Category Archives: Inspiration/ Positive News and Features

She gets global recognition twice in two years.

Bengaluru :

All of 23, Swati Bondia, a fresh MBA graduate from a city business school, received an international recognition from Junior Chamber International as one among 10 outstanding young persons of the world at a function in Kanazawa, Japan on Saturday. She ecomes is the first Indian woman to receive the award during 100 years since JCI established.

This is the second global honour for her. In July last year, she was the only Indian businesswoman to have made it to the BoP, which is being organized by the University of Colombia in association with United Nation’s Principles for Responsible Management Education Secretariat.

The founder and chief decorating officer of Bangalore-based social venture Om Shanti Traders has been selected for the Base of the Pyramid market-entry challenge at Colombia.

Om Shanti Traders is a social, sustainable venture supporting at least 1,000 individuals from the poor and underprivileged sections to improve their lifestyle and, thus, reduce the economic gap between the various layers of the society. Swati identifies individuals on the streets, trains them in arts and crafts, employs them and helps them to create a livelihood for themselves by selling their creations to corporate and individual households. The profit is shared with the employee families and a portion will go to the employee welfare corpus. Swati and her team ensure the children of the employee family compulsorily go to school.

Hailing from Jharsuguda in Odisha and a daughter of an industrialist, Swati is today a big name in social enterprise.

“It is like reverse mentoring. I was her professor and mentor in her venture in empowering poor and rural women, but she leads me now in my ideas. I am the founder director of www.enrichexpo. But is her drive behind this venture as its CEO and one of the directors,” her professor at the business school where she pursued her MBA, GS Sreekiran told TOI.

source: http://www.timesofindia.indiatimes.com / The Times of India / News Home> City> Bengaluru / by M K Madhusoodan, TNN / November 11th, 2015

NHAI announces reward to RTI activist exposed overcharging toll

Belagavi  :

In a rare instance, National Highway Authority of India (NHAI) has announced reward to RTI activists of the district for exposing a toll plaza agency overcharging the vehicles.

In-fact, Prashant Ashok Burge of Galataga in Chikkodi taluk is the first person deserved to be such honour of NHAI. Burge had exposed toll agency, M/s Konark Infrastructure Ltd., in 2013, for overcharging vehicles against the guidelines of NHAI.

Activist exposed collecting of excess user fee from light motor vehicles at Hattaragi User Fee Plaza. Agency was collecting Rs 20 instead of 15 for one way trip and Rs 40 instead of 35 for return trip. It was collecting excess fee violating NHAI guidelines and even displayed it on large hoardings.

Based on an RTI application filed by Burge on 12th March 2013 with NHAI and union ministry of road transport and highways, excess collection of toll was stopped from 26th March. Besides, as a part of corrective measures, rates displayed on large size hoardings were altered. During investigation, NHAI found excess fee collection and recovered Rs 1.80 crores amount from toll agency by penalizing it. Appreciating the efforts of complainant in the public interest, NHAI has announced Rs 10,000 cash prize to Burge.

However, in the initial stage, NHAI office in Dharwad had dodged to provide information to the activist. Later, he appealed to regional office of NHAI in Bengaluru, from where he got information of excess toll collection of Rs 15, 95,825 by the agency.

But unsatisfied with calculation of NHAI, activist has been sought audit report and cash sums of toll agency under RTI but still striving to get the same. He has also complained to Central Economic Intelligence Bureau to investigate toll collected by the agency before March 2013.

Speaking to the TOI, Prashant Burge said “I have faced lot of problems by the NHAI officials and even threats on cell phone, when I refused to heed the offers they made to me. I recorded threat calls and sent to regional office of NHAI in Bengaluru in CD form. Only after that the investigation speed up.”, he said and thanked NHAI for rewarding him.

source: http://www.timesofindia.indiatimes.com / The Times of India / News Home> City> Hubballi / by Ravindra Uppar, TNN / October 26th, 2015

Inventor With Eyes on the Sky

Dayananda Sirigere, a hobbyist inventor who fashions camera lenses and telescopes made from PVC pipes and discarded electronic equipment, has been getting inquiries from unlikely corners. “In September, a businessman called from California,” says the 53-year-old. “He said he will be coming to Bengaluru to meet me as he was fascinated by what I do.”

