Thursday 4 November 2021

Wishing you a very happy Deepawali - A Festival which resonates with all Indians.

 Wishing you a very happy Deepawali - A Festival which resonates with all Indians.







Deepavali or Diwali, is a major Hindu Festival celebrated by over a billion Indians and expats across India and in other lands wherever they are home to. The ancient celebration of Deepavali is linked to multiple mythological stories in religious texts, and it is extremely difficult to say which of the stories came first, or when exactly did the celebration of Deepavali begin. One thing though is certain about this festival that it is a major festival of India, celebrated all across the country with great fervour. Deepavali is the festival of lights, which marks and celebrates the triumph of good over evil, light over darkness and knowledge over ignorance. There are different ways in which this festival is celebrated across the country and the diversity of the ways in which this festival of light is celebrated across different regions of India, in a way, is an embodiment of that adage that we all use to represent our vast and culturally, historically and religiously rich country - Unity in Diversity. Deepavali or Diwali is a five day long festival, which is celebrated in diverse way across India with one central theme of the festival - victory of good over evil.


Derived from Sanskrit dipavali, which means “row of lights,” Deepavali or Diwali, is a Hindu festival known for the brightly burning clay lamps (Diyas in their creative best colours and vibrancy) that the celebrants line up outside their homes. The time, period and dates when this festival is to be celebrated is determined based on the Hindu Lunar Calendar, which marks each month by the time it takes the moon to orbit Earth. Deepavali begins just before the arrival of a new moon between the Hindu months of Asvina and Kartika —which typically falls in October or November of the Gregorian calendar. This year (2021) Deepavali festival has commenced on November 2, and the most important festival day of this five festival is celebrated today, 4th November. This five days long Festival of Lights - Deepavali - is marked by colourful Diyas, prayers, feasts, fireworks, family gatherings, and charitable giving. For some, Diwali is also the beginning of a new year of book keeping. One common connect for the celebration of Deepavali is reverentially honouring and remembering the incarnations of Lord Vishnu (Bhagwan Ram and Bhagwan Krishna) and Goddess Lakshmi. 


Diwali is also observed with same reverence and fervour among Jains, Sikhs, and Buddhists, who have their own significance to this Festival of Lights. The Sikhs recognize Diwali as a celebration of the release of their Sixth Guru, Hargobind, who was one of their spiritual leaders, from captivity by the Mughal Emperor Jehangir. In his reverence, it is said that Guru Hargobind’s followers decorated and lit up the entire path, all the way to the Golden Temple, with colourful and decorative lamps. The festival also has a significance for the Jains in India. For them, Diwali is the day Lord Mahavira, the last of the Jain Tirthankaras, achieved moksha or enlightenment/nirvana.


The Buddhists too have their own significance for celebrating the Festival of Lights. They celebrate Deepavali as Ashok Vijayadashami day and they believe that it was on this day that King Ashoka the Great embraced Buddhism as his faith and it was he who helped in spreading this new religion across the present day India and beyond. 


The Hindi heartland of India - North Indians - commemorate the festival of Diwali to mark that historic event when the people of Ayodhya joined the welcome celebration, by lighting the auspicious lamps (brightly burning colourful clay lamps), of their favourite reverential king, Bhagvan Ram, back to the city of Ayodhya. Bhagwan Ram returned back to Ayodhya after those gruelling 14 years of Vanvas during which Bhagwan Ram had vanquished the demon King Ravan who had deceitfully kidnapped Ma Sita. In this part of our country, the five day festival of Diwali begins with Dhanteras and ends with Bhratri-dwitiya or Bhai-dooj after full five days of celebration. 


This year Dhanteras was celebrated on 2nd November followed by Chhoti Deepavali on 3rd November and today is an occasion to celebrate the main Diwali festival when Laxmi Puja is also performed across homes praying Ma Laxmi to grace their homes. Homes across north India are brightly light with burning clay lamps (Diyas in their creative best colours and vibrancy) and also modern day electric lamps and LEDs, which are lined up outside every home. Today is also the day when fire crackers are bursted, although this tradition has unfortunately been at the receiving end of the environmental activists over the years. Tomorrow is the day when Govardhan Puja is celebrated, when Lord Krishna is invoked through Govardhan Puja and on this occasion the venerated cattle’s are also worshipped and this tradition of veneration for cattle finds special mention all through the centuries including finding a mention in article 48 of the Constitution of India under the Directive Principles, which directs the state to make efforts for banning animal slaughtering of cows and calves. The last day of the five day festival, which will be celebrated on 6th November, is celebrated as  Bhratri-dwitiya or Bhai-dooj and that brings an end to the Diwali festival. It is customary for people to acquire some expensive items like gold and jewellery or even a household object on Dhanteras. These age old traditions helped in ensuring that the artisans who are involved in the making of these ornaments are fruitfully engaged and rewarded to partake their shares of the agricultural wealth.


In Southern part of India Deepavali is celebrated as the victory and vanquishing of the high and mighty Narakasura by Bhagavan Krishna, another incarnation of Bhagwan Vishnu. Bhagwan Krishna was supported by his beloved wife Sathyabhama in the killing of Narakasura and freeing some 16,000 women who were held hostage by this Rakshas. The mythological story of Narakasura, the son of Bhumidevi (Mother Earth), reveals that although he was the son of a divine spirit, he gave into wicked temptations of power and greed, and became evil in his thoughts and actions. Narkasura was a curse to the people of his kingdom, who caused all round destruction on everything around him. He misused his divine gifted strength to conquer neighbouring kingdoms including Svargaloka. His unstoppable misadventures led him to kidnapping all the beautiful young women in the kingdom of Svargaloka. The residents of Svargaloka sought divine intervention from Bhagwan Krishna, an incarnation of Bhagwan Vishnu, to save them from Narkasura’s terror. Krishna fought in a fierce battle and helped by his beloved wife Sathybhama he could defeat and kill Narakasura thus helping people of Svargaloka to celebrate victory of good over evil.


