Saturday 27 December 2014

NOSTALGIA - 10::


COONOOR FAMILY THAT SURVIVED TSUNAMI RE-VISITS VELANAKANNI






Wednesday 10 December 2014


LIFE ENRICHMENT 7: ENHANCING COMMUNICATION SKILLS IN CHILDREN


CHILDREN EXCEL IN COMMUNICATION WHEN YOU LISTEN

by P S Sundar

Coonoor:   Encouraging children to narrate actual happenings from their life will sharpen their communication and observation skills.

This was demonstrated by Think Tank Management Resources Group (MARG-TT) in Coonoor on Sunday.

Eleven year old Rohan Gupta, sixth standard student of Riverside Public School, Kotagiri, kept listeners spellbound with excellent narration of his school tour to Andaman using some photos but without any notes.  The whole exercise was impromptu as he had no clue that he had to brief and the ambience was informal and homely.

Sitting on a sofa, he gave a broad description of Veer Savarkar’s imprisonment and suffering in the cellular jail, the highlight of light and sound show, the exhibits at Samudrika Marine and Anthropological Museum and Jarawa Tribe’s lifestyle, experience of water sports besides features of Havelock Island, Radha Nagar Beach, Neil Island, Elephant Beach, Baratang Island.  And, there was long description about the food -- what was available, what wasn't, what he liked, what he didn't and how it was different to his normal food.

“This arose when he realised that he has good listeners.  Children excel in communication when they are guided on proper words and body language”, MARG-TT co-ordinator Shyamala said.

These photos I had taken of Rohan engrossed in describing his school tour to Andaman...

Tuesday 18 November 2014

NOSTALGIA 9:


LINGAN’S 50TH DEATH ANNIVERSARY TODAY

BY P S SUNDAR


Nov 19, 2014

Today marks the 50th demise anniversary of Shri N Lingan.  In this context, I recall my two major articles and photos on him as documented in this blog as under:

1. Lingan's contributions recalled with gratitude::

http://pssundarthinktank.blogspot.in/2013/11/nostalgia-3-lingans-contributions.html

2.  Re-dedication to follow Lingan's great ideals::

http://pssundarthinktank.blogspot.in/2013/11/nostalgia-4-re-dedication-to-follow.html

Today, my article appears in The New Indian Express with Lingan's photo as a tribute on his 50th demise anniversary.   Quite a few summary of earlier tributes as well.

NAME A ROAD AFTER LINGAN

 BY  P S SUNDAR


Today marks the 50th demise anniversary of N Lingan who did Badaga, the predominant community of Nilgiris, proud by holding several firsts to his credit. 

Lingan was born on Nov 13, 1908, and died on Nov 19, 1964.  

“In 1933, our father became the first Badaga Lawyer and also subsequently President of Nilgiris Bar Association.   He had progressive thoughts on women and so, I became the second Badaga woman to go to University”, Lingan’s eldest daughter Leela Raju (79) said.

“Our father was the first Indian Chairman of Udhagamandalam municipal council (Oct 15, 1947 to May 1, 1955) after Independence.  He played key role in establishing Ooty’s new market and many projects but opposed those which injured ecology.  In recognition of his services, we have appealed to Government to name a prominent road in Ooty after him”, Lingan’s son L Kannan, General Manager, Fernhill Palace, said.

“Our father was senate member of Madras University and played significant role in Ooty getting the Government Arts College.  He was Trustee of Lawley Institute and Assembly Rooms and member of Nilgiri Library – all prestigious institutions of Ooty”, recalled another son Dr Sreedharan. 

“Prominent personalities including Lord Mountbatten, Prime Minister Nehru and state Chief Ministers P S Kumarasamy Raja and Kamaraj had visited his office and home which helped him bring significant improvements to Ooty town and our village Thangadu”, said his son Rajaram who lives in Thangadu village. 

Lingan’s eldest son Advocate Narayanan passed away recently.  Besides the above, his daughters Suseela, Indira, Kasthuri and Bhanumathi play significant role in eco-friendly farming activities in rural Nilgiris. 



