Monthly Archives: May 2018

Historians elated over return of icons

The idol of Raja Raja Chola-I
The idol of Raja Raja Chola-I

The homecoming of the ancient bronze icons of royal couple Raja Raja Chola I and his regal consort Lokamadevi is an incredible development and marks a watershed development in the sustained efforts to retrieve the priceless stolen treasure, according to art enthusiasts of Thanjavur. They say it is important to sustain the momentum and bring back as many stolen artefacts and idols and as early as possible.

“The return of the priceless icons of Raja Raja Chola I and Lokamadevi to Tamil Nadu is akin to consecrating the Sri Brihadeswarar temple afresh. I feel as if the emperor himself is returning home,” an elated Kudavayil Balasubramanian, Chola historian and epigraphist, told The Hindu on Wednesday.

The two bronze artefacts assume enormous socio-cultural and historical significance, as they are the only icons of the royal couple cast and stamped with the regal authority during the emperor’s own lifetime, said Dr. Balasubramanian, whose magnum opus Rajarajecharam is rich in scholarly research inputs.

Art enthusiasts and Chola historians are happy with the development and hope that the momentum that has gathered steam now would be sustained to retrieve more Thanjavur treasures that were lost. Dr. Balasubramanian’s role in identifying, recording and bringing back the two icons, spread over almost two decades, is acknowledged as ‘enormous.’

Ex-Minister’s petition

Tracing the background, sources at the Idol Wing said a petition by former Minister V.V. Swaminathan prompted the Madras High Court to direct the Idol Wing to look into the case of missing ancient bronze idols, especially that of Raja Raja Chola I and Lokamadevi, from the icon safe at the Thanjavur Big Temple.

After a through field study aided by inputs from experts in Chola history and iconography, it was found that the ancient bronze icons, donated to the Big Temple during the 29th regnal year of Emperor Raja Raja I, had “somehow been stolen” and finally found their way to the Calico Museum of Textiles and the Sarabhai Foundation Galleries, Ahmedabad.

The two were part of the 13 bronze statues donated then and there is no word yet on the status of the other 11 idols. However, a complaint filed with the police on March 2 here also states that several other ancient valuable icons dating to the period of Raja Raja Chola I have been stolen from the Big Temple vault.

source: http://www.thehindu.com / The Hindu / Home> News> States> Tamil Nadu / by L Renganathan / Thanjavur – May 31st, 2018

Award for village panchayat

N. Gopinath, Assistant Director of Rural Development (village panchayats) handing over the award to Rohini R. Bhajibhakare, District Collector, in Salem on Monday.
N. Gopinath, Assistant Director of Rural Development (village panchayats) handing over the award to Rohini R. Bhajibhakare, District Collector, in Salem on Monday.

The A. Pudur village panchayat in Magudanchavadi Panchayat Union has won the Nanaji Deshmukh Rashtriya Gaurav Gram Sabha Puraskar for 2016-17 for its effective implementation of various projects with people’s participation.

The award was given by the Union Ministry of Panchayati Raj.

A.Pudur is the only village panchayat in the State to win this prestigious award. N. Gopinath, Assistant Director of Rural Development (village panchayats), received the award on behalf of the District Collector at a function held in Jabalpur in Madhya Pradesh recently.

The Prime Minister, Narendra Modi, presided over the function.

The Union Ministry of Panchayati Raj gives the award to village panchayats for their outstanding contribution to the socio-economic development by involving gram sabhas.

Mr. Gopinath handed over the award to Rohini R. Bhajibhakare, District Collector, at the Collectorate here on Monday.

R. Sukumar, District Revenue Officer; N. Arul Jothi Arasan, Project Director, District Rural Development Agency; Tamil Selvan, Block Development Officer, Magudanchavadi panchayat union; P. Muthu, secretary of the A. Pudur village panchayat; were present on the occasion.

