Category Archives: Leaders

Chetan Chauhan’s promise to Uttar Pradesh Olympic medalists: Win medal, get 3 crore

Chetan Chauhan, former Indian cricket team opener and sports minister of Uttar Pradesh, has announced Olympic medal winners will be given an additional Rs 3 crore in addition to the one they receive from the Central government and has said the state of Uttar Pradesh is undertaking special efforts to promote women sportspersons.

Chetan Chauhan has announced that the additional Rs 3 crore for Olympic medal winners apart from the one that they receive from the Central government is a bid to encourage sportspersons across the state.(PTI)

Former Indian cricketer and sports minister of Uttar Pradesh, Chetan Chauhan has announced that Olympic medal winners will be given an additional Rs 3 crore apart from the one that they receive from the Central government in a bid to encourage sportspersons across the state.

Chauhan was speaking at the closing ceremony of the sports meet in Agra where he declared that the state government had been planning to pump up the rewards in tune with that of the Central government. He also stated that necessary arrangements are being made to step up the quality of football in the state as well.

Urged youngsters to stay fit and healthy, Chauhan said: “The ODI format came in when I was almost at the end of my career. These days there’s Test, ODI, Twenty20 and then the Indian Premier League and so on. It’s very important to stay fit. Back in my days a bowler could bowl at the same speed in the first hour of the day and the last. These days, you can’t see this anymore.”

He further went on to add that the state and the central governments were working in unison to promote local talent, and were driving special campaigns in rural areas.

Referring to women cricketers Deepti Sharma and Poonam Yadav, Chauhan further went on to add: “Special efforts are being undertaken to promote women players, the result of which could be seen at the previous World Cup. The players stated that they want women sportspersons to get opportunities in every discipline and not cricket in order to boost their morale. I would want the governments to support these players financially to help them in the process. The Union Sports minister has stated that there are a few areas that require supervision. We have charted out a few plans and will soon implement it as well.”

source: http://www.hindustantimes.com / Hindustan Times / Home> Cricket / by HT Correspondent, Hindustan Times – Mumbai / December 01st, 2017

Monk who initiated Ambedkar into Buddhism dies days before 89th birthday

Lucknow :

Buddhist monk Bhadant Galgedar Pragyanand, youngest among the seven priests who had initiated Babasaheb Bhim Rao Ambedkar into Buddhism in 1956, died here at Lucknow’s King George’s Medical University (KGMU) on Thursday morning.

Just about 18 days short of this 89th birthday, the Sri Lanka-born ascetic had been undergoing multiple age-related medical problems, including diabetes and high blood pressure.

Head of Lucknow’s Buddh Vihar near Risaldar Park in Lal Kuan area, monk Pragyanand had come to India at the age of 13 and was visited by Ambedkar in Lucknow twice, in 1948 and 1951.

Pragyanand was only 20 when Ambedkar first met him.

Disciples of the ‘gururji’ claimed that it was after his visits to Lucknow to seek blessings from Bhadant Boddhanant and Bhadant Pragyanand that Ambedkar was inspired to embrace Buddhism.

Bhadanta Pragyanand (File Photo)

Final rites in Shrawasti after procession in city.

A procession carrying the body of Bhadant Pragyanand in an open vehicle will leave Risaldar park situated Buddh Vihar at 9am. Following the Husainganj, Burlington, Odeon cinema route, the procession will reach Ambedkar Mahsabha where the body of its founder president will be kept for 15 minutes. The procession will then reach Hazratganj situated Ambedkar statue where a halt of 30 minutes will be made for tributes to be paid, when finally at 12 noon the body will be carried to Shrawasti for last rites as per Buddhist rituals.

‘Guruji spoke little but talking about Ambedkar would always energise him’

He was brought in on November 26 after complaints of fever and chest pain but had multiple age-related medical conditions,” said Prof SN Sankhwar, chief medical superintendent, KGMU.

Pragyanand was born on December 18, 1928, and had nephews and nieces in Sri Lanka who were in regular contact with monks in Lucknow, but could not come to India on Thursday. Followers and wellwishers of the old monk, including UP minister Swami Prasad Maurya, poured in at Buddh Vihar where his body was kept.

