Category Archives: Arts, Culture & Entertainment

SACRED TREES OF BANGALORE – Tradition helps protect sacred trees in old Bengaluru areas

Even in the highly commercialised old Pete area of Bangalore, there remain some pockets of greenery that provide some fresh air to the locality. How did they survive? Here’s a study that explores reasons.

 

A sacred fig tree used as a place of worship. Pic: currentconservation.org
A sacred fig tree used as a place of worship. Pic: currentconservation.org

It is a common sight to see a tree protruding onto a pavement, often onto the street and sometimes even acting as a divider in the centre of the road. These are trees that have survived the axe-happy city-planning authorities just by their nature of being classified culturally as Sacred Trees.

Divya Gopal, Harini Nagendra elaborate on the importance of these trees and the reasons they have survived the onslaught of development in the city, in an article, Sacred trees in the urban landscape of Bangalore, India, published in Current Conservation, Maria Tengö.

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About the authors

Maria Tengö is a researcher at Stockholm Resilience Centre and co-theme leader of the Stewardship theme. Divya Gopal is a researcher at the Institute of Ecology, Technische Universität, Berlin. Harini Nagendra is Professor at School of Development, Azim Premji University, Bangalore.

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Sacred trees include sacred fig or peepal (Ficus religiosa), neem tree (Azadirachta indica), coconut tree (Cocos nucifera), banyan (Ficus benghalensis), Indian blackberry (Syzygium cumini), banni (Prosopis cineraria) and bael (Aegle marmelos). These trees are found around temples, heritage sites or the Ashwath Kattes and often as a single tree or group of trees on roadsides and other areas.

Sacred figs are tall, with huge trunk areas and large canopies. One can see sacred figs growing even in crevices of buildings! They have many medicinal properties and are biodiversity hotspots nurturing insects, birds, squirrels, bats and monkeys.

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What is Ashwatha Katte?
The Ashwath Katte is an area with a slightly raised platform, generally with sacred fig (Ficus religiosa) and neem tree (Azadirachta indica) planted together under which one often finds idols of serpent gods. Other sacred species, specifically the Ficus species, may also be found in a Katte.

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The authors had done a sample survey to map the tree cover of the Pete in Bengaluru – the quadrangle from Town Hall to Briand Square to Tank Bund Road to Avenue Road. Established in the 16th century, the Pete was the city centre and hub of commercial commercial activity that was interlaid with residential layouts. Today the Pete that has undergone several political, social, economic and geographic changes appears congested to us. However a small numbers of trees were found to be surviving – most of them sacred trees, predominantly sacred figs forming tiny islands of green!

Places of urban greenery remaining in old Bangalore Pete area. Pic: currentconservation.org
Places of urban greenery remaining in old Bangalore Pete area. Pic: currentconservation.org

Slum settlements were other areas where there was a large presence of sacred trees, here the area around the trees were multifunctional in nature. In addition to being worshipped these were hotspots of social activities, livelihood activities like selling flowers and vegetables and the canopies were playgrounds for children.

The article also elaborates on the importance, biodiversity values, cultural and religious beliefs and medicinal values around the various sacred trees, that maybe the reason they have survived in the city. For example, peepal tree is a symbol of fertility among the majority of locals.

Clue for BBMP on greening the city?

As the city continues to lose its green cover and the authorities take up greening drives, wrong choices of trees are often made. However, sacred trees, heritage trees and other culturally protected trees have so far managed to resist the pressures of urbanisation.

As the authors point out, these examples can help BBMP learn how to design parks and green spaces that engage people in their protection and management – for a ‘green infrastructure’ of trees, parks, and other green spaces is required to sustain our well-being.

Cultural ecosystems across the world are some of the best-protected areas, securing biodiversity values as well as spiritual and other cultural values for humans. If we can recognise such values and practices that protect trees, we can better secure pockets of nature!

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Josephine Joseph researches and writes on urban governance, civic and environmental issues in Bangalore City, from a ‘citizen’ point of view.
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www.bangalore.citizenmatters.in / Citizen Matters, Bangalore / Home> Environment> Trees> City News / by Josephine Joseph / August 04th, 2014

Bringing wiki home

A great forum to meet and share knowledge. Photo: K. Murali Kumar / The Hindu
A great forum to meet and share knowledge. Photo: K. Murali Kumar / The Hindu

The free online encyclopaedia has many contributors in Bangalore

Apart from the everlasting enslavement to Google, another website that netizens cannot do without is Wikipedia, the free online encyclopaedia that allows users across the world to post entries and carry out edits on the articles posted on the site. Right from challenging and getting your facts checked in a bet with friends, to getting last-minute nuggets of information before a research paper, Wiki is the go-to resource. Didn’t ‘Lungi dance’ in Chennai Express, have the lines urging you to read up about thalaiva on Wikipedia? The resource is also used to check the authenticity of information and wild rumours that inundate the net at regular intervals. Being the tech capital of the country, Bangalore leads the way as far as wikipedians in India are concerned. Metroplus talks to a few prominent wiki contributors for the lowdown on how they joined and participated in the wiki movement.