While most of his equipment costs Rs 5,000 to Rs 10,000 to make, his talents have remained largely undiscovered by shutterbugs. “Until a neighbour came and admired his work, I kept telling him to throw all this rubbish out,” says his wife Ratna Rao.

Dayananda Sirigere and the telescopes/JITHENDRA M
Dayananda Sirigere and the telescopes/JITHENDRA M

The “rubbish” is about 35 cartons of telescope lenses stacked up in their house in Bengaluru’s Chandra Layout. Sirigere seems completely uninterested in the possibilities of using his skills to pursue a commercial end. He is fired by passion for the “practical” aspect of science.

“In school, I used to wonder what the planets we drew looked like,” he says. “Much later, when I was going through some bad times in the 90s, people attributed it to an unfavourable influence of Saturn.”

This rekindled his curiosity in astral bodies, and he got to work on trying to make a telescope. Years of trial and error followed till 2003 when his efforts came to fruition and his first telescope was ready. “I assembled an optical lens, a mirror lens and a PVC pipe using calculations based on the focal length of the lenses,” Sirigere explains.

When he looked through it, he was overjoyed. He then began working on how to attach a powerful lens to a camera to photograph planets. For this, he used a teleconvertor to enlarge the image.

He finished his first telephoto lens in 2005. “I made a wide-angle lens that covers 180 degrees and another that covers 230 degrees,” he says. The macro lens in his collection has enabled him to photograph the pores in the eye of an ant and air bubbles and droplets of water in a leaf against light. “If you attach it to a video camera, you can see the water movement in leaves,” he says.

His lenses and telescopes have kept him up nights in the open, gazing at the galaxy. “Some parts of the moon reflect more light due to its undulated surface,” he says. “The craters are best visible on the fourth day after the new moon because that side is facing Earth.”

As novel as his hobby is, he is also aware of its amateur nature. “The lenses are too bulky for some people, unlike the professional ones. There’s no way I can build in auto-focus,” he says. Procuring a camera and xerox lenses collecting dust in homes or shops takes time. “Whenever I’m visiting someone or passing by someplace and I notice parts I could use, I ask the owners if I could buy them,” he says.

Once when Sirigere wanted to photograph cricketers in Chinnaswamy Stadium, the security stopped him and asked what he was carrying in his bag. They refused to believe they were lenses. They said, “These look more like AK-47s,” he says with a hearty laugh.

Before he moved to Bengaluru eight years ago, he often let children look at the stars through his telescopes in his native Sirigere, a village in Chitradurga district. “In rural areas, children don’t have any exposure to the practical aspect of science,” he says. With them, he has observed eclipses, the rings of Saturn and four of Jupiter’s moons.

The people and the clear skies of the pastoral countryside beckon, but it might take him a couple of years to shift base. “Ideally, I would like a village not yet penetrated by electricity,” he says.

source: http://www.newindianexpress.com / The New Indian Express / Home> Magazine / by Chetana Divya Vasudev / October 31st, 2015

Padma Shri Samuel Paul: He worked for clean public governance

By KRS Murthy

In the passing away of Padma Shri Samuel Paul, India has lost a quiet and unassuming leader and builder of institutions. Throughout his professional career as a teacher, researcher and institution builder, he searched for ways to make the world socially and economically more just, and worked actively for a better and cleaner public life.

My wife Nirmala and I first met Paul, then director of IIM-Ahmedabad, in 1973, when he was visiting Harvard Business School in Harvard University , where we were both doing our doctoral studies. Paul had come to recruit faculty . After we joined IIMA, we had an opportunity to see Paul in action.Although some considered him quiet and reserved, we could see beneath the exterior a caring and affectionate person. His style was one of informing and involving all stakeholders -students, faculty, industry, board and society.

Paul later went to the US where he worked with Kennedy School of Government in Harvard University and the World Bank. He continued to focus on disparities in social and economic development and the role of public policy and governance in bridging them. It might have been during that period that he began to recognize the need for active involvement of citizens in governance and delivery of public services.

