Category Archives: Arts, Culture & Entertainment

Mangaluru : From puttur with love: Taking Crochet to new heights

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After her wedding, Ashwini Anil left her hometown Puttur and moved to Bahrain. That was 10 years ago. Despite having had a postgraduate in computer science, she found it difficult to get a job, thanks to recession. Inspired by her mother, Durga Govind, an expert in crochet designing, she decided to take up crocheting. That changed her world and now their products are being used by the poor all over the world.

Ashwini told BM, “My mother is so talented. She does knitting, crochet sewing, embroidery and many other crafts. She used to stitch all our dresses, sweaters and even school bags. I feel proud to say and my sister Anushri and I rarely wore readymade dresses. She has been an inspiration. Though I was not very active in the art world when in Puttur, crochet and art became my world, without even realising how and when. Initially, it was difficult to get the right yarn. Then I started experimenting with plastic as the raw material. I started using waste material like milk bottles and the outcome was attractive. My husband, Anil Dheraje, a project manager, has helped me in every step,” she said.

Her work became an instant hit and she was introduced to Momwise, a group on social media. They were holding an exhibition and she was surprised when she was asked to share her work. Ashwini was later introduced to Chennai-based Subhashri Natrajan who through ‘Mother India Crochet Queens’ (MICQ) was successful in making the largest crochet blanket in the world, measuring 11,148.5 sq metre.

Ashwini and her mother participated in the project along with over 1,000 participants from the country and 13 other countries.

The blankets were donated to the needy last year. The team was not satisfied with this record and they decided to create the world’s largest scarf.

To promote international peace, a group of crochet enthusiasts knitted the world’s longest scarf measuring 14.09 km. The feat was acknowledged by the Guinness World Records.

Ashwini said, for this record, MICQ created about 5400 scarves. 900 of them were sent to Secretary General of United Nations and head of states as a step towards spreading global peace.

Attempting another record, they are now working on huge crochet sculptures.

“The aim is to make the largest display of crochet sculptures and we hope to break the UK record created in 2014,” she said.

source: http://www.bangaloremirror.indiatimes.com / Bangalore Mirror / Home> News> State / by Deepthi Sanjiv, Bangalore Mirror Bureau / October 28th, 2017

Cenotaph Monument: Pillar marking 1791’s Siege of Bangalore was torn down 53 years ago

The cenotaph was demolished with official sanction on Oct 28, 1964.
The cenotaph was demolished with official sanction on Oct 28, 1964.

Bengaluru has had a long history of renaming its roads and landmarks. This story is about a landmark which was completely destroyed because of its link to the city’s colonial history.It happened on October 28, 1964. A cenotaph dedicated to soldiers who died in the 1791 Siege of Bangalore was demolished.

“A group of Kannada activists led by Vatal Nagaraj wanted to demolish structures and statues that they considered as symbols of colonial victory over Indians,” said Mansoor Ali, founder, Bengaluru By Foot.

While statues of Queen Victoria, King Edward and Mark Cubbon were also on their radar, they zeroed in on the cenotaph as it was in the city centre (Hudson Circle).The call to pull down the cenotaph goes back to the late 1940s but it was in October 1964 that a resolution was passed by the city corporation under mounting pressure from Kannada activists. Today ,a statue of Kempe Gowda, the city’s founder, stands in its place.

The 35-feet-tall cenotaph pillar was constructed in the memory of the 50-odd soldiers and commanders who died in the 1791 Siege of Bangalore and other Anglo-Mysore wars. It had stone plaques and ceremonial urns on all four sides, similar to the one constructed in Tipu Sultan’s capital Srirangapatna.According to Ali, the cenotaph included names of not only British soldiers, but also of Indians who fought as part of the Madras Engineering Group (MEG).

During the siege, the British first captured the pete (which housed residential and commercial areas) on March 7, 1791, and then captured the stone military fort on March 21.The event put Bangalore on the British map. Subsequently , the British used the Bangalore fort as a base for the Siege of Seringapatam in 1792, which forced Tipu to concede defeat.

