Wednesday, 31 August 2022

Ganesh Festival, Mumbai: A Religious - Cultural Saga that Exemplifies the Cosmopolitan nature of the City.

 




Ganesh Festival, Mumbai: A Religious - Cultural Saga that Exemplifies the Cosmopolitan nature of the City. 

After two-years of COVID pandemic restrictions, the Ganesh Festival (Sarvajanik Ganeshotsav) - the socio cultural, religio-spiritual tradition, celebrated with great fervour across Mumbai and Maharashtra, the history of which goes back to the late 19 the century that has subsequently spread to most other parts of India – a ten-day mega festival will be celebrated without any restrictions or limitations in Mumbai and other parts of Maharashtra. The Ganesh Festival is celebrated by the devotees of Lord Ganesh, the god of wisdom and good fortune, to mark “his birth” during the Chaturthi Tithi of Shukla Paksha of Bhadrapada month (August or September). This year, the Ganesh Chaturthi has fallen today - August 31, Wednesday. Accordingly, the Ganesh Visarjan will take place on Anant Chaturdashi, September 9, Friday. Ganesh Chaturthi is also known as Vinayaka Chaturthi and is celebrated with much enthusiasm across Maharashtra, Andhra Pradesh, Karnataka, Madhya Pradesh, Goa and Kerala, among other states.

The announcement of the decision to remove all the restrictions in organising the Ganesh Festival this year had motived the organisers of the Ganapati Pandals (Sarvajanik Ganeshotsav) to make a beeline at the BMC seeking approval for their respective mandals for organising the Ganesh festival. The Mumbaikars, who could not celebrate their favourite Ganapati Bappa festival in the last two years, in that quintessential manner that Mumbai is known to celebrate this festival, are eagerly waiting to celebrate this year’s Ganesh festival with great religious fervour and fanfare. The organisers of the Sarvajanik Ganapati Mandals in Mumbai are once again vying with each other to bring out their creative best in attracting as many devotees as possible to their respective Pandals. Approximately some 3490 applications were received by BMC for the erection of Ganpati Pandals this year, and 2284 mandals have been given permission. This almost matches to the pre pandemic level when in 2019, BMC had received 3723 applications out of which 2483 pandals were approved for erection.

This year’s Sarvajanik Ganesh Festival has a special significance since it owes its genesis to Indian independence and this year marks the completion of seventy-five years of our independence – Azadi Ka Amrut Mohotsav. Therefore, it is apt to recall how the Ganesh Festival began to be celebrated as a community festival owing its genesis to the freedom struggle. The Sarvajanik Ganesh festivals have played their role in freedom movement by uniting all sections of the Hindu society to gather under one platform as devotees of Lord Ganesh and to seek his blessings for a free India. The Genesis for the celebration of the Ganesh Festival in public goes back to the nineteenth century – 1893 to be precise.

The first battle of Indian independence fought in 1857, which the British had dubbed as the Sepoy Mutiny, had given an impetus for the freedom movement in India. A communal flare up between the Hindus and Muslims in 1870 and the fear that it can adversely affect their governance, the British Government in the year 1892 imposed a ban on any gathering of native Indians more than 20 in number. This had made it difficult for the nationalist leaders and reformers to address any gathering and create any socio- political awareness. The ban however, allowed only the public gatherings in form of ​Namaj or Muharram ​taboots procession by the Muslim community, who are known for offering of their prayers in public. The British were clever not to hurt the religious sentiments of their subjects, more so Indians who are largely religious.

The use of public gatherings to create an awareness in the society was first used by the social reformer, Mahatma Jyotiba Phule. He founded Satyashodhak Samaj (a society of truth seekers) under whose auspices he encouraged public gatherings - called Jalsas. These Jalsa’s had proven to be an effective medium to take socio- political messages to all cadres of society. Realising how adversely the 1892 ban was impacting the public gathering and how impartial the ban was towards the Hindus, Bal Gangadhar Tilak conceived an innovative idea to bring Lord Ganesh out of individual homes and onto the public space. Moreover, Tilak needed a platform where he could bring together all the Hindus, who were a fragmented society divided on the caste lines - this division was encouraged by the British who believed in the policy of divide and rule.

Tilak was aware that Lord Ganesh was a God of the masses in Pune and Maharashtra and that Lord Ganesh was worshipped by all sections of the Hindu community. The city of Pune, from where the movement for Sarvajanik Ganesh festival started, was ruled by the Peshwas who served as the Prime Ministers to the Maratha kings.  Peshwas worshipped Ganesh as their kul devta and therefore it is no wonder that Poona is surrounded by Eight Temples of Ganesh - Astha Vinayak. Incidentally even today the Ashtavinayak Yatra or pilgrimage covers the eight ancient holy temples of Ganesh which are situated around Pune. Each of these temples has its own individual legend and history, which is distinct from each other.

The history of the annual worshipping of Ganesh - by consecrating the statue of lord Ganesh and offering Pooja in individual houses - actually dates back to at least 16th century in Maharashtra. However, the Ganesh Festival was mostly observed in the aristocratic individual households of the Peshwas - the Prime Ministers in the Maratha regime, who were also responsible for making Ganesh the God of the masses.

In 1892, the year when the British imposed a ban on public gathering, Bal Gangadhar Tilak wanted to defy this order but lawfully. He knew how intricately Lord Ganesh is connected with the people of the region. Tilak conceived of an idea to bring Lord Ganesh out of the individual royal households and onto the public space to channelise, unite and ignite a divided Hindu society for a larger national sentiment against the oppressive British rule. Incidentally, this movement also helped lord Ganesh to become Lord Ganapati, the God of the masses. Bal Gangadhar Tilak had commissioned two newspapers, Kesari, in Marathi and Mahratta in English, which were published from Kesari Wada, Pune. Tilak used the loop hole in the 1892 ban imposed by the British, which exempted the Muslims from their Friday prayers, to appeal to his readers to start the Sarvajanik Ganesh Festival. He was sure that this being a religious festival the British would be afraid to ban it. More so since the British had permitted the Friday prayers of the Muslims. Tilak used his Kesari Marathi paper to drive home this message among the Hindu community and he appealed to the people to organise community Ganesh Festival.