I moved to Bengaluru as director, IIMBangalore, in 1991. Paul’s decision, around that time, to settle in Bengaluru, gave us another opportunity to work closely with him. Paul, I think, felt as sured involving colleagues and alumni of IIMA in his missionary work. I think he expected IIMA competence and profes sional and decent behavior in any role. In addition to others, he involved me, and PP Madappa, another distinguished alumnus of IIMA, in his early experiment with the idea of a Citizen’s Report Card (CRC) on public services. The idea was to get a sys tematic feedback of citizens on the quality of public services such as water and electricity , into policy-making and imple mentation of decisions at higher levels.

The experiment was a great success and senior civil ser vants involved Paul in finding out how CRC could help. The ex periment brought national and international attention to Ben galuru, with the Indian govern ment, World Bank and the Asian Development Bank tak ing note of it as a useful innovation in pub lic governance. Paul proceeded to set up the Public Affairs Centre, a non-profit society committed to improving public account ability and good governance. One of the earliest to recognize the impact that the cancer of corruption would have on public life, he held a seminar with leading think ers to find ways in which it can be curbed.

He published several books on corruption and on holding the state to account.

Paul continued his professional com mitment till the very end of his life. He is no more with us, but his concern for better public governance, which he lived through his quiet and exemplary profes sional life, will continue to inspire us.

(The writer was a close associate of Samuel Paul and also former chairman of ISEC, Bengaluru)

source: http://www.timesofindia.indiatimes.com / The Times of India / News Home> City> Bengaluru / TNN / October 29th, 2015

Preventing privatisation of water

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Kshitij Urs has spent the past two decades reminding society and the government that water belongs to the people

With rivers dying and lakes becoming bowls of sewage, water is being prophesised as the centre of the next great power struggle.

Amidst grave concerns, Kshitij Urs has spent the past two decades reminding society and the government that water belongs to the people. “Water, to me, has historically been a source of power. Because of this, it is also a source of discrimination. If one were to look at urban deprivation, lack of access to water is as important as food or education,” he said.

Privatisation

The battle for water started in 2004 when he accessed a government agreement with an NGO to “manufacture consent” among the people on water privatisation.

“We realised that this was a new era of public participation where consensus was going to be manufactured. We needed a State-level mobilisation of opinion on the actual impact of the move,” said Mr. Urs who then co-founded the Campaign against Water Privatisation.

Through a sustained campaign that focussed on the commoditisation of water over three years, the State government backed off from the reform. However, the ‘war’ is far from won. “They have tried their hand at Hubbali and Mysuru where opposition to the move resulted in water coming back to the municipality…In Bengaluru, we are seeing privatisation in other forms, such as Unaccounted Flow of Water project, where operations of water supply is being given to private companies,” said Mr. Urs.

Since 2007, the organisation has transformed into People’s Campaign for Right to Water (PCRW), which strives for the protection of water bodies. Their legal action has seen encroachments on Sarakki lake being removed – a development that set off anti-encroachment drives on lakes across the city.

The advocacy by PCRW was also crucial for drafting of the Karnataka Lake Conservation and Development Authority Act, which will see all lakes coming under one body, he said.

Trained as a medical doctor, Mr. Urs’ interest in social justice and deprivation started in 1993 when he met two sisters — one 10 and another 12-year-old — while volunteering at an NGO. “They were diagnosed with HIV. Deprivation had pushed them from a slum in Banashankari to prostitution in Bombay…Nothing in my upbringing had prepared me for this,” he said.

The ‘awakening’ saw him delve into the social sector with a masters in development studies from London followed by a Ph.D from National Law School of India University in the water sector.

Projects working on

Democratisation of water sources

Empowering local communities to raise issues relating to lakes

Following up implementation of Karnataka Lake Conservation and Development Authority Act

Suggestions to government

Understand social conservation of water

Involve local communities in managing water sources

Suggestions to citizens

Understand the importance of traditional wisdom to secure inter-generational rights of water

Demand protection of lakes, tanks

Get involved in policy making

source: http://www.thehindu.com / The Hindu / Home> News> Cities> Bengaluru / by Mohit M. Rao / Bengaluru – October 27th, 2015

Kittur Chennamma’s victory over British celebrated

The 192nd anniversary of the victory of Kittur queen Chennamma against the British was celebrated in a simple manner in view of farm suicides and drought, here on Friday.