K.Ravichander

IT professional

There were many Wikipedians in Bangalore. Some of us were born and brought up in Bangalore while many others made it home since our jobs were based in the city. The Centre for Internet and Society based in Bangalore helped us organise various wiki meet-ups that helped build relationships and extend the wiki community online. I contributed articles on South Indian history, politics and culture.

I used to debate regularly in Orkut communities and found people referring to Wikipedia articles to prove their point. That’s how I first came across Wikipedia. It was in September 2006 that I started to write for Wikipedia and I have spent many years as a Wikipedia editor.

From my childhood, I’ve always loved to write and Wikipedia gave me an opportunity to be read. For a good Wikipedian, all you need is passion and perseverance. Common folk like me could write for Wikipedia, interact with other Wikipedians, some of whom were experts in the field and gain expertise ourselves. It has been a fulfilling experience

Ramesh NG

IT professional

I have been active in Malayalam Wikipedia (ml wiki) since 2008. I have made some 16K + edits in ml wiki.

I learnt about ml wiki from blogs and friends, I started with making some minor edits in 2006 but became active only in 2008 after I discovered new tools that made it easy to work in Malayalam.

Tinu Cherian

PR and digital media consultant

I am one of the most active Wikipedians in India and one of top six Indian editors on English Wikipedia by number of edits.

I am one of very few Indian administrators on English Wikipedia and have over 53,000 edits. I have started more than 2,000 articles.

I am very passionate of building Wiki communities in India and have been very successful in starting various Wikimeetups across the country. I am a member of Wikimedia Foundation Communication Committee and have worked as a volunteer for media relations for Wikimedia for more than six years. I have represented India in various Wikimania and Wikimedia Conferences in Poland, Germany, Israel and Hong Kong. Bangalore has a large Wikipedia community Almost till a year and half ago, we used to have regular Wikimeetups in Bangalore.

It is great that apart from English Wikipedia, there are 20 other Indian language Wikipedias and another 20 are in incubation.

source: http://www.thehindu.com / The Hindu / Home> Features> MetroPlus / by Nikhil Varma / Bangalore – August 04th, 2014

So few and far between

Tradition prevails: ‘Perfect Peace’, the home of Merlyn and son, Paul D’Souza, is located at Inner Circle, Whitefield. / Photo: K. Murali Kumar / The Hindu
Tradition prevails: ‘Perfect Peace’, the home of Merlyn and son, Paul D’Souza, is located at Inner Circle, Whitefield. / Photo: K. Murali Kumar / The Hindu

The D’Souzas recall the days when Whitefield’s roadsides were venues for long conversations

Sipping a glass of Mango Fool in the tranquil company of squirrels and birds, in a house that dates back to the early 1900s, can give you a natural high. The house, ‘Perfect Peace’, owned by Merlyn D’Souza, is the quintessence of Inner Circle, Whitefield. It has withstood the test of time amid the onslaught of rapid commercialisation.

The Inner Circle is part of the Anglo-Indian settlement which was set up in 1882 on land granted by the Mysore maharaja. Remnants of the colonial era are reflected in the architectural style of the beautiful garden, high-tiled roof and wooden decor and the antique curios in the house (on cover). Merlyn’s son, Paul Gerard D’Souza, explains that very few houses in the area retain the charm and history of the bygone days.

Paul reminisced about the days when Whitefield was a small community of Anglo-Indians and a trunk call away from Bangalore. “Everybody knew each other in the community,” he recalls. “We often got together in the Whitefield Club and at the Memorial Church.” He fondly remembers the days when there was no traffic in Whitefield and the roadsides were perfect venues for long conversations. He recalls that the Whitefield Club, which was then an exclusive Anglo-Indian body, was a place where one could feel the richness of their culture. “Young and old, from toddlers to grannies, were called for parties and gatherings at the club. There was no age distinction. We always got together as a community,” he says.

