stone for Janam TV studio coplex was laid in Thiruvananthapuram on March 17th by Padmasree P Parmeswaran, director of Bharatiya Vichar Kendram, in presence of RSS natonal executive member Sethumadhavan and other prominent personalities. The studio complex will come up at a prime location near the world famous Shri Padmnabha temple. Sri Parmeshwar ji expressed confidence that the TV would turn into the catalyst of change in the media not only in Keral but also at national level. Strong presence of nationalist forces in the media is the need of the hour, he added.
Janam TV is being conceived as the first Malyalam television channel with true nationalistic perspective and is expected to be on air by October 2014.--top

 

10.  GOOGLE LAUNCHES VIRTUAL TOUR OF CAMBODIA'S ANGKOR WAT: Located in remote, northwestern Cambodia, the ancient Angkor Wat temples have been a wonder from afar for many who had neither the time nor money to pay a visit.  Now, a tour is just a free click away, thanks to Google Street View.
On 3rd April, The company announced the launch of its new ground-level view of the complex in Siem Reap province, where the temples are located.  “It has significance beyond Cambodia. …It’s the biggest Hindu temple in the world, so for the billions of people who believe in Hinduism in the world, this is very important for them.  This is a part of the world of information that we want to bring to everyone in the world," said Senior Google staffer Divon Lan.
Google Street View users can now visit 100 temples and sculptures around Angkor Wat, via a 360-degree perspective.  The new initiative adds to existing virtual tours of the Taj Mahal in Bharat and Mt. Fuji in Japan.
Bun Narith, director general of the Apsara Authority, which administers Angkor Wat on behalf of the government, said he hopes the project will help attract even more tourists to the temples.Cambodia welcomed 4.2 million tourists last year, many of whom visited Angkor Wat.--top

 

11. BHARATIYA DOCS AT UN BASES IN SOUTH SUDAN PROVIDE CRITICAL HEALTHCARE: Bharatiya doctors stationed at UN mission bases in South Sudan are providing critical healthcare services, including helping deliver babies, amid continued conflict and violence that has plagued the world's youngest nation in recent months.
Over 80 babies have been born at the UNMISS (UN Mission in South Sudan) base in troubled Malakal, Upper Nile State, of which 41 were delivered at the UNMISS Bharatiya hospital.
At the UNMISS Bharatiya military field hospital in the city of Malakal, 976 patients have been treated since December 23 and over 134 major surgeries have been carried out.
Bharatiya peacekeepers and medical personnel in the volatile Jonglei State have been awarded for their courage and devotion to duty shown while working in extremely difficult conditions.
"Without the steadfastness shown by the battalion group, it would not have been possible to implement the mission mandate in the desired manner," UNMISS Force Commander Delali Johnson Sakyi said in the state capital Bor.--top

 

12. IIT-DELHI SHOWS CHEAP CAN BE WONDERFUL: Be it the urinal which saves 1,51,000 litres of water every year and draws out of the excrement phosphorus — a mineral which Bharat imports — or the Rs 120 cholesterol test which otherwise costs Rs 5,800, or even the low-cost cellphone-size hemoglobin meter that must surely be a boon to a country in which an overwhelming proportion of maternal deaths result from malnutrition-triggered anemia, for every social problem, IIT-Delhi seems to have a technical solution. These are among the five high social impact products patented and already in use which form a part of an open house workshop showcasing about 200 innovative projects put together by its faculty and students in the current year.
The Open House will be organized on April 19, said member of faculty of electrical engineering in IIT Delhi Turbo Majumder. "Of these, there will be five high social impact projects, all of them already working and some patented. A few of them are also in production, like the 'Waterless Urinals Technology-Zerodor' which is an IIT startup. It's being used in the campus successfully," he said.
Scarcity, misuse, pollution of water and lack of sanitation facilities have been the driving force behind development of Zerodor, patented by IIT-Delhi. Speaking about the product, associate professor of rural development and technology, Vijayaraghavan M Chariar, said, "We were concerned about misuse of water, scarcity and absence of sanitation in cities like Delhi. This device came out of collaborative effort with Unicef to improve sanitation."
"The general perception of people is to flush urine with water. But that is not required. When it comes in contact with water, urine releases ammonia which gives out odour. With this system, we do away with flushing and take care of the odour. Nutrients from the urine can be extracted and used for farming. Urine contains phosphorus which can be used for different applications. There is scarcity of phosphorus in the world and we import it from different countries. This can be resolved using the kit," said Uttam Banerjee, CEO of Ekam Solutions which is now marketing the device.
The hemoglobin meter measures the amount of hemoglobin in the blood of a person. Okayed by AIIMS, the device was developed with funding from the technology development board of department of science and technology at IIT's Centre for Biomedical Engineering.
"The big social impact of this device stems from its portability, low cost and ease of use. More than 70% of people in Bharat, especially women, are anemic. This device will be very useful for health workers, blood banks, primary health centres, and the school health scheme of the government," said Ambar Srivastava, developer of this device and a student.--top
 

13. BRITISH ARMY GIVEN A TALK ON THE BHAGAVAD GITA: On 15 March 2014, Acharya Dhruv Chhatralia made history by teaching the Bhagwad Geeta to the British Army during a 3.5 hour ‘super talk’. He spoke non-stop for 3.5 hours without a break to seven different audiences of regiments from the British Army.