This was a well thought out decision. Tilak knew how religious the Indian society was. He was therefore sure that the British, who were successfully managing to crush the freedom movement, particularly gathering of large number of people on the streets with that inhuman and barbaric force that is associated with the colonial rule in India, would not succeed in disrupting a religious gathering of people. He knew that the call for the Sarvajanik Ganesh Festival would serve two purpose, first it would unite the divided Hindu community under single platform and second the platform could be used in strengthening the freedom movement by creating a sense of cultural unity among the people. The Ganesh festival provided the much needed impetus for the freedom struggle and ever since the Ganesh Festival has come on to the public space in Mumbai and Maharashtra and has also spread across different cities and towns in India. The Ganesh Festival, particularly in Mumbai, connects to people of all faith and is considered more a cultural worship space. One can witness this across different section of society in Mumbai, which I am privy to for several years.

The first Public Ganesh Mandal - Keshavji Naik Chawl Sarvajanik Ganeshotsav Mandal at Girgaum - in Bombay, as it was known then, was commissioned in 1893 and ever since the Ganeshotsav Mandal in Girgaum has been celebrating this auspicious Ganesh festival in the same traditional way each year. Lord Ganesh, the moorti of the elephant god, comes in varying sizes and in different shapes and styles, which depend on where the lord is commissioned for the worship. The Girgaum Ganesh pandal does not use loudspeakers nor expensive lights, or any of the modern day style pooja traditions, which are observed in most of the Ganesh Pooja pandals across Mumbai and other cities in the country. The Keshavji Naik Chawl Sarvajanik Ganeshotsav Mandal in Girgaum has continued this tradition for over a century now.  However, there are other public Ganesh Pandals, across the city including the famous Lalbaug ka Raja and so also in various other cities in India - Pune, Bengaluru, Hyderabad etc.- which celebrate the Ganesh Pooja and the festival with modern day fanfare with DJs and lights and sound and crackers and what have you. This year all this will be back to its peal in Mumbai and Maharashtra, owing to the removal of Covid restrictions. 

Post-independence, the festival has undergone a change and during these 10 days of celebration, the economic activity gets accentuated leading to increased employment, income and production of variety of goods and services. In that sense the Ganesh Utsav has become a ‘cultural product’ of the city, which has great economic and market value. Today, the Sarvajanik Ganesh Utsav is one of the most celebrated festivals of Mumbai. One of the primary reason for the success of the auspicious Ganesh Festival in Mumbai is the Mumbaikars - the rich and mighty, the powerful and powerless, the poor and the insignificant, the lettered and unlettered, sheltered and unsheltered, the males, females and the transgender, the believers and non-believers, Hindus, Muslims, Parsis, Sikhs, Christians, Jains, Buddhists, the religious and non-religious, young, middle aged, old and the very old. That undying spirit of unity in diversity in India gets exemplarily played out during this festival in Mumbai.

The Ganesh Festival in Mumbai has now become a ‘cultural product’ that has large economic impact. It includes goods and services bought for reasons other than those that are used purely for the utilitarian purposes as envisaged by Abraham Maslow. Interestingly, festivals such as the Ganesh Festival in Mumbai, are among the fastest developing cultural events in the world. Currently, festivals are treated as an important element in promotion of cities and regions which attract tourists and encourage them to spend their money. In that sense we must all encourage celebration of the Ganesh Festival, which besides being spiritual and religious in nature it also serves as a catalyst for the economy and job creation. The economic imprint of the Ganesh Festival is evidenced in a study conducted by ASSOCHAM (2015). The study revealed that the annual revenue from Ganesh festival was around Rs. 20,000 crores in the year 2015, growing annually at CAGR of 30%. The GSB ​Seva Mandal​, known to be the richest Mandal in Mumbai, sought an insurance coverage of Rs 300 crores in the year 2018 for their Pandal, which further evidences the market value of the festival.

According to the Brihanmumbai Sarvajanik Ganeshutsav Samanvay Samiti (BSGSS), a Ganesh Mandal coordination committee in the city, a single major Ganesh Mandal normally spends about 3 crore rupees for the 10-day spectacle. An estimated fifteen to twenty lakh visitors visit a single idol, ​Lalbaugcha Raja, ​ over ten days, with as many as five lakh visitors on a single day, contributing about 25 crore rupees in cash as their offerings, while a similar amount is also raised by the auction of gold- silver and presents, which are also offered by the devotees to Lord Ganesh. The scale of operations of this 10-day Ganesh Festival event was constantly increasing until Covid played spoilsport, during the last two years. It is so heartening to note that the enthusiasm among the public and also the organisers will ensure that the years lost due to Covid will more than be compensated this year and the years thereafter and that no untoward incident happens.

The economic impact of the Ganesh Festival is also seen in the opportunities of employment and income generation that this festival offers for the Mumbaikars around the ten days of the Festival. The Festival creates demand for the music industry - in terms of composition and productions of devotional music albums. It creates market opportunities for the Gold, silver and gems & jewellery - both for the purpose for offerings to the Lord Ganesh as well as for personal use. The flower and decoration markets experience a much larger turnover during these ten days. The sale from food industry – primarily sweets - increases many more times than regular. The city enjoys higher number of offers for sale and discount from the real estate sector and financial sector. A conservative estimate of all these economic activities are destined to give a push to Mumbai’s economy to the tune of Rs. 25 thousand crores for which owe our reverence to Lord Ganesh.