Monday 20 October 2014



PS SUNDAR'S ARTICLE ON HIS SON - 7  :::

OCT 21, 2014


NOBEL LAUREATE AND NOBLE SOUL


BY P S SUNDAR

I do not know this year’s Peace Nobel Laureate Malala Yousafzai of Pakistan any more than most Indians know.   All the information is what media, print and electronic, have given us since a terrorist shot her in her school bus on Oct 9, 2012, when she was 15 years aged.  She survived, thanks to the timely treatment at Queen Elizabeth Hospital in Birmingham, UK, which, perhaps, is the cause for this Nobel Prize for, in the event of, God forbid, the misfortune succumbing to the attack, she would not have had the honour of addressing the UN as she did to a standing ovation in July last year or launching the Malala charity fund or meeting Queen Elizabeth or US President Barak Obama – all major events that helped her enjoy the Nobel honour now.

Despite all these and in unquestionable reverence to her contribution to education of girl child in denied communities, I wonder if the Norwegian Parliamentary Committee which bestowed Nobel Prize on her was right in making the 60 year aged Indian Kailash Satyarthi to share the honour with this 17 years aged girl.   Not only the incomparable age, but even the contribution of Satyarthi is beyond match – he is credited to have freed about 80,000 child labourers across India over 30 years with more than 70,000 individuals and 750 civil society organisations working for his movement.   He had also been hit by anti-social elements.  But, admittedly, most of us did not know of him nor the Government honoured him at the highest level but may be, now that he is a Nobel laureate, he might be honoured with Bharath Ratna soon. 

So, what Satyarthi has done to deserve Nobel Prize is far higher than what Malala has done and for all she has done in this young age, the very honour to address UN and receive standing ovation is the highest recognition.  She can and must do much more in the years to come and, perhaps, Nobel Prize could have been awarded in consideration of all her work in due course.  To some extent, I tend to observe that the Nobel Prize should be for merit rather than mercy. 

Having opined thus, I cannot resist applauding the magnanimity of the Nobel awarding team in selecting Malala for the coveted prize because she has, braving terrorism, taught the elders the need to educate girls.  

That’s where I see heart-moving comparison with our son Vignesh who left us this day forever in 2003, just 16 days after his 16th birthday.  Like Malala’s, Vignesh’s life was full of teaching for us.  My wife and I learnt a lot from him – 

bravery as he braved even growing physical disorder while confined to wheelchair with day-to-day normalcy, 

positive approach as he encouraged even the terminally-disillusioned parents with smiling countenance to create normal ambiance, 

maturity as he understood and accepted the shortness of his life caused by the consuming gravity of the incurable muscular dystrophy, 

endurance as he made every ailing second an enjoyable moment, 

quest for improvement as he acquired knowledge and talent unmindful of the fast-approaching end to life, 

motivation as he helped everyone possible with this knowledge so-acquired to advance in life, 

humaneness as he proved to us the joy of caring and giving to the world the whole of our body and 

leadership as he proved his importance more in his absence than in his presence. 

Truly, as William Wordsworth said, “The child is the father of Man”. 

Malala is a Nobel Laureate; Vignesh was (is) a Noble Soul.


 


Wednesday 30 April 2014

LIFE ENRICHMENT 6: MONETARILY POOR ... MENTALLY RICH

LIFE ENRICHMENT 6:

MONETARILY POOR ... MENTALLY RICH

BY P S SUNDAR


This is an unusual happening I have documented in my columns -- a poor lady with two sons picking up a deserted female child and growing her up as her own daughter..I saw Sundari at Shri Balachandran -- Smt Geetha Balachandran's house in Kumbakonam last..


Saturday 15 March 2014

NOSTALGIA 8: MOTHER THERESA OF MY FAMILY

NOSTALGIA 8: 

MOTHER THERESA OF MY FAMILY

BY P.S. SUNDAR

March 16, 2014
I write this on June 20, 2008 – the 23rd anniversary day of my wedding with Shyamala.  Soon after getting up at 5 am, I prostrated gratefully in front of the photos of my late parents and her late parents who had the foresight to arrange the alliance resulting in Shyamala becoming the most precious gift of my life. Events flashed back as I remembered my describing Shyamala as ‘Mother Theresa of my family’.