Bhikshu Pragya Saar, the oldest of Pragyanand’s disciple at Lucknow’s Buddh Vihar said, “When behenji (Mayawati) became CM for the first time in 1995, guruji asked her to go on a pilgrimage.

When she asked to which place should she make the pilgrimage to, he replied Shrawasti. And she indeed did.”He added, “It was also around 1997 that on guruji’s persuasion Behenji declared Shrawasti a district and raised its political importance to match its religious significance.”

Six disciples of the monk lived with him at the Buddh Vihar, one of whom Bhikshu Dharam Priya said, “I came under guruji’s wings in October 1999 and it was from him that I imbibed the unending energy and will to work. He had published 62 books on Buddhist teachings and had authored some of them.”

The disciples recalled, “Guruji spoke little but talking about Ambedkar would always energise him. He would tell us about the ceremony in Nagpur on October 14, 1956, where Babasaheb’s wife Savita Ambedkar was also present.” The group which had performed the ceremony was headed by Chandramani Mahasanghayak and had Bhikshu Paramshanti, Pannanand Mahathero, Bhadant Sadhatiss Mahathero, H Sangratn Mahasthavir and Bhikshu Sumedh.

source: http://www.timesofindia.indiatimes.com / The Times of India / News> City News> Lucknow News / by Yusra Husain / TNN / December 01st, 2017

Poet of luminous silences

Kunwar Narain’s passing is also the loss of a whole literary world. He was of a generation of Hindi writers that confidently understood that in genuine culture and thinking there cannot be any boundaries.

Kunwar Narain, one of the greatest poets India has produced, was a poet of silences. In one of his notebooks, Dishaon Ka Khula Akash, he described silence not as the mere absence of noise. It was a place where one heard different sounds and echoes, perhaps more piercingly than what passes off as sound. One of these echoes is the echo of the eternal/the endless (anant). But these internal sounds of silence, while resonant, can also be unbearable, in his words, like a “black hole capable of absorbing anything.”

It would be impudent to try and describe Kunwar Narain’s varied and magnificent corpus of work. But every single line he wrote had that power to take you to that place where you heard the sound and the echoes of what our normal sounds render inaudible. It was as if you could hear the humming of all of existence inside you, in that silence he created.

This was true of his two great masterworks, Atmajayi and Vajshrava ke Bahane. They are based on the Kathopnishad. But they are not interpretations. They resonantly use Nachiketa as the eternal seeker, yet also our contemporary. Nachiketa questions Yama on Death and Existence. He questions his father on attachment and renunciation. You follow Nachiketa in his meditative questioning. And like Nachiketa, you literally feel the circle of your consciousness expanding till you hear the sounds of all that is immeasurable.

I suspect Nachiketa fascinated Kunwar Narain because of his fundamental honesty; an honesty that tames both Yama and Vajshrava. What strikes you most about Kunwar Narain’s work is exactly that trustworthy and luminous honesty. He was part of many literary movements, and his early work was included in “Teesra Saptak,” a modernist literary movement. He had strong values, often openly acknowledging the influence of the great Buddhist Socialist thinker Narendra Dev.

But what marks him out was that while he assimilated many trends and ideas, he never became a slave to any, nor deeply identified with them. Literary movements, like ideologies, construct the world through their own prism. Once they identify their respective hammers, the whole world begins to look like a nail to them. Kunwar Narain’s honesty was to understand insights, but to always be open to the world in its particularity. In his work you feel the world prodding you into reflection; not the world as an extension of your ideological, literary or aesthetic ego.

This quality sparkles not just in the range of poems on particular emotions and things, laughter, trees, rivers, language, time. It is evident in his elegiac historical tributes. This includes an extended poem on Kumarajiva, the man who literally transformed a whole culture through translation. It is at its striking best in his political and social poems — “Aaj ka Kabirdas,” “Lucknow”, “Gujarat” and many others written in the midst of communal violence and the Ramjanmabhoomi movement. But even in these poems, with their stunning literary qualities, Kunwar Narain successfully gets you to that point of silence, what Shrilal Shukla called his “wordlessness,” where you actually begin to think.