With the advent of the IT industry in Bangalore, tech parks have spilled all over the town, changing not just the landscape of the area but also the lives of the old Anglo-Indian settlers. Paul lamented that the Anglo-Indian community in the neighbourhood is nearly nonexistent today. “Whitefield today is associated with the rich and the IT industry. A lot of land is being grabbed for big projects,” he rues. The Inner Circle today has very few houses owned by Anglo- Indians. As Paul says, “There is no other place like this in Bangalore, and I intend to preserve the perfect peace of the Inner Circle.”

source: http://www.thehindu.com / The Hindu / Home> News> Cities. Bangalore / by James Prashanth Lobo & Sandra Marina Fernandes / May 11th, 2011

Champion horse ‘CJ-15’ dies at Pinjrapole

CJ15BF03aug2014

Don’t gallop me up the Hill,

Don’t drop me down the Hill, Don’t spare me on the Plain Ground,

Don’t drop me of the feed, Don’t deprive me of the warm bed

Don’t neglect me when I am sick and old, Don’t forget me when I am dead..

This is the prayer of the horse to its master when it stays with him and acting according to his commands. The horse hopes that his master will look after him even in its old age and shall not be deserted. But, the same was not true in case of ‘CJ-15’, the Champion Horse, which died in Mysore yesterday.

21-year-old ‘CJ-15’ which brought laurels to Mysore and the country by winning national and international medals and trophies died a sad death at Pinjrapole in Mysore.

One of the greatest showing jumping Indian Horse, which served in the Mounted Police in Mysore, was left to die unattended. The Mounted Police which is also responsible to look after the horses after they retire did not do much to look after ‘CJ-15’. It died just two days after being sent to Pinjrapole.

‘CJ-15’ was brought from Clive Stud Farm in Bangalore in the 1993 to Mounted Police and it was trained by former Mounted Police Commandant Maribashetty. It was the 15th horse in the fold and was not considered to be an ideal horse for equestrian sport by the stud owner. But, the horse was brought to Mysore and was professionally trained and it yielded good results by winning numerous medal and trophies both at the national and international level. v‘CJ-15’ retired recently as it had grown old. But, it still had eight good years to live as it was healthy. The sudden death of ‘CJ-15’ has come as a shocker for animal lovers, who have been great fans of the horse which was a show stopper during the Torch Light Parade at the Bannimantap Ground held on the last day of the Dasara festivities. vSpeaking to Star of Mysore, Srinivas, a horse rider, expressed the ‘CJ-15’ was a champion horse which had great fan following in the national level. v“The horse was healthy and fit when I last saw in the Mounted Police premises when I visited to see the newly brought horses. The officials informed me the horse would retire soon as it was old. But, none of them informed they would send the horse to Pinjrapole. The sudden death of CJ-15 has come as a shocker. We never knew that it would be sent to Pinjrapole. The Mounted Police have sufficient space to look after the old horses. If the department had made an announcement at least the horse could have been adopted. The horse deserved a decent death since it was a champion. The last rites of the horse should have been performed with state honours”, said Srinivas.

Listed among the Grade I horse by the Equestrian Federation of India (EFI), CJ-15 was a great fighter when it came to competitions. Both S.G. Maribashetty and his son Arun Maribashetty have won medals and trophies with CJ-15.

Speaking to Star of Mysore, S.G. Maribashetty, former Commandant, Mounted Police, expressed his condolences to the death of CJ-15 and remembered the days he spent with horse while in service.

“CJ-15 never came back without winning a medal in the competitions it participated. Such was the calibre and efficiency of the horse”, he added.

The saddest part is that ‘CJ-15’ did not get the treatment it deserved. When horses and dogs, which retire after serving the Police Department in western countries are taken care by their trainers or handlers till their death, why that provision is not in India?

The Mounted Police need to come out with an answer as to why ‘CJ-15’ was sent to Pinjrapole when it had the facilities to look after it. Did the Commandant of Mounted Police check for the facilities available at the Pinjrapole before deciding to admit the horse?

With the death of ‘CJ-15’, Mysore City has lost a Champion Horse, which died a inhumane death, all thanks to the Mounted Police. — VNS

source: http://www.starofmysore.com / Star of Mysore / Home> General News / July 28th, 2014

Revving up once again with Jawa and Yezdi

Blazing saddles: Riders getting ready to take out a rally on their Jawa and Yezdi motorcycles to mark the 12th International Jawa Yezdi Day in Bangalore on Sunday. — Photo: V. Sreenivasa Murthy
Blazing saddles: Riders getting ready to take out a rally on their Jawa and Yezdi motorcycles to mark the 12th International Jawa Yezdi Day in Bangalore on Sunday. — Photo: V. Sreenivasa Murthy

On Sunday, enthusiastic motorcyclists got together to celebrate their passion for the classic Jawa and Yezdi motorcycles.

