Category Archives: Leaders

RAW@50: Remembering RN Kao, India’s first true spymaster

Rameshwar Nath Kao (centre) | The Kaoboys of R&AW / Revolt Press

R.N. Kao, whose team was called ‘Kao-boys’, became India’s first RAW chief in 1968. He is also known as ‘architect of Bangladesh’ for his role in 1971 war.

New Delhi :

Around June 1975, a betel-nut exporter arrived in Dacca (now Dhaka). Over an hour-long meeting, he tried to convince the then President of Bangladesh, Sheikh Mujibur Rahman, that a coup to overthrow him was imminent. He also named the military officers behind the conspiracy.

Rahman refused to believe him. A few weeks later, Rahman and 40 members of his family were slaughtered by the very military officers this betel-nut exporter had named.

The exporter was India’s “philosopher-spymaster” Rameshwar Nath Kao in disguise.

Kao served as the first chief of India’s external intelligence agency Research & Analysis Wing (RAW). As the agency marks its 50th anniversary this month ,  ThePrint looks back at the incisive “father figure” who first led it.

A deputy director at the Intelligence Bureau (IB), Kao took over as director of RAW in 1968 after former Prime Minister Indira Gandhi split the former to carve out an intelligence agency focused on international threats.

He began with a small team, 250 handpicked agents from the IB who would later be called the mysterious “Kao-boys”.

‘Architect of Bangladesh’

Known to be ruthless, Kao has come to be identified as the architect of Bangladesh for his role during the third war between Pakistan and India in 1971, when the erstwhile East Pakistan was liberated.

India’s intelligence forces had been operating in East Pakistan before 1971, becoming “active” only after the war began. Kao was in charge of the silent operations.

In the war, which lasted 13 days, RAW actively helped Mukti Bahini, the Bangladesh liberation force, triumph over West Pakistan. RAW is believed to have trained one lakh people who fought to free the country.

General Zia-ur-Rehman, president of Bangladesh from 1977 to 1981, is said to have told Indira Gandhi once that “this man [Kao] knows more about my country than me”.

In 1974, Kao was reportedly one of the first to warn Gandhi about a possible coup in Sikkim against the then ruling Chogyal dynasty. Fears that the Chinese may step in, and reportedly at the Sikkim ruler’s behest, India took over the state. A subsequent referendum saw most Sikkimese vote for a merger with India, and the erstwhile protectorate went on to join the country as its 22nd state in 1975.

After Gandhi’s government lost power in 1977, Kao too retreated into the shadows. Many say that this may have been because Moraji Desai’s government was suspicious of the agency’s role, especially during the Emergency.

The return

As Gandhi was re-elected in 1980, Kao returned and stayed on as her security adviser till her assassination in 1984.

“A little-known secret is Kao’s visit to China in 1984, laying the ground work for the subsequent ‘historic visit’ of Rajiv Gandhi to China in 1988,” wrote former national security adviser and IB chief M.K. Narayanan in an obituary for Kao after his death on 20 January, 2002.

“For much of this period, Kao continued to function as the ‘eminence grise’ of the security establishment,” he added.

Kao was also entrusted by Gandhi to develop a better and more stable relationship with Mossad, the intelligence agency of Israel.

“Some analysts say Kao also had a substantial role in arming Tamil guerrillas in the late seventies and eighties and played a pivotal role in Sri Lankan affairs, even though he was no longer the hands-on man,” journalist Ranjit Bhushan wrote about Kao in another obituary.

Fiercely personal

Kao was born on 10 May, 1918, to wealthy Kashmiri Pandits in Benares.

He graduated with a Master’s in English Literature from Allahabad University, and went on to join the Imperial Police, the predecessor of the Indian Police Service, in 1939.

On 21 January, 1942, Kao married Malini, the daughter of Justice Tej Narain Mulla of Allahabad. They had a daughter.

Kao was known to have been a fiercely private man, and was rarely seen in public.

On 3 June, 1947, Kao was deputed to the central intelligence bureau, one of the few Hindus on a turf dominated by British and Muslim officers.

After Independence, Kao’s first assignment was to guard VIPs. When Elizabeth II, the Queen of England, visited Independent India in 1961, Kao was assigned to her security detail.