This is the point where language does not bewitch you. Kunwar Narain had strong values, beautifully articulated. But he never confused a display of values with the need to think. He always got you to the point where you began to hear all those inner echoes that the din of conventional politics had obscured. Some might argue that his poems are not, as is true of many Hindi poets, a call to arms. They are performances in controlled contemplation. But this quality also saved him in the end from so much of the misanthropy that creeps in through a superficial engagement with politics.

It is hard not to feel that Kunwar Narain’s passing is also the passing away of a whole literary world. He was of a generation of Hindi writers that confidently understood that in genuine culture and thinking there cannot be any boundaries. He was at home in European literature, and his last published work is translations of European poets. He wrote about European cinema with as much insight as he wrote about Indian classical music. He insightfully drew a series of contrasts between Kumar Gandharva and Pandit Jasraj.

The contrast he drew was this: The former blew the universe away with his rendition of Kabir; the latter probably the best exponent of Surdas. Kumar Gandharva gave you access to an almost blinding incandescence; Jasraj, through sur and the focus on the sagun form, had to perforce, take on the aesthetic world in its particulars. In a way, Kunwar Narain’s great gift was to inhabit, if one might say, the sagun and nirgun entry points into the universe. It paid unusual attention to all aesthetic detail, at the same time as it prepared the ground for a moment where you could transcend it.

This was also a Hindi world radical in its aspirations. The Hindi literary world was always fractious. But it still managed to hold onto deep ambitions. These days it is intellectually fashionable to say writers combined tradition with modernity, or the vernacular with the cosmopolitan, or identity with plurality. But the deeper radicalism was to take you to a point where these categories begin to reveal their limitations.

The aspiration was to liberate you from the trap of categories that mutilate out possibilities. One way or the other, we insist on dividing literature into sects and warring parties; literary criticism is defined more by its resentments than its power to reveal the world. Kunwar Narain always held onto one sign of true literary greatness: He was always unhoused in any of these distinctions.

For those do not read Hindi, Apurva Narain’s No Other World is a splendid bilingual text of his father’s poems. This volume is important because it sets new standards of translating poetry.

The Hindi world has suffered from the lack of good translators. Since Hindi literary production is scattered, the anthologies put together by Yatindra Mishra are also immensely valuable. He has been to Kunwar Narain what Henry Hardy was to Isaiah Berlin, tirelessly putting together everything Kunwar Narain wrote or said. That labour gives the picture of the poet as a whole.

These works will resonate. But it is difficult not to feel a sense of silence that his passing away brings. This is not the silence Kunwar Narain brought you to, where new voices become accessible to us. This silence has, more, the foreboding of darkness.

The author is vice-chancellor, Ashoka University. Views are personal

source: http://www.indianexpress.com / The Indian Express / Home> Opinion> Columns / by Pratap Bhanu Mehta / November 18th, 2017

Old beauties rally for a cause

Navniet Sekera (BCCL/ Aditya Yadav)

In a bid to spread the message of ‘Don’t Drink and Drive’ and ‘Drive Safe and Phone Later’, a vintage car rally was organised by a city club recently. The rally was flagged off by Navniet Sekera, IG 1090, from 1090 crossing and concluded at a five-star hotel in Gomti Nagar.

Rati Narain and Aditi (BCCL/ Aditya Yadav)

Chief guest Arvind Kumar, principal secretary Home, UP, welcomed the participants at the end point. “A lot of accidents happen on a daily basis in Lucknow because of drunk driving and also because of people using mobile phones while driving. Together, we need to spread awareness among people regarding following the traffic rules and regulations,” said Kumar while addressing the participants.

Paritosh Chauhan (R) Sona and Alka (BCCL/ Aditya Yadav)

The vintaged beauties attracted a large number of spectators, both at the starting and end point. Several people took selfies with the vintage cars, while their owners were spotted protecting their cars from any kind of scratches during the process.

