Category Archives: Arts, Culture & Entertainment

Meet a canine physiotherapist who has healed over 1000 dogs

krithikabf09nov2016

Bengaluru :

Her love for animals compelled Krithika Ramesh, 33, who holds a masters degree in Zoology, to become a canine physiotherapist and hydrotherapist and has healed over 1,000 dogs. In a chat with City Express, she tell us about her love for animals and more.

When did you take to being a canine physiotherapist and hydrotherapist?

I started my career in March 2013. I thought I could connect to animals easily, which is what moivated me. Dr Pawan Kumar, a veterinarian at Cessna, gave me a platform to explore my skills.

Did you take any special training for this?

I studied canine physiotherapy at the College of Animal Physiotherapy in Aylesbury, United Kingdom.

How has your experience been so far?

It has been fantastic. I don’t realise when the day ends. I have to travel for two hours to reach the hospital, but I look forward to going there and meeting new canine friends everyday.

Any memorable moment you had at the hospital?

I met a five-month-old labrador named Luke. He had hip dysplasia. At the end of the session, he got too attached to me. In fact his parents recorded my voice and play it now. He comes running towards the phone looking for me.

Everyone calls him my boyfriend, and his mother Aparna, jokingly says that I am in her will and I shall inherit him.

Another case is of black labrador called Sirrius.

He was scared of water. His parents were worried, but after a few sessions with me, he got used to it and loves playing in water now.

How is hydrotherapy helpful to dogs?

Hydrotherapy is good form of exercise. It helps in rebuilding muscle strength. In case of paralysis, it stimulates the nerves.

How much time does a dog take to heal with hydrotherapy?

If it has hip dysplasia, it takes close to six months to heal. We conduct two sessions every week for four months and one session for next six months. Paralysis takes an year to heal completely without surgery.

source: http://www.newindianexpress.com / The New Indian Express / Home> Cities> Bengaluru / by Pratima Shantaveeresh / Express News Service / November 05th, 2016

What started with 10 beds

Monkey top windows in the heritage building;
Monkey top windows in the heritage building;

Bengaluru :

The structure built in 1887 has seen the city change, from a quiet abode for retiring seniors to a rushed metro that stays up all night.

Located in a lush green 20 acres, the hotel is said to be one of the first luxury hotels in the city. As you walk around the hotel, you will be greeted by turkey, geese and butterflies.

heritage02bf09nov2016

“Bengaluru was a leafy British cantonment and all families owned a part of the city’s gardens. A British couple, Mr and Mrs Bronson, opened a boarding house with ten beds and called it Bronson’s West End. It was opened to offer efficient boarding with laundry and kitchen facilities to the soldiers,” says Somnath Mukherjee, General Manager at the hotel. The single-storey building has been now converted into a Jiva Grande spa.

Arun Prasad, a historian and researcher, says that the guesthouse was need of the hour as there were no exclusive lodgings to accommodate the upper-class British who visited the city. “They would come here to visit the city or the officers living here. Some of them would also come to visit Royal Maharaja of Mysore,” he says.

“While the guesthouse was run by Mrs Bonson, who was married to a British officer, she started getting enough visitors and next year her husband also joined her and helped her in developing the property,” says Arun Prasad. The hotel had an ideal location – on the high grounds, next to Golf Club and adjacent to Race Club. The historian says that this made it easier for officers to access both the facilities.
There was so much demand that they extended it to two other existing buildings. One of the two buildings was earlier occupied by Grenadier Guards Regiment, one of the units of British Army, says Arun Prasad. Another building, he says, belonged to the secretary of the Race Club. They must have been built in early 1900s.

The post box located in the building which is the oldest functioning one in the city.
The post box located in the building
which is the oldest functioning one
in the city.

Oldest Post Box
Walk to the right of this building and you will find a post box that is still functional. It was used by the guests when it was Bronson’s West End. “It is the oldest operational post box in the city. It has the original Victorian Crest. It is made of cast iron,” informs Somnath Mukherjee.
But much before the guest house was opened by Bronsons, Muneshwara temple existed a little ahead of the building, which is now part of the hotel. The year in which it was built remains unknown. “It would have been a place of worship for people who lived in this locality,” says Somnath Mukherjee. The carving in front of the temple says that a great jamun tree fell on this temple ‘kalasham’ splitting the trunk into two but the temple remained unharmed. Even now the temple is open to the guests who visit the hotel and also to outsiders.