The programme was organised by Veerashaiva Sanghatana Samiti. Gurusiddha Rajayogindra Swami of Moorusavir Mutt and others garlanded a statue of Rani Chennamma.

Recalling the fight of the queen against the British, the swami said that the courage and valour of Rani Chennamma should motivate us to face any odds in our life and called on farmers not to lose hope. President of the samiti, Viranna Kallur, Channabasappa Dharawadshettra, C.H. Gobbi, and P.M. Hooli were present.

In a programme held by the Basava Parisara Samrakshana Samiti, tributes were paid to the Kittur queen. Releasing pamphlets against the use of crackers during the forthcoming Deepavali festival, president of Karnatak Chamber of Commerce and Industry, Ramesh Patil, said that the State government should take steps to celebrate the occasion annually.

President of Basava Parisara Samrakshana Samiti S.V. Pattanashetti, and secretary Suresh D. Horakeri were present.

Meanwhile, in a programme related to Dasara celebrations by Moorusavir Mutt, Gurusiddha Rajayogindra Swami and the former Chief Minister Jagadish Shettar gave away compensation cheques to the family members of six farmers who committed suicide in Hubballi taluk.

The mutt had decided to celebrate Dasara in a simple manner this year in the wake of farmers’ suicides and utilise the amount saved by cancelling the grand procession to give compensation to the farmers’ families.

source: http://www.thehindu.com / The Hindu / Home> National> Karnataka / by Special Correspondent / Hubballi – October 24th, 2015

Hubballi youngster gets patent for three products

Hubballi  :

When Anup Vijapur, 26, was in his final year of mechanical engineering studies, he received three job offers. However, hepatitis affected his progress. He had to attend the examination, carrying a glucose bottle. He failed in one subject, but fortunately cleared it after applying for revaluation.

When Anup failed in the exam, it was Nanopix CEO Sasisekar Krish who recruited him and encouraged him to develop his innovative ideas into products. Thus started Anup’s success story. He now heads the innovation department of Nanopix, a startup. Anup aimed at social entrepreneurship when he was in college. Now he is realizing his dreams, emerging as an innovator to simplify the lives of farmers.

Recently, the youngster got three patents for his innovation. These innovations pertain to grading of cashew nuts. While a normal grading machine can probably classify cashew nut into three qualities, Anup three patents are more than a notch better. With his technology of installation of camera, pick and place mechanism for irregular object and conveyor and grading machine, one can classify cashew nuts into seven categories.

Though Anup pursued BE (mechanical) at Proudhadeveraya Institute of Technology, Hospet, he is well versed in computers and technology. Speaking to TOI, Anup said that he got opportunity to materialize his ideas at Nanopix. He has special words of gratitude towards Krish. “We have already got three international patents for our products. If we get all applications approved, it will be a pride for our company and a tier-2 city like Hubballi,” he said.

There is more in store as his 28 applications are waiting for patent. Anup said that he developing a technology to read the face of drivers. “To prevent road accidents, we are developing a camera that can recognize facial expressions of drivers. If the driver is sleepy, it will warn him immediately. If the vehicle is connected with some networks, corporations or companies, it will alert their control room so that the backend can intervene and avoid possible accidents,” he said.

Pramod Tonapi, public relation officer at Nanopix, said that Anup’s innovation has given a boost to the startup. “He is very passionate about science and even teaches engineering students at a private study centre during his leisure time. His innovations are going to change the food processing industry in the coming days. Because of his innovation, we have been able to apply for patent for 28 more products,” he said.

source: http://www.timesofindia.indiatimes.com / Times of India / News Home> City> Hubballi / by Sangamesh Menasinakai, TNN / October 21st, 2015

Best from waste

Recycled art

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These days, people can’t wait to leave the nest and all its comforts. But Aditi Mahajan says that she can’t imagine not seeing her mother, Sunila Mahajan, for even a day. They spend hours together, bonding over arts and crafts, and this unique relationship is reflected in their start-up, ‘Dots to Lines’.