In October 1987, we were blessed with a son whom we named Vignesh.   He grew up like other children until he started going to school in Coonoor when we discovered that he had problems of walking fast, running or jumping.  Our friend, Dr K. S. Pothi, diagnosed that Vignesh was suffering from that rare disorder called muscular dystrophy.   “There is no cure for this growing disorder.  It wastes the muscles, makes the patient immobile, cripples him to wheel chair and chokes the breathing system to death.  The end can come any time”, he said.

Shocked we were, but from then onwards, it was an unending trial of looking for light in the long tunnel.   Acupuncture, acupressure, homeopathy, ayurveda, physiotherapy, callipers – the poor child underwent all tortures in the name of treatment.   One evening while Vignesh was in fourth standard, he fell incurring a fracture, but never ever did he walk thereafter.  We came across Dr K Gunasekaran of GK Siddha Hospital in Perambur, Chennai, who instantly became our friend and helped a lot for treating Vignesh through ozhichal, pizhichal, othadam, oil massage etc.   Shyamala shifted to Chennai with Vignesh where he studied for eight years and I kept shuttling.   

We decided not to go for second child to give undivided attention to Vignesh.  He should not be treated as a rotten brinjal to be thrown away and fresh one bought for replacement.   Every working day, even when Vignesh was in Plus Two, Shyamala took him to school, attended to his toilet requirements, fed him and brought him back in the evening.  She bathed him.   She helped him to move pages, open books and on his computer in which, he was excellent.  Although there were servants, Shyamala had to physically lift him a few times each day.  She could never be away from him.  She did all this without a wrinkle on her face so, Vignesh should not  feel that he was a burden to us.

Shyamala received compliments when Vignesh bagged rank in Matriculation public exam.   But, on October 21, 2003, Vignesh, Plus-Two student, breathed his last.   His school Headmistress told me, “We used to pray that at least for all the trouble your wife took, Vignesh should be all right”.  That’s when I replied, “If there is someone whom I can describe as Mother Theresa in my family, it is she, it is she and none but she!”.


We wound up our Chennai establishment immediately and in the five three years, are living ‘together – still alone’ in Coonoor with both our parents and our only son dead.   Now, Shyamala is giving a new meaning to my life with her affection.  Today’s anniversary was in this backdrop.  

Friday 14 March 2014

NOSTALGIA 7: FAMILIARISING WITH SMS

BY P S SUNDAR.

March 14, 2014

That was the time SMS was catching up among youth. Elders had no clue to this .. in fact, they were even annoyed that English was being murdered!!!  In that backdrop, a nationalised bank came out with a Dictionary on SMS to help all communicate 'effectively' in the new environment. Herewith my article published in The New Indian Express on Jan 4, 2008:



Wednesday 5 March 2014

ICON 8: IDENTIFIED BIRDS

ICON 9:  IDENTIFIED BIRDS

BY P. S SUNDAR

March 5, 2014.

Over the last fortnight, I had been presenting separately the list of Bird species identified by the different teams during their survey on Big Bird Day in the Nilgiris on Feb 16, 2014. These are available in this Blog as ICON 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, & 7. 

For a closer understanding of the spread of the Bird species, I devoted substantial man-hours analysing them, to the extent possible, in categorised species.  My attempt is to exclude repeats but to include mention of all zones where each species has been identified.   This is an analysis of the compilation received from Jamuna Raju and G B Henriksen and a collaborative study of my articles of Birds identified in the different zones as appearing separately in the ICON series.

I can count 71 species and 192 total including sub-species. 

In the list below, the birds identified are shown as M for Masinagudi team guided by Octavious Bunshaw and Vijay Krishnaraj, UB for Upper Bhavani team guided by G B Henriksen and A Sivalingam, O for Ooty tea guided by A Bheeman Bheeman and N G Manojkumar, C for Coonoor team guided by Manoj Sethumadhavan and Allen Murphy and K for Kotagiri team guided by N Dharuman.   

In this context, I recall my observation in my article in this Blog under ICON: 2 BIRDS AS ICON OF THE NILGIRIS: 

I wish to record the fact that ornithology enthusiasts Jamuna Raju, SRK Ramasamy and G A Vikram created avian history in the Nilgiris on Feb 16, 2014, by opening the first chapter of Big Bird Day in the mountainous district where birds love to live and people love to watch the birds.  