There is also a mention of the importance of Diwali in the Vedas. According to the Vedic legends, it was on the night of Diwali when Goddess Lakshmi chose to marry Bhagwan Vishnu. In the western parts of India, particularly in Gujrat, Diwali is celebrated as a new year day and old accounting systems continue to treat this day as the beginning of new accounting year and on this day they worship not only Goddess Lakshmi but also Lord Ganesha, whose worship is considered to bring good omen for the new year. In some parts of western India, the Diwali festival marks another story in which Lord Vishnu banished the demon King Bali. People of East India, particularly Bengal, associate Diwali with Goddess Durga and her fierce Ma Kali avatar. 


Deepavali - the festival of light - which is celebrated over five days in its diversity across India embodies the spirit of India as a land of righteousness and piety whose age old values and traditions are timeless and have continued to perpetuate unhindered even while we were invaded innumerable times over centuries. This festival therefore has always been of paramount importance to Indians from historic times, who have celebrated it as a festival  of light, which commemorates the victory of good over evil. It is a festival which is celebrated with diversity and observed not only by Hindus, but also by Jains, Sikhs, and Buddhists.


Diwali is therefore a quintessential festival of India which exemplifies India as a country of diversity with many different cultural customs and traditions, with a common connect that touches the chord and resonates with all Indians. In that sense the festival of Diwali embodies the poetic expressions of the incredible plurality and diversity of India. Deepavali festival exemplifies the process of unity in diversity through which the extraordinary unity of Indians has been stitched into the very fabric of our Indianness, that is blessed from a land of virtuousness and piety. This is evidenced in the rich diversity in which the festival Deepavali or Diwali is celebrated in all its diversity across India with one central commemoration - Victory of Good over evil and Light over darkness.


Images - courtesy Wiki Commons.

Happy Deepavali 🙏🙏



Monday 1 November 2021

Karnataka Rajyotsava - ಜಯ ಹೇ ಕರ್ನಾಟಕ ಮಾತೆ.

 Karnataka Rajyotsava - ಜಯ ಹೇ ಕರ್ನಾಟಕ ಮಾತೆ.



It was on this
  date, 1st November, 1956, that a new state Mysore (later named as Karnataka in 1973) was born out of a divided Kannada speaking people who were until then torn between different provinces that the colonial rulers had put them under. Until 15th August 1947, when India attained its tryst with destiny, after many struggles, trials, tribulations and sacrifices of thousands of revolutionaries and common men and women to rightfully gain a life of freedom and dignity, the undivided India was fragmented into some 570 odd princely states by the British for helping them rule dictatorially and with their selfish interest. On that historic midnight, when we attained Independence, the founding fathers and constitutional makers of India, having learnt the lessons of divide and rule policy of the British and keeping the unity of India to be of paramount importance, decided to merge all the princely states  and provinces - which had justly acceded to India courtesy Sardar Patel - to form 27 states, which had no relation to the language of the people. Language, however was to play its role in the formation of the states in the years ahead including in the formation of the state of Karnataka. 


It was the father of the nation - Mahatma Gandhi, in the year 1921,  who articulated an idea of a linguistic division of India. He told the Home Rule League “to ensure speedy attention to people's needs and development of every component part of the nation" and.. "strive to bring about a linguistic division of India”. In the year 1936, the Britishers took queue from Gandhi’s idea and separated the Oriya speaking people from the states of Bihar and Bengal, to carve out a separate state for Oriya speakers. 


Immediately after our independence, in the year 1948, the government of India having noticed that there were some murmurs and simmering to base the formation of the states on linguistic lines, formed a commission under Justice SK Dhar, an Allahabad High Court judge, to address the need for linguistic division of the states. However, Dhar committee did not agree for restructuring the states on linguistic lines. Instead they advocated restructuring of the states for administrative convenience. Accordingly, in December 1948, a JVP Committee was constituted  - with three veteran Congressmen Jawaharlal Nehru, Vallabhbhai Patel and Pattabhi Sitaramayya - to address the issue of restructuring of the states. JVP committee believed that linguistic states would only weaken the unity of a new nation and therefore the committee submitted their report in April 1949, dismissing the idea to restructure the states on linguistic lines. 

 

Although the JVP committee had opposed the idea of a division of the country on linguistic lines, down South the Telugu speaking people - who were torn between different states - were not happy with the decision of the JVP committee. One of their leaders, freedom fighter Potti Sreeramulu, decided to up the ante for their demand for a unified Telugu speaking state. Unfortunately the Madras State led by C Rajagopalachari, was not particularly sympathetic to this  demand.  Pandit Nehru was swayed by the sentiments and opinion of Rajagopalachari and therefore he too was not very sympathetic to the demands of the Telugu speaking people. This led to an agitation, which was spearheaded by Potti Sreeramulu, who started that quintessential Gandhian style of satyagraha - fast unto death - on 19 October, 1952. The then prime minister, Jawaharlal Nehru, assured his support for the creation of Andhra Pradesh and requested Potti Sreeramulu to end his fast. But since there was no written commitment nor was a formal public statement made to this effect by Nehru, Sreeramulu continued with his fast. This led to the spread of agitation in the Telugu speaking region of the Madras state and resulted in public unrest. On that eventful day - 15 December 1952 - Sreeramulu died after 56 days of his fasting. His death resulted in widespread rioting and violence in many regions in Andhra. A few people were killed in firing by the police. Protests continued and when things seem to take uglier turn, on 29 December 1952, Pandit Nehru announced his decision to form a separate Andhra state on linguistic basis. Accordingly, on 1 October, 1953, the Andhra State was formed with its capital at Kurnool, near to my native place Raichur. 


As expected the decision to accord a separate statehood to Andhra led to the demands for other states to be formed on linguistic lines. Therefore in December, 1953, Pandit Nehru constituted a commission, under Justice Fazl, to address the demands of the people to restructure the states on linguistic lines. The committee submitted their report in 1955, emphasising that India should be divided into 16 states. This report was debated in the parliament and in August 1956, the Parliament enacted the States Reorganisation Act, which called for states to be redrawn along linguistic lines by November 1 of that year. Thus in November 1956, India was split into 14 states and six union territories, which included four new southern states – Andhra Pradesh, Kerala, Madras (renamed Tamil Nadu in 1969) and Mysore. The State of Mysore was formed on  1st November, 1956 and it later became the state of Karnataka in 1973.  Until 1956, the states in India had largely retained the political boundaries left by the British. The state of Mysore was formed out of four different parts of India, which had majorly the Kannada speaking population namely ; - Mysuru Karnataka, Mumbai Karnataka, Kalyan Karnataka and parts of Madras Presidency.  The States Reorganisation Act of 1956, which was based on linguistic division, has enabled people to nurture and promote their language and their respective culture in which the language is inextricably intertwined with culture. Ever since 1st November is observed as Karnataka Rajyotsava day. 