He was also the personal security chief of Jawaharlal Nehru, the first Prime Minister of India. He was sent to Ghana in 1957, where he worked for a year and formed the country’s intelligence agency, Foreign Service Research Bureau (FSRB).

Kao also played an integral role in setting up the National Security Guard (NSG), an elite force that has proved invaluable in dealing with hijackings and terrorist attacks. Along with B.N. Mullick, he helped form the Sashastra Seema Bal (SSB) and the Aviation Research Centre (ARC).

As a person, he had been described as “suave, brilliant, loving, caring, self-effacing”, with most remembering him as a father figure.

“Kao pulsated warmth and was essentially a father figure to all those who worked with and under him…” Narayanan added in the obituary.

“He was not only the founder of RAW… He is a legend,” former RAW chief A.S. Dulat said

source: http://www.theprint.in / The Print / Home> India> Governance / by Deeksha Bharadwaj / September 18th, 2018

Over The Moon: Lucknow Residents Celebrate City’s Chandrayaan Connection

The mission director for Chandrayaan-2 Ritu Karidhal Srivastava did her MSc in Physics from the University of Lucknow in 1996.

Lucknow : 

As the nation celebrated the launch of Chandrayaan-2, people in Lucknow are over the moon revelling in mission director Ritu Karidhal Srivastava’s connection to the city.

Congratulatory messages poured in for teachers, batchmates and relatives of Ritu Karidhal Srivastava in Lucknow.

“The entire department is feeling proud on the achievements of Ritu Karidhal, who did her MSc in Physics from this department in 1996,” Poonam Tandon, head of the Physics department at the University of Lucknow, said.

“She was a very bright student and is certainly a role model for the current batch of students. The entire department is excited over her success and that of the ISRO. She is indeed a proud alumnus of the department,” she said.

Ms Tandon said the department is chalking out a programme to felicitate the Chandrayaan-2 mission director.

In the state assembly on Tuesday, Uttar Pradesh Chief Minister Yogi Adityanath lauded ISRO scientists, specifically mentioning Ritu Karidhal Srivastava.

Meanwhile, a batchmate of hers recalled the ISRO scientist’s days at the University of Lucknow. “She was a brilliant student and had a good command over the subject,” said Vikal Saxena, who teaches Physics at a private university in the city.

“In fact, on couple of occasions she cleared my doubts as well,” he said, recalling that she helped all students and was also popular with those from the junior batches.

Ritu Karidhal’s cousin Ajay Srivastava shared the sentiment. “She is very polite by nature and used to encourage her siblings in every aspect of life. She guided us. Be it her educational qualifications or behavioural attributes, she is very good,” he said.

India’s moon mission Chandrayaan 2 lifted off from its launch pad at Andhra Pradesh’s Sriharikota at 2:43 pm on Monday on board a giant heavy-lift rocket. India’s space scientists had a narrow one-minute window for their second attempt at launching the moon mission, a week after the mission was aborted 56 minutes before lift-off.COMMENT

The success of Chandrayaan 2 mission will make India the fourth country after the US, Russia and China to pull off a soft landing on the moon.

source: http://www.ndtv.com / NDTV / Home> Sections> Lucknow / by Press Trust of India / July 23rd, 2019

Lucknow: Kalhalth Institute bags the JSW Prize for Contemporary Craftsmanship

The inaugural JSW Prize for Contemporary Craftsmanship, in association with AD, was awarded to Lucknow’s Kalhath Institute for embroidery

Photo caption: Maximiliano Modesti and Sangita Jindal at the Kalhath Institute in Lucknow. All photos courtesy Neville Sukhia

Hanging on the walls of the JSW office in Mumbai is a symbol of gratitude—a unique interpretation of a painting by French artist Anne Pesce.

But where Pesce’s medium is oil-on-canvas, this piece uses thread and glass beads to translate her abstract expressions of landscape into tangible reality. Its embroidered surface softly catches the light, and the textured shades of grey, white and pink make viewers stop for a second glance, then lean in closer to admire the dexterity that went into creating it.

The work was gifted by the Kalhath Institute as a gesture of thanks, from the recipients of the inaugural JSW Prize for Contemporary Craftsmanship, which was founded in 2018, at the AD Design Show in India.

