Saturday, June 9, 2007

All Work...

... and no space to play
A life where there is no space to move one's limbs freely. Growing up in a city where there's absolutely no place for a cheerful game of hide and seek, catching, lock and key, kho kho, wild running, cycling without fear of being knocked down by a trailer or just walking briskly on the pavements without bumping on a tree trunk or a telephone pole or an electricity pillar box.
These situations are a luxury to dream of in Chennai, particularly a far fetched dream for residents of North Chennai.
The idea behind highlighting such issues in the newspaper is not because, the very next day, Governments will swing into action (I'll be only too happy if that is the case!) or because people will immediately realise the importance of happy feet, lithe bodies and a dynamic mind that sports, physical exercise and workouts can endow, but because - somewhere in the few minds that read this - the seeds of awareness will be sown and take its own time to germinate when the environment is conducive.
So I wait to see that day when I can walk on the road, as if it were my home, rest under the shade of a tree in a bench as if I were sitting down a while in my drawing room, walk without fear down the avenue with tree-lined pavements as if I were walking through a thicket in my own backyard and greet people on the road with a smile - as if I were meeting my own family, friends and relatives. Like James Michener said in his autobiography - I wait for the day the world sings along with me - The World is My Home.
*****

Sunday, June 3, 2007

Meeting Personalities

Interviews for Meet


The Meet column on Sunday in The Hindu has been my favourite space where I have pursued several intersting people for an interview. It has been in a wide and varied field beginning from Prof. Sultan Ahmed Ismail, the Managing Director of the Ecoscience Research Foundation. A champion for the cause of vermi-composting of organic wastes, he is an advocate of segregation of wastes at source and organic farming.
There have been interviews of the Veena maestro Kalpakam Swaminathan - who at around 86 years of age now - stands a lone sentinel for Veena, the National Instrument of India. Then there has been another interview of P.S. Ramamurti, Secretary of The Egmore Samskrt School, for his efforts in conducting Bhagavad Gita chanting competitions for the past 50 years.
Cooks Sanjeev Kapoor of Khana Khazana fame, Prof. of Nutrition Chandra Venkatasubramanian and much recently Jacob Aruni for his research on ancient Kongunadu and other recipes of India, have been featured on various occasions.
Prof. Ramani Narayan of the Michigan State University, had appeared in one of the Meet interviews for his pioneering research work in introducing bio-degradable plastics in the Harita-NTI in Chennai.
Bordering on the area of spirituality and human resources management have appeared interviews of Sunanda Parthasarathy and Swami A. Parthasarathy who frequent Chennai to give their lectures on the Bhagavad Gita.
I stumbled on Rev. Jegath Gaspar Raj as a Catholic priest who had a penchant for studying the Tamil Saivaite text of Tiruvasagam and that was a meet interview that appeared much before the release of an audio album titled Tiruvasagam in Symphony by Isaignani Illaiyaraja. There was also an interview of S. Tatwamasi Dixit, founder of the Ojas Foundation on the occasion of his winning the Maharishi Badarayan Award.
The meet interview that appeared today was on Dr. Asana Andiappan who was recently in the news for demanding the appointment of trained Yoga teachers.
There may be many that I have left out and many many interesting personalities that I still look forward to meet and write about.

North Chennai

The Neglected North

My career in journalism began with an article in the Indian Express about the woes of North Chennai. My first byline story was on how lorries and trailers were being repaired on the road, abutting residential buildings at Royapuram. And since then North Chennai has had an abundant presence in my articles in The Hindu also. Several issues - the public campaign on not allowing Kattupalli, a verdant ecosystem in Minjur to be converted into a petro products park, the sea erosion at Ennore and Royapuram, the problems of environmental pollution from coal and iron ore dust, the dumping of garbage along the north Chennai coastline, the need to remove encroachments, the changing face of North Chennai when a Corporation Commissioner M.P. Vijayakumar spearheaded an initiative when J. Jayalalitha was the Chief Minister, to green and beautify pockets of the city.
But neglect of a place is a vicious circle that no amount of writing or an external force can break. The desire for a change has to come from within the people. The change can happen only with a certain self-realisation of the situation one is caught in, a realisation of one's rights and demanding it and also a realisation of one's responsibilities. And so a revolutionary change is possible only when the residents of North Chennai rise together in one voice and force to demand their right to better livelihood.