Karnataka - my home state - is resplendent with world renowned architecture, which are evidenced under the rule of different kingdoms, be it the mighty Chalukyas, the Hoysala, Vijaynagar, Adilshahi, Wodeyars, the Rashtrakutas. It has two UNESCO world heritage sites in Hampi and Pattadakal that are popular destinations and major tourist attractions. The state is home to the largest number of the majestic Tigers and Elephants and is a land of Sandalwood and coffee. The rich Kannada literature has helped eight of the scholars to be bestowed with the highest literary award - the Jnanpith award. It is dubbed the silicon valley of India, whose strength created a fear even for Barack Obama, who spoke of people of Buffalo loosing jobs to Bangaloreans,  thus making the word Bangalored enter into the lexicon of the English dictionary. Karnataka stands fifth when it comes to its GSDP contributions to the nation with Maharashtra leading this pack. 


Karnataka also boasts of a vibrant industrial culture the history of which goes back to the period of Sir M Visvesvaraya who started some of the best of industries in Mysore, when he was the Diwan of Mysore. Today Karnataka boasts of an excellent industrial culture and is home to many industries that include among others, automobile, agro, aerospace, textile and garment, biotech, and heavy engineering industries. Karnataka state also has sector specific special economic zone (SEZs) for key industries such as IT, biotechnology, and engineering, food processing and aerospace. Karnataka is the IT hub of India & home to the fourth largest technology cluster in the world. It has 34 operational SEZs as of October 2020. According to the Department for Promotion of Industry and Internal Trade (DPIIT), the state’s cumulative FDI inflow stood at US$ 11.95 billion between October 2019 and March 2021, the third highest in India after Gujarat and Maharashtra, and Karnataka accounted for 14% of India’s cumulative FDI inflow. Karnataka is also home to a diverse flora and fauna and a 320 km natural coastline, which makes it a natural tourist's paradise.


Karnataka is also a land where great men were born. Some of the prominent leading lights of the state of Karnataka include Ranna, Pampa, Basavaveshwara, Allama Prabhu, Akkamahadevi, Sarvgna, Shishunala Sharif, Kuvempu, Bendre, Shivraam Karanth, Masti, Gokak, Karnad in literature. Much before the first war of Independence was waged by the legendary Rani Jhansi, Rani Kittur Channamma in Karnataka had blown the bugle of freedom from the British and was helped by her strong man Sangolli Rayanana in taking on the Britishers. Here is a link to the blog on Sangolli Rayanna.


One of the preeminent engineers of India and a great nation builder,  Sir M Visvesvaraya is from Karnataka and he has made profound contributions to the nation building, which rightfully won him the Bharat Ratna. Karnataka is also home to some of the earliest  public sector companies - BEL, HAL, BEML, ITI etc - which were part of those early temples of modern India that Pandit Nehru established. The Krishna Raj Sagar dam and the garden in Mysore and so also the Mysore Zoo are visited by innumerable tourists both from India and abroad.  


One of the foremost pride that India and the world takes in the governance of any nation is when the country is run as a democracy. Although the World credits British to be place where the Magna Carta or the first form of democratic governance began, the reality is quite different. It is the state of Karnataka, which gave birth to the first of democratic governance in the form of Anubhava Mantapa. It was one of the foremost democratic parliamentary style of governance that began during the 12th century in Karnataka. This was commissioned and run by the seers in Karnataka led by Basaveshwara, a remarkable visionary.


Wishing you all a very happy Karnataka Rajyotsava Day. 


Images - Courtesy Wikipedia and Wiki Commons.


ಜಯ ಭಾರತ ಜನನಿಯ ತನುಜಾತೆ,

ಜಯ ಹೇ ಕರ್ನಾಟಕ ಮಾತೆ.


Here is a link to two of my blog posts on Sangolli Rayanna one of the first revolutionary who helped her king Rani Channamma to take on the British and another on another revolutionary thinker Basaveshwara for those who may be interested in reading.


https://khened.blogspot.com/2020/04/basava-jayanti-birth-anniversary-of.html



https://khened.blogspot.com/2019/10/sangolli-rayanna-forgotten-freedom.html


Here is a link to my blog on Gol Gumbaj.


https://khened.blogspot.com/2021/04/gol-gumbaz-glorious-monument-which.html 



Here is the link to my blog on the Ibrahim Roza 


https://khened.blogspot.com/2020/04/the-majesty-of-ibrahim-rauza-monument.html


Link to the blog on Shravanabelagola 


https://khened.blogspot.com/2019/10/shrikshetra-shravanabelagola.html







Sunday 24 October 2021

India - Pak T20 World Cup Match - A Theatre for Hyper-Nationalism.

 

India - Pak T20 World Cup Match - A Theatre for Hyper-Nationalism. Time to recall how the two arch rivals came together.




The stage is all set for the India Pakistan inaugural match in the 7th T20 World Cup 2021 tournament, which begins later today. The Super 12 stage matches have commenced yesterday with Australia and England winning their inaugural matches and India is all set to begin its campaign against their arch rival Pakistan today evening. The T20 World Cup 2021 was originally scheduled to be played last year between 18th October to 15th November 2020 in Australia but then the tournament was affected by the global COVID 19 epidemic and it had to be postponed and shifted to the current location in UAE. The 7th T20 World Cup 2021 will now be played between 17th October 2021 and 14th November 2021 in UAE and Oman and this tournament will now be hosted by India.  