Whether a sombre pooja or an ostentatious collective celebration, one thing remains central to this Ganesh Festival, which every Mumbaikars and Maharashtrians celebrate - the festival is celebrated with Shradha and Bhakti. This in essence is the very spirit of India - the socio, cultural and spiritual land that is home to most religions of the world. The administration and all other stakeholders, including the public, who ensure that this extraordinary 10 days Ganesh Festival passes of peacefully with the immersions of the Ganesh murthis and the festival becomes a grand success time after time and festival after festival, must be saluted for their efforts to make this grand festival successful.

In the CSMVS Museum campus, where we are currently staying, Mr Sabyasachi Mukherjee, DG, CSMVS, organised a community Ganesh Pooja for the families who are residing in the staff quarters - inside the campus - and we all had the honour to celebrate the Ganesh Festival in a traditional Maharashtrian way with devotional songs and offerings for the Lord of wisdom. Incidentally every year we also celebrate the Ganesh Festival at home, bringing home Lord Ganesh. It was on this Ganesh Chaturthi day in 1958 that my elder son was born and ever since our family has been celebrating the Ganesh Festival brining home Lord Ganesh.   

May Ganapati Bappa bless us all and may he guide this nation to ever increasing heights with peace and prosperity and may the people living in the bottom of the pyramid and all other disadvantaged section of the society continue to be blessed to lead a happy life.

Ganapati Bappa Morya.


Sunday, 7 August 2022

Rabindranath Tagore: A Tribute to the Polymath on his 81st Punyatithi





It was on this day - 7th August - in the year 1941, that Gurudev Rabindranath Tagore departed for his heavenly abode at Calcutta (now Kolkata) at the age of 80 years. He was the first Asian and also the first non-white to be conferred with the coveted Nobel Prize in Literature (1913). Rabindranath Tagore was an exemplar polymath whose outstanding contributions in the multitudes of creative endeavours continue to inspire generations. Today, on the occasion of his 81st Punyatithi, while I am writing this tribute and paying my reverence to this great Indian genius polymath - a versatile poet, a par excellence short story writer, great nationalist, novelist, playwright, essayist, artist, rationalist, as well as a talented painter - I am reminded of those last few years of Tagore which preceded his passing away. The later incident relates to a surgery that Tagore underwent, which he was not prepared to. There were different opinions that experts had whether Tagore should or should not undergo the surgery. Tagore himself was averse to the surgery and any allopathic medications and believed more in the traditional Ayurveda and homeopathic medicines. Unfortunately, he went by the advice of his Doctors and Tagore could not survive the surgery and passed away on 7th August 1941. 

 The last four years of Gurudev’s life - 1937 to 41 - were marked by chronic pain, urinary and kidney problems and two long periods of illness, which Tagore had to endear. It all began on 10 September 1937 in Shantiniketan where he collapsed and lost his consciousness due to an attack of ‘erysipelas’. He remained in a state of comatose and near death, for some sixty odd hours. In those days, there was no proper means to send out SOS communication for the medical team to arrive from Calcutta (now Kolkatta). Therefore, Tagore remained in a state of Comatose at Shantiniketan until the arrival of the medical team from Calcutta and their effective medical treatment. Miraculously, Tagore started responding to the medication and regained his consciousness fully on 15th September. The creative genius that Gurudev was, who had fallen in love with painting in his sixties - the last of his creative contributions - as soon as he regained full consciousness on 15 September, the indefatigable Gurudev asked for a brush and colours. Notwithstanding the fact that he had just recovered from his painful ailment, Tagore started painting a landscape on a piece of plywood. The result was “a dark wood with streaks of yellow light breaking through its gloom,”. This was one of his many remarkable paintings all of which are now classified as national treasures. Ten days later, 25 September, he wrote the first poem of a series of eighteen poems, which he scripted on life and death, dying and after death. These poems were published under the title ‘Prantik’. 

 In just three years, September, 15, 1940, while in Kalimpong, Tagore once again faced another attack and he complained of pain in his bladder. He was unable to pass his urine and suddenly lost consciousness and collapsed. He was rushed back to his Jorasanko house in Calcutta. With dutiful attendants attending to Gurudev in the presence of his near and dear ones and under the supervision of Nilratan Sarkar and Dr Bidhan Chandra Roy, Tagore was soon on the path to recovery. But then he continued to suffer from his urinary problems and prostate issues, which aggravated. On 16 July 1941 Doctors advised him to go for a surgery. Tagore preferred homeopathic and Ayurvedic medications and he was against allopathic treatment and that included the surgery, which he was advised to undergo by his Doctors including by Dr BC Roy. Tagore had great faith in Dr BC Roy, who incidentally is also responsible for the establishment of the Birla Industrial and Technological Museum, the mother museum, which later gave birth to the NCSM an organisation with which I was associated for 35 long years. 

 Dr BC Roy was considered as one of the greatest of Doctors of his time and incidentally even today his birthday, 1st July, is commemorated as the National Doctors day in India. On his advice a makeshift operation theatre was created at Jorasanko Thakurbari and Tagore, against his own wishes, was asked to undergo surgery. Although most Doctors, including Dr BC Roy had decided that operation is the only solution to Tagore’s ailments, there was another famous Doctor, Nilaratan Sarkar, who had a different opinion. Dr Sarkar was of the opinion that due to his old age, Tagore will not be able to withstand the operation. Dr Sarkar and Dr BC Roy, it is said, argued bitterly and even had fight on this issue. But then sadly the opinion of Dr BC Roy and those who supported him prevailed. 

Dr Lalitkumar Bandopadhyay was tasked to perform the operation on Tagore on 25 July, 1941 at the make shift operation theatre which was created at the residence of Tagore. Dr Bandopadhyay was assisted by Dr Satysakha Maitra and Dr Amiya Sen. The operation for ‘suprapubic cystostomy’ was carried out by the Doctors, who inserted a drainage tube into the urinary bladder of Tagore to help him drain his bladder via the urethra. Unfortunately, after the operation, Tagore complained of a burning sensation, and fell unconscious. His condition continued to deteriorate even while he was unconscious. His kidneys stopped functioning on August 4 and he was kept on medical support with saline and oxygen administered extraneously. His condition could not improve, despite the best of efforts from the team of Doctors who were attending to Tagore. Finally, on the night of August 6, his condition worsened and Doctors gave up all their hopes and Rabindranath Tagore was declared dead on 7 August, 1941. 