It also signifies a turning point for the Lucknow-based institute, whose pursuit of embroidery education uncovered a new opportunity for craft production.

Photo caption: The facade and campus of the Kalhath Institute in Lucknow, which was founded by Modesti in 2016

Lucknow, Kalhath Institute: Serial Skiller

After over 20 years of working with karigars (craftsmen) and luxury houses, French-Italian craft entrepreneur Maximiliano Modesti  realised that pride in one’s work was a big driver, and that formalising recognition was as important as addressing wages.

He founded Kalhath in 2016, and its mission has been to recognise, promote and sustain craft excellence. His approach to create an impact across craft is now through measured interventions. What this means is that engagements must be deep, long term and, to begin with, in smaller numbers.

Sangita Jindal confesses to being completely taken by her visit to the institute, housed in a heritage building in Lucknow: “The work of Kalhath was very inspiring to see first-hand. It is a unique institution and they are doing a commendable job.”

Photo caption: Embroiderers at the Kalhath Institute, Siraj Ali and Amir Khan, working on artist T Venkanna’s Holy Tree artwork

Fourteen karigars recently celebrated their convocation. The faculty had introduced them to a wide spectrum of skill-building engagements, including spatial perception, colour, costing and design.

They learnt through practical application, and the programme concluded with an art residency that had them co-creating artworks with artist T Venkanna.

Lucknow, Kalhath Institute: French Influences

But it all began with the initial experiment. The first artwork interpreted by the karigars during the initial stages of the programme was the Pesce piece.

Titled New York #14karigars Mohammed Ishtiaque Ansari and Mohammed Tabriz Shaikh worked on it over a period of two months.

Modesti shares the reasoning behind this piece being chosen as the gift: “I wanted to acknowledge the kindness of Sangita’s award with the first-ever artwork we worked on at the institute. This work travelled to the AD Design Show as well.”

Visitors to the last year’s show might recall a young man, Ishtiyaque Ansari, working over an adda (a rectangular wooden frame), intently focused on transforming into three dimensions, Pesce’s two-dimensional work.

Photo caption: Embroiderers at the institute working on an artwork titled Incomplete Circle

Lucknow, Kalhath Institute: Bridging the Gap

Embroidered works of art are not new, but the opportunity lies in creating production facilities dedicated to, and experienced in, managing the expectations and the relationships between artists and karigars.

Modesti’s view on the final product being classified as either a work of art or craft is telling: “It depends on who the artist is, and what kind of work they want to create.

For instance, there is no difference between a painting by Venkanna and his embroidered works: he is using embroidery as [a medium].

However, in the case of Pesce, it is a translation of her work. What is emerging is so different for each artist—and that is the great potential: It is not only one language, it is multiple ways of creating and translating work.”

Photo caption: A piece titled Fire being shown by Venkanna (left) and Zeeshan Ahmed, a member of faculty at the Kalhath Institute

That Pesce’s work is being translated into five editions almost undermines the understanding of each as a unique work that reveals the potential, and need, of new classifications between craft, art and design. It is perhaps in these new classifications that the future of craft lies.

The recipient of the second edition of the JSW Prize for Contemporary Craftsmanship will be announced at the AD Design Show 2019.

source: http://www.architecturaldigest.in / Architectural Digest / Home> Architecture & Design> Craftsmanship / by Malika Verma Kashyap / May 27th, 2019

Allahabad Museum to soon exhibit letters, documents of freedom fighters

The Allahabad Museum is requesting individuals and organisations to donate to it the letters, documents written by freedom fighters.


The Allahabad Museum (HT Photo)

Soon people will be able to get an insight into the lives of nation’s great freedom fighters through their own hand written accounts, letters and documents narrating their struggle and life during India’s freedom movement.

“Allahabad Museum is in the process of getting these documents from individuals, organisations and institutes from different parts of the country. The museum took the initiative after an appeal made by UP governor that people who possess some valuable documents, letters etc related to India’s freedom movement and freedom fighters should come forward to donate them to the Allahabad Museum,” said director of the museum Sunil Gupta.

“Following it, we received a well-preserved letter of freedom fighter Vishnu Sharan Dublish from KD Sharma, a resident of Meerut. He contacted us for proving the letter,” added Gupta.

Gupta claimed that Dublish wrote this letter on November 1, 1937 after he was released from the Andaman jail.

