Category Archives: Leaders

Meerut scissors make the cut for GI tag

Barber scissors hand made in Meerut with scrap metal.

For the first time, a handmade tool from micro and small and medium enterprises in India has been registered for a geographical indicator (GI) tag, an official of a body promoting this sector said on Wednesday.

The tool is a pair of scissors made of metal scrap by a community in Meerut, which is “the only scissor cluster in India” and which has been making the product for more than three centuries, Karamjeet Singh Saluja, Deputy Director- Intellectual Property Rights, Federation of Indian Micro and Small and Medium Enterprises (FISME), IP Facilitation Centre, told reporters on the sidelines of an IPR awareness programme held here.

The programme focused on innovators, micro, small and medium enterprises and other industries. It was organised by the FISME, which promotes entrepreneurship and works to improve market access for these units. The IP Facilitation Centre, sponsored by the Development Commissioner, MSME, Union Ministry of MSME, facilitated the registering of the scissors for the GI tag. Sharif Ahmad, vice-president, Meerut Scissors Manufacturers Special Purpose Vehicle, and a seventh-generation craftsman, told The Hindu on the phone: “The GI tag will make a difference to us. No one else will be able to copy our scissors or misuse the made-in-Meerut tag our handmade scissors offer…”

The tag would enable the crafters to make scissors of standard sizes and of high quality, he said. At present, the size varies, from six inches to 14 inches, and the scissors are sold at a price ranging from Rs.20 to Rs.500.

Known for their sharpness, the scissors are used at home and by industrial garment manufacturers.

They can be repaired, unlike other scissors that are thrown out after use.

In the Uttar Pradesh Hindi, the phrase used to vouch for the quality of the scissors is Dada le, potaa barpe (a product bought by the grandfather, but which continues to be used by his grandson), Mr. Ahmad said, to underscore the scissors’ quality.

The Meerut scissors are made of carbon steel blades sourced from scrap metal found in cars, buses, trucks and railways. The handles are made of plastic, aluminium or alloys, which are sourced from old utensils. All the parts are pre-used. The first pair was made 360 years ago by Asli Akhun.

Meerut has 250 small-scale scissors-making units, employing 70,000 people directly and indirectly. Both the Central and Uttar Pradesh governments have helped the industry.

While men make scissors, women do the tasks that require handwork and pack the products.

They are sent only to the domestic markets, but the makers find it tough to meet the demand at home.

Mr. Saluja said the GI tag was given to products based on certain information submitted to the Geographical Indication Registry, Chennai: proof of origin, the GI map, the statement of case and the history of the product.

At present, the FISME, which is present in Delhi, Hyderabad and Bangalore, is working to get the GI tag for three more products.

source: http://www.thehindu.com / The Hindu / Home> Crafts / by Renuka Phadnis / Mangaluru – January 10th, 2018

National film awards:The feeling is yet to sink in, says Yatindra

Lata: Sur Gatha is based on interviews with the legendary singer that took eight years to shape up.

Yatindra Mishra(HT Photo)

Yatindra Mishra, author of Lata: Sur Gatha, became the first UPite to win the Swarna Kamal award at the 64th National Film Awards that were announced on Friday.

After 12 years a Hindi work has won the Best Book on cinema category in the prestigious award. In 2005, Doordarshan’s ex-chairman Sharad Dutt from Delhi had won the award for his biography on KL Sehgal in Hindi.

Speaking to HT City from Ayodhya, Mishra said, “I still don’t believe that I have won the National Award for my book. It was only after I read it on official website and wishes started pouring in that I believed it to be true. Honestly, it is yet to sink in. It’s not just my feat but a glory for the state too.” The book gives an insight on melody queen Lata Mangeshkar’s life, her seven-decade career and its impact on Indian cinema.

The book has been selected out of 33 official entries in various languages. “Mostly books in Bengali, Marathi and other languages have bagged this award in previous years. The award carries a Swarna Kamal citation and Rs 75,000 each to the author and publisher – Vani Publication. The book, that was release in October last year, has already won three awards,” he said.