Today when we are observing the 81st Punyatithi of Gurudev Rabindranath Tagore, I am happy to share a tribute, which I had written for Tagore on his birthday in 2020 on my blog whose link is appended for those interested.

https://khened.blogspot.com/2020/05/rabindrnaath-tagore-tribute-to-polymath.html

Jai Ho Long live Tagore. 

Images : Courtesy Wikipedia and NGMA Mumbai.

Saturday, 30 July 2022

Kargil Vijay Diwas, Screening of Saga of a Brave Heart and NGMA Bengaluru – My Connect.

 

 





Kargil Vijay Diwas, Saga of a Brave Heart and NGMA, Bengaluru resonate with yours truly and therefore it was a pleasant surprise to receive an e invite for the celebration of the Kargil Vijay Diwas - which included screening the Saga of a Brave Heart Documentary, from NGMA Bengaluru.  Speaking of Kargil Vijay Diwas, commemorated to celebrate the Indian victory over our enemy, Pakistan, it reminds me of the exemplary courage shown by the Indian Armed Forces, which included my one year senior Ajeet, at the Sainik School Bijapur, Colonel M B Ravindranath, Vir Chakra, under whose command Indian Armed forces achieved their path breaking success of capturing the Tololing peak. Here is a link to the blog which I had written on Kargil Vijay Diwas last year, as my respect and tribute to Col M B Ravindranth and about the extraordinary valour, which the Indian Army exemplified while winning the Kargil battle.

https://khened.blogspot.com/2021/07/kargil-vijay-diwas-remembering-col-m-b.html

My second connect is with the Saga of the Brave Heart. And this saga, so beautifully and passionately scripted and published as a book by our dear Bhabhi ji, Smt Shakuntala Bhandarkar, the Veer Nari and the exemplary wife of Late Lt Col. Ajit Bhandarkar, Shaurya Chakra (Posthumous), relates to my class buddy Lr Col Ajit Bhandarkar, who made that supreme sacrifice in service of his nation. Ajit was my class buddy at the Sainik School with whom my class mates and I spent seven long years at the residential Sainik School Bijapur during the most impressionable age - 9 years to 16 years. All of us, the classmates of Lt Col Ajit Bhandarkar, had joined hands to create a memorial in honour of our dear buddy and that memorial now stands tall as Ajit Dwar at Sainik School Bijapur. Here is the link to the Blog and a tribute which I had paid to our dear class buddy Lt Col Ajit Bhandarkar.

https://khened.blogspot.com/2019/10/lt-col-ajit-bhandarkar-25-rr-to-brave.html

 The Third connect relates to NGMA Bengaluru, which is celebrating the Kargil Vijay Diwas by organising three days’ event (29-31st July) at the NGMA. I had the honour to head NGMA Bengaluru - as the Director of NGMA Bengaluru – for four months from October 2011 to January 2012. This was an additional duty which I had the honour to shoulder over and above my main responsibility of Director Visvesvaraya Industrial and Technological Museum, Bengaluru.  Although my association with NGMA was very brief, I had fallen in love with that extraordinary creative ambience of the Manikyavelu Mansion which is now home to NGMA, Bengaluru. I have therefore requested my classmates in Bengaluru to use this opportunity to visit NGMA Bengaluru to witness the screening of the Saga of the Brave Heart in the beautiful auditorium of NGMA.  

 

Manikyavelu Mansion, which now houses NGMA Bengaluru, has an interesting history which dates back to many years before the foundation for the NGMA was laid some times in 2001. This beautiful building - Manikyavelu Mansion – which exhibits a rich, vibrant and an extravagant Victorian-style bungalow belonged to the royal dynasty of the Wodeyars -  the Mysuru Wadiyars. In the 1920s this beautiful mansion was bought by a mining baron, Raja Manickyavelu Mudaliar, from the Mysuru Wadiyars. When Manickyavelu Mudaliar died in 1939 this white mansion was inherited by his son. The junior Mudaliar was not as successful businessman as his illustrious father -  Manickyavelu Mudaliar, and therefore this mansion was put under auction due to financial problems in 1964. This building was then acquired by the City Improvement Trust Board (Bengaluru Development Authority) and was transferred to the Housing Board in late 1960s. This mansion and the beautiful complex in which it is situated was used - in the 1970s and 80s - to house the UN’s Asian and Pacific Regional Centre for Transfer of Technology. Subsequently, this building remained unused and unfortunately with passage of time the condition of this beautiful mansion started deteriorating.

 

The deteriorating conditions of this beautiful white mansion, located in the green ambience of 3.5-acre campus, came to the notice of art lovers of Bengaluru and rest what they say is history. Courtesy the efforts of many of the stalwart art lovers of the city and so also the government of India, Ministry of Culture – Late Ananth Kumar, Ms. Maneka Gandhi, K.N. Srivastava, Chiranjeev Singh and others -  that this magnificent building was restored for housing the National Gallery of Modern Art (NGMA), which was opened in the year 2009. Architect Naresh Narasimhan was assigned the task of redesigning Manikyavelu Mansion to house the NGMA Bengaluru. The grandeur to which this building has been restored to house the NGMA Bengaluru can be seen when one visits this magnificent campus. NGMA Bengaluru stands testimony and demonstrates how a heritage building can be effectively reused to create the best of public cultural spaces in the city. A new annexe building was added in the same style as the white mansion to create the requisite additional space for the NGMA. The NGMA campus now boasts of the best of the greenery in the garden city of Bengaluru, interspersed with some exquisite art pieces and sculptures in the garden that is flanked by old trees, a beautiful open air cafeteria, water body and a lovely auditorium, where the Saga of the Brave Heart documentary will be screened tomorrow – 31st July. During my brief stay at NGMA Bengaluru, I had the honour to host three exhibitions and many outreach educational programmes including film shows. I also had the honour to unfurl the national flag on the Republic Day in 2013. 