In the letter, Dublish had made an appeal to people to also treat Aman Singh Atre as a freedom fighter while highlighting his role in the freedom movement.

“We are also in discussion with Pune-based Tilak Foundation for providing hand written letter of another great freedom fighter Rajguru. A few days back, an artist donated us around 150 pictures of freedom fighters. Likewise, we have also made an appeal to some organisations and institutes to provide us some original documents on temporary basis,” he added.

The officials also informed that they were also in discussion with Savarkar Trust in Kalyan, Maharashtra for getting some letters of freedom fighter Veer Savarkar.

“We are still in the process of getting these valuable documents and letters related to India’s freedom movement. Once we get sufficient documents, they will be displayed in the new gallery being constructed at the cost of around Rs eight crore. The dates of displaying these items and other related decisions will be taken in the next meeting of Allahabad Museum,” said Gupta.

source: http://www.hindustantimes.com / Hindustan Times / Home> India / by Smriti Malaviya , Hindustan Tiems, Prayagraj / April 01st, 2019

V.N. Bhatkhande: A seeker who helped in bridging Hindustani and Carnatic music


Photograph of the special 15 paise postal stamp, issued on September 01, 1961 in honour of the late V.N. Bhatkhande   | Photo Credit:  The Hindu Archives – PIBB

V.N. Bhatkhande’s extensive travels helped bridge North and South

One of the most fascinating structures in the Qaiserbagh area of Lucknow is the erstwhile Pari Khana, the building, which housed the numerous courtesans in the service of the Nawabs of Avadh. In its time it must have been home to much music and what is interesting is that it continues to do so even now, the Bhatkhande Music Institute Deemed University being headquartered here. And that institution has a story that bridges both the Hindustani and Carnatic systems.

Vishnu Narayan Bhatkhande (1860-1936) remains a landmark figure in the world of Indian musicology. A resident of Bombay, he was trained in music while young and retained sufficient interest in it even after reaching adulthood, when he qualified in law and set up practice at the High Court of Bombay. Circumstances so arranged themselves that he could soon devote his entire energies to music, his wife and daughter passing away thereby freeing him of the necessity of earning for a family. It was then that he began to ponder over the fact that Hindustani Music did not have a structured curriculum of teaching and remained largely an oral tradition.

Bhatkhande travelled far and wide across North India, collecting information about the way music was taught in the various gharanas. He then moved South, coming to Madras in 1904. He had established contact with Thirumalayya Naidu, a local connoisseur. Having met up with Naidu at the Cosmopolitan Club, he attended a concert performance by Bangalore Nagarathnamma at a Sabha on Ramaswami Street, George Town. Bhatkhande’s account of her performance remains the only review of a concert by this redoubtable artiste.


The Bhatkhande Institute Deemed University  

It was, however, his subsequent interactions with other names deep down South that had a greater impact on him. He travelled to Ramanathapuram to meet ‘Poochi’ Srinivasa Iyengar. He came to know that Subbarama Dikshitar had just then published his Sangita Sampradaya Pradarshini and went to Ettayapuram to see him. In Madras, he met Thiruvottiyur Tyagier and Tachur Singaracharya among others. The interactions were not altogether as fruitful as Bhatkhande would have wished, language being a great barrier. In his daily jottings, published later by the Indira Gandhi University at Khairagarh, as Meri Dakshin Bharat Ki Sangeet Yatra (My Musical Journey in Southern India), Bhatkhande noted that while all the musicians he met came across as great and saintly personalities, they were unable to explain to him much of what they practised.

He did manage to obtain valuable manuscripts — the Chaturdandi Prakasika of Venkatamakhin and the Svaramelakalanidhi of Ramamatya. These, and the observations he had made while touring North India, along with other manuscripts, helped him classify Hindustani ragas under a system of ten, which is rather like the melakartas of the Carnatic style. He wrote extensively on Hindustani music and his four-volume Hindustani Sangeet Paddhathi is even today the standard text for the North Indian style of classical music. Bhatkhande also began organising All India Music Conferences, which focused on Hindustani Music.