Dhruv spoke on the key concepts of the Bhagavad Gita including the immortality of the soul and the mortality of the body, the concept of Svadharma and our duty, the importance of Lokasamgrahan etc. He told the soldiers that the Bhagavad Gita is a guide as to how to make decisions in difficult situations, when the decision is often not clear cut and when we do not know what is right and what is wrong.
He said that the soldiers should meditate upon the fact that their essence was Atman and not matter, that we are not our physical bodies and therefore we do not need to worry about death because we know that we will continue to exist and we know where we are going to go.
This was an incredibly inspirational day that generated a lot of interest from the British Army on Sanatana Dharma.  --top

 

14.  B-SCHOOLS USE MANDARIN MANTRA FOR GLOBAL SUCCESS: Bharatiya management students have devised a unique strategy to take on their Chinese counterparts when the two face off on the global stage. The B-school students are learning Mandarin, the official language of China, with several private MBA colleges and even some of the Indian Institutes of Management (IIMs) offering the language as part of their curriculum.
While IIM Calcutta, Bangalore and Shillong offer Mandarin as an elective in their post-graduate diploma courses, Great Lakes Institute of Management, Chennai, has made the language a compulsory subject in all eight terms of its post-graduate course. At Narsee Monjee Institute of Management Studies (NMIMS) in Mumbai, students are required to learn either Mandarin or Spanish as a foreign language.
Apart from B-schools, the study of Mandarin has also caught owing to increasing number of people travelling between India and China. “On an average, over 500 Indians apply for Chinese visas daily and most of them are going there for business. This trend has escalated in the recent past, indicating the surge in the importance of the language for Indians,” said an official at the Chinese embassy in Mumbai.
Even family-run businesses have realised the importance of knowing Mandarin. Gurgaon-based Aniket Gidada, whose family runs a company dealing with water purification and sanitation equipment, started learning Mandarin two years ago as his company sells its products in China. “I can now converse in the language. Unfortunately, when I was in college, no B-school offered a course in the language. It would have been helpful,” said Gidada.--top

 

15. 'YOGA SAVED MY CAREER: Serial entrepreneur Pravin Kothari has spent the past two decades in Silicon Valley’s enterprise software trenches. He’s had a hand in founding four tech companies, including ArcSight, which grew into a $1.6 billion HP acquisition in 2010. Kothari holds over a dozen patents in security technologies and is the inventor behind his latest company, CipherCloud’s encryption technology.
“For me, solving complex problems through innovation is my calling,” says Kothari. “I get immersed into the process of developing an idea and passionately pushing it up the steep hill of building a company, getting funded, going to market and winning market share.”
But the biggest challenge in a startup when you have limited resources, changing priorities, too much to do and not enough time can be stress. “Yoga saved my career,” says Kothari. “In 2004, I experienced a stress-induced digestive system disorder. My doctor informed me that I would need to quit startups and take daily medication for the rest of my life to counter the condition.” --top

 

16. 700 BHARATIYA-OWNED COS IN UK EMPLOY OVER 1 LAKH PERSONS: Bharatiya companies are playing an important role in the growth of the British economy and contributing to GDP and creating employment opportunities, according to Grant Thornton UK LLP's India Tracker 2014 report.
It finds that there are currently over 700 Bharatiya owned small to large-sized businesses in the UK, collectively employing over 100,000 individuals. Of these, 41 organisations were identified as registering year-on-year growth rates of more than 10 per cent, with more than half (26 corporates) demonstrating particularly strong growth in excess of 20 per cent.--top

 

17. BHARATIYA SOFTWARE MARKET UP 10% TO $4.7 BILLON: Software market in Bharat grew 10 per cent to $4.76 billion in 2013, driven by strong adoption of cloud or subscription-based services, research firm Gartner said.
The software market stood at $4.334 billion in 2012. Microsoft was the market leader with 20 per cent share and $957.3 million in revenues. Oracle ranked second with $505 million while IBM ranked third ($446.6 million), followed by SAP VMware, CA Technologies and Adobe etc.
Among the BRICS (Brazil, Russia, Bharat, China and South Africa) nations, the Bharatiya software market experienced the highest growth rate. Brazil grew at 7.8 per cent, while China registered a growth rate of 7 per cent. Russia grew at 8.9 per cent and South Africa at 6.3 per cent.--top

 

18. BHARAT RECEIVES $70 BILLION TO TOP GLOBAL REMITTANCES LIST: Having received $70 billion in 2013, Bharat has topped the list of countries receiving remittances from overseas workers, said the World Bank. The World Bank's latest issue of the Migration and Development Brief said international migrants from developing countries are expected to send $436 billion in remittances to their home countries this year (2014).
"Remittances have become a major component of the balance of payments of nations. Bharat led the chart receiving $70 billion last year (2013), followed by China with $60 billion and the Philippines with $25 billion," said Kaushik Basu, Senior Vice President and Chief Economist of the World Bank.
Out of this $70 billion, more than the $65 billion earned from the country's flagship software services exports, the World Bank said.--top

 

19. SHRI VISHWA NIKETAN: Pravas: Shri Saumitra Gokhale samyojak Vishwa Vibhag is on a tour to Australia and New Zealand. Dr.Ram Vaidya sah samyojak is on a trip to Germany for European shibir at Hamburg. Visitors: Rajesh – Singapore, Chamanlal Gohil – UK.--top

 

FOOD FOR THOUGHT: Nearly all mankind is more or less unhappy because nearly all do not know the true Self. Real happiness abides in Self-knowledge alone. All else is fleeting. To know one's Self is to be blissful always. – Ramana Maharshi--top
 
JAI SHREE RAM

 
TECHNOLOGY COULD BE GAME CHANGER IN THIS ELECTION
Over the next 35 days, 814 million Indians are expected to vote in the general elections. Of this number, around 72mn are voters in the age group of 18-23 years.
These first-time voters, or ‘born frees’ as The Economist describes them, are an important bloc every political party is addressing.
Armed with mobile phones and tablets, this group is tech-savvy and informed.
The high level of awareness among first-time voters can be attributed to improved access to information and technology — through TV, broadband Internet and mobile phones.
According to the I-Cube 2013 report, by the Internet and Mobile Association of India and IMRB International, by June, India, with close to 250 million users, is expected to overtake the United States as the second largest Internet base in the world. Several parties have set up IT teams to focus on online campaigning on the Internet, especially on social networking sites.
With close to 250 million Internet users, of whom 93mn have Facebook accounts and around 35mn have Twitter accounts, this is a big a segment for any party to tap. The advantages here is that the intended message reaches a greater audience in less time with lesser effort.
The flip side is that the easy access to technology has also been misused to spread mischief and hatred — as was seen in Muzaffarnagar last year.
Perhaps the most important of reasons that make this election significant is the way parties have relied on technology to reach the electorate.
Along with rallies, televised debates and door-to-door campaigning, this election has seen contestants and parties focus on social media and other Internet platforms, like blogs, advertisements, podcasts, and analytics, to reach voters.
Whatever be the outcome of the elections, one thing is certain: Technology is helping more people make a better decision about this election than ever before. (Editorial, Hindustan Times April 07, 2014)--top

 
30 YEARS OF THE WORLD’S COLDEST WAR

April 13, 1984, was the first time Indian troops landed on the icy heights called Siachen Glacier. Hundreds of deaths and three decades on, the battle zone continues to inspire awe and fear.

