Category Archives: Arts, Culture & Entertainment

Varanasi-based violinist strikes a chord with Srilanka

Noted violinist and professor at department of music at BHU, Dr V Balaji was awarded the title 'Violin Chakravarthy' on the occasion
Noted violinist and professor at department of music at BHU, Dr V Balaji was awarded the title ‘Violin Chakravarthy’ on the occasion

Varanasi:

Noted violinist and professor at department of music at BHU, Dr V Balaji, has been felicitated in Colombo recently.

Sri Lankan President Maithrieala Sirisena rewarded him during a programme ‘The State Music Award Ceremony’ organized by ministry of cultural affairs of Sri Lanka at Colombo, on the occasion of World Music Day.

Balaji presented a portrait of Bharat Ratna and BHU founder Pt. Madan Mohan Malviya to the Sri Lankan President on behalf of BHU.

Balaji was in Sri Lanka to participate in various events including a three-day workshop organized by Sandhwani Sangeet Niketan to mark its golden jubilee and also the centennial celebration of BHU.

He was awarded the title of ‘Violin Chakravarthy’ on the occasion.

source: http://www.timesofindia.indiatimes.com / The Times of India / News Home> City> Varanasi / TNN / July 09th, 2016

Women city bus hit among girl students

Lucknow :

Girl students are boarding the women bus service for safe transportation.

The route of the women city bus service, ‘My Wings’ has been extended till Sarojininagar on the demand of the students of the Guru Nanak Girls Degree college, Charbagh.

As many as 32 girl students of the college had contacted the Lucknow City Transport Services, UPSRTC to extend the bus service till Sarojininagar. The women city bus service inaugurated in April had been operating between Charbagh and Engineering College.

But now it plies between Charbagh and Engineering College. “The principal of the college approached us and said that the timings of the bus were suitable for the students,” said MD, LCTS, A Rahman.

Along with 32 girls who board the bus everyday in morning at Sarojininagar, at least 45 girls board it back to home. LCTS had chosen the Charbagh-Engineering college route for the launch of the bus given the high demand.

The bus is available at every two hours from 8am till 8pm. The minimum fare charged is Rs 5 for every 4km.

source: http://www.timesofindia.indiatimes.com / The Times of India / News Home> City> Lucknow / by Neha Shukla, TNN / August 10th, 2015

Kabir musuem to come up soon

Varanasi:

Here’s good news on Kabir Jayanti. Decks have been cleared for an array of projects in the name of Kabir, the great poet-saint. The detailed project report (DPR) of a new museum complex and hut (Kabir ki jhopdi) at Kabirchaura Mutt, Moolgadi was submitted to the union ministry of culture this year. The remaining projects are currently in the pipeline.

The ministry of culture had sanctioned Rs 5 lakh for preparation of DPR in August last year. However, the ministry asked for some changes in the DPR and wrote to the mahanth of Kabirmutt, Moolgadi, on the same.

The revised DPR was submitted in January this year and the proposed cost of the project is Rs 4.65 crore, mahant at Kabirchaura mutt, Sant Vivekdas Acharya, said on Kabir Jayanti on Monday.

As per the DPR, a hut and a three-storeyed museum building are expected to come up in mutt premises.

The mahant said, “The rooms of the hut will be furnished with Kabir’s belongings so that devotees and tourists are better acquainted with the way he lived. Notably, the proposed hut is to come up at the exact spot where the poet’s hut was some 500 years ago.”

” A museum complex will be set up adjacent to the modular hut to store and preserve the belongings of Kabir and his successors and contemporary saints”, added Das.

source: http://www.timesofindia.indiatimes.com / The Times of India / News Home> City> Varanasi / TNN / July 04th, 2016

Author eyes Guinness record with huge yoga envelope

Musical yoga
Musical yoga

Varanasi:

City-based author and film-maker Jagdeesh Pillai claims to have made a 60 x 45.30 ft paper envelope to carry the message of ‘Benefits of Yoga’ to get the city registered with the Guinness Book of World Records.

The envelope was made in 10 days by Pillai with help of a yoga trainer, social worker and owner of printing press. It was put on display at the committee hall in the Diesel Locomotive Works (DLW) on the occasion of second International Day of Yoga on Tuesday.