168-year-old Tree
Even the trees here are ancient, among them is a Rain Tree. According to a carving put up in front of the tree, it was planted in 1848 approximately. A Christmas tree planted in front of it measures more than 130 feet and is believed to have been planted even before the guesthouse came up. Eagles and parrots have made their nests here. Many more trees have been added and maintained by The Taj West End which occupied the place in 1984 and have preserved it with much love.
Arun Prasad says that in a book called Cyclopedia of India, a descriptive account of the landmarks and the people of India in early 1900s is listed. One of the landmarks mentioned in the edition printed in 1909 is Bronson’s West Land.

“The book describes it as an establishment of six fine buildings, spacious verandas, overlooking beautiful gardens and cottages. It also mentions that the building had a large dining room, a spacious drawing room, lofty billiards room with two full-sized billiard tables. All the rooms were furnished with modern amenities. There was a bakery, a dairy and carriage services as part of the hotel according to the book,“ he tells us.

source: http://www.newindianexpress.com / The New Indian Express / Home> Cities> Bengaluru / by Pratima Shantaveeresh / Express News Service / November 09th, 2016

Hassan library celebrates a centenary of reading

INVITING BOOK LOVERS:Readers browse at Hassan City Library.— Photo: Prakash Hassan
INVITING BOOK LOVERS:Readers browse at Hassan City Library.— Photo: Prakash Hassan

Leading literary figures have been regulars at the institution that has one lakh books, and a large membership

One of Karnataka’s oldest public libraries, the Hassan City Central Library is all set to celebrate its centenary. The Department of Public Libraries will hold a week-long celebration during January and February of 2017.

The Hassan institution has served many well-known litterateurs including Masti Venkatesh Iyengar, D.R. Bendre, and Shivaram Karanth, who have also participated in its programmes.

“We have a collection of over one lakh books, besides 8,000 reference titles. There are more than 13,017 members,” said P.L.Nagaraj, chief librarian.

This is the third centenary library in the State after the central public libraries in Mysuru and Bengaluru. The building here was sanctioned in 1911 to commemorate the coronation of George V, then Emperor of India.

The foundation stone was laid by P.R.W. Wetheralla Eso, Deputy Commissioner of Hassan on December 12, 1911.

The building was completed in 1916 and inaugurated by Sir M.Visvesvaraya, the Dewan of Mysore.

It then became the Public Library and Reading Room.

In just a few years, the library became a magnet for all intellectuals and cultural personalities. Mahatma Gandhi held a public meeting in the library premises in 1924 as part of the freedom struggle, records say.

Thousands of students have also benefited. Indian Space Research Organisation chairperson Dr. A.S. Kiran Kumar, who hails from Hassan, is a member, and was a regular visitor as a student.

H.K. Sharat, a faculty member at Malnad College of Engineering said, “I have been visiting this library to read magazines and borrow books for 10 years. Many students have benefited from the reference section, where books for competitive exams are available.” Many programmes for the centenary have been planned, with Hassan MLA H. S. Prakash chairing the meetings.

“We are facing a shortage of space. We want a new building and the department has provided Rs. 40 lakh for this,” the chief librarian said.

To celebrate the centenary, a new building has been planned in the land spread over 2.5 acres. The design is being worked out.

“We have suggested a design akin to Anna Centenary Library in Chennai, one of the best library buildings constructed on a big budget,” he added.

source: http://www.thehindu.com / The Hindu / Home> National> Karnataka / by Satish G T / Hassan – November 09th, 2016

Mangaluruean wins 2016 International Creative Writing Contest

Mangaluru :

Dr Geralyn Pinto, Associate Professor of English at St Agnes College, Mangaluru, has won the first prize for her short story, “Here they are, Saar….” in the 2016  International Creative Writing Contest organized by the Save as Writers Group, Canterbury, England. The theme of this year’s contest was ‘Rebellion’ in commemoration of the Irish Rising of Easter, 1916.

Geralyn, who views creative writing as an agent of social rebellion and memory retrieval, chose to write on Nangeli, a woman of the Ezhava community of early 19th century Travancore. The young Nangeli looked at society in the face and decided to show it who she really was. Her self-mutilation in 1803 as a form of rebellion against the levying of the hideous ‘mulakkaram’ or breast tax earned all women, but particularly those of the lower castes, the inalienable right to cover themselves in modesty and decency, if they so chose. The humiliating tax was eventually repealed by the British Crown, upon pressure from the British Resident of Travancore, Col. John Munro.

Geralyn’s powerfully-told story won the first place from an otherwise all-British shortlist of nine stories and was described by judge, Derek Sellen, as an amazing story with a sinuous narrative that impressed one right from the beginning. Sellen said, upon presenting the prize to Geralyn at the Awards Evening held on October 29 in the hall of St Mary Bredin Church, Canterbury, that he had no doubt when he began reading it that her story would be the top prize winner.