I take this opportunity to appeal to my school buddies and other friends in Bengaluru to please join NGMA Bengaluru in the celebrations of Kargil Vijay Diwas and witness the Saga of the Brave Heart documentary tomorrow.

Jai Hind and Jai Hind Ki Sena

 

Thursday, 30 June 2022

Tribute to our Guru, the nonagenarian, Shri G D Kale Sir.

The day started with an extremely sad news - received in our Sainik School Batch group - that our beloved Guru, the nonagenarian, Shri G D Kale Sir, aged 91, had breathed his last, this morning around 10 AM. For all Ajeets – the students of the Sainik School Bijapur, where Kale Sir served as a teacher- Shri Kale Sir has always been that quintessential ‘Guru’, whose significance has been defined in that age old Sanskrit hymn; “Acharya Devo Bhava”. In the Indian traditions, the Guru (teacher) is equated with God and is placed on that same high pedestal, which is reverentially reserved for the Gods/goddesses in the Indian society. Kale Sir was that Guru, described in those times less Sanskrit scriptures, for all of us - the Ajeets – spanning all batches (1963-2022). He remained connected to every single Ajeet who studied and passed out from the Sainik School Bijapur, until his last breath. For every single Ajeet, Shri Kale Sir resonates with all those Gurus - Dronacharya, Kripacharya or Vashisth - who have been immortalised in our age old scriptures and so will he be for all of us and the entire Ajeets family. 

 He was a moving encyclopaedia, a computer in true sense, who strived all through his nine decades of his enduring life to create and continue to update an encyclopaedic data base of all the Ajeets, tracing them with their roll numbers, batch, year of passing out, date of birth, their current postings and many more data related to each and every Ajeet. He would call up most Ajeets and commandingly address each of them by their first name and most importantly with our roll numbers. He would make it a point to trace every single Ajeet and update their whereabouts in a database which he would share with respective batches.

 The Ajeets Alumni Association ( AAA) and the website of the Sainik School Bijapur alumni - www.ajeets.org which has connected all Ajeets, cutting across continents, owes its Genesis to our beloved Guru, who was befittingly felicitated during the Diamond Jubilee of our SSBJ at the hands of the Honourable President of India, late Pranab Mukherjee. Today every single groups of Ajeets - which are more than fifty for sure - have poured out their emotions and tributes to our beloved Guru and there was one point which was constant in remembrance of our Guru. Almost every one of the Ajeets had received a call from him which ensured that, even today, the Ajeets, stood up speaking to him on phone, such was the respect and reverence that he commanded from all of us all through his life. May 14, 2022, was the last major events of Ajeets - the Ajeets Knowledge Forum event - which Kale Sir attended. 

 I join the entire Ajeet fraternity in praying for the noble soul of our beloved Guru, father figure to all of us ( grand father to the youngsters) to rest in peace in the heavenly abode which is now home to him and May he continue to bless us all. Kale Sir and his memory and his unparalleled service to the Sainik School, Bijapur and to the AJEET Alumni Association will remain eternally etched in golden letters in the annals of the history of SSBJ. Ajeet Hain Abheet Hain.

Saturday, 11 June 2022

Role of Education and Information Technology in India’s Economic Development: A talk by Dr Lalit Kanodia under the auspices of Ajeet Knowledge Forum

 



The Ajeet Knowledge Forum (AKF), one of the verticals under the Ajeet Alumni Association (AAA)– a formal association of the Alumni of Sainik School Bijapur, will be hosting its sixth talk, which will be delivered by one of the founding fathers of IT industry in India Dr Lalit Kanodia, the founder of Datamatics and so also the founder CEO of Tata Communication Services (TCS) on 11th June, Saturday, 2022, at 6 PM. He will be speaking on a subject entitled “Role of Education and Information Technology in India’s Economic Development”. This is for the first time that this talk will now be open to everyone, unlike on earlier occasions when the talks under the AKF were mostly confined to the members and family of the AAA. I am happy to share the link to the You Tube where it will be live webcast and also a link for registration to the talk for those who may be interested.

The Ajeet Alumni Association (AAA) is a formal association of the alumni of Sainik School Bijapur (SSBJ). AAA is being majorly transformed and getting institutionalized by our senior Ajeets led by the untiring and indefatigable Dr Ashok Dalwai, IAS, with support from Mr Gopal Hosur, IPS, the President of AAA, senior mentors that include among others the first School Captain of SSBJ, Colonel BGV Kumar, Captain Gopinath - the founder of Deccan Airways - and many other serving and retired Generals, admirals and air vice Marshals and so also other Military officers and many more fellow civilian Ajeets from across the country and abroad. True to the motto of SSBJ : Ajeet Hain Abheet Hain – and so also its objective of preparing the boys academically, physically and mentally for entry into the National Defence Academy, Khadakvasla (Pune) and also to be the leaders in other walks of life, SSBJ has produced the best of military officers and has prepared us to be the leaders in many different areas – Civil Service, engineering, medicine, entrepreneurship, legal, social service, political service, sports etc. The office bearers of AAA, senior Ajeet mentors and all the Ajeets, have now come together and are brain storming to contribute to the society in the nation building and one of the forums through which AAA is aiming to connect Ajeets and their families (and others) with the knowledge society - in which we live today - is to bring them face to face with the best of nation builders in different walks of life through the AKF platform.
 