The Collector called upon all the panchayats in the district to take effective steps for winning similar awards in the near future by effectively implementing government projects with public participation.

source: http://www.thehindu.com / The Hindu / Home> News> Cities> Coimbatore / by Special Correspondent / Salem – May 28th, 2018

Acclaimed director, producer Muktha Srinivasan no more

SrinivasanCF30may2018

In a career spanning over six decades, he directed several memorable movies

Renowned director and producer Muktha V. Srinivasan died on Tuesday night in the city. He was 88 years old. The veteran film-maker directed his first film Mudhalaali in 1957. Starring S.S. Rajendran, the film won the national award for the best feature film in Tamil that year.

Through his career in films spanning over six decades, Srinivasan directed several memorable films, including PaanchaliNinaivil NindravalSuryagandhiSimla Special and Polladhavan and had worked with several notable actors including Sivaji Ganesan, Rajinikanth, Kamal Haasan and former Chief Minister Jayalalithaa.

Suryagandhi, which was released in 1973 starring R. Muthuraman and Jayalalithaa, was digitally re-mastered and re-released in 2016 and Srinivasan had spoken about how the former Chief Minister had given one of her best performances in the movie.

Srinivasan, who described himself as a ‘die-hard book lover’ to The Hindu back in 2009, had also authored several non-fiction and fictional works including novels, short story collections and essays.

‘A good orator’

Veteran script writer and playwright Chitralaya Gopu recalled the days when they used to meet regularly to exchange ideas. “We didn’t work together. But we often discussed cinema. He used to be called as Mudhalali Srinivasan during the 1950s after his debut film as a director. He planned his films well and released them on time,” said Mr. Gopu.

He founded the production house, Muktha Films, in 1961 and produced several films with his brother Muktha V. Ramaswamy, including the Kamal Haasan starrer Nayagan directed by Mani Rathnam. He has produced and directed nearly 50 films.

“He was a good orator and spoke fluently in English. I met him only two months ago when three of us, including film director C.V. Rajendran who too recently passed away, were honoured in a function,” recalled Mr. Gopu.

Srinivasan was also remembered by political colleagues as an “old Congressman” who remained a close friend of G.K. Moopanar.

Political stint

Srinivasan left the Congress to join Moopanar’s Tamil Maanila Congress. He was appointed general secretary and contested the 1999 general elections on the party’s ticket from the South Madras constituency, finishing third.

When Moopanar’s son G.K. Vasan merged the TMC with the Tamil Nadu Congress Committee, Srinivasan returned, and in 2002, was made a vice-president.

Interestingly, “BJP’s State headquarters in T. Nagar is located in a building once owned by Srinivasan,” recalled B.S. Gnanadesikan, senior vice-president of the TMC who was also a TNCC president.

Srinivasan had reportedly, on former Chief Minister and actor M.G. Ramachandran’s insistence, helped with the founding of the Tamil Film Producers Council.

source: http://www.thehindu.com / The Hindu / Home> Entertainment> Movies / by Special Correspondent / Chennai – May 30th, 2018

Showing the right legal recourse is her forte

S. Senthamarai. | Photo Credit: R. Ashok
S. Senthamarai. | Photo Credit: R. Ashok

This volunteer helps the needy people in getting justice

When she is not attending to her duties as the leader of her Self-Help Group Federation at DHAN Foundation, S. Senthamarai can be seen reading legal procedures in India. This 54-year-old legal aid volunteer works twice a week at several clinics stipulated by the District Legal Services Authority. She provides counselling and direction to people belonging to low-income groups, who come to places such as offices of the Commissioner of Police, Superintendent of Police, district court, High Court, Madurai Collectorate and Social Welfare department in search of justice. She tells Sanjana Ganesh that in the six years of volunteering service, she has seen a wide range of helpless people from the lowest rungs of society.