In this he was greatly supported by Rai Umanath Bali, a prominent Taluqdar of Avadh. It was the latter’s dearest wish that a college for Hindustani Music be established in Lucknow while Bhatkhande preferred Delhi for its location. The two argued over it for nearly a decade before the latter was finally won over in 1922. The fourth All India Music Conference was held in Lucknow in 1924 and a resolution was passed for the setting up of a music college in that city. The music-loving Nawab of Rampur threw his weight behind the setting up of the institution. This became reality in 1926, with syllabus fashioned by Bhatkhande. The All India College of Hindustani Music was inaugurated at the Pari Khana by Sir William Sinclair Marris, the then Governor of the United Provinces. Six months later, the college was named after him.

Rather interestingly, this was to have an impact in Madras. It was in 1927 that the All India Congress Session was held here with a music conference being held in parallel. That saw the birth of the Music Academy with one of its mandates being the setting up of a Teachers’ College of Music, “on the lines of the Marris College.” The Queen Mary’s College, which had offered music as an elective course with no theory classes for over a decade, began to offer a two-year intermediate course from 1927. Two years later, the Music College in Chidambaram, now a part of the Annamalai University began functioning. That institution too borrowed from the Marris College pattern.

It was only in 1948 that the Marris College changed its name to give credit where it was due — becoming the Bhatkhande Institute. This scholar, intrepid traveller and seeker deserved his name being preserved for posterity. In 2000, the Institute became a deemed university.

source: http://www.thehindu.com / The Hindu / Home> In Search of Music> Music / by Sriram V / March 29th, 2019

At 83, the fire burns bright within

Raj Bisaria – a TV, stage, radio, literature personality who continues to inspire aspirants, this octogenarian thespian, is still working on his Shakespearean favourite, ‘Hamlet’.

“Oh my fair warrior …,” this line from ‘Othello’, began the career of the father of modern theatre in North India – Raj Bisaria.

Today, 53 years after his first professional play as director, octogenarian Bisaria is working on another admired work of Shakespeare, ‘Hamlet’, and looking for an answer to the question: “To be or not to be…”

It was 1965, Bisaria, all of 30 years, conceptualised the thought of directing ‘Othello’, only with four characters- Desdemona, Iago, Emilia and of course ‘Othello’. “All were British artists, who were here in India under some literature and linguistics programme,” said Bisaria, going down memory lane.

“We started working on it in October 1965 and it was staged on February 12, 1966. I telescoped the play to four characters. I worked on the essence of the play with no violation of its spirit,” he added. It was the first play by Bisaria’s theatre group- The Art Workshop. After that there was no looking back as he directed more than six dozen plays in English as well Hindi, in India as well as abroad.

Since then, the changed viewing culture has pained the octogenarian thespian. “The entire viewing culture has changed. We just see short images. Especially when the audience is not theatre-oriented, theatre conscious, what do you expect,” he said.

Anguished over the fact that the younger lot is less interested in theatre, he said, “Even parents are not interested. Still, people like me are working for a bright tomorrow. I am the lone voice in the wilderness.”

Critical of the ‘modern’ form of theatre, he said that theatre is not song and dance but it is relates to human issues and psychology, which is universal. “Kalidasa’s ‘Shakuntala’ was performed in Germany. Shakespeare is alive in India, even more alive now. What connection do the Germans have with Kalidasa or we with Shakespeare?,” asked Bisaria hypothetically, and then responded, “Theatre depicts human problems, which are universal, these can’t be ignored. But convenience of ignorance is creating barriers in culture.”

‘STINT WITH CINEMA’

The thespian said that he meant to be a film actor and director. “There was no theatre accept Papa Ji (Prithviraj Kapoor). I am talking about 1950s,” he said. “I tried for films but I was told that I am too ugly, too thin to become an actor,” said Bisaria smiling and added, “Rejection trained me.”

However, he credits firms for his theatre education. “My whole theatre education has been through films because there was no theatre. But I believe, theatre is the womb of all the arts,” he asserted.

However, he has acted in Muzzaffar Ali’s ‘Aagman’ and Govind Nilhani’s ‘Aaghat’, besides several Doordarshan’s productions including ‘Biwi Natiyon Wali’.

Recalling theatre legends’ date with Lucknow, he said Prithviraj Kapoor, Geoffrey Kendal, “they used to come with their group to Lucknow. But times have changed now.”