Paritosh Chauhan (R) Sona and Alka (BCCL/ Aditya Yadav)

Sandeep Narain came with his three priceless beauties – 1947 MG, 1936 Packard and 1961 Fiat Pininfarina. However, due to some technical fault, his 1961 Fiat Pininfarina stopped midway creating a small traffic congestion. Interestingly, Captain Paritosh Chauhan came with six of his vintage cars.
— By Prachi Arya

source: http://www.timesofindia.indiatimes.com / The Times of India / News> City News> Lucknow News / TNN / November 16th, 2017

Freedom fighter passes away

Muzaffarnagar

Freedom fighter Jyoti Pershad, who had taken an active part in the Quit India movement in 1942 and served jail sentences, died at his native Badkali village in Uttar Pradesh’s Muzaffarnagar district on Wednesday.

Pershad was 95. According to his family members, his mortal remains were consigned to the flames today in the presence of a large number of social activists and eminent citizens.

Prasad is survived by his three sons and two daughters.

source: http://www.echoofindia.com / The Echo of India / Home / Muzaffarnagar – November 09th, 2017

British-era train re-run planned for eco-tourism boost in east UP

Lucknow :

Thirty years after it undertook its last journey, and has been since stationed under a shed, a British-era train would start chugging soon once again. Only this time, its run would be curtailed from earlier 22.4km to 10km and it would ferry eco-tourists and won’t be laden with wooden logs.

Chief minister Yogi Adityanath is keen to re-start the vintage train to give eco-tourism a boost in eastern UP. Railways has already completed the survey of the track and has found it fit for operation.

Chief minister Yogi Adityanath is keen to re-start the vintage train to give eco-tourism a boost in eastern UP

The train would run through the thick foliage of the lush green Sal trees in Laxmipur range of Maharajganj forest division which is famous for the Sohagi Barwa Wildlife Sanctuary having huge population of antelopes besides rare and endangered birds and wildlife.

This British-era train used to run on the 22.4km long track between Ikma and Chauraha that was laid in 1922 and got commissioned in 1924. It was the first track in the country which was laid in a forest only for transportation of timber. A raised platform and a beautiful yard still exist at Ikma.

“The track is still there though now most of it is covered with vegetation,” said Kuruvila Thomas, a forest official in Gonda.

Four engines and compartments of the train had been lying in Ikma since the train stopped operation in 1986. One of the engines, however, was brought to Lucknow Zoo in 2008.

The vintage train that used to run on a narrow gauge track of .625 metre had 56 bogies and four engines. Moreover, the train also had a saloon.

While the train earlier used to run on steam engine, it will now be driven by a diesel one.
The track that runs along Taungya villages has a parallel road alongside on which there is heavy movement of people all day through.

source: http://www.timesofindia.indiatimes.com / The Times of India / News> City News> Lucknow News> Politics / TNN / November 08th, 2017

Suresh Raina made ambassador of Ghaziabad

Ghaziabad(Cricketnmore)

Cricketer Suresh Raina was made the brand ambassador of the Ghaziabad Municipal Corporation (GMC) at a programme here on Sunday.

“It is a matter of pride for Ghaziabad that Suresh Raina, an international star, is the brand ambassador of GMC and also the brand ambassador of Swachh Bharat Mission,” said V.K. Jindal, Joint Secretary and Director of Swachh Bharat Mission.

Ghaziabad Municipal Commissioner C.P. Singh added: “I am grateful to Raina for accepting my proposal to be the brand ambassador of our Municipal Corporation.”

Raina is a resident of Ghaziabad. It is the only city among 16 municipal corporations in Uttar Pradesh which has been declared open defecation free.

Raina said: “I will offer my best services to the municipal body. I have been emotionally attached to this city. This city gave me strength so that we could win the World Cup.”

source: http://www.cricket.yahoo.com / Yahoo Cricket / Home / by Sahir Usman / October 29th, 2017

I have the power

Raid alert: As MD of Kanpur Electric Supply Company Limited, Ritu Maheshwari conducted raids on a regular basis to curb power theft / courtesy: Uma Maheshwari

The new collector of Ghaziabad comes with the distinction of having revived a debt-ridden electric utility.