The bumpy road constructed by the Border Roads Organisation after painstakingly cutting at the mountainside meanders up the imposing rocky Ladakh Range visible from Leh. The slow ride leads to the world’s highest motorable pass, the Khardung La at 18,380 feet. It’s the highest point on planet earth to which a human being can travel on wheels without having to walk a step.
From there, the road winds down northwards past small hamlets and villages into the Shyok Valley through which the Shyok river snakes its way, eventually merging into the Indus river that flows into Pakistan Occupied Kashmir (POK). After some hours of driving, the Shyok river is greeted by the Nubra river which flows in a southerly direction from the Siachen Glacier.
This point at which the two rivers (known as ‘Yankee point’) meet becomes a valley wide enough for an Indian Air Force (IAF) Antonov-32 transport aircraft to take a U-turn, usually an extremely hazardous manoeuvre while flying in a valley flanked by imposingly high mountains. A straight drive from there leads to Partapur where the headquarters of the Army’s 102 brigade, colloquially known as the Siachen brigade, is located.
Oxygen at a premium
A short distance further up from Partapar is Thoise airbase, which serves as the runway closest to the Siachen Glacier where the IAF’s transport aircraft land after some skilful flying through the high mountains. A signboard put up at this airbase tellingly states, ‘You are breathing 30 per cent less but pure oxygen’.
A right turn from ‘Yankee Point’ and a short drive on a bridge over the Shyok river leads into the Nubra valley with the Nubra river to the left. The road goes past the Old Silk Route before culminating at the snout of the 76 km long Siachen Glacier, the world’s second largest glacier outside the polar region and also the origin of the Nubra river. From the snout (height approximately 12,000 feet), the glacier extends 76 km like a giant white tongue to as high as 18,875 feet at its source which is Indra Col (24,493 feet), the northern most tip of India.
It is near the snout — blackened over the years due to pollution, human habitation and mixing with gravel from the mountains — where the Army has a major Base Camp equipped with a training school for soldiers, helipads, a battery of the Swedish-made Bofors 155 mm Howitzer, and a memorial with the names of soldiers killed either due to weather, terrain or Pakistani fire over the last three decades among other equipment and facilities.
However, for almost 11 years now, beginning November 2003, both sides are maintaining a ceasefire in the area leaving soldiers on both sides to contend with weather and terrain, which arguably is a far bigger threat than the now silent guns of the adversary located on both sides of the 110-km long Actual Ground Position Line (AGPL) that runs along the Saltoro Ridge.
110 km trek in the freeze
This Base Camp caters for the northern and middle portions of the Siachen Glacier. A second Base Camp, catering to troops deployed in the southern Siachen Glacier, is located ahead of Thoise.
It is from these two base camps that Army soldiers begin their long arduous trek to the 100-odd posts located along the AGPL that begins from map grid reference NJ 9842 all the way northwest to Indra Col, which overlooks the Shaksgam Valley. The altitude of the Saltoro Ridge ranges between 17,800 feet and 25,500 feet, which is barely 3,500 feet less than Mount Everest, the world’s highest peak.
The Indian Army is strongly positioned on the Saltoro Ridge, which overlooks Gilgit and Baltistan (POK) in the far distance and is located well ahead of the entire Siachen Glacier. But along with this major strength is also a pitfall. The nearest road head is located as far as 80 km from the farther Indian post. In these high killer mountains, 80 km can seem an endless distance for a soldier who has to spend up to several days traversing the glacier and climbing high peaks to take his position on one of the scores of Army posts dotting the Saltoro ridgeline.
Such distances in the absence of any possible roads on the glacier poses a herculean logistics challenge. How does one transport equipment and supplies? A helicopter? Yes, but it comes at a huge cost. The IAF and the Army Aviation Corps, which flies a range of helicopters – the smaller nubile Cheetah, the larger sturdy Mi-17-1V and the indigenously developed Dhruv advance light helicopter – carry far less than their designated payload.
This is because these helicopters take off from Leh, Thoise and the Base Camp, all of which are located above 10,000 feet and therefore permit carrying only a substantially reduced payload in the rarefied atmosphere.
While Cheetah helicopters can fly up to those posts where makeshift helipads have been created, the much larger Mi-17 and Dhruv helicopters cannot land on these posts and have to mostly airdrop supplies. But most posts cannot be air-maintained since it is not easy to construct helipads at those heights. Soldiers here thus have no option but to trek up the spurs of the Saltoro range carrying supplies on their back.
Survival is the job
What mountaineers elsewhere in the world do as a novelty, the average Indian soldier does as a matter of duty on a routine posting living up to three to six months on icy heights with temperatures dipping as low as minus 40 degrees Celsius. The farthest post – Bana Post at 22,100 feet – takes a soldier up to 20 days of trek to reach.
Indeed, this is a cruelly unique part of the country where breathing is at a premium, bathing a dream, a change of clothes an impossible luxury, and where raging blizzards, sudden deep crevasses in the glacier and unforgiving avalanches devour soldiers like a hungry monster. Then there is always the danger of frostbite leading to gangrene and amputation of a limb and high-altitude pulmonary oedema and memory loss owing to the low content of oxygen.
It is a battlefield fit only for the Gods and not for mortal beings, some would say. Between April 1984 and August 2012, the Indian Army had lost 846 soldiers with many more wounded.
Both sides have deployed a brigade strength (about 5,000 troops) that costs about Rs 5 crore a day to maintain in the region and comprising Infantry battalions along with a host of supporting units. Siachen remains one of the Indian Army and Air Force’s greatest story – of valour, grit, fortitude, logistics, manoeuvres, battles and skillful flying. Equally important, there would be scores of human interest stories for every soldier posted in the area. It would arguably surpass the stories of many if not all militaries in the world.  (Dinesh Kumar, Sunday Tribune, 13 April  2014 )--top