Lata Mangeshkar (HT File Photo)

Lata: Sur Gatha is based on interviews with the legendary singer that took eight years to shape up. “One year I just did the research while the interviews were spread across six years and then it took a year to pen the book,” he said.

In 2000, he wrote his first book ‘Girija’ on legendary classical singer Girija Devi followed by a book on shehnai maestro Ustad Bismillaha Khan, which is also a part of NCERT syllabus and is taught in schools. He has authored four poetry books and wrote a book on ‘Devpriya’ on dancer Sonal Man Singh.

“On cinema, I have written a musical history ‘Humsafar’ that came out during the celebrations of 100 years of cinema (2013). I also compiled Gulzar saheb’s poetry ‘Yar Julahe’ while another book is ‘Milon Se Din’ — a compilation of songs,” he tells. Mishra is now looking forward to speak to melody queen very soon. “Today I recall a line said by Lataji when I asked her about being conferred the highest civilian award Bharat Ratna. She said, ‘…shayad aapki apni bhakti aur vishwas bhi unmein sahayak hotey hai.’ (…probably your own devotion and faith helps in it).” He will be given the award by President Pranab Mukherjee on May 3.

source: http://www.hindustantimes.com / Hindustan Times / Home> Cities> Lucknow / by Deep Saxena,Lucknow, Hindustan Times / April 12th, 2017

The story of the Englishman who stayed back as a judge in India (and what it tells us about Nehru)

Having come to India in the service of an imperial power, William Broome died an Indian.

Justice William Broome is not a well-known figure today. But he lived an exciting and inspiring life.

He came to India as an imperial official, but defied British prejudices by marrying an Indian woman and devoting his life to India. He received Indian citizenship with the assistance of Prime Minister Jawaharlal Nehru and heard the early stages of Raj Narain’s challenge to Indira Gandhi’s 1971 election victory. He was unusual even among those British officials who stayed on in India after Independence. But his life still contains important lessons about what it can mean to be Indian.

William Broome was born in 1910 in London. He was appointed to the Indian Civil Service in 1932. He served in what was then the United Provinces (now Uttar Pradesh). In 1937, he married Swaroop Kumari Gour, the daughter of the lawyer, politician and academic Sir Hari Singh Gour.

This marriage was remarkable. Even though Broome served in the Indian Civil Service during a period of Indianisation, British rule in India was still characterised by racial hierarchies and segregation. The maintenance of colonial control involved the preservation of racial divides, aloofness and detachment from the Indian populace. Even India’s Anglo-Indian population was stigmatised and excluded by the English-born.

In marrying Gour, Broome defied these prejudices. He raised his children as Hindus (Broome was an atheist), learned numerous Indian languages and developed a strong interest in Indian culture.

Being Indian
Broome was appointed as a district and sessions judge in 1941. His independence in that role was legendary. When the chief secretary of the United Provinces declared that too many detainees under the Defence of India Rules were receiving bail, Broome responded by threatening the chief secretary with contempt of court.

Unlike most British judges and civil servants, Broome stayed in India as a judge after Independence. By 1958, Nehru was able to write of Broome that “I have seldom known any Englishman who has so Indianized himself in various ways as he has”, and that “he is as much as Indian as anybody can be who is not born in India and indeed probably more so than many people born in India”.

In that year, with Nehru’s assistance, Broome renounced his British citizenship and became an Indian citizen. He was appointed to the Allahabad High Court, where he served until his retirement in 1972. His judgments in this role demonstrated a strong concern for civil liberties, even going further than the Supreme Court of that time.

One of Broome’s final cases as a judge was to hear the early stages of Raj Narain’s challenge to Indira Gandhi’s 1971 election from Rae Bareli – the challenge that ultimately led to the Emergency. Broome had known Nehru and had once enjoyed a friendly relationship with Indira – he and his wife were even invited to Rajiv and Sonia Gandhi’s wedding reception. But he nonetheless made important procedural rulings in Narain’s favour. (Although Broome’s friendship with Indira Gandhi seems to have ended after this case, it is striking that no effort was made to delegitimise his decisions by referring to his foreign birth.)