This is the third time that Geralyn Pinto has won a prize in the Save as Writers annually-held International Creative Writing Contest.

source: http://www.timesofindia.indiatimes.com / The Times of India / News Home> City> Mangalore / by  Stanley Pinto / TNN / November 07th, 2016

Bengaluru auto driver spreads his love for Kannada

History on wheels:Shivakumar’s aesthetically made up three-wheeler is a library holding260 Kannada books, magazines and newspapers.—Photos: Bhagya Prakash K.
History on wheels:Shivakumar’s aesthetically made up three-wheeler is a library holding260 Kannada books, magazines and newspapers.—Photos: Bhagya Prakash K.

Wants to create awareness so that people can observe, reflect, think and be inspired by Kannada history and literature.

:“I am not a November Kannadiga sporting artificial patriotism during the month of Rajyotsava. My passion towards my State is wholesome and my language repertoire is intrinsic to me,” says 50-year-old autorickshaw owner and driver Shivakumar from Dasarahalli, Magadi Road. His 4-stroke autorickshaw, registration number KA05 B-370, is curiously designed to showcase his love for Kannada.

Sporting a huge flag in the front, Shivakumar’s aesthetically made up three-wheeler is also a library holding 260 Kannada books, magazines and newspapers. It also exhibits 360 different-sized photos of Kannada writers, actors, reformers, poets and freedom fighters. “This is my style of ‘creating awareness’ amongst people to observe, reflect and think during the city drives,” says Shivakumar, who also offers mineral water to his passengers.

“I once gave a book to an ex-serviceman in my auto. He returned it promptly and said, ‘I learnt so much about Karnataka’s freedom fighters like Kittur Rani Chennamma and Onake Obavva from you in the last one hour. Books are useful tools that kindle curiosity — have them for your collection,” Shivakumar recalled.

Curious people

Shivakumar’s auto library introduces passengers to the Kannada literary world with a historical perspective. Let alone his continuous gyaan on everything Kannada and Karnataka, his knowledge is mind-blowing. Curious people gather to see his auto even as he stops in front of the Vidhana Soudha for a ‘Rajyotsava Special’. “If you want me to talk of history or literature, Karnataka is rich in everything. Only people have to get richer with curiosity, and have the patience to lend a ear,” said Shivakumar.

He elaborates on the history behind the Cauvery and Mahadayi issues, descriptions of DVG (the popular acronym for writer D.V. Gundappa), poems by G.P. Rajaratnam and T.P. Kailasam, the recitation of vachanas (sayings) by Basavanna, Allama Prabhu and Akka Mahadevi, and lectures on freedom fighters. “May be some talk on Rajkumar, Vishnuvardhan, Shankar Nag and Puttanna Kanagal is what you want,” he guesses when he notices a silent crowd.

Multi-faceted

Hailing from Bengaluru, Shivakumar grew up in Yeshwantpur and studied up to Class 7 at the Vishwabharati Vidya Mandira. His love for Bhavageete (‘emotional poetry’) had him win prizes from poet Dodda Range Gowda. Apart from driving his autorickshaw for 25 years, he is a radio jockey at 90.4 FM, and he regularly talks about road-sense and civic issues for the C-Bangalore cable TV network. His two sons, the older of them pursuing a Masters in Science and the other into dance choreography, are also Kannada history enthusiasts.

Best services

Shivakumar is excited about the 14 awards he received from the Police Commissioner’s office over two decades for his ‘sincerity drives’. The best service he renders is a 50 per cent discount on the meter for senior citizens, persons with disabilities, and students during exams. “Pregnant ladies can travel free,” says Shivakumar, who has composed 1,500 couplets in Kannada.

source: http://www.thehindu.com / The Hindu / Home> News> Cities> Bengaluru / by Ranjani Govind / Bengaluru – November02nd, 2016

Mysore Rajya: Diverse areas bound by one tongue

slice of history:The cover of the 440-page bookMysore Rajya;
slice of history:The cover of the 440-page bookMysore Rajya;

The book, released by Information Department on Nov. 1, 1956, emphasised that Mysore was a State of diverse cultures, but Kannada was the binding factor

When the erstwhile Mysore State, comprising Kannada-speaking territories, came into existence on November 1, 1956, the Information Department of the then Mysore government brought out Mysore Rajya, a 440-page book, to mark the occasion. This six-decade-old volume laid emphasis on the fact that Mysore is a State of diverse cultures, but Kannada is the binding factor.

The book consists of two parts: the first containing articles by eminent people from Kannada-speaking areas, and the second on statistical data about 19 districts that formed the new State of Mysore. According to the preface, the idea behind the government bringing out the book “is to see that it will serve to create a mental and psychological fusion among its several areas”.