Having come from a humble background herself, she says connecting with their plight came easily. “I struggled to make my children study because my husband had a lot of debts. I joined the DHAN Madurai Federation with several other women from my community. Soon, I picked up and eventually became their leader. The senior people at the DHAN Foundation felt I had legal acumen and sent me for a two-day camp. After that, I began volunteering at Legal Aid Clinics,” she says.

For Ms. Senthamarai, the legal world has been her greatest learning curve yet. Her interest has grown with time, along with apathy for the voiceless. She provides counselling and shows people directions to legal courses. She helps in getting the right guidance for resolving disputes in courts, tribunals or other authorities. She also helps petitioners in finding lawyers who take up their cases pro-bono or for a meagre sum.

She focuses on civil cases such as property disputes, education loan issues and motor accident claims. Her area of interest, however, is women’s welfare. “I once helped a woman whose husband cheated her, sold her kidney, her jewellery and house because he had many loans. He went to Dubai and abandoned her.

When she realised her folly, she went to Dubai in search of him, but could not find him. After some clandestine work at some houses to feed herself and her two children, she was deported as she didn’t have valid documents. “At this stage, I helped her procure Aadhaar and family cards. This case changed my life,” Ms. Senthamarai says.

As a basic piece of legal advice, Senthamarai amma (as she is fondly called), says: “Read all your documents before you put your signature.”

source: http://www.thehindu.com / The Hindu / Home> News> Cities> Madurai / May 28th, 2018

TN man donates golden sword worth ₹1.75 crore to Tirumala deity

The swarna surya katari that was donated to the Tirumala temple on Tuesday. | Photo Credit: G.P. Shukla
The swarna surya katari that was donated to the Tirumala temple on Tuesday. | Photo Credit: G.P. Shukla

Thanga Dorai, a noted textile merchant from Teni, Tamil Nadu, on Tuesday donated a golden sword worth ₹1.75 crore to the famous hill temple of Lord Venkateswara on Tirumala.

About six kilograms of gold is estimated to have gone into the making of the golden sword or ‘surya katari’.

Mr. Dorai handed over the precious offering to the temple authorities during the Suprabhata Seva early this morning.

source: http://www.thehindu.com / The Hindu / Home> News> States> Andhra Pradesh / by G.P. Shukla / Tirumala – May 29th, 2018

Butterflies of Tamil Nadu captured in a book

P. Mohanprasath and N. Satheesh with their book Butterflies of Tamil Nadu in Chennai.   | Photo Credit: K.V. Srinivasan
P. Mohanprasath and N. Satheesh with their book Butterflies of Tamil Nadu in Chennai. | Photo Credit: K.V. Srinivasan

It is the culmination of a two-year project

Did you know that Tamil Nadu has 326 species of butterflies identified so far? And did you know that the fragile vannathu poochi (or pattaam poochi) we chased as children are important ecological indicators?

“If you find butterflies in parks or in your gardens, it means these areas are fine for living. Butterflies are very sensitive to environmental changes and will migrate if they cannot survive,” explains N. Satheesh, Conservator of Forests, Tamil Nadu Forest Plantation Corporation Limited (TAFCORN), Tiruchi.

Mr. Satheesh, along with P. Mohanprasath, who works with the NGO, Act of Butterfly, has authored a book titled Butterflies of Tamil Nadu. Volunteers with the Act of Butterfly study the activities of the pretty insects, including their annual mass migration.

The book, with colourful photographs of 316 species found in the State, was recently released in the city.

The culmination of a two-year project, the book explains the ecological role of butterflies, their life cycle, and a list of 32 butterfly ‘hotspots’ in the State. It would make a good addition to any library.

Tamil Nadu has two butterfly parks — one in Srirangam in Tiruchi, and another in the Arignar Anna Zoological Park in Vandalur near Chennai. “If you want to watch butterflies, the best time is either between 6 a.m. and 9 a.m. or from 3 p.m. to 6 p.m. When it’s hot, they would rather hide in the shade than flit around in the sun,” Mr. Satheesh says. The book is priced at ₹ 900.