Pillai said that he had started working on the envelope from June 12 after prior intimation to world record officials at London. The main purpose of the envelope is to popularize yoga which has now become a global entity. The envelope is made of brown paper joined by glue and is 18.29 metres long (60 ft) and 13.80 metres wide.

Current record for largest envelope was set by Ajmal Khan Tibbiya College of Aligarh Muslim University on April 3, 2013 by making an envelope measuring 58 ft and 7.15 inch x 42 ft and 11.75 inch. The envelop has a photograph of PM in Yoga pose along with official logo of Yoga Day and states a hundred advantages of Yoga. “I will send the video recording and proof along with photographs to Guinness world record office in London within a couple of days,” he said.

source: http://www.timesofindia.indiatimes.com / The Times of India / News Home> City> Varanasi / TNN / June 22nd, 2016

Bengaluru woman bags titles in chennai pageant

LaxmipriyaBF27jun2016

Bengaluru :

Bengaluru mom Laxmipriya Srivastav bagged the first runner-up and the Mrs Beautiful Smile at Mrs India International contest held in Chennai recently.

The contest saw 40 finalists from across the country. It comprised six rounds and workshops for self-assessment, time management, innovative ways of draping sarees, hair care and styling, followed by yoga and meditation to overcome anxiety and stress before the finale.

Laxmipriya, native of a village near Allahabad, has always admired Sushmitha Sen, former Miss Universe, a single mother, and an independent woman.

Laxmipriya lives in the city with her husband Tanmai and their three-year-old son Vivaan.

She works in Pharmed Limited as Senior Product Manager. Her professional career has been progressive in the past eight years. She has also the title of ‘Junior scientist’ from The National Academy of Sciences India to her credit.

As a teenager, she won a painting competition organised by the Indian Oil Corporation, and represented Allahabad in a play during Natya Mahotsav, a cultural event organised by North Central Zone Cultural Centre (NCZCC).

Writing, painting and acting are among her passions.

She cherishes two years of working with Doordarshan as a 12-13-year-old. Currently, she is editor of her company’s in-house magazine Supermom.

She is also associated with NGOs like Aasra and Global Headstart Mission to address medical needs and contribute to the education of the underprivileged.

source: http://www.newindianexpress.com / The New Indian Express / Home> Cities> Bengaluru / by Express Features / June 22nd, 2016

Concert for forgotten folk instruments

Lucknow:

Sound of folk instrument Chameli that was played in most of the pre-Independence ‘Azadi’ songs in rural India before it gradually faded into oblivion will be heard once again in the city this weekend.

Along with it, 26 other instruments that are on the verge of vanishing will be played to acquaint people with the rich folk music.

The gala evening is part of Sanjhi Virasat, a culture fest organised by culture department at the amphitheatre in Lohia Park. 30 folk artists from the remotest parts of the state are invited to play instruments-besides Chameli-the sarangi, dukkad, shehnai, madal, pakhawaj, jal tarang and paddle harmonium.

Sheikh Ibrahim, the choreographer of the event told TOI artists playing these instruments belong to villages of Sonbhadra, Sandeela, Sitapur, Barabanki, Gorakhpur, Hardoi, Rae Bareli, Jhansi and Varanasi districts. Though they are not full-time musicians, they have inherited the art of playing these instruments.

“The musician playing tribal shehnai in our group is a daily wage labourer by profession who has been playing the instrument since childhood and can render all sorts of music including tunes of film songs,” shared Ibarahim.

source: http://www.timesofindia.indiatimes.com / The Times of India / News Home> City> Lucknow / Vidita Chandra / TNN / June 24th, 2016

Once an important centre of Parsis, Agra has now just 6 of them

Agra :

From a time when all the prominent institutions in Agra were run by Parsis in the early 20th century — right from manning the Central Bank to starting city’s iconic hotel Cecil Mansion and entirely controlling the liquor trade here, the number of Parsis in the city has come to just six today.

“Most of the members of the Parsi community have left the city for better living standards”, says Porus Debara (54), President of the Agra Parsi Anjuman and member of the executive body of Federation of Zoroastrian Anjumans of India.