Chaitra Shukla 2, Vik Samvat 2071. Yugabda 5116: April 1, 2014

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1. FESTIVALS: Akshaya Tritiya

2. CHANGE IS INEVITABLE, CONSTANT: RSS CHIEF:

3. SEWA & VYASA LAUNCHES FIGHT AGAINST MENACE OF DIABETES:

4. 'DISCRIMINATION AGAINST NORTHEAST IS IGNORANCE-DRIVEN NOT HATE' :

5. KP YOUTH PROTESTS AGAINST RENAMING OF SHANKARACHARYA HILL TO SULEIMAN HILL:

6. RAM MADHAV’S LECTURE AT BANGALORE ON UNEASY NEIGHBOURS’ (INDO-CHINA ISSUE) :

7. BHARAT NOW POLIO-FREE:

8. HINDUS COMMENDED BRITISH LIBRARY LONDON:

9. HINDU-AMERICANS RANK TOP IN EDUCATION, INCOME:

10. NATIONAL GALLERY OF AUSTRALIA TO RETURN ALLEGEDLY STOLEN STATUE TO BHARAT:

11. BHARAT  TEST FIRES LONG RANGE N-MISSILE LAUNCHED FROM UNDER SEA:

12. FIJI TO HOLD NATIONAL HINDU CONFERENCE:

13. DHARMA RAKSHA SANGAM AT HELD KOCHI:

14. TWENTY YEARS CELEBRATION OF HINDUISM RADIO PROGRAM:

15. AN AFFECTION HOME FOR THE DESTITUTE CHILDREN- VIVEKANANDA AWASAM:

16. PARLIAMENT BUILDING AT KABUL:

17. RSS PAYS HOMAGE TO KHUSHWANT SINGH:

18. ANAND MAHINDRA, LAKSHMI MITTAL AMONG WORLD'S GREATEST LEADERS:

19. SHRI VISHWA NIKETAN:

FOOD FOR THOUGHT:

Articles:

NOSTALGIA MUSTN’T DEFINE NALANDA

DECLASSIFYING 1962 WAR REPORT WILL HELP THE ESTABLISHMENT LEARN FROM MISTAKES

THINGS HAVE NOT CHANGED


1. FESTIVALS: Akshaya Tritiya, also known as Akha Teej, falls on Vaishakh Shuddha Tritiya ( May 2 this year) , is one of the four days considered the most auspicious days for any new venture. (sade teen Muhurtas )  It is the birthday of Bhagwan Parasurama who is the sixth incarnation of Bhagwan Vishnu, Veda Vyas and Lord Ganesha began to write Mahabharata on this day, on this day Goddess Annapoorna Devi was born and Bhagwan Rishabhdeva ended his yearlong fast.

The word "Akshaya" means never diminishing in Sanskrit and the day is believed to bring good luck and success. It is believed that if you do charity on this day, you will be blessed. Hence, new ventures, like starting a business, construction, major purchasing etc. are performed on Akshaya Tritiya.

Fasts are kept on this day and pujas are performed.

In Bengal, on the day of the Akshay Tritiya, "HalKhata" - a ceremony to start the new audit book is performed - with the worship of Ganesha and goddess Lakshmi. - Back to Top

2. CHANGE IS INEVITABLE, CONSTANT: RSS CHIEF: At a function in Delhi to relaunch two Sangh publications in a magazine format, RSS chief Dr. Mohan Bhagwat on 24th March underlined the need for change saying “vision needs to change with time… and this has been established”.

 “Vision needs to change with time and this has been established… change is inevitable, this journey is tough… we have now grown…. used to difficult times,” Bhagwat said at the function to mark the relaunch of Organiser and Panchjanya.

Praising the Organiser and Panchjanya, Bhagwat referred to the “Ramjanmabhoomi movement” and said “people turned to these publications for the truth” about the movement.

Viveck Goenka, The Indian Express Group chairman and chief guest at the function, said his primary responsibility as a publisher has been to ensure “integrity of content” and “commitment to truth”.

Saying that the Organiser and Panchjanya “crystallize a set of thoughts that inspire a sweeping range of institutions,” Goenka said that relaunching them as magazines is “sound media strategy.”- Back to Top

3. SEWA & VYASA LAUNCHES FIGHT AGAINST MENACE OF DIABETES: Sewa International USA has partnered with VYASA (Vivekananda Yoga Anusandhan Samstha) to fight against the Diabetes by offering 20 hour yoga therapy sessions to pre-diabetic and Diabetic patients in Houston Area. This program is offered completely free as a service to community. The first of series of 6 camps started on 23rd March in Katy, a western suburb of Houston, where 11 participants took yoga therapy sessions by trained yoga therapist in guidance of Dr. Sudha Rajan, President of VYASA.

Dr. Sudha Rajan lighted the lamp and inaugurated the camp in presence of Shri Arvind Thekdi of Sewa and Shri Vishwaroopa of VYASA. Dr. Bala Prabhakar, a medical doctor from Katy area also graced the occasion.

For more information visit www.sewahouston.org - Back to Top

4. 'DISCRIMINATION AGAINST NORTHEAST IS IGNORANCE-DRIVEN NOT HATE' : Incidents of discrimination against northeasterners living in different parts of the country are "ignorance driven" and not "hate driven", said Ajit Doval, former IB chief at the India International Centre Delhi on 26th March at a discussion on 'What ails our northeast policy?', organised by Solidarity with the Youth of Northeast (SYNE).  