BEYOND SHAKESPEARE

Five decades after staging ‘Othello’ and working on ‘Hamlet’, Bisaria, is the more impressed with Charlie Chaplin. “I stayed bit long with Shakespeare but my work ranges from George Bernard Shaw’s ‘Candida’ to Maxwell Anderson’s ‘Barefoot in Athens’, Harold Pinter’s ‘The Caretaker’ to Mohan Rakesh’s ‘Aadhe Adhoore’, Badal Sircar’s ‘Baki Itihas’, Dharamvir Bharti’s ‘Andha Yug’ and Adya Rangacharya’s ‘Suno Janmejaya’.

As a stage and light designer, his use of colours and perception of its psychology help him create a new spectrum of theatrical images. “My effort has remained to promote a serious bi-lingual theatre, more purposeful and contextually relevant to India’s social conditions,” he said.

ENGLISH THEATRE

After ‘Othello’, he directed Christopher Fry’s poetic play ‘A Phoenix Too Frequent’ and Eugène Ionesco’s absurd play ‘The Lesson’. A significant advance was made when he directed Jean-Paul Sartre’s existential ‘In Camera’, Edna St. Vincent Millay’s ‘Aria Da Capo’. Bisaria recalled, “In 1967, I directed Ronald Duncan’s translation of 12th Century classic ‘Abelard and Heloise’ in a three-bill.”

HINDI, URDU THEATRE

Bisaria put his efforts to promoting bilingual theatre sensibilities in Lucknow. He invited groups from other parts of country to produce plays in Hindi, under TAW’s umbrella. Badal Sircar’s ‘Baqi Itihas’ was the first Hindi play directed by Bisaria under the auspices of TAW.

Bisaria did not stop there and his debut in Hindi theatre lined up a wide range of plays which were translations from English, Bengali, Marathi, besides Hindi.

BHARTENDU ACADEMY OF DRAMATIC ARTS

Bisaria said he was excited when he founded Bhartendu Academy of Dramatic Arts. “I taught in the university for decades but I am not a teacher. I am an artist,” he said. He suggested the then state government, to have a semi-professional repertory theatre in Uttar Pradesh and in 1974 the State Government asked him to set a roadmap for establishing a drama school, which would function as a full-fledged academy. Hence, Bhartendu Academy of Dramatic Arts (BADA) was born in 1975. That time, its contemporaries were the Delhi-based National School of Drama, said Bisaria, who, remained founder director of the academy for years.

STILL LOOKING FOR THE FIRE WITHIN

“Something like a fire is within me which I am still looking for,” he said, showing, some papers relating to a project under the prestigious ‘Tagore National Fellowship’. “Shakespeare’s ‘Indian Summer’ is the title of my work, which tells about the theatrical study of Shakespearean plays in India.

Other than this, under the ‘Senior Fellowship’ of the central government, the thespian has worked on a book – titled ‘The Mind of the Director’ – on Hindi theatre directors.

But, Bisaria, who is working on directing Hamlet – his 5th of the Bard, said, “Hamlet is my favourite work and character. I would love to do the role of Hamlet.”

AWARDS AND HONOURS

For his contribution to modern theatre, he was honoured with the third highest civilian award, Padma Shree, in 1990. Besides, Bisara has been awarded with several awards at the state, national, international levels.

source: http://www.hindustantimes.com / Hindustan Times / Home> Lucknow / Hindustan Times, Lucknow / by Saurabh Chauhan / February 18th, 2019

Lucknow diary

Resplendent with the flavour of Kumbh, the ongoing 10-day-long Lucknow Book Fair is drawing denizens in hordes.

‘Atal’ tribute to Vajpayee
In a tribute to former prime minister Atal Bihari Vajpayee, the Central Institute of Medicinal and Aromatic Plants (CIMAP), Lucknow, has named its new variety of lemongrass ‘CIM-Atal’. Having represented Lucknow inParliament for five consecutive terms, Vajpayee passed away in August last year. The institution’s director Dr AK Tripathi claims that true to its name, the new variety of lemongrass is firm and resistant to moderate changes in farming conditions as ‘Atal’ means firm and constant. Moreover, the plant gives a constant high yield of aromatic oil. Besides, ‘CIM-Akshay’, ‘CIM-Sukhda’, ‘CIM-Suvas’ have also been evolved from basil (tulsi) to be released and distributed to farmers for cultivation and being high yield varieties, these will contribute to consolidate farmers’ income. 