As we prepare to watch the media go hyperbolic with hyper nationalism in building up the match between India and Pakistan as another war like event, it is time to look back to understand as to how such a great primacy is being given to Cricket matches, particularly the world cup matches and how India is dominating the world Cricket administration and finances. It is time to recognise that Pakistan and India came together to help India achieve cricket administration supremacy.  It all began post the 1983 World Cup winning performance by team India the under dogs who were never expected to go that far. But they did and the rest is what they say is history. India wining the Prudential World Cup in 1983 helped the game of cricket. which was already a darling of the masses to become the darling of the business and political class, who used the game to further their interests and also that of the game.

Most Indians, particularly the Indian media, have two constant punching bags - the Politicians and the Businessmen, who are blamed for anything and almost everything, including sports, that is wrong with India. But then they forget that it is these two class of people who are also majorly responsible for sowing the seeds for the unprecedented scale of success, which the Cricket World Cup in all its format and its reach has been receiving over the years. While majority of Indians are well informed about the game of cricket, their cricketing heroes, ICC Cricket World Cup in all its formats- including our World Cup victories in 1983 and 2011 - but not many are aware as to what has made India to be an undisputed global leader in the cricket administration. Therefore, before the titanic clash between India and Pakistan unfolds this evening with which both India and Pakistan will begin their T20 World Cup 2021, I am writing this post not about the game per se but about the robust foundations that went into making India a predominant force in international cricket administration and for paying respect to those extraordinary people Politicians and business men and women who helped India to be the undisputed leader of International Cricket administration - NKP Salve, Mrs Gandhi and Dhirubhai Ambani and Reliance Industries Ltd

The Cricket World Cup, a flagship event of the International Cricket Council, is one of the world's most viewed sporting events. The participation of tens of millions Indians, and several hundreds of thousands of overseas Indians as spectators, the companies who sponsor the game, the men who manage and influence this game is what makes the World Cup - including the ongoing T20 World Cup 2021 - so very special. This greatest of the sporting spectacle, World Cup in all its format, which the whole of India is now perhaps glued to, is hosted on rotation basis by different Cricket playing nations once every four years or so. It was not the case when the World Cup Cricket event began in 1975. The first three versions of the Cricket World Cups - The Prudential World Cups (named after the sponsors) - were hosted only by England in 1975, 1979 and 1983. Until then England alone was thought to be capable of organising huge resources to stage an event of such magnitude. The first three World Cup matches consisted of 60, six-ball, over per team, played during the daytime in traditional form, with the players wearing cricket whites and using red cricket balls. The power dynamics of the game of cricket was mostly with England who were unwittingly supported each time and every time by their arch cricketing adversary the Australians, while other teams including India were mostly bystanders. The fourth World Cup in 1987 changed all of this for good and ever since India has been a dominant player in administering and controlling the game of Cricket.

The Reliance CUP 1987 marked the first step towards altering international cricket's power dynamics, and gave birth to the rotation system for hosting the World Cups. The Indian Cricket administrators, led by NKP Salve, buoyed by India winning the 1983 Prudential World Cup, emboldened their bid for the staging rights for the 1987 World Cup, jointly with Pakistan. It is interesting to note that both India and Pakistan, which are viewed as arch rivals - not just on the cricketing grounds but even otherwise - joined hands in ensuring the cricket monopoly that England had in hosting World Cup matches changed forever.

Moving the World Cup away from England was not so simple, since it involved one of the most complicated negotiations, unprecedented financial resources, political manoeuvring not just between India and Pakistan but also with the other cricket playing nations, the ICC, leaders, politicians, cricket administrators and businessmen. It was the combined spirit and efforts of Dhirubhai Ambani, N K P Salve and Mrs Indira Gandhi among others who made this impossible looking task possible. But most unfortunately, their contribution has not adequately been acknowledged by the cricket loving fans in India. The three of them, supported by many other cricket aficionados, showed how politicians, professionals and industrialists can help to shape the world through the medium of sports including bridging the political divide and other fissures that existed between India and Pakistan. Can the ongoing T20 World Cup repeat this and help India and Pakistan to build better relationship and will it help Pakistan to move away from their terror activities against India and changed their polarised vision of India so that it leads them to helping their countrymen, who are suffering from complete economic inadequacy, unemployment and such other problems? We will have to wait and watch.

The efforts of NKP Salve for breaking the monopoly that England had on cricket administration and hosting of the Cricket World Cup in India started with one phone call from the PMO to Dhirubhai Ambani on one of those monsoon mornings in Mumbai, way back in 1983. Dhirubhai was asked to urgently meet Mrs Gandhi, the then PM of India, within a couple of days. Dhirubhai did not know the reasons for the urgency of the meeting nor did he want to know, all he wanted was to take the earliest flight to meet the PM. The very next day he landed in Delhi and was at Mrs Indira Gandhi’s residence, at 10 Janpath to meet the prime minister. N K P Salve, the president of the Board of Control for Cricket in India (BCCI), was also asked by the PMO to be present for the meeting. Salve was then a cabinet minister in Mrs Gandhi’s cabinet and was very highly rated by her for his integrity and commitment, both as a Minister and as a lawyer politician. Salve had sounded Mrs Indira Gandhi about his plans for shifting the World Cup Cricket from England to India.

Mrs Gandhi came straight to the point and asked Dhirubhai whether he would financially support the initiative of her government to try and bring the Cricket World Cup to India, which to her was a prestigious issue. Dhirubhai Ambani, having heard the PM, realised that the image and prestige of India was at stake and with no hesitation whatsoever, agreed to bear all the financial liabilities associated with the event without even bothering to understand what the financial scope of this commitment was. He nodded in agreement and uttered, “Madam, yes, I would be too happy to give a blank cheque to cover the entire cost of the tournament since it is for a national cause.” Dhirubhai, the grand visionary that he was, had immediately realised that the Indian honour was at stake and for him this in itself was reason enough to offer a blank cheque to the PM.