Talking about the consistent fall in their number, Porus says, “The Parsi community in India is deteriorating because most Parsis do not marry and those who do marry do so in their thirties or forties and rarely have more than one child. Intermarriage is another problem amongst us. If a girl marries outside the Parsi community, her children are not welcomed into the community.” The Parsi community has a long history in Agra and its zenith was in the early 20th century when several families arrived in the city as employees of the railways. Over the next few decades, they left their mark on various aspects of the city.

“Parsis first came to Agra more than a century ago as employees of the railways. Some of us also started off with menial jobs such as drivers and guards, but slowly established businesses in the city. The liquor trade was entirely owned by us. Almost all employees of the Central Bank were Parsis. The first hotel in Agra, Cecil Mansion, was started by us. Most prominent lawyers of the city were also Parsis,” says Debara.

In the 1960s, there were still 25 families left, but the numbers have been plummeting in the past few years, and at present there are just six members living in the city.

“In 1969 when we moved to the city, there were almost 25 families in the city. With time, the number has now reduced to just two families. However, there has never been any bias against us in the people of Agra. We have always seen as a peace loving community,” says Daulat Debara, mother of Porus.

“Many of them were engineers in John’s Mill, Jeoni Mandi, were Parsis. The community produced some of the best ginning engineers in the country. Since the factory closed down, almost all of them have left the city,” says Dr Rati Khambatta, the treasurer of the community and doctor at S N Medical College. To keep the spirit of the Parsi community alive in the city, the community keeps meeting on a regular basis. They meet regularly at their dharamshala located in Pratapura. They even have functions at Aaram Garh, their graveyard located in front of the GIC ground.

“We meet as a congregation regularly and even celebrate together during the festivals,” Khambatta says. “The Parsi community has many festivals. Jamshed-i Nouroz is celebrated in March. Pateti, the last day of the year, and Nouruz, the first day of the year, is celebrated in August. Khordad Sal, which celebrates the birth anniversary of the Prophet Zoroaster, is celebrated on March 26,” she says.

Porus says, “Agra has no fire temple. We are only 6 people and it’s not possible to maintain a fire temple amongst us. The running cost of a fire temple is around Rs 70,000-80,000 a month. A priest has to stay at the temple at all time to ensure that the fire never gets extinguished.”

“We usually go to the temples in Delhi. When we’re at home, we pray among ourselves,” adds Daulat.

source: http://www.timesofindia.indiatimes.com / The Times of India / News Home> City> Agra / TNN / June 23rd, 2016

Rare text on earthquakes waits to be translated

Allahabad:

With government agencies and scientists concerned about the damage caused by earthquakes worldwide, there have been many attempts to identify the signals nature sends out before such occurrences.

In this backdrop, a manuscript, which is the conversation between Parasara and Gautama Rishi (sage) on laksana (symptoms) of Bhukampa (tremors) as mentioned in Matsya Puran (epic), is kept in the galleries of National Mission for Manuscript Delhi. The rare manuscript, if deciphered, could be of vital importance.

Titled ‘Bhukampalaksana’, this 8-page book was first found in the shelves of a library in Kashmir.

Talking about the manuscript, N C Kara, coordinator at the mission who was in the city for a 21-day workshop organised by Central Library of Allahabad University, said this manuscript was preserved in the department of municipal cooperation, Karnanagar, Kashmir.

He said the material of this rare manuscript is handmade paper and is written in Sharada script, the language of the manuscript being Sanskrit. Till today, however, the 8 pages of this book are waiting to be deciphered by a scholar well-versed in the Sharda script.

Beginning of the manuscript is missing as it could have got mixed with other manuscripts. “We would be initiating the process of search for the remaining parts of this rare manuscript and also for finding a scholar who could decipher this,” said Kar.

source: http://www.timesofindia.indiatimes.com / The Times of India / News Home> City> Allahabad / by Rajeev Mani / TNN / June 16th, 2016

NBRI cures, restores Parijat to pure original glory

Lucknow:

The ancient Parijat tree in Barabanki district is now free of ailments. The treatment administered by the CSIR lab, National Botanical Research Institute, has made the tree healthy again.