Started earlier this year, ‘Dots to Lines’ is a creative platform where the two share their trade secrets with their customers in the most colourful and exquisite manner. From home decor to accessories and stationery, they hand make them all with much patience and dedication.

Aditi gave up her career as a children’s educator to take a gamble on this venture. Sunila, however, has always had an artistic bend and spends a major part of her time working on crafts or teaching them.

Talking about how the idea to start this came about, Aditi explains, “We are into handcrafted products and a large part of our items are made from MDF or recycled wood. It all began when we ended up with some wooden scraps at home. Instead of disposing of them, my mother suggested we make something out of them. So we got them cut in various shapes — cats, bunnies, fish, butterflies — and turned them into keyrings. Usually, people make keyrings small but we decided to make them a little bulky and different. When my friends saw this, they loved them and suggested we make something more.”

There is a story behind how each of their products came about. “A cousin was getting married so we designed a tray for the couple. It became a hit and more people wanted it!” says Aditi. The accessory line walked in because of popular demand. “When people noticed our work, they began asking us to make jewellery.

We didn’t find a reason not to, so now we work on pendants, necklaces, earrings and more,” she adds.  Selling mainly on online portals and at various flea markets and ‘santhes’, the two have a range of products to display — fridge magnets, photo frames and more.

“I love to collect photo frames so we thought we’d make some of them. Since everything is handmade, it’s a problem to replicate an item, but we try our best. When there’s a sale coming up, we make sure to craft at least 20 items per day. But making things in bulk is hard…” says Aditi.

Why did they name it ‘Dots to Lines’? “Multiple dots put together make a line, which in turn makes a pattern and then a design. And unique designs is what keeps us going,” she explains. All their works are bright and colourful because they believe that “they make for a brighter and happier day”.  For more details, please visit their Facebook page www.facebo­ok.com/dots2lines.

source: http://www.deccanherald.com / Deccan Herald / Home> Supplements> MetroLife / by Ananya Revanna, Bengaluru / DHNS – October 08th, 2015

In a real world

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When this eight-year-old boy was brought to us by his parents, he didn’t speak or play. All he would do was play with his saliva, and roll on the ground. Over days and months, positive changes became visible in him. He started sitting down and playing with a variety of toys. What’s more, he now calls his parents ‘Appa’ and ‘Amma’ ,” Vaishali Pai says with pride.

The Founder and Director of ‘Tamahar’, a centre for children with special needs, points out that in spite of all the efforts, the challenges are many in this field, and the task an uphill one.

Children with special abilities and their parents still  face stigma. Their only fault — these children are unable to live life the conventional way. More often than not, their special needs never get addressed. They continue to be ostracised. For those who are entrusted in teaching and caring for them, it’s a tough task, sometimes a thankless one.

An occupational therapist with two decades of experience, Vaishali came to Bengaluru for paediatric work more than 20 years ago. She used to travel to work for two hours or so. “I remember seeing parents travelling with children with special needs. There were only two or three centres then. This picture remained with me, After about 20 years, I started ‘Tamahar’,” she recollects.

“Children who come here are basically those with brain damage — with conditions like cerebral palsy, Down Syndrome, autism etc. We give a complete development assesment according to their mental age and  intervention — cognitive, occupational, physical and speech therapies and try to make the brain function as a whole. We have also functional academics to make them independent and self-reliant. We are also doing pre-vocational programmes, parent training, both in theory and practicals of developmental therapy. The parents too are learning,” she says.

Chandrika Sheshadri started ‘Take a Break Respite Care’ in Malleswaram when she found that the City was not equipped to provide care for the child and parents. She says. “I have a child with special needs. Before relocating to Bengaluru, we were in the US. When we moved here seven years back, I thought we would get the same kind of caregiving that we got there on a regular basis. But we were disappointed. Soon, with the help of family and friends, we decided to open this place.”  ‘Take a Break Respite Care’ gives a break to families that have individuals with special needs.”