Echoing the same feeling Dr. Krishna Gopal, sah sarkaryavaha RSS who has worked in the northeast region talked of a holistic approach, saying there should be no generalisation about people from any part of the country and "everybody in Delhi or elsewhere is not bad".

"Certain incidents happening to the people from northeast are sad but then there should not be a generalisation, so it is important to strike a 'middle way' in order to assimilate the northeast with the rest of the country," Gopal told later.- Back to Top

5. KP YOUTH PROTESTS AGAINST RENAMING OF SHANKARACHARYA HILL TO SULEIMAN HILL: To protest against the conspiracy of Jammu and Kashmir Government along with Archeological Survey of India to change the name of Pious Hillock in Kashmir known since ages and till date as Shankaracharya Hill to Takht- e- Suleiman, a massive demonstration was organized by Youth 4 Panun kashmir (A Youth wing under Aegis of Panun Kashmir) near Collectors Office, Pune on 18th March.  

The demonstration included chanting songs and bhajans in support of Shankaracharya temple. Members of all age groups of the Kashmiri Hindu Community in Pune along with the local Citizens of Pune and members of Shankaracharya Math in Pune participated in the demonstration.

Addressing the people, Rohit Bhat, Pune coordinator for Youth 4 Panun Kashmir said that similar protests were held in Delhi, Hyderabad , Bangalore and Jammu opposing the change in name of Holy Shankaracharya Hill, which is a plan undertaken by state government under pressure from the Jihadi elements. . - Back to Top

6. RAM MADHAV’S LECTURE AT BANGALORE ON UNEASY NEIGHBOURS’ (INDO-CHINA ISSUE) : RSS senior functionary Ram Madhav addressed a gathering on 23rd March evening at the Mythic Society Auditorium at Bangalore, on his new book UNEASY NEIGHBOURS, India and China after 50 years of the war.

The programme, organised by Manthana, a forum for Intellectual dialogue in Bangalore and attended by over 200 intellectuals was presided over by Sreedhar Rao, an expert of national security issue, who was former chief secretary on Sikkim. Some exerpts from his speech are, “We are made to believe by our governments that India & China had relationships and cultural linkages for thousands of years.When Hu Jintao visited India in 2010 he said India and China have been good friends in History for 2000 years and our relationship soured only after 1962. This is partly right and partly wrong.

This is because we never shared our borders as we had a buffer state in Tibet which lay between India and China. China became our neighbour only in 1952; this is after it annexed Tibet in 1950. Tibet gave a call for help to many countries including India, Britain and US. But they realized that no one would come to their rescue. When China annexed Tibet, India never protested. No one stood up and said that whats happening with the Tibetians was wrong.

I am trying to submit through this book that although things have changed, the mindset continues to remain the same. We Indians are idealists, simple at heart and truly believe to have good relationships with all our neighbours. Owning to this we treat all neighbours as same when no two neighbours are the same. In many aspects of International relations we are guided by romanticism, sloganeering and far removed from reality. Unfortunately International relations are all about realism and pragmatism. We have to be guided by our interests. It is here that 1962 becomes relevant as I propose in this book that we still do no understand our neighbour. ‘Hindi Chini Bhai Bhai’ has become a article of faith but not based on reality.

Despite several inputs from intelligence that China had intruded into our territoty, Nehru lied to the nation that there was no such information. We were hiding facts from our own people. As evident, we cannot choose our neighbours and that’s a reality. Though we know something about Pakistan we still do not know much about China. We need to know China to live with them and not to fight them and that is the idea behind writing this book.”  - Back to Top

7. BHARAT NOW POLIO-FREE:  Bharat as well as WHO's southeast Asia region was certified polio-free on 27th March by an  independent commission under the WHO (World Health Organization) certification process.

Polio eradication is one of the biggest public health successes of Bharat. From being one of the top three countries reporting polio, there hasn't been a single polio case in the country for the last three years.

Bharat's polio-free certification came along with that of 10 other countries in the South-East Asia region — Bangladesh, Bhutan, Democratic People's Republic of Korea, Indonesia, Maldives, Myanmar, Nepal, Sri Lanka, Thailand and Timor-Leste. A press release sent by the World Health Organization's Southeast Asia region said that this certification means that 80 per cent of the world's population now lives in certified polio-free regions.

"This is a momentous victory for the millions of health workers who have worked with governments, nongovernmental organizations, civil society and international partners to eradicate polio from the Region. It is a sign of what we can bequeath our children when we work together," said Dr Poonam Khetrapal Singh, regional director for the WHO South-East Asia Region. The door-to-door campaigns that clinched the battle against polio can now be used in other vaccination programmes, she added.- Back to Top

8. HINDUS COMMENDED BRITISH LIBRARY LONDON: Hindus have commended British Library London and Chhatrapati Shivaji Maharaj Vastu Sangrahalaya (CSMVS) Mumbai for “reuniting” Mewar Ramayana, digitizing it and making it available online.

Said to be one of the finest surviving Ramayana manuscripts from 17th century carrying over 370 paintings, it was split between various organizations in United Kingdom (UK) and Bharat  for over 150 years. Its’ over 600 folios are now digitally reunited in a three-year project with a British Library and CSMVS partnership,  enabling wider access to a global audience. It was commissioned by Rana Jagat Singh of Mewar in 1649 and produced in his court studio at Udaipur.

Distinguished Hindu statesman Rajan Zed, applauding British Library and CSMVS for this joint venture in a statement in Nevada (USA) urged world libraries and museums to undertake projects to explore the rich philosophical thought and wisdom offered by Hinduism and Hindu scriptures.

The British Library is the national library of UK and claims to be one of the world’s greatest research libraries. CSMVS, founded in early 1900s, claims to be one of the premier art and history museums in Bharat housing a world-class collection of over 60,000 artifacts from Asia and Europe. - Back to Top

9. HINDU-AMERICANS RANK TOP IN EDUCATION, INCOME: Hindu-Americans have the highest socioeconomic levels among all religions in the United States, according to a new study by the Pew Research Center's Forum on Religion and Public Life.