But then what prompted Mrs Gandhi to stake her claim for hosting the 1987 World Cup Cricket in India? Well it is an interesting story, which began at Lord’s on the 25th of June 1983, the day when Kapil’s men made history. The Indian team - the underdogs in the tournament with a ridiculously low possibility of winning any single match, let alone the tournament, had miraculously reached the finals and were to play the defending champions, the indomitable rampaging West Indies, led by their legendary captain Clive Lloyd’s at the Lord’s. India had defeated the hosts, England in the semi-final, to reach the finals. N K P Salve, the president of the BCCI, had requested the authorities at Lord’s to provide two tickets for the final, which were meant for Siddhartha Shankar Ray, the Indian High Commissioner to the US at the time, and his wife Maya. Most shockingly, the authorities at Lord’s had turned down the request of the BCCI president. He was not even provided the priced tickets let alone the complementary VIP passes to watch the finals. This was too embarrassing even for Salve, an epitome of gentlemanliness. The president of one of the finalist teams could not offer even two tickets to an Indian ambassador. It was at this instance that Salve, perhaps, decided not take this insult to his country lying down. As luck would have it, Indian team won the 1983 Prudential World Cup and Salve lost no time in taking the Indian winning team on their return to New Delhi from Heathrow, to meet the Prime Minister, Mrs Gandhi and it was during this meeting that Salve narrated about his insult to the PM and expressed his interest to consider hosting the next edition of the world cup in India. Salve also had informed the PM about his discussions of a joint bid for hosting this event with Pakistan, which he had with Pakistan's cricketing chief, Air Marshall Noor Khan.

The political commitment for the game shown by Mrs Gandhi was ably supported by her Pakistani counterpart. With financial and political commitments in place the ball was set rolling for luring the eight full members and 21 associate members of the ICC for agreeing to shift the World Cup from England to the Indian subcontinent. Every one of them including the players and cricketing boards were offered such an extraordinary financial allurement that it was just a matter of time that the English opposition was blow away and there was consensus in shifting the next World Cup to India. Most unfortunately when everything had fallen in place, Mrs Gandhi was assassinated in October 1984 and there was huge uncertainty on the continued political and financial commitments, which was not to be. Mr Rajiv Gandhi became the Prime Minister and continued his patronage to the game. Dhirubhai assigned the work of managing this mega event to his younger son Anil Ambani, who did an admirable job in most professionally managing this entire event including providing more than adequate financial resources for the tournament. NKP Salve was later made the Chairman of the India-Pakistan Joint Managing Committee for the Reliance Cup. The massive success of that tournament saw the World Cup live up to its name as a world event played in all the continents. The Reliance Cup also marked a step in the shifting of the cricket headquarters from Lord's to Eden Gardens, culminating in the election of Jagmohan Dalmiya as the first Asian president of the ICC.


The Reliance Cup, was a major success with packed crowds and huge stadiums playing host to every single match. Both the host teams, India and Pakistan, performed exceptionally well with impressive performances in the group stage and ended up group toppers and qualified for the semi-finals. India lost in the Semi-finals to England, in a match that was played in Mumbai in front of a massive crowd. Pakistan too lost its semi-final match against Australia and in the finals played in front of a mammoth Eden garden crowd of more than 100,000, the Australians defeated the English team to begin their dominance over the cup. Ever since every single ICC World Cups have been a roaring success with huge audience, mostly Indians, and unprecedented sponsors for whom the ICC World Cup including the T20 World Cup 2021 and so also the IPL are extremely important events from the advertising standpoint.

 As India takes on Pakistan their arch rival Pakistan in their inaugural T20 World Cup match later today, it is time for us to look back and see how both these two countries came together to break the monopoly of England and look forward as to how they must come together to solve all their bilateral issues for the larger good of their citizens who are great ambassadors for the game of Cricket. We must also remember and credit Mrs Gandhi, Rajiv Gandhi, NKP Salve, Anil and Dhirubhai Ambani, Reliance Industries and all other stake holders who helped India becoming a global leader in cricket administration. We must also appreciate all these leaders for their extraordinary political and business leadership, shown for the game of Cricket, which to every Indian is nothing short of a religion.

 All the best team India.

Images - Courtesy Wikipedia 

Sunday 3 October 2021

Growth of Science Museums in India - A Historical Perspective

6th Dr. Fredie A Mehta and Mrs Keti F Mehta Memorial Lecture.
Growth of Science Museums in India - A Historical Perspective 


I was pleasantly surprised to receive an invitation from the prestigious CSMVS Museum for delivering the 6th Fredie A Mehta and Mrs Keti Mehta Memorial Lecture. Unfortunately, although a museum has not necessarily been regimented to be confined to a specific subject, somehow there has not been an innate connect between the art, archaeology and cultural museums with the science museums in India. This may also stem from the fact that the science museums in India have been rechristened as Science Centres, thus further distancing the two communities of science and art museums in India. Mr Sabyasachi Mukherjee, the dynamic DG of CSMVS, who is on the board of the EC of the Nehru Science Centre, has always been advocating for a more participatory engagement between the two museums. I am therefore very happy to be a part of this engagement between the two museums and to be delivering the 6th Fredie A Mehta and Mrs Keti Mehta Memorial Lecture on the topic Growth of Science Museums in India - A Historical Perspective. Dr F.A. Mehta, Freddie to friends, has an unique distinction to be the first recruit to the now famous Tata Administrative Service, which was conceived by Bharat Ratna, JRD Tata. Freddie earned his PhD in economics from the London School of Economics and joined the TAS in 1956 and earned an illustrious career spanning nearly 50 years with the Tata Group.

My talk scheduled for 4th October will focus on the genesis of connecting science with people, through museums. This connect between science and society has always been a necessity for a broader inclusion of the society in the acceptance of the applications of science, and adoption of modern technological gadgets. It necessitated strengthening of the widely accepted model of learning science in a formal setting, where the teacher explains established scientific laws, concepts, and theories to her passive audience. The scientists and the society looked at other more adventurous ways of connecting science to people through large exhibitions, demonstrations etc. which led to the growth of Science Museums in England and other western countries. India too has a resonance for the genesis of the science museums and centres in India with the west. Those interested may please like to join this event by registering on the link given below.

https://zoom.us/webinar/register/WN_7n5vawZXRwK1t7ZPpORCKA


Wednesday 15 September 2021

Engineers Day - Remembering Sir MV, An Engineer and Statesman Par Excellence

 Engineers Day - Remembering Sir MV, An Engineer and Statesman Par Excellence on His Birthday













Images - Courtesy Nehru Science Centre, Mumbai

Every year, India celebrates 15th September as Engineers day as a befitting tribute and in reverence to once in a century engineer and a nation builder par excellence, Sir Mokshagundam Visvesvaraya (Sir MV), who was born on this date in 1861 as per the official records as entered in his passport, while most scholars say that he was born on 15th September, 1860.  