 Under the umbrella of AAA, different chapters and forums have been constituted and one such forum is the Ajeet Knowledge Forum (AKF). The AKF was launched in August 2021 with the opening online talk by one of our legendary Ajeets – Captain Gopinath, who spoke with passion and emotion about his life journey from his school days in Sainik School Bijapur to his joining the National Defence Academy and then getting commissioned into the Indian Army and taking part in the 1971 Bangladesh Liberation war and then establishing his own Air Ways – Deccan Airways, which revolutionised aviation industry in India. AKF has organised 5 such lectures under its umbrella and the speakers, besides Captain Gopinath, included, Mr Subroto Bagchi, the founder of Mind Tree, eminent scientist, Padma Vibhushan, Dr Raghunath Mashelkar, Eminent Film Director, Padma Vibhushan, Shyam Benegal, Eminent Oncologist Dr Devi Shetty and Ms Rubi Ahluwalia the cancer survivor and Wing Commander Rakesh Sharma.

 The AKF organizes their session on every second Saturday of the alternate month and the sixth session under the AKF will be organised tomorrow between 6 – 7.45 PM and the speaker for this session is Dr Lalit Kanodia, a well-known industrialist and the founder CEO of Tata Consultancy Services and Datamatics. In this sixth session of the AKF, besides the main speaker – Dr Lalit Kanodia, we will also be having two of our distinguished alumni of SSBJ – Vice Chief of Indian Army Lt Gen. B S Raju, UYSM, AYSM, YSM and Vice Admiral M A Hampiholi AVSM, NM – the two senior serving military officers, who will be addressing the audience and inspiring young Ajeets.

 A brief information on Dr Kanodia is warranted, which I am happy to share in this blog.  Modern world of knowledge society is shaped by some of the most brilliant minds whose discoveries and invention of products and services in digital technology has ushered us into this era which is shaped by information technology led by the technological marvel – Internet. Internet is inextricably woven into the very fabric of our day today lives. Therefore, AKF is privileged to host Mr Lalit Kanodia, one of the key architects of IT in India who founded the Tata Computer Centre, which later grew to become the giant TCS company and Dr Lalit Kanodia becoming its founder CEO. Incidentally, Dr Kanodia has also played a role in Project MAC, a research project of MIT. As a member of the Project MAC, he helped build a Compatible Time-Sharing System and MULTICS (the first two multi-user computer operating systems & pre-cursors to UNIX).

He was one among many brilliant engineers in Project MAC, who laid the foundation for development of remarkable technologies, under the auspices of ARPA and DARPA (Defence Advanced Products Research Agency) founded by JCR Licklider, USA. This project later grew to become the Internet that is driving our connected world today. Dr Kanodia has a brilliant academic record with a graduation from IIT-Bombay in 1963, and masters and doctorate from MIT, USA. 

In 1965, Mr. JRD Tata, the then Chairman of Tata Group was contemplating to start a software company. He chanced upon the CV of Lalit Kanodia, who had returned back to India from US. Impressed by the CV of Kanodia, JRD Tata invited him and tasked him to study the feasibility of computerization within the Tata Group. Lalit Kanodia, after studying the feasibility wrote three Papers for the Tata Group, which led to the automation of the Load Dispatch System of the Tata Electric Companies by Westinghouse, Computerization of the electricity billing system of the company and formation of a software development Centre. He then returned to MIT for his Doctorate, which he completed at the MIT. While in the USA, Dr Kapadia consulted to Arthur D. Little and the Ford Motor Company.

Dr Kanodia was coaxed to return to India to form and head the software development centre for the Tata Group. The result was the formation of a Company called the Tata Computer Centre in 1967, which later grew in Himalayan proportions to become the Tata Consultancy Services and Dr Kanodia became its founding CEO. He handed over the charge of TCS to the legendary F C Kohli.  
Dr. Lalit Kanodia was born March 30, 1941 in Calcutta ( now Kolkata) to Shri Surajmal Kanodia, a bullion merchant and Smt. Chandravati Kanodia, a home maker. His family moved to Bombay ( now Mumbai) in 1942. Although his family was very well to do, unfortunately tragedy struck them and his father was killed in an air crash in 1951. His mother Chandravati Kanodia brought up her children by giving them the best of education and as luck would have it and so also her dedication to educate her children, all her four children including Dr Lalit Kanodia graduated from the prestigious IIT Bombay. Dr Kanodia had a brilliant academic career. He was ranked the Best Student in the entire high school for 3 years. He then studied Science in Elphinstone College, Bombay University for 2 years where too he was ranked at the top of the class. He then joined IIT, Bombay, where he studied Mechanical Engineering. After graduating in 1963, Lalit secured admission to MIT, Cambridge, MA, where completed his MS in Management in 1965 with the highest grade in the graduating class. He was awarded the Ford Foundation Fellowship while at MIT. He returned to MIT in 1966 for his PhD in management, which he completed in 1967.

 Dr Kanodia continues to be a very active Indian Business Entrepreneur. He is befittingly credited to be responsible for creating a Software Industry of India, Dr Kanodia established the Datamatics company in 1975. Datamatics crafted an extraordinary way forward for many Indian IT companies including the BPO industry. Datamatics company started with a modest team of 10 employees, which has now grown to become a very large company with more than 10000 strong employees with its footprints across the globe. In 1979 he set-up the first dedicated offshore development centre for Wang Laboratories. He also established the first satellite link for Software development from India, between its software development centre in Mumbai and AT&T Bell labs USA in 1991. This led to the foundation of BPO services in India and Dr. Kanodia formally started another company "Datamatics Technologies Limited" with 100% focus on BPO and KPO services. The start of BPO services helped Datamatics spread its wing globally and it acquired SAZTEC and CorPay, two US based companies in 1997 and 2003 respectively. Since then, Datamatics has acquired several other companies globally to enhance its offerings and footprints across the globe.

It was the foundation and vision that Dr Kanodia had in the late sixties and early seventies of harvesting the bountiful benefits of IT for Indian companies that led to the revolutionary changes in IT in India whose benefits are evidenced today across the country, particularly in Bangalore, which is now called the Silicon Valley of India. Dr Kanodia is currently the Chairman of Datamatics Group of Companies. As Chief Mentor at Datamatics, Dr. Kanodia drives all innovation, new product development and quality initiatives. His inspirational leadership has led Datamatics to be conferred with various awards over the years, including the Most Innovative Software Product Award, the International Asia Pacific Quality Award and being ranked among the top 50 best-managed outsourcing vendors by ‘The Black Book of Outsourcing’.