In the article Our Culture , R.R. Diwakar, the then Governor of Bihar, explained the difference between individual and social culture and pointed out that Kannada culture is part of Indian culture. Dr. Srikanata Shastry in his article The History of Karnataka dealt with the succession of ings who ruled Karnataka namely the Kadambas, Gangas, Chalukyas and Hoysalas culminating in the establishment of the Vijayanagar Empire. He also made a reference to the Mahratta influence on Mysore and Mohammedan rule under Hyder and Tipu.

B. Shivamurthy Shastry, in his article on Religious Movements in Karnataka, dealt with several religious movements that left their impression on Kannadigas. In his illuminating article on thePolitical Life of Kannadigas , Tirumale Tatacharya Sharma pointed out that the kings of Karnataka have always stood for a Welfare State. Gorur Ramaswamy Iyengar has traced several events that led to the formation of the New Mysore State in his article on The Formation of New Mysore. Writer Jayadevi Taayi Ligade has given a good account of the part played by women in Karnataka. Writing on modern Kannada literature, A.N. Krishna Rao dealt in detail about development in prose, drama, short story, lyric, novel, and literary review, and indicated that the influence of English literature has given a liberal outlook among the Kannada authors.

The publication has messages from Prime Minister Jawaharlal Nehru, Sarvepalli Radhakrishnan, first Vice-President of India, Chakravarti Rajagopalachari, the last Governor-General of India, Jayachamaraja Wadiyar, Governor Mysore State, and Chief Minister S. Nijalingappa.

nehrubf01nov2016

Kadidal Manjappa, who was Chief Minister till October 31, 1956, in his introduction stated: “We must not forget that under the scheme of States’ Reorganisation, we are only altering the number and boundaries of the States for administrative purposes and not trying to set up Independent Sovereign States”.

A photo of the Vidhana Soudha in the book.
A photo of the Vidhana Soudha in the book.

Interestingly, batting for the need of “multilingual, multinational State”, C. Rajagopalachari dubbed such State as “ideal State in political theory”. He also said: “let us not allow small and narrow interests to take obstinate root and obstruct real progress”.

source: http://www.thehindu.com / The Hindu / Home> News> Cities > Bengaluru / by Muralidhar Khajane / Bengaluru – November 01st, 2016

… and the award turns 50

It is the 50th year of the Karnataka Rajyotsava Award.

Though the Mysore State comprising Kannada-speaking territories came into existence on November 1, 1956 the tradition of conferring the award — considered to be the second highest civilian honour for persons of eminence for their contribution to their respective fields — began in 1966.

Except on two occasions, once during the Vishwa Kannada Sammelan held in Mysuru in 1985 and Kanteerava Indoor Stadium in 2008, the award ceremony has been held in Ravindra Kalakshetra, which is the icon of Kannada and culture in the State.

While 10 eminent persons, including Dr. M.C. Modi, who claimed to have performed a record half-a-million eye surgeries, were selected for the award in 1966, the number did not change for the next decade. However, this was increased to 21 in 1973. The number even crossed three digits in the later years. The S. Bangarappa regime had chosen 175 awardees and the Dharam Singh government had chosen 176. But at that time, the cash component was just Rs. 10,000, which was increased to Rs. 1 lakh in 2008. As many as 92 personalities were chosen for the award in 2008 during B.S. Yeddyurappa’s tenure as the Chief Minister. The number even reached 162 in 2010 during Mr. Yeddyurappa’s tenure.

In the last 50 years, awards were not conferred for various reasons, including natural calamities.

source: http://www.thehindu.com / The Hindu / Home> News> Cities> Bengaluru / Muralidhara Khajane / Bengaluru – October 31st, 2016

College lecturers make film for students

Lecturers of a private pre-university college have shot a film with students as the target audience. A Sunny Morning, an educational movie, will be screened at Adichunchanagiri Community Hall in Hassan on Tuesday.

The film has been directed by J. Shivaprasad, an English lecturer and A.R. Sachidananda, who teaches Physics. Both are working at B.G.S.PU College. “The movie is all about attractions that disturb students in the age group 16-18 years, primarily those in the PU colleges. We lecturers thought of this theme and developed a script keeping the students in mind,” Mr. Sachidananda said.

The college lecturers have contributed from their salaries for making of the movie, which cost about Rs.4 lakh. “It is a short movie of about 20 minutes. Our students have played acted in it. We hired a cameraman, an editor and other technicians for production,” said Sachidanand.