The new district magistrate of Ghaziabad — among the slew of transfers in the Uttar Pradesh government last month — is difficult to track down. The little breathing space Ritu Maheshwari gets between meetings and team briefings is devoted to her son’s preparations for school exams. That this officer’s days are long and busy is nothing new, given that in her previous stint she was feted for successfully ushering in power distribution reforms in a country weighed down by an average annual loss of $16.2 billion due to power theft.

Maheshwari joined the civil services in 2003 after completing a degree in electrical engineering at Punjab Engineering College. She had her first major breakthrough in 2011, when she was posted as the managing director of Kanpur Electric Supply Company Limited (KESCO). The debt-ridden utility had run up losses of nearly 30 per cent, brought about by distribution losses, thefts, and tampering of meters. All that was about to change soon.

“I had just returned from maternity leave and had expected an easier posting, but when I got this (KESCO) instead, many of my peers advised me against taking it up. But I decided to go ahead. After I joined, I was told the company would soon be disinvested and I needn’t take on too much pressure. But I decided that it was still possible to turn this company around, and I worked on it. I wouldn’t say it was a complete makeover, but we made some headway,” Maheshwari says during a telephonic interview.

By the time she left KESCO, the losses had almost halved. During her 11-month stewardship, she replaced nearly one-third, or 1.6 lakh, of the mechanical meters with smart ones. She credits the turnover not to any big moves, but rather small actions instead. “We went on regular raids. The office staff was made to understand that it wasn’t okay to sit idle and turn a blind eye to instances of power theft.”

Nearly 8.4 million of UP’s 29 million households have non-metered power supply, while another 11.2 million have no electricity, according to a Bloomberg report. Distribution companies do not want to upgrade grids without recovering current losses. Recently, a tender was floated for the purchase of five million smart meters for UP and Haryana. The public-sector Energy Efficiency Services Ltd, which aims to halve distribution losses to 15 per cent across India by 2019, was in charge of the international bidding process. Maheshwari was heading this project until July 2017.

She believes that technology is the best defence against power theft — if the systems are seamless, and the processes automated, accountability will increase and it will become that much harder to steal. “I feel that while there were checks against power theft earlier too, the automatic meters made a world of difference by bringing in transparency,” she says.

A reduction of even one per cent in distribution loss translates into a profit of $10 billion for the company, so a difference of 15 per cent was nothing short of extraordinary. Maheshwari was also involved in the development of Urja Mitra, an app that gives real-time information on power supply across the country. After a successful trial run in Kanpur, it was rolled out countrywide in April 2017.

“After I got involved, many power companies are putting up their audited sheets on a three-month basis, where the public can find out how much power has been consumed, and the losses incurred by the companies,” she says. As the distribution losses fell, the company was able to improve supply too.

Such drastic reforms, unsurprisingly, were met with opposition initially. Consumers in Kanpur protested when forced to take up legitimate connections and fall under the revenue net. The powers-that-be weren’t pleased either. “I did face resistance from the political milieu, and had to pull up employees who had become corrupt. Some took money to tip off violators ahead of raids against power theft… they would remove the illegal power hooks before the team arrived. We countered this with surprise raids.”

In 2014, Maheshwari’s work inspired filmmakers Deepti Kakkar and Fahad Mustafa to produce a documentary titled Katiabaaz (Powerless), focusing on the power situation in Kanpur, a seat for leather industries, which require heavy-duty electricity.

After Kanpur, and stints as the district magistrate of JP Nagar, Ghazipur, Pilibhit and Shahjahanpur, Maheshwari wants to focus on fighting pollution control in her current posting at Ghaziabad.

So, how did she tackle the bullies and naysayers at work?

“My degree has stood me well all this time. There have been times where I’ve had to tackle patriarchal attitudes at work, but people realise that I have good knowledge of this [power] sector, and it isn’t easy to hoodwink me. I think, eventually, anyone trying to do some good work is given the space to do so.”

source: http://www.thehindubusinessline.com / BLINK / Home> Cover> BLINK / by Payel Majumdar Upreti / October 06th, 2017

‘Girija Devi’s demise an irreparable loss to Banaras Gharana’

Even at 88 her scintillating voice could leave the audience spell bound

___________________________________________________________

Highlights

Girija Devi, fondly known as Appa ji, passed away in a hospital in Kolkata on Tuesday evening. She was 88.