Initially, officers who died during the Siege of Bangalore were buried in the Fort’s Cemetery .Robert Home’s book `Select Views in Mysore, the country of Tipoo Sultan’ illustrates graves of soldiers and indicates that the land was filled with cypress trees, rose bushes and flowers. In the early 1910s, the records of these officers were transferred to the Cenotaph that was raised in the British cantonment.

 After the demolition, the stones from the cenotaph were thrown away . One remnant was a bench in the corporation office until recently , while a some others were at the nearby Abbas Khan College.The Cenotaph Road on which the structure stood was renamed Nrupathunga Road. “Instead of eliminating a heritage structure that marked a turning point in the history of Bengaluru, we could have constructed another monument of Mysoreans who lost their lives in war. Both could have coexisted,” said Ali.

source: http://www.economictimes.indiatimes.com / The Economic Times / ET Home> Magazines> Panache / by Divya Shekhar, ET Bureau / October 26th, 2017

Bengaluru predates Kempegowda: Experts

Bengaluru :

Epigraphists at the University of Mysore are close to unveiling facts about Bengaluru’s founding fathers. And, the story predates Kempegowda, who is believed to have founded the city.

The team is recompiling Epigraphia Carnatica -considered an authentic history document -which will shed new light on how Bengaluru was built and how it existed with its present name centuries before Kempegowda.

“The recompilation is going on in full swing. We are aiming at publishing revised volumes about Bengaluru by April 2018,” said MG Manjunath, organizing editor of Epigraphia Carnatica’s revised volumes.

Among the information to be added to the document are the chapters about an inscription found in Begur on the city outskirts, according to which Bengaluru’s existence dates back to 890AD and the period before it. The inscription found in 1952 at Nageswara Temple in Begur says: “Bengaluru kaalagadalli Nagaththarana maga Buttanasetty saththam.” (Nagaththara’s son Buttanasetty  was killed in the Bengaluru battle). Nagaththara was a feudatory ruler under Gangas, who flour ished in the ninth century , and the inscription is believed to have been written in 890AD.

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Another piece of evidence to show Bengaluru had been built much before the time of Kempegowda (1510 to 1570AD) is an inscription on the wall of Someshwara Temple near Madiwala Lake. It reads that the Hoysala king Veera Ballala donated a piece of paddy land to the temple in 1218AD and mentions the temple was in Bengaluru.

“These are known facts and it has already been established that Bengaluru existed much before Kempegowda,” said HS Gopal Rao, vice-president, Karnataka Ithihasa Academy , and a wellknown epigraphist. Efforts are on to recom pile disparate historical facts into an authentic document and the revised volumes of Epigraphia Carnatica related to Bengaluru districts will be published,” Gopal Rao added.

Rao, however, said Kempe gowda’s contribution to the city’s development cannot be denied. “Kempegowda is credited with having developed Bengaluru into a commercial capital of Yalahanka Naadu. He built commercial hubs like Chikkapete and Doddapete apart from the mud fort that was built in 1532. He gave Bengaluru an initial identity, thanks to the temples and the four iconic towers among other monuments he constructed,” Rao said.

The original Epigraphia Carnatica complied and published in 1905 by British historian and archaeologist B L Rice contained 12 volumes.While it was based on over 9,000 inscriptions found till then, there was a supplementary volume based on the findings at a later stage. The supplementary volume had more information about Bengaluru, but it was not included in the main volume, which went out of print in 1950. Subsequently, over 2,000 more inscriptions were found, and Kuvempu Kannada Study Centre of UoM took up the task of recompiling Epigraphia Carnatica with inclusion of the supplementary volume and later findings.