Fair with ‘Kumbh flavour’
Resplendent with the flavour of Kumbh, the ongoing 10-day-long Lucknow Book Fair is drawing denizens in hordes. Cultural performances, ‘traffic security week’ and many other attractions have been set up at the fair. Called ‘Ankuram Shiksha Mahotsav’, the festival is being managed by a civil society group ‘icareindia’. A satrangi exhibiton is also being organised with the participation of government primary and upper primary schools from 11 districts — Agra, Aligarh, Basti, Maharajganj, Etawah, Mathura, Kheri, Kannauj, Balrampur, Ayodhya and Lucknow in the festival. The Kumbh festival has been going on since January 14 and has been set up on an unprecendented scale.

Lucknow ready for Metro
In a matter of days, the first phase of the Lucknow Metro will kick off from the airport to the other end of the city, covering a 23-km stretch from February 15. The ambitious project of connecting the city’s ends is two-and-a-half months ahead of its deadline. As of now, the Metro will only ply on the 8-km route from the airport to Charbagh. Recently, ‘Metroman of India’ E Sreedharan, who is also the principal advisor to Lucknow Metro Rail Corporation (LMRC), inspected the North-South Corridor — from the airport to Munshipulia — with a team of the corporation and endorsed the work carried out. Following another inspection by Commissioner Railway Safety between February 20-23, the project would be ready for commercial runs.

Marquee bubbling with Oudhi culture
Lucknow residents woke up to the soulful notes of Raag Bhairavi and ‘Jago Mohan pyare’ rendered by noted classical singer Shruti Sadolikar, who performed at the ‘Safed Baradari’ in a concert at dawn on Sunday. Presenting timeless melodies for an enthusiastic audience at 6am, Sadolikar enthralled music connoisseurs with her ethereal voice at the ongoing Sanatkada Festival in an ode to the Oudhi culture that is quintessential to Lucknow. The event was a day-long celebration with food and a mushaira and a qawwali session in the evening.

Our correspondent in Uttar Pradesh / namita.bajpai@newindianexpress

source: http://www.newindianexpress.com / The New Indian Express / Home> Nation / by Namita Bajpai, Express News Service / February 05th, 2019

Congress leader’s death mourned

Senior UP Congress leader and state general secretary Raja JP Singh (58) passed away after a prolonged illness in Lucknow. Singh was the younger brother of former IAS officer Aparmita Pratap Singh.

Singh’s family said that the leader breathed his last at Sanjay Gandhi Post-Graduate Institute of Medical Sciences (SGPGI) during treatment on Thursday and he was cremated in Varanasi, his native place on Saturday.

Singh belonged to a royal family from Varanasi and is survived by his widow and two sons, both residing in the US.

Meanwhile, UP Congress chief Raj Babbar, along with other senior leaders including Rajya Sabha member Sanjay Singh, MP PL Puniya, former UP Home Minister Satyadeo Tripathi and others, mourned Singh’s death. A condolence meeting was also held at the UPCC headquarters in Mall Avenue on Saturday evening.

source: http://www.dailypioneer.com / The Pioneer / Home> State Editions / PNS, Lucknow / November 25th, 2018

South Korean First Lady visits Queen Heo Memorial in Ayodhya, welcomes ‘Ram Durbar’

Kim garlanded ‘Sita’ as they descended from the helicopter and Uttar Pradesh Governor Ram Naik and Adityanath welcomed Lord Ram and Laxman by garlanding them.

Uttar Pradesh Chief Minister Yogi Adityanath and South Korean first lady Kim Jung-sook on their arrival at the Queen Huh Park in Ayodhya Tuesday. November 6 2018. | PTI

Ayodhya :

South Korean First Lady Kim Jung-sook arrived in Ayodhya Tuesday to attend Diwali festivities in the holy city and began her tour by offering tribute at the Queen Heo Memorial.

Kim visited the site, along with Chief Minister Yogi Adityanath, and attended a ground-breaking ceremony for upgrade and beautification of the memorial dedicated to the legendary princess of Ayodhya who went to Korea.