The movie will be released in a programme on Tuesday. Nirmalanananatha Swamiji of Adichunchanagiri Math, C.Shikha, Director of PU Department and others will participate in the event.

source: http://www.thehindu.com / The Hindu / Home> National> Karnataka / by Staff Correspondent / Hassan – October 31st, 2016

My dream has been fulfilled, says Rajyotsava awardee Ballari Sujathamma

“My dream has been fulfilled. I am very happy.” This was how septuagenarian Ballari Sujathamma, a well-known ‘bylaata’ and ‘parijatha’ artiste, reacted when she heard that the government was conferring the prestigious ‘Rajyotsava’ award on her.

After learning music under the tutelage of her father, Ms. Sujathamma took to acting at the age of ten. Her career as an artiste began with ‘Girija Kalyan,’ where she donned the role of Rathi. Since then, she has acted in various mythological plays not only in Bylaata and Parijatha, but also in theatre, including Ramayana, where she donned the lead roles. She has acted in plays such as Rakta Ratri, Kurukshetra, Dushyasana Vadhe , Daksha Brahma in over six decades of her acting career.

Ms. Sujathamma has also performed in Telugu plays in neighbouring Andhra Pradesh.

“Acting was the only source of income to feed my family and also to raise my children. I was forced to act in a play when my son, daughter-in-law and my grandson died in a fire accident. Such was our economic condition. Luckily, I used to get opportunities to act and I won the appreciation of the connoisseurs throughout and now Government has chosen me for the Rajyotsava award. I am very happy,” she told The Hindu.

Ms. Sujathamma is also a recipient of Karnataka Janapada, Yakshagana Academy award and the Kittur Rani Chennamma Award.

Though she still gets requests to act in plays, Ms. Sujathamma rejects them owing to age factor. She now imparts training in acting and singing to interested people.

source: http://www.thehindu.com / The Hindu / Home> National> Karnataka / by Special Correspondent / Ballari – October 31st, 2016

Karnataka on the antarjaala

An online space for products from small and rural entrepreneurs of Karnataka, Total Karnataka is all set to reach out to the world

Channapatna dolls
Channapatna dolls

Natural dyed khadi kurtas from Shikaripura in Karnataka’s Sagar district can now be shipped to Australia or anywhere in the world. Traditional Kinhal dolls can now be delivered to the grandchildren in America.

Terracotta jewellery
Terracotta jewellery

An NGO in Shimoga is able to sell its terracota jewellery online. People of Karnataka who live all over the world can have gifts with a flavour and feel of their home states delivered at their doorstep. Even pickle!

Chandrasekhar Kakal, a food entrepreneur and start-up coach with three decades of corporate experience and Lakshmikanth V., a software engineer-turned- entrepreneur passionate about Kannada and Karnataka, have launched totalkarnataka.com. Lakshmikanth has earlier experience from his venture Total Kannada.

Bidriware
Bidriware

“We have on board a family in Bidar district of Karnataka engaged for generations in carving traditional Bidriware, artisans of Channapattana shaping the famous Channapattana toys, carpenters chiselling white wood, rose wood or sandalwood in the lanes of Mysuru’s Mandi Mohalla region. These are people who know their craft well but are unable to market themselves and find themselves lost in the online market space,” says Lakshmikanth. They all belong to micro, small, or medium enterprises (MSME) segments, and they are struggling to keep their tradition alive, and even earn a livelihood for their families, he points out.

“Our idea is to bring them to the mainstream and connect them directly with the customer.

We have put in place a system whereby the craftsman can directly ship an order. Even rejects and returns go back to him with a reason, so he can change and adapt accordingly. The craftsman also feels a sense of pride that he is selling his work online to people in other countries,” explains Lakshmikanth.

They also want to make speciality products of Karnataka origin available to consumers anywhere in the world under one umbrella.

As of now they have over 500 products across nine categories.

There is also a small video accompanying each category so that people get an idea of how a particular hand-crafted piece is made.

Soon translation services and state-specific tourism services will also be added, along with many other categories of products. It is also the only online market place where there is an English and a complete Kannada version — “and it is not done using Google translate”, he laughs. In the three months that they have been in operation, they have shipped over 180 orders, including those to the U.S.A.

Whitewood carving
Whitewood carving

The site now stocks terracotta jewellery, hand crafted cotton and khadi dresses, paddy craft display pieces, speciality pickles, north Karnataka food products including the famous jolada rotti, traditional Channapattana toys, Mysore handicrafts, Kannada books and movies, T-shirts with Kannada slogans etc.

For details see www.totalkarnataka.com

source: http://www.thehindu.com / The Hindu / Home> Features> Metroplus /  Bhumika K / Bengaluru – October 28th, 2016