Deverakonda Reddy, president of Karnataka Itihasa Academy, was tasked with compiling two volumes about Bengaluru in 2005. But he could not complete the project for want of support from the university in terms of resources and manpower, and he surrendered it in 2013. “The work has been fast-tracked now. I hope the revised volumes are published early next year,” said Reddy.

source: http://www.timesofindia.indiatimes.com / The Times of India / News> City News> Bangalore News / by Shivshankar / TNN / October 28th, 2017

BOOKS – A voice for women

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On October 29 falls the 30th death anniversary of Kamaladevi Chattopadhyay. Paying tribute to the grand lady who changed the way society looked at women, we carry excerpts from acclaimed Kannada writer Vaidehi’s book on her

Do you know Kamaladevi Chattopadhyay from close quarters? Wasn’t she your contemporary?” I asked Kota Lakshminarayan Karanth once. Cursing his forgetfulness and praising his younger brother, Dr. Shivarama Karanth’s phenomenal memory, this 91-year-old pathbreaking educationist would recollect from his “wretched” memory: “I met her only once in Mangalore. It was the year 1926 I think…What an exquisitely beautiful young lady she was! Already committed to public life, she had a vast collection of books. ‘Can I borrow some books from your library?’ I asked her. She recalled that I was a classmate of her ex-husband’s younger brother and said, ‘Why not? But remember to return them within seven days.’ I went to her place in Kodialbail, a mansion opposite the cart stand. I borrowed Trotsky’s History of Russian Revolution. I promptly returned it within a week. Kamaladevi was delighted. ‘ Nobody has ever returned my books on time. I had to be strict, you know, as books once lent just disappear into thin air!’, she said.

****

“ Age cannot wither nor custom stale her infinite variety”

Kamaladevi Chattopadhyaya – was in Bangalore to attend the Zonal Theatre Festival. Just the right height, she was by then well into her Eighties. Time had drawn its picturesque lines on her full face. The wrinkles and sagging muscles played rhythmically as she spoke. The tell-tale signs had only chiselled her into a graceful, ripe beauty. K.V. Subbanna introduced me to her as the translator of her work, “Indian Women’s Struggle for Freedom” into Kannada. Looking sharply at me, she asked Subbanna: “Has she done justice to it?” Her eyes were gleaming like the edge of a sword , sending a slight shiver down the spine. Smiles were infrequent visitors on this aristocratic visage.

There were bangles on her hands – not of gold, but what tribal women made in remote corners of India. Her ethnic handspun sari with a border and pallu seemed to derive its elegance from the charming wearer.

Not many knew her as a Mangalorean, as she left home early on to join the Swaraj movement. Only a few were in touch with her. For the new generation, Chattopadhyaya sounded a Bengali by birth!

***

Back to Mangalore days … A wedding ceremony was in progress. Bride – a Brahmin, the groom was a non-Brahmin. The elders overseeing the “arrangements” of this match were none other than Rajaji and Kamaladevi’s maternal uncle. Rajaji had come to play the part of the bridegroom’s father. The uncle introduced little Kamala to Rajaji.

“What do you want to become when you grow up?” Rajaji asked the feisty young girl who stood like a willow, head held high.

Kamala: I want to reform society, especially the condition of Indian women.

Rajaji: You are ambitious!

Kamala: Of course!

Softly Rajaji ‘s hand patted the girl’s head.

When Annie Besant visited Mangalore Kamala’s mother, Girijabai, had taken her to seek the blessings of the venerable lady. Girijabai was in close touch with Pune’s formidable women. She had founded a Women’s organization in Mangalore in 1912 itself. Freedom fighters, existential warriors, front door visitors, father’s drawing room buddies and mother’s pyol pals- all went into the melting pot of Kamala’s childhood. She had already come across tormented women, their tales of exploitation and deception, the solitary strife of her widowed and disinherited mother, sisters and aunt.

Kamala’s sparkling repartee to Rajaji had emerged from this backdrop… Pune’s avante garde radicals brought clarity to her life’s purpose. Gandhiji’s speech in Mangalore in 1917 mesmerised her. In 1924, during the All India Congress Conference in Belgaum, Dr. Hardikar and Smt. Uma Bai Kundapura asked Kamala’s assistance in training volunteers. This was Kamala’s debut of sorts in public life.