Later she went to the banks of the Saryu river to welcome artists donning the avatar of Lord Ram and Goddess Sita, who arrived at Ram Katha Park in a ceremonial chopper as part of ‘Ram Durbar’.

Kim garlanded ‘Sita’ as they descended from the helicopter and Uttar Pradesh Governor Ram Naik and Adityanath welcomed Lord Ram and Laxman by garlanding them.

Union Minister V K Singh also attended the grand event in Ayodhya.

Kim’s stand-alone visit to India, which began on November 4, has rekindled interest in the legendary princess who married a Korean king.

According to Korean legend, the Princess of Ayodhya went to Korea in 48 AD and married King Kim-Suro.

A large number of Koreans trace their ancestry to this legendary princess, who is known as Queen Heo Hwang-ok.

“The legend of Queen Heo Hwang-ok binds the two countries together culturally, and her visit will further promote our people-to-people ties,” a senior official at the cultural wing of the South Korean Embassy in India told PTI.

Huge hoardings, bearing message — ‘South Korean First lady Kim Jung-sook – Welcome to Ayodhya ‘ and her picture, have been put up across the city.

An agreement regarding the Queen Suriratna Memorial Project was signed to facilitate upgrade and expansion of the existing monument commemorating Princess Suriratna (Queen Hur Hwang-ok).

In July, the two countries signed the agreement for expansion of the Suriratna memorial project.

Uttam Das, a seer from Ayodhya, told PTI, “It was a matter of honour for Ayodhya that the she was visiting Ayodhya.”

“A princess of Ayodhya had gone there around 2,000 years ago, and now the First Lady is visiting Ayodhya, life has sort of come full circle,” he said.

Bihar Governor Lalji Tandon, South Korean envoy Shin Bongkil also took part in the celebrations.

source: http://www.newindianexpress.com / The New Indian Express / Home> Nation / by PTI / November 06th, 2018

India’s first multi-modal terminal on inland waterways inaugurated in Varanasi

Prime Minister Narendra Modi and Uttar Pradesh Chief Minister Yogi Adityanath accept greetings during a public meeting for the inauguration of two major national highways and an inland waterways project, in Varanasi | Photo Credit: PTI

This is the first of the four multi-modal terminals being constructed on the National Waterway-1 (river Ganga) as part of the World Bank-aided Jal Marg Vikas project of the Inland Waterways Authority of India.

Prime Minister Narendra Modi on Monday inaugurated India’s first multi-modal terminal on the Ganga river in his parliamentary constituency here and received the country’s first container cargo transported on inland waterways from Kolkata.

The first consignment containing food and beverage had set sail from Kolkata in the last week of October.

The Prime Minister was accompanied by Uttar Pradesh Chief Minister Yogi Adityanath, Union Transport, Highways and Shipping Minister Nitin Gadkari and BJP State president Mahendra Nath Pandey, who is also the MP of the neighbouring Chandauli Lok Sabha constituency.

This is the first of the four multi-modal terminals being constructed on the National Waterway-1 (river Ganga) as part of the World Bank-aided Jal Marg Vikas project of the Inland Waterways Authority of India.

The total estimated cost of the project is ₹5,369.18 crore, which will be equally shared between the Government of India and the World Bank.

Earlier, upon his arrival here, the Prime Minister was given a detailed presentation of the waterways and watched a short film on the viability of the waterways between Varanasi in Uttar Pradesh and Haldia in West Bengal.

According to an official statement, the Centre’s Jal Marg Vikas Project aims at developing the stretch of the river between Varanasi and Haldia for navigation of large vessels weighing up to 1,500 tonnes to 2,000 tonnes.

Its objective is to promote inland waterways as a cheap and environment-friendly means of transportation, especially for cargo movement. The Inland Waterways Authority of India (IWAI) is the project implementing agency.

The project entails construction of three multi-modal terminals (Varanasi, Sahibganj and Haldia), two inter-modal terminals, five roll-on-roll-off (Ro-Ro) terminal pairs, new navigation lock at Farakka in West Bengal, assured depth dredging, integrated vessel repair and maintenance facility, differential global positioning system (DGPS), river information system (RIS), river training.

source: http://www.thehindu.com / The Hindu / Home> News> National / by PTI / Varanasi – November 12th, 2018