Copies can be purchased at the Forest Department office in Saidapet after a few days.

source: http://www.thehindu.com / The Hindu / Home> News> Cities> Chennai / by Deepa H. Ramakrishnan / Chennai – May 29th, 2018

Two new coir clusters to provide jobs to 320 artisans

The two new coir clusters recently set up at Uthiyur and Puliyampatti through government and beneficiary contributions is all set to provide employment to 320 artisans and increase the turnover from the said regions by ₹10 crore this financial year.

The targeted developments in terms of revenue and employment are planned to be achieved by undertaking cluster development activities to the tune of ₹8.55 crore, which would be a combination of grants from Union government and beneficiary contributions.

Of the outlay, the government grant portion was ₹5.78 crore.

“We are aiming to increase the turnover from the Uthiyur region from the present ₹27.6 crore to ₹31.74 crore before the end of the current fiscal year through an annual production of 8,760 tonnes of matting and biodegradable coir geo textiles like soil erosion control woven blankets”, Anitha Jacob, deputy director of Coir Board, which is the nodal agency of cluster activities, told The Hindu.

Similarly, the cluster activities at Puliyampatti region would be catapulting the turnover from the present ₹34.06 crore to a projected ₹39.16 crore in the current financial year through a combination of exports as well as domestic sale of products like coir pith and coir growbag.

Common facility centres

As part of the cluster activities, common facility centres were set up at both the clusters where the artisans could collectively use provisions such as fibre extraction equipment, growbag manufacturing gadgets and pith block making facility, among others.

The numbers of units involved in the manufacturing of various coir products too were expected to go up by another 10 to 20 units in each of the clusters because of the enhanced support.

Special purpose vehicles

To streamline activities, Special Purpose Vehicles have been constituted in two clusters with the representation of beneficiaries and officials from the Coir Board and ITCOT Consultancy Services.

source: http://www.thehindu.com / The Hindu / Home> News> Cities> Coimbatore / by R. Vimal Kumar / Tirupur – May 28th, 2018

Lawrence School celebrates 160th founder’s day

Chief of the Naval Staff Admiral Sunil Lanba reviewing the parade at Lawrence School, Lovedale, on Saturday.
Chief of the Naval Staff Admiral Sunil Lanba reviewing the parade at Lawrence School, Lovedale, on Saturday.

The Lawrence School in Lovedale, under the aegis of the HRD Ministry, celebrated its 160th Founder’s Day on Saturday.

Following exhibitions in Science, Math, Art and Humanities, an Equestrian Display by the School’s Riding Club and an English play, “Peter Pan” was staged on Friday.

The second day of the celebrations commenced with the parade, keeping in line with the military antiquity and tradition of The Lawrence School, Lovedale.

Chief of the Naval Staff Admiral Sunil Lanba inspected the parade along with Headmaster Rajan Narayanan.

The Beating Retreat marked the end of the 2nd day celebration.

source: http://www.thehindu.com / The Hindu / Home> News> Cities> Coimbatore / by Staff Reporter / Udhagamandalam – May 27th, 2018

The jasmine with a GI tag

Madurai malli | Photo Credit: G. Moorthy
Madurai malli | Photo Credit: G. Moorthy

It’s a hot, uninviting terrain but it is here that the Madurai malli thrives and grows

Off the Madurai-Aruppukottai highway, a little away from the airport, a road winds through solitary palm trees. On either side is burnished landscape in various shades of brown glistening in the summer sun. Shielded within this terrain are acres and acres of fields dotted with dark green plants — the Madurai malli. Groups of women are at work, plucking flowers and weeding, and by 10 a.m., they are done for the day.

“A good worker can make about ₹7,000 a month,” says M. Ramar, 42, who owns about 12 acres of land in the tiny village of Melaupplikundu. His wife, Lakshmi, also works with the women in the fields, and their day begins as early as 3 a.m. Armed with headlamps, they make their way to the farm to pick the plump white buds and don’t stop until it’s time for the morning rice gruel.

