Friday 6 December 2013

CULTURE - 2: BADAGA DANCE ON WORLD AIDS DAY 2103


BADAGA DANCE ON WORLD AIDS DAY 2013

BY P S SUNDAR

Badaga is the predominant community of the Nilgiris hilly district in South India.   Badagas have a distinct dialect which Kannadigas and Tamils can follow rather easily. There is no script for this language.   Badagas are basically an agrarian community and cultivate tea and hilly vegetables. 
Now, Badagas live in many countries but all hail from the Nilgiris.  Among the specific highlights of Badaga culture are Hethaiamman festival, mass feeding (Annadanam), telling hospitality, white dress, Avara Othukka meals and their dance.    

Badagas stage their dance at all important functions.  On the World AIDS Day awareness campaign organised on Dec 1, 2013, by Nilgiris Branch of Family Planning Association of India (FPAI) at Kakkuchi village, some 22 kilometres from Coonoor, the villagers, including adolescents, took a vow to keep their hamlet AIDS-free.  FPAI Nilgiris President T Rangaiah (who also belongs to Badaga community) and Administrator Dr K S Pothi and Manager G Sundara Raj assured the villagers of their support.

I have captured this in this photo:




Hailing this, the children of Kakkuchi village dressed in traditional Badaga attire staged a captivating Badaga cultural dance.  I took a video of it and have updated in Youtube which can be seen in: 



Herewith a photo for a glimpse of the dance:



FPAI honoured Village Head M Bojan, Youth Leader R Gandhi and Women leader N Sumathi.    

Wednesday 4 December 2013

LIFE ENRICHMENT - 4 : CARING FOR ELDERS, A PASSION AND MISSION

CARING FOR ELDERS, A PASSION AND MISSION

BY P S SUNDAR


A tea small grower couple has brought about a social renaissance in the tea hub of Denalai village, some 10 kilometres from Coonoor.

Thanks to them, 15 deserted senior citizens (as on Nov 28, 2013) including nine women are benefiting from free accommodation, food, bedding with attached bathroom, clothes, visits to worship places, personal hygiene including hot water bath, haircut and cloth washing.

So, it is not yet another old age home for the affluent but for the deserted poor. It all happened when N Ramamurthy, a health inspector in Tamil Nadu Government, and his wife Rajeswari, a tea small grower, decided to use the income from tea leaves for taking care of deserted old people. 

“While working as leprosy inspector, I was moved to see elderly patients suffering for want of timely care.  So, in 2005, we accommodated two orphaned elders in our house.  As three more sought help, we formed M N Trust in my parents’ name and converted our old house in our tea field into the Home for deserted aged”, Ramamurthy told me.  

However, it was not easy because tea income was insufficient for construction works.  Pumping in his salary, Ramamurthy has created three dormitories, bathrooms, kitchen and prayer hall.   “The 400-square-foot old house has now become the 1,600 square-foot asylum.   We have provided cots and blankets. Some inmates had died and we did decent cremation”, Ramamurthy said.  

It was R Muralidharan, Operations Manager, Gateway Hotel Coonoor, who took me to this Home first on June 29, 2013.  I took visitors to the place subsequently. Every time I visited this place, I noticed changes .. some inmates died, some newcomers, area expansion, ceiling rising, solar water heater etc etc.."I want to use my superannuation earnings for finishing the infrastructural works here, so that after me, those who manage the Home need spend only on providing food and clothes to the inmates", Ramamurthy tells me periodically.

Caring for elders is the passion of this couple as I have written in this article published in The New Indian Express on July 1, 2013:





I have documented the couple's contribution as "Unsung Heroes in Tea Community" in this article in The Assam Review and Tea News (July 2013):  


The Gateway Hotel Coonoor has been serving this Home as part of its corporate social activity.  "We have been periodically serving food to the inmates.  Our staff members have also personally contributed their mite.  In effect, we have assisted the Home with chairs, tables, plates and blankets", D Antony Gerald, Gateway's Human Resources Manager, told me.  This photo taken by me shows Muralidharan, Chef D Ramalingam, Housekeeping Head R Nagaraj (second left) and Purchase Department Head S Siva (extreme left), serving food brought from their hotel to the inmates:



Interestingly, the Home is sensitising youth on caring for elders as these photos I had taken of the Notices displayed there indicate: 





I had documented this in my article in The New Indian Express on July 31, 2013:


  
What would have happened if this Home failed to accommodate some such elders?  "They would have ended up as beggars and some would have committed suicide", Ramamurthy told me which kindled my writing this article in The New Indian Express (Aug 16, 2013): 



And, the Home teaches youth to experience the unparalleled joy of giving.  I asked Vaishnavi, a XII standard student, to look at the face of the receiver (a) when he/she comes to receive the blankets she was donating, (b) when he/she actually receives them and (c) when he/she goes off with the blanket. Vaishnavi was moved to tears after this experience and she told me that her attitude to life has changed.  This was one of the pictures I had snapped of Vaishnavi donating the blankets: 