Purple Sunbird (M, UB, O, K)
Crimson Sunbird (M, C)  
Loten’s Sunbird (M, C)
Purple-rumped Sunbird (M, UB)
==========
Spotted Dove (M, UB, O, C, K)
Laughing Dove (M)
Red-turtle Dove (M)
Eurasian Collared Dove (M)
Emerald Dove (M, UB, C, K)
==========
Rock Pigeon ( O, C)
Nilgiri Wood Pigeon (M, UB, O)
===========
Greenish Warbler (M, UB, O, C, K)
Tickell's Leaf Warbler (M, O, C)
Blyth’s Leaf Warbler (M, O)
Clamorous Reed Warbler (M)
Blyth's Reed Warbler (M, C, K)
Blyth's Leaf Warbler (M)
========== 
Nilgiri Flowerpecker (UB)
Pale -billed Flowerpecker (M, UB)
Thick-billed Flowerpecker (M, K)
Fulvous-breasted Woodpecker (M)
Yellow crowned Woodpecker (M)
Streak throated Woodpecker (M)
 Flower Pecker (O, C)
=============
Jungle Myna (M, UB, O, C, K)
Common Myna (M)
 Southern Hill Myna (K)
==========
Jungle Crow (M, UB, K)
House Crow (M, O, C)
 Long Billed Crow (O)
=============
Yellow-eyed Babbler (M)
Common Babbler (M)
Jungle Babbler (M, UB, C, K)
Puff throated Babbler (M, UB, C)
Yellow-billed Babbler (M)
 Indian Scimitar Babbler (UB, C, K)
 Rufous Babbler (UB, K)
 Twany Bellied Babbler (C)
=============
Red-whiskered Bulbul (M, O, C, K)
Red-vented Bulbul (M, UB, K)
Yellow-throated Bulbul (M, UB)
White-browed Bulbul (M)
Yellow –browed Bulbul (M, UB, C, K)
 Black Bulbul (UB, C, K)
 Grey-headed Bulbul (UB)
================ 
House sparrow (UB, C, K)
======
Pond Heron (M, O, K)
======= 
Shaheen Falcon (UB)
===========
 Black winged Kite (UB, K)
==========
Oriental-honey Buzzard (M, C)
 White-eyed Buzzard (UB, K)
 Common Buzzard (UB)
=======
Crested Serpent Eagle (M, UB, C, K)
Black Eagle (M, UB, K)
 Black Eagle juvenile (K)
 Eagle (O, K)
===========
Hoopoe (M, UB, C)
=========
Indian Robin (M, UB, C)
Oriental Magpie Robin (M, UB, C, K)
 Indian Blue Robin (C, K)
===========
Oriental White-eye (M, UB, O, C, K)
============
Rose-ringed Parakeet (M, C)
Plum-headed Parakeet (M)
Malabar Parakeet (M, UB, C, K)
==========
Bronzed Drongo (UB, K)

Black Drongo (M, O, C)
White-bellied Drongo (M, UB)
Racket tailed Dringo (K)
============== 
Indian Black Bird (UB, O, C)
===========
Barn Swallow (M, UB, O)
Red-rumped Swallow (M)
Wire-tailed Swallow (M)
Ashy wood Swallow (M, C)
Hill Swallow (M, C)
Streak Throated Swallow (M)
 Common Wood Swallow (UB)
========== 
Blue Rock Thrush (K)
 Blue-capped Rock Thrush (C, K)
 Orange-headed Thrush (K)
 Malabar Whistling Thrush (UB, C, K)
 Nilgiri Laughing Thrush (UB, O)
==========
Asian Fairy-bluebird (M, UB, C, K)
======
Shikra (M, UB, O, K)
========
Bar-winged Flycatcher Shrike (UB, O, C)
Long-tailed Shrike (M, UB, O, K)
Bay-backed Shrike (M)
Rufous-tailed Shrike (M)
Brown Shrike (M, C)
Common Wood Shrike (M)
========== 
Golden Oriole (UB, O)


Black Hooded Oriole (M, UB)
Eurasian Golden Oriole (M)

========
Small Minivet (UB, C, K)