On Wednesday, D K Upreti, officiating director, NBRI, handed over the report containing recommendations on how to preseve the generations-old entity to the forest department. Though NBRI had administered chemical treatment to the tree initially, it has now recommended a microbial biopesticide (Bacillus based inoculants) to be applied on the trunk and leaves of the tree thrice in a year to keep it clean of infections. NBRI also gave Bacillus packets to forest department.

“When we visited the site and studied the samples of the tree and soil we found a huge number of bacterial and fungal infections but now it has been treated and cured completely,” said NBRI’s senior principal scientist S K Tiwari.

NBRI, a CSIR laboratory, was brought on board by the forest department to study the condition of the tree after TOI highlighted how it is wilting and is in dire need of conservation. Scientists had collected samples of the tree’s healthy tissue, wood from the affected portion and soil to find the cause. The sample analysis showed the tree was infested with multiple bacteria and fungi.

The tree was put under treatment in February and administered chemical therapy twice. The tree has a small temple at its base and devotees, for years, have been offering water and sweets as prasad there. Right at the spot it had developed a large opening in its trunk.

Though the tree is being looked after by the forest department as less than an acre land on which the tree exists in forest area, the treatment by the department along with regular spraying of disinfectants proved inefficient and insufficient to preserve the tree.

Parijat (Adansonia digitata) is an exotic tree, an African specie with peculiar features. It bears only flowers and no fruits, the reason it is difficult to grow anywhere. Its white flowers turn golden after a certain period. Barabanki’s Parijat is mythically believed to have come out of the ‘samudra manthan’ (churning of ocean) and brought to earth by Arjun from the garden of Indra for his mother Kunti to offer to Lord Shiva and seek victory of Pandavas over Kauravas. A few years ago, the Centre had released two postal stamps on this tree. “Parijat is said to be ‘kalpvrikhsh’ or the wish-fulfilling tree,” said a priest at the site of the tree.

Experts from Narendra Dev University of Agriculture and Technology, Faizabad too studied the cause of the tree’s decay after Barabanki district administration sought help in 2012.

The age of the tree is anybody’s guess. According to forest officers, it’s only when one cuts the trunk of the tree and counts its rings that it can be known how old it is.

Parijat is ‘top-drying’, meaning its branches dry from the top. It sheds leaves in winters and during May-June new leaves sprout, so for six months it is green and rest of the year barren.

source: http://www.timesofindia.indiatimes.com / The Times of India / News Home> City> Lucknow / Neha Shukla, TNN / June 02nd, 2016

Bonjour Lucknow as city gets French language center

Lucknow :

Learning French will now be easier for citizens. Alliance Francaise, an institution that provides French language education and certification worldwide, has picked Lucknow to open its first centre in Uttar Pradesh in September. This will be their 13th centre in India. In fact, in northern India, it will be the third centre after Delhi and Gurgaon.

Delegate general Jean-Francois Ramon said Lucknow centre will operate from La Martiniere College. “The Francaise will not only promote French language but also provide Indo-French cultural exchange. The institution will also spread awareness of the Francophone cultures,” he added.

The uniqueness of the centre, said La Martiniere principal Carlyle McFarland, is that it will come up in a school (La Martiniere) established by a Frenchman, Claude Martin.

The centre will open to people in the 7 to 77 age group, said Richard Franco , UP coordinator. “We will have trained teachers who would provide high quality teaching of French language and culture. French education will be imparted using mediums like films and songs,” said Richard. The first project to be launched in Lucknow would be learning French through video games, added Richard.

Welcoming the opening of Alliance Francoise, Meeta Ghosh, a French expert in Lucknow, said, “French is not taught in the correct way in Lucknow. Even after completing the advanced level of French course many are unable to speak French,” said Ghosh, adding that the centre will focus on all four skills – listening, reading, writing and speaking.

Interested people can register online.

There will be six levels – A1, A2, B1, B2, C1 and C2, with A1 being the beginners level and C2 making the person proficient in the language. Each level has an average of 60 hours teaching, varying from four hours to eight hours per week, informed Jawahar Lal Sarin, prsident, Alliance Francoise de Delhi. Registered candidates before taking the classes, will have to undergo an online assessment to know whether the level, the person has enrolled is fit to him/her.

source: http://www.timesofindia.indiatimes.com / The Times of India / News Home> City> Lucknow / Isha Jain, TNN / June 02nd, 2016