By 10 a.m., Ramar completes five trips to the flower market in Villapuram, carrying 20 kilos of flowers on his motorcycle. It’s about 20 km from his village to the market, and Ramar zips on the highway. Even the smallest delay can cause the buds to unfurl in the heat.

Ramar is one of the hundreds of farmers in the district that’s famous for the Madurai malli, the jasmine with a GI tag. Madurai and Dindigul together have some 2,000 hectares under cultivation.

But Madurai is only the second home of the eponymous flower. Its birthplace is actually a tiny village called Thangachimadam on Rameswaram island, some 160 km or four hours away.

****

It all began in the summer of ’50. Betel leaf armer T. Subbiah Kumar stepped out of his home in the blinding light. The cool sea breeze had long dissipated and Thangachimadam, just 3 km inland, was simmering. Farmers in this little speck of a village lived off the cultivation of betel leaves. Lost in thought, Kumar made his way to the farm. Of late, men from the island had been steadily leaving for the mainland in search of work. Betel leaf cultivation being labour intensive, Kumar was finding the going hard. He planned to visit Coimbatore Agricultural College soon, hoping to get a new high-yielding variety.

___________________________

The paper trail
  • In 1962, The Hindu started using an Indian Airlines special flight to transport bundles of the newspaper to the temple town of Madurai. By September the next year it had bought its own aircraft, a Heron. The then small military airport in Madurai was used to land the plane and offload the bundles. As the aircraft had to return empty, it struck someone that jasmine flowers could be loaded in it for the export market. Nagarathnam of S.N. Exports chuckles. “It was The Hindu that opened up the world market for Madurai malli.”

_____________________________

The visit did take place and it changed not just Kumar’s life but also the landscape of Thangachimadam. In the agricultural college, he saw a jasmine plant being layered and, on a whim, brought back one sapling for the women at home. Once the plant grew, instead of propagating it using the layering method, he just cut a stem and plonked it a little distance away.

In a few weeks he was stunned to see the stem sprout a lush growth of tiny new limbs. In no time, his farm was teeming with rows and rows of jasmine saplings. At this time, jasmine farmers in Madurai and its peripheries were using only the layering method to propagate the flower. It took a long time for the plant to take root in the gravelly earth with its thick under-layer of clayey soil. Though the perfume was heady, the flowers were few and enough only to supply the local market.

One day, S. Nagarathnam, a flower-seller’s son who owned a few acres of farmland in Madurai, stumbled upon the Thangachimadam saplings. He planted a few on his plot and found that not only did they take root immediately, they also flowered profusely.

According to Kumar’s son Thavasi, who now runs a nursery in Thangachimadam, this realisation was the eureka moment for the Madurai malli. As we talk, he bends down to tug at a little sapling and uproots it for me to see. There is one primary root hidden in a maze of secondary roots. The sandy terrain and loose soil help the roots penetrate deep and proliferate. Till the saplings take root, coconut fronds are woven and layered like a shamiana to protect them from the harsh sun.

MaduraiMalli02CF28may2018

Once fresh leaves spring forth, the fronds are removed and the plants bask in the heat. In three months, the saplings are uprooted, tied in bundles, and sent for replanting, some as far away as Mumbai.

But without a doubt, the jasmine is at its seductive best only in the hinterlands of Madurai. Replanted here, the hundreds of secondary roots cling to the gravelly soil while the primary root goes deep into the clayey soil. In this uninviting terrain, the Madurai malli is reborn, hiding a heady perfume within its thick petals.

****

It is in summer that jasmine thrives. Of course, the plants need plenty of water. Like other farmers, Ramar too has deepened his borewell and invested in drip irrigation. The regulated supply helps the plants, he says.