 

In the annals of human history very few people have had the honour of celebrating their own birth centenary; from amongst those few who have, there are no parallels to the veritable and a nation building life that Sir M Visvesvaraya lived for all of 102 years (died on 14th April 1962) during which his achievements, both as an engineer and as an administrator, were truly incredible. Sir M Visvesvaraya, popularly referred to as Sir MV, was an engineer par excellence, statesman, visionary, a staunch votary for industrialization, proponent of education and women empowerment, a visionary who started the Mysore Bank which later became the State Bank of India, the man who improved transportation, and the father of planned economy etc. Sir MV has made enduring contributions, not just as a civil engineer with the British Government -  two plus decades in the Maharashtra province - but also for the development of the state of Mysore, where he worked as the Chief Engineer and the Diwan of Mysore and for his many other contributions in regions of the sub-continent including Karachi and Hyderabad, which are now in Pakistan and also in Aden, which is now in Syria. Sir MVs works as a great nation builder remain eternally etched in the annals of Indian history. There, are very few fields of thoughts and constructive endeavours, of technical advancement and nation building, in which Sir MV has not made a significant contribution in his nearly eight decades long service to the nation. It is therefore no wonder that Sir MV was bestowed with the highest national honours the Bharat Ratna in the year 1955, which he shared with Pandit Nehru and Bhagwan Das.

 

The year 1960 marked the centenary of Sir MV. The then government of Mysore (now Karnataka from 1st November 1973) befittingly decided to felicitate Sir MV, publicly, on his attaining 100 years on 15th September 1960, for his invaluable contributions to the state of Mysore. They planned to organise this event as a mega event at Lal Bagh, Bangalore. Pandit Nehru, the PM of India, had given his consent to personally felicitate the centenarian MV at Lal Bagh on 15th September 1860. Unfortunately, Feroze Gandhi the son-in-law of Nehru – husband of Mrs Indira Gandhi – died on 8th September 1960, just a week before MV attained his centenary. This created some doubt whether Pandit Nehru would attend the felicitation function of Sir MV in Bangalore given the personal tragedy in his family. Nehru, who had greatest of respect and regard for MV, decided to overlook his personal tragedy to be with the centenarian MV on this historic day. Nehru flew down to Bangalore and paid befitting tribute to Sir MV at the Lal Bagh where public function was organised by the Mysore State to honour MV. Nehru, in his felicitation address said: “You. Sir, have been …  always young in mind, young in outlook, and looking as young people should, to the future. You have not lost yourself in the past ……..you have always looked to the future and you have always built for that future and you have reminded us always of this modern world of science and industry and technology ……. And, so many of us …. feel old when we look at your young self…..We in India have an unfortunate reputation for talking a great deal and not living up to what we say. You Sir, have been a great exception to that rule for you have thought, talked little, and done much...” This in nut shell summarises the admiration that Pandit Nehru, the Prime Minister of India had for Sir MV, notwithstanding some of the difference of opinions that they both had when it comes to development and industrialisation.

Considering the admiration that Pandit Nehru had for the centenarian, it was no wonder that he chose the occasion of the centenary celebration of Sir MV to announce at Lal Bagh, on 15th September, 1960, setting up of a museum in honour of Sir MV in the city of Bangalore. The outcome was the establishment of The Visvesvaraya Industrial and Technological Museum (VITM) Bangalore, which came up under Council of Scientific and Industrial Research (CSIR). Sir MV passed away on 14th April, 1962 at the age of 102 years and just three months later, on July 14, 1962, Nehru came to Bangalore to inaugurate the VITM. Addressing the audience, Nehru recalled the undying belief that MV had in science and technology. He said “Without science you perish, without spirituality you perish also…. We see in Dr Visvesvaraya a man of vision, a man of creative activity, a man looking ahead and a man who built around himself, and around others, a tradition of looking to science and technology, which was very, very necessary for India. Others were working to that end, but he was pre-eminent in it”

 

The extraordinary interest that Nehru had for personally opening the VITM, as a befitting tribute to Sir MV, is seen from a letter that Nehru wrote to Nijalingappa. Earlier, Nehru had written to the then CM of Mysore, Mr S R Kanthi, expressing his desire to visit Bangalore to open the Visvesvaraya Museum, some time in middle of July, 1962. But then things changed and Kanthi was soon to make way for Mr Nijalingappa to be the CM. Nehru was so emotionally attached with Sir MV that he did not want any delay in the opening of the VITM, which was to be a national tribute to MV.  Nehru wrote to Nijalingappa “I see from the newspapers that you have been elected Leader of the party, and consequently you will become the Chief Minister of Mysore. My congratulations and good wishes. I had written to Kanthi about my visiting Bangalore in the middle of July principally for the Visvesvaraya Museum …….”. With this letter to Nijalingappa, Pandit Nehru, reminded of his desire to be present for the opening of the VITM. Accordingly, Nijalingappa made all arrangements for the opening of the VITM, and Pandit Nehru opened the first phase of VITM on …. July, 1962. However, the second phase and the expanded VITM was opened by his daughter in the year 1965.  