Both the 1965 Immigration Act and the more recent H1-B visa program set the table for Hindus to succeed. The former encouraged the immigration of professionals, particularly doctors and engineers, while the latter was designed to encourage the immigration of highly skilled guest workers.

The number of H1-B visas issued to Bharatiyas grew steadily in the late 1990s and early 2000s and then spiked again in 2007. In 2011, according to the study, Bharat accounted for more than half of all the H1-B visas granted.

The education capital of this group is phenomenal, said Khyati Joshi, an associate professor at the Fairleigh Dickinson School of Education in Teaneck, New Jersey. 85 percent of Hindu-Americans are college graduates, and 57 percent have some postgraduate education, nearly five times the national average.

Education levels largely correlate to income, and 48 percent of Hindu-American households have an income of $100,000 or more and 70 percent make at least $75,000.  - Back to Top

10. NATIONAL GALLERY OF AUSTRALIA TO RETURN ALLEGEDLY STOLEN STATUE TO BHARAT: The National Gallery of Australia is preparing to return a bronze statue that was allegedly looted from a temple in Bharat. A statement from the Attorney-General's Department says the National Gallery has voluntarily removed the Shiva Nataraja, or Dancing Shiva, from display.

Bharatiya police believe the 900-year-old statue was stolen from a temple in Tamil Nadu as part of a multi-million-dollar heist by disgraced New York art dealer Subhash Kapoor.

The statue has been on display at the Canberra gallery since 2008, when it was sold to the gallery by Kapoor for $5.6 million. Kapoor is currently on trial in Chennai for allegedly ordering the theft of 28 artefacts from two Bharatiya temples.

The gallery has maintained that it ran appropriate provenance checks before buying the statue and had said it would continue to display the piece while investigations continued. However, the Bharatiya government has made a formal request for the NGA to return the 900-year-old bronze figure of the Hindu deity, which has been on display in its first floor gallery since 2008. - Back to Top

11. BHARAT  TEST FIRES LONG RANGE N-MISSILE LAUNCHED FROM UNDER SEA: In a significant step towards completing the nuclear triad available with a few nations, Bharat successfully test-fired a nuclear-capable ballistic missile launched from an underwater platform with a range of over 2,000 kms.

The missile, which can be launched from submarines, was test-fired on 24th March in the Bay of Bengal and all parameters were met,  sources said. This is the longest range missile in the underwater category to have been developed by Bharat. With this, Bharat has developed the capability of launching long-range nuclear-capable missile from surface, air and underwater.

Defence Minister AK Antony has congratulated the team of scientists involved in the tests.

Launch from a submarine and integration of the three types of capabilities will mean completion of the nuclear triad, which is available only with a few countries like the US, France, Russia and China. The submarine-launched ballistic missile (SLBM) is being readied for deployment on various platforms including the around 6,000-tonne indigenous nuclear submarine INS Arihant which will soon be ready for sea trials, sources said.- Back to Top

12. FIJI TO HOLD NATIONAL HINDU CONFERENCE: Interest in participating in the first ever Fiji National Hindu Conference is growing, said Ashika Chandra of the World Hindu Council's Fiji chapter.

"People are making enquiries and registering their interest in taking part in an event which will not only recognize the contribution of the Bharatiya people to Fiji but also address social, economic, health and education issues as well," she said.

Ms Chandra said all major Hindu organisations such as the Sanatan Dharm, Arya Samaj, TISI Sangam, Gujarati Samaj, Sri Ramakrishna Mission, Art of Living and Brahma Kumaris would make presentations at the event.

"The conference program will have oral presentations and we also aim to publish all the conference papers and the copies will be available to government agencies and community workers, and also to all participants of the conference."

The conference will be held on April 12 and 13 at the Tanoa International Hotel in Nadi. It is organized by the Vishwa Hindu Parishad Fiji.- Back to Top

13. DHARMA RAKSHA SANGAM AT HELD KOCHI: ‘Dharma Raksha Samgam’ a unique massive gathering of Hindu organisations was held at Kochi in Kerala on 23rd March. The event was organized by various Hindu organisations on the background of efforts of defaming Mata Amritanandamayi.

The Dharma Raksha Samgam was organized after about 30 years. In 1982, the first Hindu Samgam had been organized by Vishwa Hindu Parishad in Kerala, which was a trend setter to the Hindu community of Kerala who were totally confused due to bad effects of Communist politics of more than 30 years. At that time Hindus who were neglecting the traditional rituals and even Ramayana Tradition of common households also came back on the right path.

Dharma Raksha Samgam was inaugurated by Swami Viswesara Theertha of Pejavar Mutt and presided by Swami Prakasananda of Sivagiri Mutt. Ashok Singhal, the chief patron of Vishwa Hindu Parishad made the Key note address in the presence of more than 20 Saints, who were religious and Dharmic Heads of Different Ashram and 40 Hindu Community Leaders and RSS Pranth Sanghchalak PEB.Menon and Swami Poornamruthanandapuri of Amritanandamayi Mutt, Swami Chidananda Puri, and Swami Vivikthananda Saraswathi of Chinmaya Mission..  E.S.Biju of Hindu AyikyaVedi welcomed all Cast and Community leaders. In between the program RSS Pranth Karyavah P.Gopalankutty master lead to take the Dharma Raksha Pratigya (The Pledge). - Back to Top

14. TWENTY YEARS CELEBRATION OF HINDUISM RADIO PROGRAM: Voice of Sanatan Hinduism Radio program has now completed 20 years of broadcasting. Looking back to the past 20 years the Houston Hindu Community started to build the foundations of many institutions and organizations to establish not only places of worship and teach Hindu Dharma,  it also ventured into the media of radio. This was also a time and age when the Western world looked up to Sanatana Dharma for its teachings with accurate meaning and significance of traditions, festivals and rituals. A radio program to showcase the tenets of Hinduism was created by “Dheerga darshi” (Intuitive Instructor) Padmakant Khambhati. His vision was to explain the doctrines of Hinduism by sharing Vedic knowledge and share it on public media the richness of Hinduism and its philosophies. Hinduism alone is by itself a vast and ancient religion as a great diversified and yet subtly unified mass of spiritual thought and realization. For the past twenty years, it is one voice that has provided to communicate through public media not only the eminence of Hindu faith but also present melodious Bhajans, Music and Chants of Vedic Hinduism.  - Back to Top

15. AN AFFECTION HOME FOR THE DESTITUTE CHILDREN- VIVEKANANDA AWASAM: Sri Vivekananda Awasam—a home for the orphaned children located at Bhainsa is providing much needed warmth and affection to them. These children, who lost their parents either in any accident, or in an unfortunate incident, longed for warmth, love and affection so that they could feel at home. And Seva Bharti is doing exactly that. By showering affection and love on them, Seva Bharti activists have made all the 18 kids staying her feel like home at the Awasam.