In 1927, the first session of The All India Women’s Conference was held in Pt. Rama Bai’s Seva Sadan, Pune. Kamala put her heart and soul as a volunteer. Noting her efficiency, the Executive Committee comprising Margaret Cousins and Sarojini Naidu selected her as the future Secretary of the Conference. Thus began the journey of responsibility, up the ladder, step by step. As Secretary, she travelled all over the country. She made the AIWC take up issues like accommodation for women labourers, crèche for their children, special allowance for pregnant women etc. She used to personally go to the Legislative Assembly to discuss laws with the people’s representatives. She ran from pillar to post, meeting key legislators, seeking their vote for Harbilas Sharada Act abolishing child marriage. She met Motilal Nehru, who looked at her, and said: “What brings you here, sweetheart?’’

“Your party must support the Sharada Bill,” said Kamala and almost immediately added: “You WILL support us, won’t you?”

Motilal: (in his typical raised voice) You slip of a girl, how dare you suggest what we should vote for!

Kamala: Oh! I see, your issue is my age! Okay, wait. I will bring along some old grannies!

So sayingKamala fled the place. Later, whenever Motilal met Kamala, he used to laugh recollecting this. Sharada Bill was passed.

***

For the young Kamala, active participation in the independence struggle went hand in hand with the responsibilities of AIWC. She was in close contact with prominent national leaders including Gandhiji, but held her own before all eminence. If she disagreed with them, she did it with courage and conviction. A sensitive and reflective writer, she travelled through remote villages to get first hand knowledge of the real riddles plaguing the country.

Her perspective on Salt Satyagraha was unique. Gandhiji, more concerned about women than women themselves, did not favour their joining Salt Satyagraha! Kamala was flabbergasted. If women could be trusted to look after the Ashram in his absence, why couldn’t they be allowed to take part in the independence movement?

Kamaladevi went straight to Gandhiji. In the thick of Dandi March, he was camping in a village. When she appealed to him for women’s equal participation in Salt Sathyagraha, she got Bapu’s broad smile in reply.”I think you don’t know about your sisters,” he said.

“I know. That is why I am requesting you.”

She refuted all his arguments.

Finally, Gandhiji had to yield to her perseverance. What confidence the Salt Satyagraha inspired in womenGandhiji conceded that women were the most important weapons in the march for Swaraj !!

***

The dreamer in Kamala began to visualize a composite cultural renaissance of music, drama, painting and sculpture. If today, dhrupad, thumri and ghazals are part of artistes’ repertoire, it is due to the untiring efforts of Kamaladevi who later founded the Sangeeth Natak Akademy. Our theatre those days was just regional stage episodes – not a discipline to be studied. Kamaladevi realized the theatre practitioners’ need for a school, curriculum and training by professional teachers. National School of Drama was the outcome of this foresight.

She built a dedicated army of enthusiasts who strove to unearth weavers, the rich but dying handloom legacies of Kanchivaram, Gadwal, Pochampalli, Paithani, and Jamdani. Her autobiography, “Inner Recesses Outer Spaces’, is not just a chronicle of independence movement but a singular narrative thronging with personalities from the world of art.

***

Kamaladevi was majestic and transparent, yet very private; a perfect blend of tradition and sophistication, beauty and brains.

Her sparkling humour and mimicry would have people around her in splits. She had fashioned her own signature style, setting a trend for generations to come.

Breaking the shackles of outdated societal mores, she had carved her own path. She was a phenomenal force, an epitome of feminine grace and creativity.

An atypical stateswoman commanding love, respect and awe though never seeking the spoils of power. A true feminist in her own right and a truer woman – her life reads like a legend and a myth.