Broome died in Bengaluru in 1988. Having come to India in the service of an imperial power, he died an Indian.

A noteworthy life
Broome was unusual. Although thousands of British citizens remained in India after Independence, few British officials or judges did so. Of those officials, Broome was one of the few who devoted himself to India not just as an administrator, judge or scholar but as a citizen. The fact that he embraced India until his death, and was embraced in turn, must be weighed against the departure of so many other British citizens, whether at Independence or upon their retirement, and the alienation of many Anglo-Indians from the new independent nation. His life was not necessarily representative of how other people of British descent in India felt or acted after Independence.

But Broome’s life is still noteworthy.

He was retained as a judge by the independent Indian government partially through pragmatism: despite the long struggle for independence, free India kept many of the institutions and officials that had governed (even subjugated) colonial India. But his life also reflected important, idealistic aspects of the new Indian state.

Broome came to India as an official of an occupying colonial power. He served as an official and a judge in a regime that imposed various rigid classifications: between races, between religions, between governors and governed. Broome rejected these classifications. After achieving Independence, the government of India did so too.

In the current age of escalating intolerance and xenophobic nationalism, Jawaharlal Nehru’s idea of India remains a powerful alternative to those who would make the nation great again by slicing away undesired pieces of it. Nehru refused, as Ramachandra Guha puts it, to “reduce India or ‘Indianness’ to a dominant religious or linguistic ethos”. Nehru himself described Indian unity as encompassing “the widest tolerance of belief and custom…every variety acknowledged and even encouraged”. Nehru’s idea of India was, as he put it, a nation of “enduring capacity to absorb other people and their cultural accomplishments”, drawing upon and enriched by ideas and faiths and traditions from around the world. Even though this vision failed to attract or keep many, even most, of the British people who had lived and worked in India under the colonial regime, it did allow Broome to be accepted as an Indian.

The fact that Broome was seemingly one of a kind demonstrates that this vision has not been completely honoured in practice. Broome was married to the daughter of a very distinguished Indian, held important offices and was seen to have “Indianized himself”. He may have been easier to accept as an Indian than someone without these characteristics, thus demonstrating limits to Indian tolerance.

There is hence a gulf between Nehru’s vision of India and how that dream has been fulfilled. But the vision is still important and still inspiring today.

Douglas McDonald-Norman is a researcher in Indian law, politics and history and a contributor to Law and Other Things.

For more information on William Broome, see Douglas’s article for the Indian Historical Review, “Becoming Indian: William Broome and Colonial Continuity in Post-Independence India”.

source: http://www.scroll.in / Scroll.in / Home> Magazine> History Revisited / by Douglas McDonald-Norman / December 26th, 2017

Stoke Row’s Maharajah’s Well undergoes £25K revamp

Stoke Row’s Maharajah’s Well undergoes £25K revamp / ALAN MURRAY-RUST

A Victorian well that was funded by an Indian maharajah has undergone £25,000 refurbishment works.

Maharajah’s Well was gifted to the residents of Stoke Row, Henley on Thames, Oxfordshire, by the Maharajah of Benares in the mid-1800s.

He was moved by stories of water shortage in the area told to him by local landowner Edward Reade who worked in India for many years sinking wells.

Revamp work has included refurbishing the well’s gilded elephant statue.

The restoration of the 368ft-deep (112m) well – which began in April – also involved repainting the well and its canopy using Victorian methods, the Maharajah’s Well Trust charity, which has funded the work, said.

Chair of the trust, Catherine Hale, described it as a “unique structure”.

“It’s also an amazing story of this connection between a landowner in the Chilterns and a maharaja.”