  

And, the receivers also react with sentiments as only they can measure the benefit of the gift.  One inmate, for instance, asked Sruthi, visitor from Dubai, if she would sit on her lap just like her grand daughter.  And, I snapped this unusual photo:



Sruthi also pleased the inmates by showing photos she had clicked of them.  Many were eager to see how they looked as this photo I had snapped shows:



If such small pleasures can be big for the deserted elders, they experience immeasurable happiness when people visit them as these photos taken by me show -- in the first, visitors from Dubai led by K G Veeraraghavan and his wife Geetha and the second, from Thrissur led by Usha (seen with Ramamurthy's daughter Seema in the photo):






'Visitors' means, support, monetary and moral, to The Home. All the above were donors.  "To celebrate my 16th birthday, my parents and relatives had lined up 16 mega events -- visit to this Home, contribution and service to the inmates was one of them.  Flying in from Dubai where I was born and growing, I learnt a lot from this visit", Sruthi told me. 

The Rotary Club of the Nilgiris which has funded the construction of gender-based toilets, approach road and area expansion, has also contributed solar heating systems as this photograph shows of Rotary District Governor Dr Senthilnathan Siva dedicating them on November 12, 2013:



And, my article on Rotary's contribution appeared in The New Indian Express on July 7, 2013:



I had referred to this in my article, "Nostalgia - 4" in this Blog.

Ramamurthy can be contacted on phone: (91) (0) 9843915680.

Monday 2 December 2013

LIFE ENRICHMENT - 3: LEARNING LIFE THROUGH LENS

LEARNING LIFE THROUGH LENS

BY P S SUNDAR

I happen to have photographed a photographer himself!

Dethan Punalur is a celebrated photographer of Coonoor who has won many awards for his captivating snaps on nature.  He has staged 31 exhibitions by now.  His creativity is not through manipulation of lens but looking at nature with a 'different eye', a 'third eye'!   People come across these subjects in their day-to-day life but seldom do they see them the way Dethan does as I had captured in this photograph of this photographer and the article published in The New Indian Express on Oct 8, 2009:





And, his snaps on monkeys are a treat for eyes and mind as I have grouped here:



Of these, regarding the left middle photo, my exclusive article, "Monkey's grief Eternised" published in The New Indian Express on Oct 26, 2012 (see below) documents a mother monkey grieving over her dead baby, a photograph that speaks volume and has won 'National Geographic' recognition.  Regarding the right middle photo, my article, "Monkey Manners: Adults scold the brats" published in The New Indian Express on Nov 19, 2012, (see below) describes the father-son-grooming in monkeys!!

Of the rest, the left top shows monkey counting 'one..two..three'...right top shows monkey examining the expiry date before drinking the juice!..left bottom is monkey's prayer to The Cross while right bottom is running race..I have documented this monkey behaviour in my article in Dec 2012-Feb 2013 issue of Contemporary Tea Time (see below) 





  


And this study on monkey behaviour is incomplete without this article of mine published in The New Indian Express on Sep 14, 2013:



Dethan's photographic study on Coonoor could easily become a document on landscape history as years roll by as I have recorded in this article published in The New Indian Express on March 20, 2013:



And, there is a book authored (no, photographed!!) by Dethan as I have enumerated in these articles published in The New Indian Express on June 13, 2012:




On Christmas day (Dec 25, 2013), Dethan shared with me a unique photo showing a symmetrical line-up of monkeys with two babies, frightened but alert, at left and right end while five adults were calmly sitting in between them

“They had a hunger-less satisfied countenance which made me feel that after a sumptuous Christmas lunch, they all had assembled for a family group photograph!   And so like a sincere photographer, I clicked as they gave me this unique pose!   Soon thereafter, however, they made their way back to the forests as thick mist started obstructing visibility”, Dethan detailed.

This is the family Group Photo after Christmas lunch!


And this New Year (2014), Dethan shared with me as Greetings a photo he had taken.  The message is, while all along monkeys had been travelling by jumping from place to place, this is a photo to show their organised way of climbing through a ladder!   "Probably, for the monkeys, this is the modern technology", Dethan said. Herewith this photo:



Just as the Nilgiris is famous for monkeys, it is famous for hotels as well!  So, what happens when a monkey visits a hotel served by another monkey?  This is how it will be with the waiter monkey asking the guest monkey politely, "Anything more, Sir?"..notes Dethan in this photo he shared with me on Feb 21, 2014:



On Vijayadasami day (Oct 3, 2014), Dethan sent me this photo showing monkeys' engagement with rice..Dethan wrote, "In Kerala, today is Vidhyaramabam with 'Hari' and 'Shri' but here, it is 'Ari' (rice) and Sthree (female)!



On Nov 4, 2014, Dethan sent me this photo which is another study of monkeys linking with human behaviour.  Here, one monkey is tickling the other to make him laugh as Dethan put it, "Laughter is the best medicine".. when you don't laugh by yourself, tickling does the trick!