Giving the primary caregiver a break is essential, she says. “We usually provide this care during weekends. Parents can drop the child here and they are here from three to six hours.”

The voices to bring these kids into the mainstream are getting louder. The sympathies can wait. “You can help the kids with something productive, rather than sympathy. I take my daughter wherever I go. Also, the parent has to take care of himself or herself first. Only then they can take care of the child. You need to let go of the child,” adds Chandrika.

The children with special needs are two to three percent of the population and Vaishali feels there should be a centre every five km. “I have a dream to get these children into art, music etc once a month. We also need volunteers for various activities like storytelling,” she points out.

Akila Vaidyanathan’s story is no different. She has a son with autism. Now, the founder-director of Amaze Charitable Trust, and joint secretary of Autism Society of India, says, “My son is now 19 years old. In 1999, when he was first diagnosed with it, I decided to train myself  on how to work with him. Initially, we did speech therapy and vocational  therapy. I was also looking at schools where we could enrol him, but the schools would say that they had no expertise to handle these children. So I did a diploma in social education and worked with the teachers on how to handle him,” she says.

Her son now loves to cook , trek and cycle. He uses alternate modes of communication including a VOCA. He is also a national-level bronze medalist for cycling (Special Olympics Bharat -2010).

On the larger picture, she says, “Very often, teachers are not equipped. Classrooms are crowded. Autistic children have sensory issues, they are sensitive to loud sounds and don’t like people touching them. These are the challenges, ” Akila adds,
“Having dedicated manpower is a challenge,” adds Vaishali. “To work in this section, you need to love children unconditionally. You have to create manpower and we do that too. There are two other challenges — finance and space. The children tend to make a lot of sound and there are certain points of the society where people can’t withstand the sound. So it’s difficult to find space.”

“If each one of us can give half our time for an organisation such as this, it would be such a support,” she says.

Four to five children from Tamahar goto  Prakash Padukone Badminton Academy, Canara Union regularly to play badminton. They have cognitive losses — of which one is autistic and the other has a psychiatric disorder,” informs Vaishali. Yet they are all out there, smashing it on a regular wooden court! They are no way hanging up their racquets.

source: http://www.deccanherald.com / Deccan Herald / Home> Supplements> Metrolife / by Anupama Ramakrishnan, Bengaluru / DHNS – October 09th, 2015

Dreams on wheels

Candida Louis at Gurez in Kashmir where she was given a rousing reception by school girls.
Candida Louis at Gurez in Kashmir where she was given a rousing reception by school girls.

It was on a hazy morning last month that Candida Louis rode into the largely unexplored Gurez Valley in Kashmir on her Royal Enfield.

It didn’t take long for the news to spread about the girl on motorcycle, a rare sight in those parts of the world. The next thing the 24-year-old knew was she in the middle of a mob of girls who had come to meet the brave one. They were awestruck by the adventurous spirit of the Bengaluru girl and wanted to ride pillion, which she obliged. “Its such experiences and people I meet that count more than covering thousands of kilometres,” said the IT professional with Infosys, who is on a three-month vacation to live her dream.

Circumstances conspired to help her fulfil that dream in a flurry. First, Dalton Louis gifted his only daughter with a Royal Enfield on her birthday last November and then seven months later a television channel approached her to be part of a group of ten riders in a programme meant to cover 30,000 kilometres in 22 states.

The supportive parents gave their nod and so did her employer. And before she knew it, she was on the road this July. Though the programme was wound up just in 20 days, Candida declined to be dispirited and continued her journey solo with the same target.

Since then she had covered 8,200 kilometres in over 12 states and till now she didn’t have a single bad experience despite many apprehensions about her safety by her loved ones. She reached Kochi from Munnar and was at Vypeen on Tuesday.

Staying at different hotels and experiencing variety food, the youngster plans to write about her travelling experience for a mobile app, which she said would help her meet fuel expenses.

The end of the journey in Goa in November would just be the beginning of wait for her next big adventure. “I always dreamt of going around the world in a motorcycle and I wanted to start it covering India,” she signed off.

source: http://www.thehindu.com / The Hindu / Home>National> Kerala / by M.P. Praveen / September 30th, 2015