Translated by Sumathi Niranjan Karody

source: http://www.thehindu.com / The Hindu / Home> Books / by Vaidehi / October 26th, 2017

Writer C N Ramachadran to inaugurate 14th edition of Alva’s Nudisiri

Moodbidri :

Litterateur C N Ramachandran will inaugurate the 14th edition of Alva’s Nudisiri 2017 that gets underway at this Jain Kashi of the South on December 1. Eminent film director Nagathihalli Chandrashekar will preside over the three-day Kannada literary meet, Dr M Mohan Alva, chairman, Alva’s Education Foundation announced here on Tuesday. Barring the decennial year, when the event was held for four-days, the meet has been a three-day affair.

C N Ramachandran has worked as teacher of English literature in India, Somalia, Saudi Arabia and USA. He worked in the post-graduate department of English of Mangalore University for 16-years, before superannuating from services. Ramachandran has presented papers at seminars in Delhi, San Francisco, Tokyo, and Turkey. An eminent critic in Kannada and English, Ramachandran has penned 10-books in English and 16 in Kannada, Dr Alva stated.

Born in Nagathihalli village in Mandya district, Chandrashekar is better known with the village name prefixed to his name. A gold medal winner in Kannada PG, Chandrashekar is basically a Kannada teacher. He instilled a deep sense of culture among the villagers with the Nagathihalli Samskruthika Habba organized by Abhivyakthi Samskruthika Vedike that he founded. The Vedike has succeeded in bringing about economic awareness among villagers.

source: http://www.timesofindia.indiatimes.com / The Times of India / News> City News> Mangalore News / TNN / October 24th, 2017

Archiving the life and culture of Bidar

Vocational training in progress in the early 1900s in Mahmud Gawan Madrasa in Bidar. | Photo Credit: Source-Liyakath Ali Khan, Bidar
Vocational training in progress in the early 1900s in Mahmud Gawan Madrasa in Bidar. | Photo Credit: Source-Liyakath Ali Khan, Bidar

Srishti institute project to showcase the ‘intangible history’ of the region

Bidar, which can trace its roots back to the third century, is steeped in history and is home to monuments such as Bidar fort, Gurdwara Nanak Jhira Sahib, and the domed tombs of Bahmani kings, among others. While its physical ‘brick and mortar’ heritage remains, the city’s ‘intangible history’ — community life, culture, cuisine and social practices — have been unrecorded for the most part.

To bring these to the public, students and faculty members of the Srishti Institute of Art, Design and Technology are working with a non-profit organisation, Team Yuvaa, to digitally archive local traditions.

They are also setting up brick and mortar museums in the walled city. An MoU was recently signed in this regard with the Hyderabad Karnataka Regional Development Authority, which will be funding the museums.

The project began with 17 undergraduate students exploring the cultural landscape, culinary heritage and the spatial transformation by talking to families in the region. “The project was initiated last year after a request from the former Superintendent of Police to set up a museum for the Police Department. Now, the students are documenting the origins of Dakhini Urdu dialect, the typography and iconography of houses, and the occupational heritage of the place, among other things,” said Shreyas Srivatsa, senior faculty member at the institute. Students, who spent four to six weeks early this year visiting households in Bidar, describe it at as a community-driven project.

“A museum is generally associated with some artefact and events of historical importance, but we wanted our museum to be a space where ordinary people’s histories are showcased. We want to look at the life of Bidiri artisans, Kulsali, Gawli and other communities and understand the city through their narratives,” said Mr. Srivatsa.

Eeshita Kapadiya, a Sahapedia UNESCO Fellow, who is part of the project is archiving information about the Dalapathi system, ancient village policing, which existed in Bidar. “The system has hardly been recorded in history. The village policing was seen as a community service and the people were never officially paid. There are people in Bidar who have served in this system and we are trying to share their memories through old photographs and oral stories,” she said. Museums will be set up at three centres in Bidar and will chronicle its police history, the century-old Urdu journalism tradition, stories of communities involved in certain occupations, old photographs, culinary practices, and historic court documents and maps of the region “Humsakavi, who served as a librarian in the police department is helping us trace the police history, an individual collector, Liyakath Ali Khan, is sharing his collections with the museum and some citizens have given away heirloom household items to us. Without the support of the community, we cannot build and run these museums,” Mr. Srivatsa said.