Dr Kanodia has also been a teacher. While at MIT, he taught a course on Statistical Decision Theory to MBA students. Later, in India he taught MBA students for 2 years at the Jamnalal Bajaj Institute of Management Studies, Bombay University. Dr Kanodia has held several important positions including the position of National President of the Indo - American Chamber of Commerce and Vice President of the Indian Merchants Chamber. He has also served as President of the Management Consultants Association of India. Today the IT industry has come a long way in India and it accounts for 8% of the Indian GDP and it is poised to increase further. IT sector is the number one employer in India and it accounts for nearly 5 million people who are working in the IT sector in India and for this we owe our reverence to Dr Kanodia and other founding fathers of IT in India.

Those interested in listening to Dr Kanodia the Doyen of IT Industry in India may please like to join the webinar by registering on the link given below or you can see it on the You Tube, whose link is given below.
Ajeet Hain Abheet Hain

Sunday, 5 June 2022

World Environment Day - Only One Earth.

 


Today as we prepare ourselves to celebrate the ''World Environment Day', with the campaign 'Only One Earth', it is time for us to remind ourselves of what the father of our nation - Mahatma Gandhi - famously said 'the earth has enough resources for our need, but not for our greed'.

In the unending expanse of our ever expanding universe, which harbours billions and billions of galaxies, including our very own Milky Way Galaxy, and each galaxy birthing billions of stars that include our very own life giving and life sustaining star - the Sun - which is just one among those billions of stars that make up our 'Akash Ganga' galaxy, our Sun, as we know it today, is perhaps the only known star in the universe, which cradles our life sustaining planet Earth, where life in its myriad forms and unending diversity has evolved on our pale blue planet.

Speaking of the uniqueness of our planet, on this world environment day, we are reminded of that famous book with that poetic out look for our earth - 'Pale Blue Dot' book - written by Carl Sagan. This book was inspired by a pale blue dot image taken, at Sagan's suggestion, by Voyager 1 on 14 February 1990. The book reveals the uniqueness of our planet in those inimitable words of Sagan " Pale Blue Dot" and it makes a fascinating reading. It stresses the importance of campaign theme for the World Environment Day.
'Only One Earth'. It also reminds us all for a collective, transformative action on a global scale to celebrate, protect and restore our planet.

Image Credit - Wiki Commons

Let us all join hands to achieve this.
Wishing you all a very happy world environment day.

Sunday, 29 May 2022

Vertical Urbanism - Elisha Graves Otis & his patented ‘Life and Labor Saving Hoisting Machinery’.







The skyline of the metropolitan cities across the world are populated with Manhattan like skyscraper buildings. There has been an exponential growth in the high-rise structures -  vertical urbanism - which is necessary in the ever increasing population and the vertical urbanism has the potential to decongest urban sprawl. Indian cities are witnessing immense demographic expansion due to migration from surrounding places, leading to urban sprawl, housing demand, rise in cost of land and therefore vertical urbanism is a best way forward. It is helped by an ever improving technology that makes vertical urbanism a safe reality. The first major technological marvel that helped in the growth of vertical urbanism can best be attributed to the Otis invention of Patented “Life and Labor Saving Hoisting Machinery", which would make it possible to lift men and materials safely to their tops.


It was not until Otis’s invention of this device and its adaptation and commissioning in high raise buildings in the 1880s, that the silhouettes of most cities consisted of buildings which were rarely taller than four or five stories. However, all this changed with a dramatic public demonstration of a patented ‘Life and Labor Saving Hoisting Machinery’ by Elisha Graves Otis. The Great Exhibition - Crystal Palace Exhibition, London - of 1851 and its success had paved a way for another exhibition of its avatar in 1853 in New York,  USA. This exhibition too was named the Crystal Palace Exhibition and it was aimed at displaying an unprecedented progress in technology, industry,  arts and crafts to the public in New York. It was here - in this exhibition - that a bearded man in a frock coat and top hat - Elisha Graves Otis - attracted a large crowd when he made an announcement that he is prepared to risk his life to demonstrate his technological invention. 


In a melodramatic setting, which he had created in an open ambience in the precincts of the Crystal Palace exhibition in New York, Otis stood on an open platform that began to rise towards the ceiling of the hall, where he had assembled his machine. The platform was steadily lifted up on the vertical guide rails by the power of a steam engine until it reached a height of about 50 feet. The visitors could notice a conspicuous counterweight, which was gradually coming down as the platform, on which Otis was standing, was raising upwards. It is now evident that this was an underpinning of a principle mechanism that Otis had used, which essentially functioned like a seesaw -  when one side goes up the other side comes down. In Otis contraption as the platform, on which he stood, went up the counterweight came down. As soon as the platform rose to the highest vertical point, Otis ordered his assistant to cut the rope on which the platform was resting. There was an eerie silence in the crowded audience and when the rope was cut the crowd was stunned to notice the platform fall freely. Before they could think of the worst eventuality that it was the end of Otis, suddenly the platform jerked and halted and remained stationary, high above the onlookers's heads. ‘All safe, gentlemen, all safe’, Elisha Graves Otis yelled to his stunned but relaxed audience. He assured his audience that he was here for a live demonstration of his technological invention, which he described as an "improvement in hoisting apparatus”. This was an improvement in an automatic device, which Otis had designed to prevent the platform from falling. This mechanism was destined to become one of the most successful 19th-century technological development, which helped make possible the urban skylines, which we witness across the world.