It also marked the 12th International Jawa Yezdi Day. A worldwide event held on the second Sunday of July each year, it celebrates the power and legacy of the motorbikes manufactured by the Ideal Jawa Company in Mysore till 1996, when the company shut down.

Exotic machines

Organised by the Bangalore Jawa Yezdi Motorcycle Club, close to 280 motorcycles — 60cc and 125cc — as well as twin cylinder motorcycles took out a rally from Wilson Garden to Mysore Road. Around 15 members of the Jawa club of Mysore also took part.

The motorcycles are credited with making a mark in Indian automotive history as an exotic piece of machinery. They were known for their reliability and low maintenance cost.

The Bangalore Jawa Yezdi Motorcycle Club, which has been in existence since 2007, tried to bring these classic motorcycles back on the road. It boasts of having over 600 Jawa and Yezdi motorcycles, which have been completely restored by passionate mechanics.

“They include rare imported motorcycles such as Jawa Perak, Czeta and Jawa 350,” said Brian Ammanna, the club’s co-founder.

The annual event also acts as a platform for biking enthusiasts and collectors to interact with some of the oldest Jawa riders and employees of the Ideal Jawa factory.

source: http://www.thehindu.com / The Hindu / Home> News> Cities> Bangalore / K.C. Deepika / Bangalore – July 13th, 2014

Jayalalithaa & Vyjayanthimala : Right Royal Mysore connections

A vintage photograph showing Sandhya (middle row - third from left) at an event in Vanita Sadana, a women’s development institution in Mysore, contemporaneous with Mahila Samaja and Mahila Sadana.
A vintage photograph showing Sandhya (middle row – third from left) at an event in Vanita Sadana, a women’s development
institution in Mysore, contemporaneous with Mahila Samaja and Mahila Sadana.

Sir,

Readers of your curiosity-provoking news report on J. Jayalalithaa’s Mysore roots (SOM dated July 9) may find it interesting to know that her mother Sandhya was a socialite in Mysore, with links to the ruling elite. After leaving Mysore and living for a while in Bangalore, Sandhya settled in Madras and started acting in Tamil films at the instance of her actor-sister Ambujavalli (Vidyavathi).

Sandhya’s pre-screen name was Vedavalli (Vedavathi) and it is said that even Jayalalithaa’s original name was different: it was “Komalavalli.” It is also said that the prefix “Jaya” in the names of her family signifies their association with the Palace.

Jayalalithaa’s grandfather Dr. N. Rangachar, L.M. & S., was a Palace doctor in Mysore and his name is exclusively inscribed on a donation plaque in Mahila Samaja, close to Jayalalithaa’s ancestral residence on 2nd Main Road, Lakshmipuram (the building now houses the Lakshmipuram Sports Club). Dr. Rangachar’s image is also seen in an enchanting mural depicting a group of Durbaris at the Mysore Palace.

This context rekindles memories of the similar, interesting roots of Vyjayanthimala in Mysore. Her mother Vasundhara Devi, a glamorous dancer and Tamil film actress, too, enjoyed direct contacts with the Mysore Royalty. Vasundhara Devi counted the Yuvaraja of Mysore, Kanteerava Narasimharaja Wadiyar, among her admirers, and she and her family were part of the Yuvaraja’s contingent that toured Europe in 1939. Vyjayanthimala’s paternal grandfather Dhati Gopalacharya and step-grandmother M.D. Ranganayakamma founded Mahila Sadana on N.S. Road (near Maharani’s High School) in Mysore.

—S.G. Seetharam

on e-mail / Gita Road, Mysore / 17.7.2014

source: http://www.starofmysore.com / Star of Mysore / Home> Voice of the Reader / July 27th, 2014

Mesmerised by mantras

SCHOLAR: Dr. R.L. Kashyap. Photo: K. Bhagya Prakash
SCHOLAR: Dr. R.L. Kashyap. Photo: K. Bhagya Prakash

Harvard-educated Dr. Rangasami L. Kashyap is fascinated by the Vedas and set up an institute to further his passion.

He has a Masters degree from IISc and a PhD. from Harvard. But Dr. Rangasami L. Kashyap is happiest when he is discussing the Vedas and Vedic studies. The Bengaluru-based scholar was recently honoured by the Bharatiya Vidya Bhavan for his contributions to Vedic study, and conferred an Honorary D. Litt by the Karnataka Sanskrit University. He has translated 23,000 Vedic mantras, in 26 volumes. In addition, he has brought out 50 books in what he calls the “Compact Series”, where each book runs to just 100 pages.