“The first museum is likely to open at the Old Town Police Station building in February next year,” he added. The next step would be to conduct community workshops on archiving and curating so that people can continue to tell their own histories and sustain the museums. “The content in the digital archive and museum will keep changing as and when we get new stories. We are starting it on archive.org, where Bidar residents themselves can make additions. Currently we have 200 items for the digital archive,” he said.

source: http://www.thehindu.com / The Hindu / Home>News> Cities> Bengaluru / by Sarumathi K  / Bengaluru – October 23rd, 2017

Bengaluru’s Lalbagh hopes to create Guinness world record

Lalbagh Botanical Garden. (TOI Photo)
Lalbagh Botanical Garden. (TOI Photo)

Bengaluru :

Lalbagh Botanical Garden in Bengaluru is hoping to create history on December 9, when ten thousand high school students will stand still as trees and hug each other.

Under the ‘My Tree, My Life’ programme, students from classes 8, 9 and 10, across 60 city schools, are being trained and taught about the environment and the importance of trees.

On the day of the event, students will first be taught the basics about trees, types of trees, how they grow, their reproduction, among others things. After that, they will form a human chain and stand still for two minutes.

“The aim of this programme is to make children aware about the environment. In addition, Lalbagh will get special recognition. While joining the Guinness book of records, information about Lalbagh’s birth and growth will be recorded,” said Dr AN Yallappa Reddy, Chairman of the Environmental and Parks Technical Committee.

The event, which will be recorded by officers of the Guinness World Records, is being organized in association with the state’s horticulture department and the Rotary Club. The programme will be headed by Dr Reddy.

Entry to the garden will be restricted between 10am and 12 noon on the day of the event.

“The police and traffic departments have assured us of all help,” officials said.

source: http://www.timesofindia.indiatimes.com / The Times of India / News> City News> Bangalore News / by Vijaya Karnataka / October 23rd, 2017

Art from areca sheath

it's not just about the nut: Some of the areca sheath handicraft items designed by M D Mathew in Bhatkal. Photo by author.
it’s not just about the nut: Some of the areca sheath handicraft items designed by M D Mathew in Bhatkal. Photo by author.

Areca palm leaf sheath, a waste product of yesteryears, is now popular in many forms, across India and even abroad. It’s modern avatar as eco-friendly plates have brought it fortunes. As this story is turning old, areca palm leaf is now all set for a second attempt to get international fame, as an art piece. MD Mathew, the owner of Usheera Industries in Bhatkal, has been making a variety of handicrafts from vetiver root for many decades now. He has designed over a hundred vetiver products that are attractive as well as useful. Of late, he has taken interest in areca leaf sheath. His creative touch makes the hale (the local term for areca leaf sheath in Kannada) turn into designs like Lord Ganesha, and Yakshagana and Kathakali artefacts.

This is the first time someone is trying embossed art on areca palm leaf sheath. “We have to pick raw materials that are available locally,” explains Mathew. “Using art and imagination, we can improve the value of otherwise waste product.” If these products are accepted by the customers, he has plans to scale up the effort and include other designs, like a Kerala houseboat, as well.

Designing an embossed art piece from areca palm leaf sheath involves a number of stages. Finally, if the design is acceptable, a metal mould has to be cast. Raw areca palm leaf sheath has to be pressed in the mould, which is heated to give stability to the moulded sheath. Then it crosses different hands to get its final form. In fact, Ganesha, in an abstract form, is a simple but catchy art piece. Mathew doesn’t use any colour or decorations for that. Embossing, cutting, and stitching the edge with a piece of cloth help give the piece an aesthetic look. In contrast, the Yakshagana and Kathakali artefacts have colourful decorations.