Bhainsa is a small but important business hub for cotton trade located in the tribal belt of Adilabad district on the Maharashtra-Andhra Pradesh border. The children are wonderful and working hard to be toppers in their respective classes. Seva Bharti has deputed a dedicated couple, whom the kids fondly call “Mataji” and “Acharya”, to look after them and manage the daily chores of the hostel.

Apart from an urge to learn vocational skills, these children have a natural flair for drawing and painting. Their collection ranges from a panoramic scene of a beautiful house amidst woods to the sketches of national leaders like Mahatma Gandhi,  Chhatrapati Shivaji Maharaj etc.

This Awasam for these little heroes has been in their service since September 28, 1996. Till now, five children sponsored by the local business community are studying in intermediate college at Warangal, Bodhan and NIzamabad.

Two children of this Awasam secured highest score of 491 marks in 2004 Board Examinations. That was so far the highest score in the town and surrounding area. Contact: Sri Vivekananda Awasam, Bhainsa, Adilabad Dist (Andhra Pradesh, Bharat) PIN 504103 E-mail: drmrk_goud@yahoo.com- Back to Top

16. PARLIAMENT BUILDING AT KABUL:The new parliament building in Afghanistan on an 84 acre plot on the outskirts of Kabul, near the historical landmark, the Amanulla Khan palace, is being built by Bharat. The exterior of the building is made of white marble from Heart and red granite from Bharat. Bharat has given development assistance of over 2 million US Dollars in Afghanistan while the overall cost of construction is about 700 crores. 

17. RSS PAYS HOMAGE TO KHUSHWANT SINGH:  RSS expressed its deep shock and sorrow at the demise Khushwant Singh. General Secretary Shri Bhyya ji (Suresh) Joshi said in his condolence message that the country had lost a veteran journalist and author who was a link between today and Bharat before independence by the demise of Shri Khushwant Singh.

“Through his bold and direct comments Shri Khushwant Singh has educated the people of India on almost every issue of national and social importance, in independent India. His interview of Shri Guruji, then Sarsanghachalak of RSS, published in “Illustrated weekly” speaks of his honesty and transparency”, he added.- Back to Top

18. ANAND MAHINDRA, LAKSHMI MITTAL AMONG WORLD'S GREATEST LEADERS: Bharatiya business honchos Anand Mahindra and Lakshmi Mittal are among the world's 50 greatest leaders, according to Fortune magazine. The list of leaders, which includes Nobel Peace Prize winner Aung San Suu Kyi, the Dalai Lama and Pope Francis, through their leadership are "energizing" their followers and making the world better, it said.

On the 40th spot is Anand Mahindra, Chairman of the Mahindra and Mahindra group. "A third-generation corporate aristocrat, Mahindra has aggressively expanded the big conglomerate through acquisitions in autos, computer services, aeronautics, and more, while maintaining the company's standing as one of Bharat's most sought-after employers.

Steel magnate Lakshmi Mittal secured the 48th rank. The CEO of ArcelorMittal created the world's largest steelmaker by "pursuing a decades-long, impossibly audacious plan of consolidation.

The list features Bharatiya origin engineer Arati Prabhakar, 55 who heads the United States Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA).- Back to Top

19. SHRI VISHWA NIKETAN:  Visitors: Shridhar Damle, USA

FOOD FOR THOUGHT: Know that all this, whatever moves in this moving world, is enveloped by God. Therefore find your enjoyment in renunciation; do not covet what belongs to others. - Ishavasya Upanishad- Back to Top

JAI SHREE RAM

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NOSTALGIA MUSTN’T DEFINE NALANDA

Anirban Ganguly

The study of the evolution of Indic civilisation, and how it influenced a number of spiritual movements across the world, is what a university of this kind must advance

The governing idea behind the revival of Nalanda University should not merely be to promote ‘international understanding’, which in any case means a vague-nothing that allows projects to flounder or to be besieged with ideas and intentions that eventually cloud the founding ideal of any such efforts. In any case, the promotion of ‘international understanding’ has been done in the past by India, especially in her Nehruvian heydays, without any tangible returns or takeaways. Nalanda is indeed about nostalgia, but a nostalgia that needs to be rooted in pragmatism, hard strategy and a determined implementing machinery that aspires to see India regain her cultural and civilisational foothold, first, in her immediate neighbourhood and then gradually the world over.

In order to truly impart such a project with a civilisational vision and direction, the first imperative is to extract it from the clutches of an academic and intellectual coterie which is, at best, shallow in its knowledge of the Indian soul and spirit and, at its worst, has been at the forefront of perennially misrepresenting India or tweaking the reading of her polity and civilisation to suit certain interested sections. Certainly such a grand vision cannot be left to the whims, tantrums and dictates of a single individual, however decorated or celebrated.

It is no one's case that Nalanda be developed into an exact replica of its more famous past avatar that would, in any case, be impossible in the present age of a deficient cultural and civilisational vision and understanding, especially among a section of our present policymakers. But a certain physical resemblance and a certain similarity in approach and spirit can truly impart it a unique identity. Simply burdening it with sundry subjects in the name of modernity or of internationalism will defeat the actual vision of the effort. For Nalanda, if it is to rise again as a principal centre of learning should have the capacity to offer some direction, some alternate approaches to the study of India, to the understanding of her myriad cultural-intellectual manifestations and more importantly to the understanding of her past stature and future potentialities as a world-power.