========
Junglefowl (M, UB, O, C, K)
 Red spurfowl (UB)
 Indian Peafolwl (UB)
======== 
Brown Fish Owl (UB, K)
 Mottled Wood Owl (K)
 Indian Eagle Owl (UB)
========= 
Black and Orange flycatcher (UB, C, K)
 Grey-headed Canary Flycatcher (O, C, K)
 Asian Brown Flycatcher (UB, K)
 White-bellied Blue Flycatcher (C, K)
 Asian Paradise Flycatcher (UB, K)
 Rusty Tailed Flycatcher (C, K)
 Brown breasted Flycatcher (C)
 Nilgiri Flycatcher (UB, O, C, K)

Verditer Flycatcher (M, C, K)
Tickell's Blue Flycatcher(M, UB, C, K)
 Canary Flycatcher (UB)
 Kashmir Flycatcher (UB)
Brown-breasted Flycatcher (M)
=========== 
Velvet-fronted Nuthatch (UB, C, K)
Chestnut-bellied Nuthatch (M)
========= 
Malabar Trogan (UB, K)

==========
White- breasted Waterhen (M, O, C)
Greater Flameback (M, K)
 Lesser Flameback (UB)
=========
Vernal Hanging Parrot (M, UB, C, K)
===========
Ashy Prinia (M, UB, O, C)
Jungle Prinia (M)
Grey-breasted Prinia (M)
=========
Brahminy Starling (M)
Chestnut-tailed Starling (M)
Grey Wagtail (M, UB, O, C, K)
========== 
Forest Wagtail (K)
 White-throated Wagtail (O, C)
White-browed Wagtail (M)
Yellow Wagtail (M)
========
White-browed Fantail  (M)
White-spotted Fantail   (M)
======= 
White-Rumped Spinetail (UB)
========
Pied buschat (M, UB, O, C)
=======
Common Stonechat (M)
========
Common Iora (M, UB, C, K)
========
Great Tit (M, UB, O, C)
=====
Asian Koel (M, UB)
======
Greater Coucal (M, UB)
==========
Common Hawk Cuckoo (M, UB)
Pied Cuckoo (M)
Branded Bay Cuckoo (K)
Grey-bellied Cuckoo (UB) 
===========
Scaly-breasted Munia (M)
 White-Rumped Munia (K)
=========
Green Bee-eater (M, UB)
Blue-tailed Bee-eater (M)
Chestnut-headed Bee-eater (M, UB, C)
 Blue-bearded Bee-eater (UB, K)


=====
White-cheeked Barbet (M, UB, O, C)
Coppersmith Barbet (M, UB)

=========
Rosefinch (M, UB, O, C, K)
===========
White –throated Kingfisher (M, UB, K)
Common Kingfisher (M, C)
======== 
Swift (C)
 Crested Tree Swift (UB)
========
Golden-fronted Leaf Bird (M, K)
 Leaf Bird (UB, C)
========
 Whitte-bellied Tree Pie (C)
========
Nilgiri Pipit (M, UB, O)
 Paddy Field Pupit (UB)
======== 
Brown Cheeked Fulvetta (C, K)
========== 
Black Leaf Tit (UB)
 Black-lowered Tit (UB)
==========
Common Tailor Bird (M, UB)
============ 
Crested Goshawk (UB, C)
======
White -Rumped Vulture (M, K)
=======
Common Kestrel (M, UB, C)
====== 
Eurasian Blackbird (K)
==========
Jungle Bush Quail (M, UB)
======== 
Common Moorhen (O)
=======
Common House Martin (M, UB)
=====
Brahminy Kite (M, UB)
Black Kite (M, UB)
Black Shouldered Kite (M)
=========
Peacock (M)
========
Malabar Pied Hornbill
=========
Chestnut-shouldered Petronia (M)
Long-billed Vulture (M)
Little Spider Hunter (M)
Blue –faced Malkhoa (M)
Indian Silverbill (M)
Crested Treeswift (M)
Little Egret (M)
Eurasian Openbill (M)
Red-wattled Lapwing (M)
Darter  (M)
Lesser Cormorant (M)
Lesser Egret (M)
Intermediate Egret (M)
Glossy Ibis (M)
Green Sandpiper (M)
Humes white throat (M)
Indian Nightjar (M)
Indian Roller (M)