“We have just started marketing. Positive and negative aspects are under observation. Over a period of time, we will perfect it after rectifying drawbacks, if any,” says Mathew. Areca palm leaf sheath gets easily degenerated by fungal growth. Won’t this affect the art pieces too? “We have to keep the products in a dry place. When we press it in the mould, all the moisture gets evaporated,” he clarifies.

Mathew’s visualisation and innovation deserve to be appreciated. Today, a good number of units are thriving by adopting his ideas and designs. “I see a lot of vetiver handicraft items in the market now. So, I decided to take up a new raw material. Areca palm leaf sheath came handy,” he reveals. To know more, one can contact Mathew on 94486 29439, or email at usheeramathew@gmail.com.

source: http://www.deccanherald.com / Deccan Herald / Home> Supplements> Spectrum / by Shree Padre / October 24th, 2017

The curtain falls on this museum dedicated to women

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Intricate embroidery, wall hangings, colourful paintings, old vessels, cradles, and rare handlooms. All these and more were displayed at Shashwathi Centre for Women’s Studies and Museum at N.M.K.R.V. College for Women until recently. However, the college, has now closed the private museum, one of the rare museums that was dedicated to women.

Shelves bereft of the displays are all that remain of the museum that was set up by founder-principal C.N. Mangala in December 1982.

College principal Snehalata G. Nadiger told The Hindu that C.N. Mangala collected most of the items by going on a padayatra and many households voluntarily donated their heirlooms to be displayed. The decision to close down the museum was a difficult one to make. “The museum, that housed many precious artefacts, had become a sort of dumping ground over the years. People started dumping items that they didn’t have any use for, such as Dasara dolls made of plaster of Paris. Most of these were disintegrating. That apart, the museum had no visitors. At best, one or two visitors would come in a year,” she said.

Rashtreeya Sikshana Samithi Trust, which was maintaining the museum, had made many attempts to revive it. But with no visitors over the years, the trust decided to try and return the items on display to the donors.

“Apart from the writings of Tirumalamba, said to be the first woman writer in Kannada, which we have preserved, we are trying to return the other items to the donors. Some of the items that belonged to C.N. Mangala are preserved. We will display whatever is left in the R.V. institutions,” she said and added that the trust continues to have on its rolls two curators, a clerk, and a cleaner.

The college will retain the building. “It will be remodelled and the space will be utilised for B.Ed and LLB classes,” she said.

Trust president Panduranga Setty said attempts were made earlier to revive the museum.

“A few years ago, we had even submitted a proposal to the Tourism Department to have the museum included in the tourism circuit. That way, more people would have come to the museum. We had also sought ₹10 lakh for maintenance in this regard.” However, despite meetings with officials, nothing materialised and the project seems to have been put on the back burner, he said.

Meanwhile, Tourism Minister Priyank Kharge said he did not have any information on the proposal that had been submitted by the trust.

“The government cannot interfere in matters pertaining to a private museum. However, if the trust comes up with a fresh proposal, we will look into it,” he said.

source: http://www.thehindu.com / The Hindu / Home> News> Cities> Bengaluru / by Chitra V. Ramani / Bengaluru – October 21st, 2017

Vishwa Konkani Seva Awards for 2017 announced

Mangaluru:

World Konkani Centre, Konkani Language and Cultural Foundation, Mangaluru instituted Basti Vaman Shenoy Vishwa Konkani  Seva Awards on Tuesday announced recipients of the award for 2017. They are G Nagendra Prabhu, associate professor, post-graduate department of zoology and research centre, University of Kerala among men and Dr Usha S Heranjal, Anu Eye Hospital, Valsad, Gujarat among women.

The award is sponsored by Vishwa Konkani Kendra chief patron and chairman of Manipal Global Education T V Mohandas Pai. The above two personalities will receive Rs 1 lakh each and a shawl, citation and other items at a ceremony to be held on November 20 at Sri Sudheendra Hall, Canara Girls High School, Dongerkery, Mangaluru.

source: http://www.timesofindia.indiatimes.com / The Times of India / News> City News> Mangalore News / by Jaideep Shenoy / TNN / October 20th, 2017