A three-acre plot is divided into three sections, with plants in one acre watered for 10 days continuously. On Day 11, the buds are ready for harvest. The plants flower continuously for the next 20 days. On Day 20, the second acre is watered and by the time the first acre stops flowering, the second begins to bloom. As Ramar says, flowering is continuous in summer; daily average yields can be 9 kg per acre. The regimentation maintains a steady supply to the market.

Summer showers can be scary though, says Ramar. If it rains two days at a stretch, the flowering is prodigious, leading to a glut in the market. From mid-December to mid-February, when mist covers the region, the plants lie dormant. An occasional bud or two may be healthy enough to fetch the farmers a good price.

****

The Madurai malli hides a heady perfume within its soft petals. | Photo Credit: G. Moorthy
The Madurai malli hides a heady perfume within its soft petals. | Photo Credit: G. Moorthy

Madurai malli is a capricious child, says Nagarathnam, 70, proprietor of S.N. Exports, as he lovingly scoops out a handful of blooms from a sack. It is 6.30 a.m. and the flower market at Villapuram is bustling. Farmers carrying sacks of flowers enter the market, which is located in the middle of a housing board colony and roofed with corrugated sheets.

Nagarathnam’s grandson Mahesh, an engineer who left his job in Saudi Arabia to look after the family business, sits at a table on a raised platform. Weighing the flowers brought in from various parts of Madurai, he and a few others place half a kilo each of the tight buds into plastic baskets.

In an hour, P. Mukamma, 65, arrives, carrying a little tiffin-carrier, picks up a basket, and settles down against a pillar to start stringing the buds together. She is soon joined by about 50 other women, all stringing jasmine.

In another corner, some men are busy soaking gel sheets in water. Once the little chambers in the sheets puff up, they are placed in a refrigerator. By 11.30 a.m, P. Pothiraja, 28, is at his desk, readying thermocol cartons. Some men wrap the buds, now all in strands, in thick paper sheets, while others pack them in plastic bags.

These are all brought to Pothiraja who lines the thermocol cartons with butter paper and frozen gel sheets before putting in the precious cargo. Within the next hour, the cartons are on their way to Madurai airport from where the flowers will fly to Singapore, Malaysia, Dubai, Canada and the U.S. Two tonnes of jasmine are exported every day.

N. Karthikeyan, Nagarathnam’s son, says the packaging is good enough to survive the long journey, and the buds do not bloom until the carton is opened, and sometimes not till two whole days later. But exporting is risky business, and Karthikeyan recalls the time an entire consignment to Dubai went to waste after a worm was discovered nestling in the flowers. But business is otherwise good, he says, and as long as women love flowers and people need them for pujas and weddings and parties, there will always be a market for the Madurai malli.

beulah.r@thehindu.co.in

source:http://www.thehindu.com / The Hindu / Home> Field Notes> Society / by Beulah Rose / May 26th, 2018

Mutharaiyar birth anniversary peaceful

Trichy :

The 1343 birth anniversary of the Perumbidugu Mutharaiyar went off peacefully with the local leaders cutting across party lines and garlanding the statue in the city on Wednesday.

The celebrations commenced with two state ministers Vellamandi M Natarajan and S Valarmathi and several other leaders from the AIADMK as well as the Mutharaiyar community associations garlanding the statue on Wednesday morning.

Since the district administration organised the celebration, district collector K Rajamani, AIADMK MPs P Kumar, T Rathinavel, and MLAs participated in the celebrations and garlanded the statue of the king.

AMMK deputy general secretary TTV Dhinakaran’s visit with his supporters created some ruckus at the venue as his men entered into arguments with the police. The arguments erupted after the police refused to allow his van to be parked near the police outpost. His supporters left after raising slogans against the police. Dhinakaran also garlanded the statue and left after addressing the press.

source: http://www.timesofindia.indiatimes.com / The Times of India / News> City News> Trichy News / TNN / May 24th, 2018