 I was privileged to have had the honour to be posted as the Director of the VITM Bangalore in January 2011, which incidentally happened to be the 150th official birth centenary of Sir MV. Being a native of Karnataka, I grew up listening to the legendary tales of Sir M Visvesvaraya, from my school days, and I also vividly remember a Kannada film “Bangarada Manushya” – a block buster film - where another legend of Kannada film industry, late Dr Raj Kumar, eulogises Sir MV for his extraordinary contributions in building the Krishna Raj Sagar Dam (Kannambadi) in a song, which became very popular ad continues to be so even today. The year of my posting in Visvesvaraya Museum was quite providential since it was also the official sesquicentennial birth anniversary of Sir MV. It provided me an opportunity to conceive developing an exhibition on the life and works of the legend, under the title “Sir MV – The Legendary Nation Builder”. This exhibition based on research and drawing on a range of historical sources and images, archival materials, documentary, visual and audio – highlighted the extraordinary nation building contributions of Sir MV and helped in illuminating the contributions of Sir MV to the nation. Painstaking curatorial efforts were made to collect the materials from across the country. The exhibition was opened at VITM on 15th September 2011, on his 150th official birth anniversary, in the presence of the family members of Sir MV - Satish Mokshagundam the great grandson of Sir MV, his wife and his mother. This well researched exhibition with a wide ranging archival materials, and a host of original objects and memorabilia - sourced from the collections of Satish Mokshagundam and his Museum in Muddenhalli (very close to the Bangalore airport) and several other sources and archives -  became a roaring success. The exhibition was majorly covered by all the media and it was all over the news. The wide publicity and appreciation for the exhibition in the media helped the museum with an unprecedented increase in visitor foot fall to VITM.  In fact, this exhibition helped VITM to cross that magical visitor foot fall of one million visitors in a year for the very first time since its opening in July 1962. We created a special period room in the exhibition where all the original belongings of Sir MV, which included among other objects HIS Bharat Ratna Medallion, his dress etc., were displayed and this period room became the corner stone of the exhibition. The exhibition also had a large number of other rare archival material and information including a wide range of writings and correspondence of Sir MV with people like Nehru, Gandhi and who’s who of the makers of India.


The range of archival material, content and information that we had researched and collected from across the country - from various state and national archives and other sources - was mind boggling for Satish Mokshagundam, the great grandson of Sir MV, the custodian of the Sir MV Museum in Muddenhalli, the very house where Sir MV was born. Satish Mokshagundam, legal inheritor of all the belongings of Sir MV including the house, which was home to Sir MV at the time of his demise on 14th April, 1962, openly mentioned in his inaugural address that although he is the owner and custodian of Sir MV and his belongings, he had never seen so much of archival information and content on the life and works of Sir MV all his life. Similar sentiments were expressed by a host of distinguished dignitaries who visited this exhibition.

 

Sir MV began his engineering service with the British Government in the Bombay province in 1884 and his first posting was in Nashik and subsequently he spent major part of his service in Pune and Bombay (now Mumbai), where he made unprecedented contributions in diverse fields of engineering including his greatest of innovations in building the collectors well, and introducing his patent winning sluice gates in Pune. His engineering contributions spread a vast area from Aden to Pune, Sukkur, Nashik, Hyderabad, Mysore, and several other cities and projects across India, particularly in the state of Maharashtra. Sir MV's civil engineering contributions are seen all over India, His engineering service was also used in building the Hirakud Dam, in Odisha, a Railway Bridge across Ganga in Patna, for combating floods in Hyderabad, constructing the Himayatsagar and the Osmansagar reservoirs across the rivers Musi and Easi, and in the reconstruction of Hyderabad city and preparation of the drainage scheme for the city. Sir MV was also a member of the engineering committee that was involved in construction of several buildings in Lutyens Delhi.

 

Sir MV, the man with an impeccable integrity too utopian for any of us to imagine, was known for his foresight and prophetic vision for industrial development, which he advocated was essential for alleviating poverty. He was a master in irrigation designs and was very passionate about effective utilization of scarce water resource for drinking and irrigation purpose. Block System of Irrigation, Automatic Sluice gates and Collector Well are some important innovations of Sir MV. Automatic Sluice gates, used in Pune and in KRS, Mysore enable storage of water well above the crest of the weir of the Dam. He designed the Block system of Irrigation to optimize, control and evenly distribute water supply to parched agricultural lands across number of villages. The supply was rotated within “blocks” in each village to curtail misuse and water logging. This system, devised in 1899, continues to be used even today in Deccan Canals. The collector wells can provide moderate to large quantities of naturally filtered water from the river beds.

 

Sir MV was a firm believer that development alone can bring about prosperity for people. He also believed that India could be benefited from harvesting the knowledge and experience of the prosperous nations. Visvesvaraya toured many developed countries of the world to study, understand and evaluate the success of their prosperity and for replicating the same in India. During his six foreign travels, he visited Japan, America, Canada and many European countries. An outcome of his learning from foreign visits is embodied in the establishment of several industries and educational institutes in the state of Karnataka. He also started the All India Manufacturers Association in 1941 and was its founding president. After serving for 23 years in the Bombay Province and on realising that the highest position that an Indian Engineer could reach in the British administration is Superintendent Engineer and that he will not be able to become a Chief Engineer, Sir MV submitted his voluntary retirement from service in 1907 and decided to go back to his home state of Mysore. However, his service were sought by the Nizam of Hyderabad in 1908 for combating the flood in Hyderabad.

 

Visvesvaraya served his mother state Mysore (now Karnataka) in different capacities, first as the Chief Engineer to the government in 1909 and next as the Diwan of Mysore from 1912 to 1918. He firmly believed that education is fundamental to the progress of the nation. His regime as the Dewan of Mysore witnessed unprecedented growth in the establishment of a number of primary schools. In just six years of his tenure as the Diwan Sir MV added an additional 6,500 new schools in Mysore. He pronounced a revolutionary legislation making primary education compulsory for every child, including the girl child. He also believed in social empowerment of the depressed communities and backward classes and laid special emphasis on education of girls. He was instrumental in establishing educational institutes, industries, banks, Mysore University and Agriculture Science College. He also used his personal money to help establish a vocational college (Jayachamarajendra Polytechnic College). HAL the premier aircraft manufacturing company in Bangalore, the steel, sugar and soap factories in Karnataka owe their existence to Sir MV. The Premier Automobile Company in Pune, which was the first automobile company in India, owes its genesis to Sir MV. He improved the Railway infrastructure of Mysore and established clubs and association for improvement of the state. He was associated with the premier Indian Institute of Science and promoted linkage of industries with scientific institutes. The two term sex year tenure (2012-2018) of Sir MV as the Diwan of Mysore produced outstanding results for the state the fruits of which are continuing to harvested by Karnataka even today.