Today, the elevators - with the safety mechanism designed by Otis - are found everywhere and there is an inextricable linkage of a lift / elevator and high rise buildings that blend into each other and share a symbiotic relationship in their mutual existence. From the legendary Tower of Babel to the iconic Burj Khalifa, tall buildings are seen all over the world. In Mumbai we have several skyscrapers, which appear to touch the Mumbai skyline. It is estimated that Mumbai has over 4000 skyscrapers, which has earned it a ‘high rise  urban city’ epithet. 


From historic times there is an evidence that humans have always aspired to build to ever greater heights. Over the centuries, different cultures have constructed towering edifices to celebrate their culture and promote their cities -- or simply to show off to the external world. In the early times majestically tall structures were the preserve of great rulers, religions and empires. For instance, the Great Pyramids of Gaza, built to house the tomb of Pharaoh Khufu, or the magnificent Brihadeeshwar temple, which represents the temple building traditions of the great Hindu Kings, were built by the great rulers. Such examples of tall structures are seen across the world. Most of these tall structures were not meant for human dwelling.


However, the 19th century changed all that. It witnessed two revolutionary developments, which  paved the way for rapid rise in skyscrapers. The first and most important development was the safe elevator that was demonstrated by Otis at the Crystal Palace exhibition in New York in 1854. Primitive elevators were used prior to the commencement of safe elevators. These elevators were mostly used to carry materials in factories and warehouses. They were not considered safe for carrying people, because if the cable broke, the elevator car would fall to the bottom of the elevator shaft. This problem of safety was solved by Elisha Graves Otis, an American inventor, who  created a safety device that was meant to keep elevators from falling, even if the cable broke loose. This safety mechanism embedded into the new elevators helped safely carry and transport people. Subsequently, with the introduction of motors the elevators became even more practical and found a place in almost all vertical buildings. 


The second important development that helped in the vertical urbanism came about in the revolutionary changes that were introduced in the building technology. The city of Chicago had witnessed a huge fire accident in 1871. Following a devastating fire, the city experienced an explosive demand for growth. However, there was scarcity of land for meeting the increasing demand for new buildings. The only option was to  go vertical. And for this the technology used in the construction had to change. This led to the changed construction design, which started using high strength bearing grid of steel columns and beams that would support any forces that the building may experience at taller heights. With the passage of time engineers were able to combat all foreseen forces in the skyscraper buildings, which included the dead weight of the building, contents and floor, wind, seismic conditions etc. This new construction method coupled with the safe elevators for vertical transport gave birth to the skyscrapers, leading to a race to construct the ever increasing taller buildings. The results are there for every one to see. Today, the Burj Khalifa, the tallest building in the world, stands at a staggering height of 828 metres and movements in this building is helped by the safe elevators supplied by the Otis company. 


Until the successful demonstration of the safety mechanism in the elevator, riding in an elevator used to be dangerous business. It changed with the May 1854, public demonstration by Elisha Graves Otis. The 42-year-old engineer was a carpenter who was making bed-frames.  He was also a tinkerer with a passion for fixing faults and frailties. He had engaged himself in trying to find solution to the frailties associated with the safety of the elevators and had developed a mechanism for solving the problem of cable failure in platform elevators. There were some faults in his design, which he had improved. He had tested and tried his newly designed device that could prevent a passenger elevator from falling if its rope broke. His design made use of a hoist with a passive automatic braking system. 


Although he was very confident of the safety of his new device, unfortunately none of his devices were sold fearing for the safety of people. Therefore, Otis had chosen the occasion of the Crystal Palace exhibition to demonstrate publicly the safety of his device to win the confidence of the people and builders. Until his safety mechanism got embedded into the new elevators, earlier elevators would often catastrophically brake down in granaries and warehouses, killing and maiming their passengers. Otis realized that his design, though superior and straightforward, needed showmanship. The World’s Fair was his moment to flaunt his vertical flight of fancy and function. His sustained public demonstrations of the safety of his device at the Crystal Palace world fair in New York ( now Bryant Park) during the period from May to November 1854 ensured that his new device became commercially successful. It debuted at the E.V. Haughwout and Company store in Manhattan on March 23, 1857.


From May to October 1854, Elisha Graves Otis gave repeated performances at the Exhibition in New York City. In the previous year Otis had founded the E. G. Otis Elevator Company in Yonkers, New York, in September 1853. But having received only one order in his first seven months of business, he was happy to accept an invitation to introduce his apparatus to the public. In the Crystal Palace on Forty-Second Street.  


Otis device  was model of engineering simplicity, the safety device consisted of a used wagon spring that was attached to both the top of the hoist platform and the overhead lifting cable. “Under ordinary circumstances, the spring was kept in place by the pull of the platform’s weight on the lifting cable. If the cable broke, however, this pressure was suddenly released, causing the big spring to snap open in a jaw-like motion. When this occurred, both ends of the spring would engage the saw-toothed ratchet-bar beams that Otis had installed on either side of the elevator shaft, thereby bringing the falling hoist platform to a complete stop.” It was no wonder that the invention of this type of safe elevator also played its part in the industrial revolution. This device “transformed real estate in America”.  Prior to the safe elevator coming along, the cheapest rent one could get was the top floor of the building. However all that changed and the top floors became one of the most expensive real estates in New York and this trend continued across the world.  


The US Patent Office granted Otis a patent for his invention of the ‘Improved Hoisting Apparatus” on Jan. 15, 1861. Just three months after he received his patent, he died on April 8, 1861.  His legacy had lived on and today Otis Elevator Company is one of the worlds leading elevator manufacturers, whose elevators are found in most high rise buildings in the world including in the Burj Khalifa building. There was time when Otis became synonymous with elevators and had a monopoly in this business. However the increased demand has brought in many more players in this market. 


Next time when you ride any elevator spare a thought for this show man Elisha Graves Otis, who helped revolutionize vertical urbanism to decongest the cities. 


Images - Courtesy Wiki Commons 






165th Anniversary of Charles Darwin’s Monumental Publication : On the Origin of Species.

This day, 24th November 2024, we commemorate the 165th anniversary of Charles Darwin’s monumental publication, On the Origin of Species, ...