Maharajah’s Well was officially opened on 24 May 1864 and cost £353.

source: http://www.bbc.om / BBC News / Home> News> England> Oxford / December 16th, 2017

I give full credit to Lucknow for my win in Mr India

Lucknow boy Jitesh Singh Deo, who won the title of Peter England Mr India World 2017, in Mumbai on Thursday, says he always had the confidence to make it to the top but could hardly believe it when his name was announced as the winner.

The 22-year defeated 15 other contestants in the final round to win the coveted title. Having worked hard for two years to clinch the title Jitesh is “super happy” and is now looking forward to coming back home to Lucknow and celebrating his success with his friends and family. Also on the top of his to-do list, when in Lucknow, is tucking in his favourite Tundey kebabs.

Speaking to us from Mumbai, Jitesh says, “I froze on stage when they announced my name as the winner. And then when Kangana Ranaut put that sash around me, it was the most incredible feeling. I knew I had it in me but frankly, the win was unexpected. But as they say, and now I firmly believe it too, that hard work definitely pays.”

And Jitesh would know that as the engineering graduate also tried his luck in the contest two-years ago but couldn’t make it to the finals. He then groomed and trained himself for this year’s contest and succeeded, and how!

Jitesh Singh Deo, Peter England Mr India World, 2017, in a scene from the film A Disaster….June 16 in which he plays lead (BCCL)

The former City Montessori School student of Mahanagar, third branch, says he is now looking forward to sharing his happiness with his family and friends in Lucknow. “Bas ab Lucknow aa ke celebrate karna hai”Jitesh laughs and adds, “My grandmother and parents are eagerly waiting for me to be there at home.

My grandmother and mom had started crying when they got to know that I had won. My parents were so happy that they cut a cake and partied the whole night the day I won. My friends have been calling me up ki ‘bhai kab aa raha hai, party karni hai’. There’s so much excitement among all my relatives and even our neighbours. Ab bas sabse milna hai. Aur sabse zyada, Lucknow aa ke khoob saare Tundey kabab khaane hain. I am dying to have them. Mein thoda patla bhi ho gaya hoon toh Lucknow aane ke baad khoob sara khana khaunga.”

‘But what surprised Jitesh was a call from his school congratulating him for his win. “I got a call from my school and they said they want to felicitate me. It was a bit surprising kyunki mein aisa koi studies mein bahut achha nahi tha. And now they want to honour me. That’s what I call god’s blessings. It’s all feeling so nice.

My friends are calling me and saying ‘yeh ladka jo hamare saath padhta tha, khada hota tha, aaj TV pe hai aur Mr India bann gaya hai!’

Giving credit to his city of birth for his win, Jitesh says, “All credit goes to Lucknow for my success. Yahan ki tehzeeb, parvarish, grooming, yahi sab zimmedar hain meri kaamyabi ke. My basic personality has been shaped in this city. Yes, I got the exposure and the confidence to face the world in Mumbai, where I shifted six-months ago and also in college in Ghaziabad, but shuruaat toh Lucknow se hi hui hai.”

An aspiring actor, Jitesh has acted as lead in a film made last year on the 2013 Uttrakhand floods. He has also participated in fashion shows in the past and says that Bollywood will be a natural progression, but not just yet.

“As of now, I want to focus on the Mr World title. After Rohit Khandelwal winning the Mr World title and Manushi Chillar being crowned Miss World, I feel my responsibility has increased. I want to retain the Mr World title in India and win it for my country again. So abhi toh usi ki taiyyari karni hai,” says Jitesh, adding, “As a kid I always was interested in singing, dancing and acting but I had never imagined myself to be Mr India. I used to participate in cultural activities in school.

In fact, when I was in class 12th, the school annual function was to be held. And since we had our board exams, we weren’t allowed to participate in it. But I saw these juniors practicing for the group song and I also joined in. On the final day of the event when people saw me as the lead singer in the group, they were shocked ki yeh ladka kaise aa gaya annual function mein, so main aisi cheezen karta rehta hoon. But, eventually, I want to be an actor.”