But what is interesting is Kashyap has not studied in a Veda Patasala. “My only acquaintance with Sanskrit in the early years was in school; it was my second language. I was taught Sandhyavandana mantras by my father,” he says.

Kashyap was curious about the import of the Vedas, but there was no one to answer his questions. Formal education claimed most of his time. He stood first in the State in his Inter exams, and went on to do BSc in Physics, Masters at the IISc and PhD in Harvard, where he won the Gordon McKay Prize Fellowship, and completed his PhD in less than three years. He became a faculty member at the department of Electrical and Computer Engineering, at the Purdue University, West Lafayette, U.S. He has published more than 250 research papers and guided 50 doctoral students. His doctoral work, ‘Ho-Kashyap algorithm’ is quoted even today in text books. He, along with with Dr.Ho, started the journal IEEE Transactions of Pattern Analyses and Machine Intelligence. And yet ask him if he gives lectures in his field of study after his retirement, and he replies, “Rarely. All my time is spent in Vedic studies.”

When did he start studying the Vedas? He answers, “When I was in the U.S., I first had my scholarship money and later during my tenure at Purdue, I had more money at my disposal. So I bought books on the Upanishads, the Gita, and translations of the Vedas by Griffith and Keith. I was surprised to find that although Rg Vedic mantras are quoted explicitly in the Chandogya and Brihaddaranyaka Upanishads, this aspect was not touched upon by speakers on Vedanta.”

In any case, with all the questions he had, Kashyap was in need of a guru. The visit to the U.S. by Madhav Pandit from the Aurobindo Ashram, Pondicherry, was a godsend. Kashyap was drawn to the work of Aurobindo and Kapali Sastri, and his translations and interpretations of the Vedas are inspired by their works.

Post-retirement, Kashyap set up SAKSI (Sri Aurobindo Kapali Sastry Institute of Vedic Culture) for the revival of Vedic knowledge. He clarifies that SAKSI has nothing to do with the Sri Aurobindo Ashram or with the Aurobindo Society.

What was it that drew him to the work of Aurobindo and Kapali Sastri? “Aurobindo points out that Vedic mantras had a symbolic meaning. Kapali Sastri identified 30 key words such as Agni and Gau, which occur more than 500 times in the Rg Veda. These help you arrive at the deeper meaning.”

But if there are such deeper meanings, does he mean to say that no one had noticed them before Aurobindo did? “The concept is indicated in the Mahabharata. Madhvacharya in his ‘Rg Veda Bhashya’ said that Vedic passages have three meanings – one referring to Gods (Adhidaivika), one referring to rituals (Adhi-Yajna) and the esoteric meaning (Adhyaatmika). Later, Raghavendra Swami looked at the last aspect more elaborately in his work ‘Mantraartha Manjari.’ Aurobindo made a pertinent observation. He said that to understand the Vedas, the Vedas are the only guide.”

Do the Vedas talk of moksha? “By and large, no. Not in the sense in which we understand it. They talk of the divinisation of human beings.”

Is sanyasa recommended by the Vedas as the way to attain such divinisation? “No. Marriage was not regarded as an obstacle to spiritual progress in the Vedas. That idea came much later.” So how did that idea gain currency? “Some people might have felt that they could get more spiritual ideas that way. But the Vedas don’t have this material versus spiritual idea. They emphasise on holistic perfection.”

Kashyap says women were not excluded from studying the Vedas. He points out that of the 400 Vedic rishis, 30 were women. He says that even the words used to describe women seers show the importance they had – Aditi, because she is not dependent (Nirukta 4/22); Vishrutaa, for she is learned, Dhruva, for she is firm and so on. “Even in the Upanishadic times, you have the example of Gargi participating in philosophical discussions.”

Hasn’t the oral tradition been responsible for the preservation of the Vedas? “Oral chanting was an excellent strategy, because manuscripts could be destroyed. Also when people chant in different ways like krama, jata, ghana etc., errors can be detected. So, we had an Error Correcting and Detecting scheme, thousands of years before the West rediscovered it in the 1950s, for computer and communication applications. But the downside was that when invasions took place, patronage for Vedic learning dwindled, and many sakas were lost. Patanjali speaks of 98 sakas of the Yajur Veda. Today, we have only six!”