Nalanda and a number of other established universities of that epoch essentially signified and symbolised India's world reach. It was a world reach which ensured the extension of Indian civilisation in all directions overcoming the mightiest barriers of the old world. These institutions of higher learning were centres which united, no subject seems to have been discarded, no pupil rejected on account of belief and some of the greatest patrons of these centres were Hindu kings who generously supported these great and multifaceted efforts. Studies of the past Indian polity, in an actual light and not under the influence of the spirit of deconstructionism, ought to become one of the major areas of studies in the course of years in such an institutional of learning.

The study of the evolution of Indic civilisation, of the evolution of Indic thought, its worldwide spread and how it influenced and shaped a number of religious and spiritual movements and trends is what a university of this kind must advance, institutionalize and give scope to. Through the growth of such a framework of study and research can such an institution eventually shape the study of India in a greater manner and in course of time spawn other institutions that shall further this study from an Indic perspective. A generation of young scholars must be allowed space to train to themselves in such institutions in order to lay a sound foundation for the study of India. 

In the Indic civilisational memory Nalanda survives as an enduring symbol of the perpetual struggle between civilisation and barbarism. It is this fundamental aspect of its symbolism that needs recognition, the present academic coterie however, has displayed a limited understanding and appreciation of such a symbolism and of such a grand vision. (Op Ed Daily Pioneer March 17, 2014)- Back to Top

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DECLASSIFYING 1962 WAR REPORT WILL HELP THE ESTABLISHMENT LEARN FROM MISTAKES

India's reaction to the web publication of the Henderson Brooks report, the official study of its debacle in the 1962 Sino-Indian war, has been predictable. It has moved to block online access to the report, a curiously anachronistic response in the era of WikiLeaks when copies can be proliferated endlessly across the internet. Instead it should make the report public, to enable a debate on how the greatest military debacle in the history of independent India could have taken place.

Most democracies declassify secret documents after a reasonable period of 25-30 years. It's time India too adopted such a policy, which would enable the building of an institutional memory as well as a review of mistakes that may have been committed in the past. By refusing to examine past mistakes, we are condemned to repeating them. It's arguable that release of the report when it was compiled in 1963 may have had a demoralising effect on the nation fresh from its defeat. But half a century later, the government's plea that it contains "sensitive information" and knowledge of its contents could still jeopardise national security is weak.

Making the report public will allow both the military and political leadership to learn from miscalculations and correct deficiencies which frequently get exposed now whenever the army is caught unprepared on the Chinese flank. The government's anxiety to keep the report under wraps reflects its often passive-aggressive approach towards China, which shares common features with Jawaharlal Nehru's catastrophic 'forward policy'. While there is little urgency in strengthening defences along the Line of Actual Control, the establishment goes on a hyper-aggressive mode with every instance of so-called Chinese incursion.

Declassifying the report, following recommendations of the 2006 Veerappa Moily commission, will be an opportunity to revisit past China policy which should now hinge on a more flexible approach to the border dispute. Instead of displaying unbending cartographic nationalism, New Delhi must take up the old Chinese proposal on a territorial swap involving eastern and western sectors. A pragmatic negotiating position, built by political consensus, should settle the dispute once and for all. What must also end is the culture of suspicion between military and civilian leaderships that Henderson Brooks reportedly laid bare, with the political class and bureaucracy integrating the armed forces into decision-making on defence matters. (Editorial, Times Of India, March 19, 2014)- Back to Top

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THINGS HAVE NOT CHANGED

Attack on Hindu temple in Pakistan worrisome

The attack on a Hindu temple in Pakistan during Holi is only the latest in a series of such incidents and underscores the continued persecution of religious minorities in the Islamic Republic. This trend is equally the product of an increasingly radicalised Pakistani society, as much as it is the fatal consequence of an infirm state mechanism incapable of ensuring law and order. Facts are few at this point, but from what has been reported in the Pakistani Press, it seems like anti-social elements leveraged both factors to wreak havoc. Saturday's events have been portrayed as the work of a reactionary mob driven to violence, following reports of a Hindu man allegedly desecrating the Quran. That the allegation was widely publicised via mobile phone messages and broadcast on local television, points to a pre-planned conspiracy. The theory gains heft when one takes into consideration an FIR reportedly filed by the Hindu accused only days before, regarding a robbery in his home. Moreover, even if one were to presume that the accused wilfully resorted to what can only be described as suicidal behaviour — the desecration of the Quran — it still does not justify the savage attack on the temple complex. It also raises serious questions about local law enforcement authorities who withered away when they faced the frenzied mob. That they, nevertheless, managed to save the accused from the blood-thirsty crowd is perhaps the only saving grace in this situation. Unsurprisingly, Saturday's incident in Larkana, Sindh, also fuelled communal tensions in other parts of the Province and in neighbouring Balochistan: Protesters clashed with the police, Hindu shops were gutted and curfews imposed. Together, both Provinces are home to most of Pakistan's Hindu minority community, which numbers about two million people. Tragically, reports of minority persecution — from land grab and extortion to targeted killings and forced conversions — there are routine.

Of course, the Hindus in Pakistan are not the only minorities who live in the shadow of perpetual fear; that country's Christians and Jews receive an equally raw deal. In fact, the attack on the Larkana temple complex is reminiscent of the two suicide blasts at a church in Peshawar that killed more than 78 people in September 2013. Later in November that year, a police officer guarding another church in the same city was killed, while in January this year a security personnel on duty outside a temple in Peshawar was shot dead. As is inevitable, the scourge of intolerance has now also victimised Pakistan's Muslim minorities, with the country's hardline Sunni groups gunning for Shias and Ahmediyyas for not conforming to the former’s puritanical version of Islam. Perhaps, the only glimmer of hope lies in the fact that in recent times, attacks on minorities have been condemned by large sections of the Pakistani intelligentsia, political class and even some Muslim clerics. (Editorial, Daily Pioneer March 19, 2014)- Back to Top