— Itishree.Misra@timesgroup.com

source: http://www.timesofindia.indiatimes.com / The Times of India / Home> News> City News> Lucknow News / TNN / December 18th, 2017

Babasaheb Bhimrao Ambedkar University to honour 7 eminent persons

Lucknow :

Babasaheb Bhimrao Ambedkar University will give awards to seven eminent people on its convocation on December 15. The Academic Council meeting held on Wednesday decided to award Vidhi Ratna to chairman, Central Administrative Tribunal, Justice Permod Kohli, and senior advocate HC Ganeshia.

While president, Indian National Science Academy (INSA) Ajay Sood and chairman, University Grants Commission, VS Chauhan will be given Vigyan Ratna; Guru Nanak Dev University vice-chancellor Jaspal S Sandhu will be given sportsmedicine award; and senior RSS leader Krishna Gopal and former chairman, Indian Council of Social Science Research, SK Thorat will be given social science award for their social service.

The convocation will be held in two parts. The first one will begin from 10.30 am which will see President Ram Nath Kovind’s participation. After giving away medals to four toppers and delivering the convocation address, the President will leave at 11.30am. Sharing the dais with chief guest Kovind would be UP chief minister Aditya Nath Yogi, governor Ram Naik, deputy chief minister Dinesh Sharma and medical and technical education minister Ashutosh Tandon.

In the second shift, the other gold medal awardees will accept it from the vicechancellor.

source: http://www.timesofindia.indiatimes.com / The Times of India / News> City News> Lucknow News> Schools & Colleges / TNN / December 14th, 2017

Lalji Singh, ‘father of DNA fingerprinting in India,’ passes away

A file picture of Lalji Singh, former Director of the Centre for Cellular and Molecular Biology, in Hyderabad. | Photo Credit: Nagara Gopal

Uttar Pradesh Chief Minister Yogi Adityanath condoled Lalji Singh’s death.

Eminent scientist and ‘father of DNA fingerprinting in India’ Lalji Singh died following a heart attack on Sunday. He was 70.

Dr. Singh was one of the leaders instrumental in making DNA fingerprinting mainstream in India, both at the level of research as well as for forensic applications.

This was after techniques advanced by him led to DNA profiling being used to establish parentage as well as solve some high profile crime cases in India.

Based on his work he was tasked by the government — in the late 1990s — to establish the Centre for DNA Fingerprinting and Diagnostics (CDFD) with a mandate of making it a nodal centre for DNA fingerprinting and diagnostics for all species and several diseases.

He also set up a slew of dedicated labs that worked on several aspects of genetics such as population biology, structural biology and transgenic research.

Dr. Singh served as a director at the Centre for Cellular and Molecular Biology (CCMB) in Hyderabad from 1998 to 2009.

He went on to become Vice Chancellor of the Banaras Hindu University (2001 – 2014), his alma mater.

Until recently, he was active in the Genome Foundation, a non-profit organisation that aims to diagnose and treat genetic disorders affecting the underprivileged, especially from rural India.

PTI adds…

“He complained of chest pain when he reached the Lal Bahadur Shastri Airport to board a flight for Delhi. He was taken to the Banaras Hindu University (BHU) Trauma Centre from there but he could not be saved,” O P Upadhyaya, chief medical superintendent of the Sunder Lal hospital in the BHU, said.

Singh, the 25th vice chancellor of the BHU, hailed from neighbouring Jaunpur district’s Kalvari village.

He was also an alumnus of the BHU and completed his BSc, MSc and PhD degrees from there.

Uttar Pradesh Chief Minister Yogi Adityanath condoled Singh’s death.

“Lalji Singh was the father of DNA fingerprinting. The country has lost a great educationist and scientist after his death,” he said.