Veda patasalas keep alive the tradition even today, with emphasis on oral chanting, I point out. “What is the use of just learning how to chant? The meanings are more important. Sadly, even the teachers often don’t know the meanings. In any case, how many students stay for the entire duration of the course? Once they get the hang of things, they leave to become purohits.”

Kashyap says we shouldn’t look at Western solutions to Indian problems. He says that it is wrong to conclude that with the coming of industrial agriculture, fewer people are engaged in agriculture. What has happened is that work has shifted from the fields to the making of tractors and the monotonous work of extraction of oil, to fuel the tractors and harvesters. Kashyap gives statistics to buttress his arguments against the use of pesticides and fertilisers. “In 1948, farmers in the U.S. used 50 million pounds of pesticides, and crop loss was 7 per cent. In 2000, a billion pounds of pesticides was used and crop loss was 13 per cent. So that shows that the bugs have developed resistance. Organic farming, on the other hand, allows insect predator population to have a healthy presence.”

Kashyap practises what he preaches. He has a completely organic farm at the Edumadu village, near Kanakpura, Bengaluru, where he has cows, and grows vegetables and fruits.

•SAKSI has published 160 titles in eight languages.

•SAKSI has its own recording studio, and 18 CDs have been brought out on the Vedas, Upanishads etc. In addition to chanting, the CDs give the meaning too.

•Teachers in schools catering to the poorer sections of society, have been trained by SAKSI, and they teach Vedic chants to their pupils. The children say their memory power and their creativity have improved, as a result.

source: http://www.m.thehindu.com / The Hindu / Home> Sections / by Suganthy Krishnamachari / July 31st, 2014

Nanaiah to head panel on women’s safety

The 26-member committee has to submit its report within three months

The government has set up a 26-member expert committee, headed by the former Law Minister M.C. Nanaiah, to suggest amendments to the law related to sexual assault cases and enhancement of punishment for the crime.

According to a government release on Wednesday, Mr. Nanaiah will have the Cabinet Minister status. As the chairman of the committee, he enjoys powers to invite opinions and suggestions from experts and officers concerned. The committee is expected to submit its report along with its recommendations within three months from the date of its formation, the release said.

Increase in the incidents of sexual assault on women and children, followed by protests both inside and outside the House, prompted the government to constitute the expert committee comprising legislators, representatives of social organisations and women and children’s organisations, and legal experts.

Legislators Shakuntala Shetty, Y.S.V. Datta, Motamma, Jaimala, Tara, V.S. Ugrappa, Basavaraj Horatti, K.B. Shanappa, Govind Karjol, Tanveer Sait and Vinisha Nero, the former Minister Rani Satish, the former MLC Prafulla Madhukar, Leela Sampige, retired IPS officer Jija Hari Singh, writer Suchitra Rao, journalist Gouri Lankesh, Sangeetha Saxena, Krupa Alwa, Chandramouli and M.R. Hegde are members of the committee apart from four government officials from the departments of Home, and Law and Parliamentary Affairs.

source: http://www.thehindu.com / The Hindu / Home> News> National> Karnataka / Special Correspondent / Bangalore – July 31st, 2014

They were once tots too: Famous Bishop Cotton Alumni

Prestigious schools in the city, Bishop Cotton Boys’ School and Bishop Cotton Girls’ School turn 150. As the schools and the Old Cottonians’ Association celebrate the landmark event through the year, Vidya Iyengar brings you some rare photos of eminent personalities who sat on those benches.

jaya

 POWERPUFF GIRL J. Jayalalithaa (66) Fatima Jaffer, 68, 7th from left, standing in first row) was a class four student in the early 1950s at the Girls’ School. Her classmate was Tamil Nadu Chief Minister J Jayalalithaa, who studied only in junior school. “I think she was a good student, though I didn’t know much about her. We studied together for a very short time,” she says. Apparently, Jayalalithaa and Jaffer were admitted to the school on the same day — sometime in January (the term back then was between January and December) On Jayalalithaa’s birthday in February every year, sweets are distributed at the school.

FERTILE MIND Dr Kamini Rao (60) Taken in the garden of the Girls’ School in 1962, this photograph of Dr Kamini Rao, the pioneer in the field of Assisted Reproduction in India, shows her in class two. The photograph was taken on Prize day, when she was awarded five prizes. The bright and ambitious student was allowed to come to school in “colour dress”, she recalls, for her outstanding performance.