 

Sir MV after laying down the office of Diwan of Mysore spent time in writing, which was aimed at development for India. He wrote two books---Reconstructing India in 1920 and A Planned Economy for India in 1934, Both these books had a profound impact on Nehru and other leaders including Mahatma Gandhi. The Mahatma, pained by the loss of lives due to floods in Orissa in 1937, requested Sir MV to find some solution to Orissa floods. Visvesvaraya, who differed with Gandhi on many counts, particularly when it came to developing industries, had great respect for the Mahatma and at his instance MV, in the year 1937, surveyed the flood affected areas of the state and collected a lot of data from the flood affected area in Orissa (now Odisha). After careful analysis of the data collected from the flood affected area, designed engineering solution to combat flood. The very next year he visited Orissa and submitted a detailed report and for the construction of a dam in the upper regions of Mahanadi river which was the cause for the floods. The task for the building of a large dam across the river Mahanadi was taken up for execution post our independence in 1948. This giant Hirakud Dam was inaugurated by Pandit Nehru in January 1957.

 

The ideas expressed by Sir MV in his book Reconstructing India served as a source for the publishing of a Hindi Pamphlet by the United Provinces, which was titled ‘The Poverty of India and its Cure’, which finds a mention of reference to Sir MV book. Sir MVs services were also sought by the Indian National Congress. In the year 1938, Sir MV was tipped to be the Chairman of a National Planning Committee of the INC, at the instance of Netaji Subhash Chandra Bose. However, on the advice of Meghnad Saha, the noted scientist, Netaji changed his mind and appointed Nehru to be the Chairman of the committee and with Visvesvaraya as one of the prominent members. Saha himself was a member of this committee with many other distinguished economists on this committee. The subsequent First Five Years Plan introduced in India, post-independence, is majorly influenced by this committee report. Sir MV. As expected Mahatma Gandhi was not in favour of the committee and its report and therefore the progress of the committee was at snail pace. Sir MV was frustrated with the tardy progress of the committee and he decided to put in paper from the membership of the committee. However, Nehru, vide his letter dated December 26, 1939, tried to explain the reasons for the slow progress, which Sir MV accepted and did not insist for acceptance of his resignation.

 

Sir MV was a staunch supporter of industries and he knew from his experience of his six foreign visits and his studies in Japan, Europe, USA, USSR etc. and so also his works in the state of Mysore that industrialisation and applications of technology is a sure shot solution to improving the lives of the people. He was also a votary of an organised industry. He founded the All India Manufacturers Organisation. Sir MV served as the president of this organisation and he used his reputation to invite the best of leaders for the annual sessions. In the year, 1947 just before our independence he invited Pandit Nehru to address the seventh annual session of the AIMO in New Delhi. True to his reputation of plain speaking, Sir M.V. as the President of the AIMO spoke straight and mixed no words to criticise the industrial policy of the Indian Government, which was headed by Pandit Nehru. It is said that Nehru was not pleased with the criticism leading to tense moments. Although Pandit Nehru tried his best to address all the concerns expressed by Sir MV, he remained unconvinced and went to the extent of disrupting Nehru from speaking and addressing him as Motilal Nehru. When the Prime Minister retorted that he was addressing him wrongly, Sir M.V. remained unperturbed and said that he belonged to the generation of his father, who was well known to him and therefore Motilal Nehru’s name comes to him naturally. This eased the tense moment in the audience since Pandit Nehru himself was the first to give a lofty laugh for the retort of Sir MV who he admired greatly.

 

Sir MV was instrumental in establishment of the Government Engineering College in Bangalore in the year 1917. This was one of the first engineering colleges in India. This college was later befittingly named after the legend himself and is now called the University Visvesvaraya College of Engineering UVCE, which has produced some of the best engineers that India has produced. He was also the founder of the State Bank of Mysore, which later gave rise to the State Bank of India and the State Bank of Mysore, the mother Bank, later got merged with SBI

 

In recognition of the extraordinary engineering services rendered by Visvesvaraya to the British Empire he was conferred with the knighthood from the British Empire. Post the Independence the government of India conferred on Sir MV the highest national award the Bharat Ratna in the year 1955. Incidentally he shared the Bharat Ratna Award with Pandit Nehru and Bhagwan Das. After actively serving the nation for more than 100 years Sir MV breathed his last on 14th April, 1962 at Bangalore.

 

India Science Congress is one of the most premier annual science event organised every year in the month of January every year since 1913. The India Science Congress attracts the best of scientists from across India and several foreign scientists including Nobel laureates.  An exhibition accompanies the India Science Congress exhibition. A tradition was introduced in the India Science Congress to commemorate great scientists through an exhibition which was to find a prime space in the Hall of Pride stall of the India Science Congress. It was such a great honour that Sir MV, although is not a Scientist speaking figuratively, was chosen to be featured as the scientist to be given a tribute in the Hall of Fame in the India Science Congress Exhibition for the year 2015. The fame of the Sir MV exhibition, which we had opened at Nehru Science Centre on 15th September 2014 had spread wide and fast. Therefore 102nd India Science Congress, which was held in Mumbai from Jan 3-7, 2015 chose the Sir MV exhibition to be featured in the India Science Congress in Mumbai. Incidentally Dr Anil Kakodkar, who was the Chairman of a committee to decide on the theme for the Hall of Pride pavilion, had actually opened the Sir MV exhibition at the Nehru Science Centre, in the august presence of Mr Sajjan Jindal and Mrs Sangita Jindal, who had funded the exhibition and the printing of the catalogue. Therefore, it was no surprise that we were tasked with the responsibility to present the Sir MV exhibition at the India Science Congress. Our pavilion was visited by more than 1 lac visitors and was highly appreciated by all.  Sir MV exhibition was befittingly honoured as the best pavilion of the 102nd India Science Congress and I had the honour to receive this award during the concluding ceremony.

 

For those of you who may be interested in reading the exhibition catalogue book you may please down load it from the Nehru Science Centre website under the New Publications section, where you will find all the publications of Nehru Science Centre, which are free for download.

 

Wishing you all a very happy engineers day.


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