Singh was also the recipient of the prestigious Padma Shri award.

source: http://www.thehindu.com / The Hindu / Home> Sci-Tech> Science / by Special Correspondent / Varanasi – Lucknow, (U.P.) / December 11th, 2017

Lucknow’s first woman mayor, 110 corporators sworn in

Bharatiya Janata Party’s Sanyukta Bhatia was on Tuesday sworn in as the first woman Mayor of the Uttar Pradesh capital

Along with her, 110 newly elected corporators were also administered the oath of office in presence of a large number of their supporters, party workers, family members.

Soon after taking oath, Bhatia said that her top most priority was to improve the cleanliness rankings of the state capital and added that the corporation would seek all support and help from the state government to faster development of the city.

She also batted for more teeth to the civic body and the Mayor as well as implementation of the Constitution’s 74th Amendment. Bhatia also hinted that the municipal corporation would soon crack down on encroachments on roads.

Urban Development Minister Suresh Khanna as well as other senior colleagues like Rita Bahuguna Joshi, Ashutosh Tandon and Brajesh Pathak along with legislators of the ruling party were also present at the oath-taking ceremony.

–IANS

md/him/vd
source: http://www.business-standard.com / Business Standard / Home> News-IANS> Lucknow – December 12th, 2017

Nutan Rathore youngest mayor in UP

Agra :

By winning the Firozabad municipal corporation election, Nutan Rathore has not only became its first mayor but also the youngest in the state.

Firozabad was upgraded to a municipal corporation in 2014 but elections for it have been held now.

Rathore secured 98,932 votes and won by a margin of 42,392 votes from her AIMIM rival, Masrur Fatima.

After completing her MBA, she worked with NGOs. Before getting associated with Mahila Chetna Manch, Bhopal, she also worked with Oxfam India.

Talking with TOI, Rathore said her education and working experience with NGOs would help her in meeting the aspirations of the people and fulfill her responsibilities as a mayor. “For understanding the problems of people and for doing development work, proper management is require and my experience will surely help,” she said.

She said her father, Mangal Singh Rathore who has been associated with BJP for several years, is her political mentor. “My father was city president of the party and a district office-bearer,” she said. She campaigned for the mayor’s post under his guidance.

An elated Mangal Singh Rathore, who is a lawyer by profession, said he always wanted someone from his family to take over the political baton from him but he had never thought that it would be his daughter. “BJP’s slogan is ‘beti bachao, beti padhao’ but I wanted to extend it to ‘beti badhao’ for my daughter,” he added.

“When the seat was reserved for OBC woman candidate, I asked my wife to contest but she refused. Then, my daughter expressed her desire to contest and today, she has won,” he said.

source: http://www.timesofindia.indiatimes.com / The Times of India / News> City News> Agra News / by DM Sharma and Anuja Jaiswal / TNN / December 02nd, 2017

To end VIP culture, UP ADM commutes on cycle for official meetings, daily chores

Muzaffarnagar :

Taking a step towards ending VIP culture and spread the message among other officials in the district, additional district magistrate (ADM) of Muzaffarnagar, Harish Chandra, is trying to set an example here.

Chandra not only commutes by bicycle from his home to office and other places for official meetings, but also completes his daily chores on it. He also never has security personnel with him.

A 1997 batch provincial civil services (PCS) official, 40-year-old Chandra had taken to riding a bicycle during his previous stint in Saharanpur as well. On seeing the ADM take a bicycle to work, the district bar association president, Thakur Anup Singh, also appealed to his associates to start using bicycles instead of travelling by cars or buses in a bid to reduce pollution. “I will soon put a proposal to bring bicycles while coming for the bar meeting,” he said.

“I use the bicycle even for my daily chores. It saves time and fuel,” said ADM Chandra.

Advocate Firoz Rana, who has a chamber only 100 yards away from the ADM office, said, “I know many my associates would like to bring the bicycle to work. I am sure in the coming days they will also use it.”

source: http://www.timesofindia.indiatimes.com / The Times of India / News> City News> Meerut News / by Mohd Dilshad / TNN / November 29th, 2017