CHEMICAL POTENTIAL Kiran Mazumdar Shaw (61) We dug out this picture from the school magazine of the ’60s, which mentions that the Chairman and Managing Director of Biocon, Kiran Mazumdar was a senior prefect in 1968. She was part of the games committee (hockey). The 1967 records mention that she was also a junior prefect of the school.

A FLAIR FOR DRAMA Gautami Tadimalla (45) A ctress and Kamal Hassan’s partner, passed out in the early ’80s. Gautami Tadimalla studied until high school in Bishop Cotton Girls’ School. She was a boarder at the school because her doctor parents practiced in Vandiperiyar, Kerala. 

INFORMATION-BOUND Nandan Nilekani (59) This is a class photograph of Std 5 B from 1965 which was the centenary year of BCBS. Can you spot business tycoon Nandan Nilekani? Recalling his classmate, CN Kumar (first on the last row), remembers Nilekani as a bright student who’d always stand first in class. He joined in class four from St Anthony’s School. He was part of the Pakenham-Walsh house. “He was there until class six or seven after which he went off to Dharwad,” he says. 

MIND OF STEEL General Thimayya The late General Thimayya is a soldier of the Indian Army who served as Chief of Army Staff from 1957 to 1961, the years leading up to the conflict with China in 1962. This picture was taken when the general visited the school circa in as CAOS and met with Rev IL Thomas, Warden, BCBS. A few years later, on retirement from the Indian Army, he went on to command the United Nations peacekeeping force in Cyprus, where he died of a heart attack (1965).

WINNER Lalit Rai (58) A batchmate of Nandan Nilekani, Lalit Rai was a soldier of the Indian Army, who had the task of capturing the strategic heights of Khalubar in the Batalik sub-sector during Operation Vijay in the Kargil War. He was well-known as a football player. Joining the school in class five, he was there until class 10. He was part of the Pope house. Fun and mischievous is how C N Kumar recalls the colonel.

source: http://www.bangaloremirror.com / Bangalore Mirror / Home> Columns> Sunday Read / by Vidya Iyengar, Bangalore Mirror Bureau / July 19th, 2014

Three Jaina temples at Halebid

Pages from History

JainaTemplesBF 01aug2014

by Prof. A.V. Narasimha Murthy

Hundreds of tourists visit the famous temples at Halebid which was also known as Dwarasamudra.It was their capital and when they changed the capital to Belur, this place became famous as old capital or Halebidu. Normally, tourists visit the famous Hoysalesvara temple here and enjoy the beauty of the delicate sculptures. Generally people do not even know the existence of three Jaina temples in the same place. Though these three Jaina temples do not exhibit that enchanting beauty of the Hoysalesvara temple, they present another facet of Hoysala art.

Many may wonder how Vishnuvardhana, a devoted Vaishnava was able to build these three temples in his capital Halebid. To understand this we have to just go back to some incidents that happened in the early life of Vishnuvardhana. His original name was Bittideva and was a staunch Jaina by religion. After coming into contact with the great Sri Vaishnava Saint Ramanujacharya, he became a Vaishnava and changed his name Bittideva to Vishnuvardhana. There are no historical records to support these incidents but these legends are very strong and make us believe them. One such legend states that Vishnuvardhana had a daughter by name Hariyaladevi and she was a problematic child physically and mentally from her birth itself. The physicians of the Palace could not cure her and make her normal. At that time Vishnuvardhana who had heard of Ramanujacharya paid a visit to him and narrated him the plight of his daughter. The saint by uttering some mantras cured the daughter of Vishnuvardhana and the latter was greatly imp

ressed by the spiritual power of Ramanujacharya and became his disciple and consequently he changed his name to Vishnuvardhana.

There is another slightly different legend to explain the name Vishnuvardhana. Bittideva had many wives among whom Lakshmidevi was the most beautiful and charming. She was a follower of Sri Ramanujacharya. She used her influence on her husband and converted him to Vaishnavism from Jainism. Naturally Bittideva changed his name also and began to be known as Vishnuvardhana. All these legends have no historical basis but they are strong in the minds of the people and the historians. Though Vishnuvardhana was a Jaina in the beginning and got converted to Vaishnavism, he was tolerant of Saivism which was one of the major sects of the period. This is evidenced by many Siva temples built by him.

The Jaina architecture is based upon Hindu architecture itself but the Jainas made some innovations and changes to suit the needs of their religion. They followed the usual pattern of Garbhagriha, Sukhanasi, Navaranga and Mandapa in a row. They added a pillar in front of the temple and it became unique as Manastambha. The Jaina art can be studied on dynastic pattern as Ganga, Chalukya, Hoysala, etc. That shows their inclination for adaptability. The double storeyed sanctum was an innovation of the Jains. But this did not become popular. The uniqueness of the Jaina sculptural style is the highly glossy polish of the Tirthankara images, even if the structure was built of granite. Another unique feature is the presence of tall metallic images found in many Jaina temples.

The three Jaina temples in a row at Halebid are dedicated to Parsvanatha (west), Adinatha (central) and Shantinatha (east) Tirthankaras. Parsvanatha was the 23rd Tirthankara (Jaina guru) and many people consider him as the real founder of Jainism. He was the son of Asvasena of Kashi. He lived as a housholder for 30 years and later became an ascetic. After deep meditation for 83 days, he attained the highest spiritual knowledge. He had a huge following of 1,64,000 men and 3,27,000 nuns who were highly devoted to him. He died at the age of 100 years on the summit of mountain Sammeta. Scholars have placed him in 8th century BC.

The temple dedicated to Parsvanatha was built by Bopparaja, the son of the famous Hoysala General Gangaraja. It was built in memory of Gangaraja. At this time the news of the victory (vijaya) over Bankapura was conveyed to Vishnuvardhana and he named the deity as Vijaya Parsvanatha. The temple is built of soapstone and consists of garbhagriha, sukhanasi and a navaranga and a detached enclosure. The square garbhagriha and the walls of the navaranga are decorated with pilasters at intervals. The most important attraction of this temple is the image of Vijaya Parsvanatha which is imposing by its height of 14 ft. The deity has a seven-hooded serpent over his head. The Tirthankara is a perfect yogi or a realised soul with sympathetic and benign smile on his lips. The lathe-turned elegant pillars in the navaranga are highly polished and exhibit mirror-like glossy surface.

The next temple is dedicated to Shantinatha. This is also similar to the first temple. It was built in 1192 AD during the reign of Ballala II (1173-1220). He was the next great king in Hoysala dynasty after Vishnuvardhana. He was born in 1154 AD and was appointed as a Yuvaraja as a child. He began taking interest in administration from his eleventh year. He was ruling for sometime with his mother Echaladevi and subsequently as an independent king. His father Narasimha was weak and was immersed in worldly pleasures. Ballala rebelled against him and after his father’s death, he assumed full powers and defeated many kings including Chalukya and Yadava kings. He was a patron of art and architecture also. He built this Jaina temple dedicated to Shantinatha. It consists of a garbhagriha, sukhanasi, navaranga and a mandapa. The first three parts were built during the Hoysala period while the mandapa was added during the Vijayanagara period. The sanctum has a fine image of standing Shantinatha which is 14ft in hei

ght. The navaranga pillars do not exhibit the glossy quality. Perhaps it was not finished at all.

The frontal mandapa contains granite pillars which are tall but are not artistic as those of the hoysala pillars. But they provide good support to the roof of the mandapa. Before the temple is a tall pillar referred to as manastambha which is similar to garudagamba or nandi kamba of vaishnava and saiva temples respectively. The manastamba is very elegant and indicates the special feature of jaina temple art, and can be seen in all Jaina temples. They can be seen in Sravanabelagola in plenty which is a great Jaina architectural centre not only in Karnataka but also in India.

Sravanabelagola is not only an ancient Jaina centre but also has a large number of Jaina monuments including temples and an evolution of Jaina architectural and sculptural art can be traced. Infact, its history starts from the Chandragupta basadi. The present structure is of a later period but scholars have opined that at that very spot existed the ancient Chandragupta basadi almost contemporary to the migration of King Chandragupta and the sage Bhadrabahu. Even at this great centre we do not come across three Jaina temples in a row close to each other. Thus it is unique feature here at Halebid.

The last temple is slightly smaller in dimension. It is dedicated to Tirthankara Adinatha. It was built in 1138 AD during the reign of Vishnuvardhana. He had a minister by name Mallayya and this temple is his initiative. An inscription is available and it records some historical details. Thus the three temples built by hoysala kings in their capital Halebid gives a hint to the importance given by them to jainism in addition to other religious of the State. This religious harmony of the hoysala period is specially noteworthy. This reminds us of a hoysala inscription which enunciates the equality of all Gods like Siva, Vishnu, Brahma, Budda, Jina, Karta etc. That this was not an empty boast and a lofty idea in theory but was practised in daily life is proved by the temples built by hoysala kings to all the religious faiths of their kingdom. That was the greatness of the hoysala dynasty.

source: http://www.starofmysore.com / Star of Mysore / Home> Feature Articles  / July 26th, 2014