She worked as a faculty member of the ITC Sangeet Research Academy, Kolkata in the 1980s and of the Banaras Hindu University during the early 1990s

She was awarded Padma Vibhushan in 2016
___________________________________________________________

Varanasi :

Demise of great vocalist and Thumri queen Girija Devi came as a big shocker to the music lovers of Varanasi, the birth place of the eminent singer. Girija Devi, fondly known as Appa ji, passed away in a hospital in Kolkata on Tuesday evening. She was 88.

“It is an irreparable loss to Indian music and Banaras Gharana of music. She was a guiding figure for us,” said noted Sarod player and Yash Bharati recipient Pt. Vikash Maharaj. “She was ailing for some time, and admitted to BM Birla Hospital in Kolkata in the morning. She left for the heavenly abode in the evening,” he said adding that she had been living in Kolkata with her daughter.

“No one can fill the gap. Even at 88 her scintillating voice could leave the audience spell bound. She was perhaps the last exponent of thumri, tappa, chaiti and khayal. I heard her singing in an award ceremony in New Delhi on August 27,” said Ashok Kapoor, founder of a cultural organization Kala Prakash working for the cause of Indian music.

Though settled in Kolkata, she regularly visited Varanasi. She was born in Varanasi in 1929. She took lessons in singing khayal and tappa from vocalist Sarju Prasad Misra in early childhood. She worked as a faculty member of the ITC Sangeet Research Academy, Kolkata in the 1980s and of the Banaras Hindu University during the early 1990s. She was a prominent performer of purabi ang thumri style of Banaras gharana. She was awarded Padma Vibhushan in 2016.

source: http://www.timesofindia.indiatimes.com / The Times of India / News> India News / by Binay Singh / TNN / October 25th, 2017

Urvashi Sahni, founder of SHEF, wins social entrepreneur award

Urvashi Sahni, founder of Study Hall Educational Foundation, was awarded the Social Entrepreneur of the Year award 2017 for her work in educating India’s most disadvantaged girls

Urvashi Sahni is an Ashoka Fellow, an honorary member of the Clinton Global Initiative and a non-resident fellow at the Centre for Universal Education at the Brookings Institution in the US.

New Delhi:

Urvashi Sahni, founder and chief executive of Study Hall Educational Foundation (SHEF), was awarded the Social Entrepreneur of the Year award 2017 for her work in educating India’s most disadvantaged girls.

She won the award, beating candidates from more prominent non-profit organizations including Akshaya Patra. Commerce and industry minister Suresh Prabhu presented the award to Sahni.

Jointly founded by Jubilant Bhartia Foundation and Schwab Foundation for Social Entrepreneurship in 2010, the award recognizes promising and high impact social entrepreneurs implementing practical and sustainable solutions.

Sahni was chosen from over 100 applicants. The other two finalists for the award were Safeena Husain of Educate Girls and Madhu Pandit Dasa of the Akshaya Patra Foundation.

SHEF has demonstrated a business model of education for inclusion, empowerment and leadership building for India’s most disadvantaged and girls at risk. It has scaled its model across 993 government schools of Uttar Pradesh and Rajasthan, training 24,000 teachers in the process and impacting 501,000 girls.

To ensure that women from ultra poor communities have the resources to keep their daughters in schools, Sahni has started Didi, a catering and tailoring venture that has captured the Lucknow market for corporate meals and has doubled the incomes of its women employees.

Accepting the award, Sahni said the perfect tool for changing mindset is education. “Education should be broader, deeper and wider. Until then we cannot call ourselves a fully democratic country,” she added.

Sahni is an Ashoka Fellow, an honorary member of the Clinton Global Initiative and a non-resident fellow at the Centre for Universal Education at the Brookings Institution in the US.

In an emailed response before she won the award, Sahni said in her girls education programme, the organization uses the government curriculum but makes sure that it is infused with critical feminist pedagogy or a gender-empowering methods of education. “We have also added a separate programme called ‘critical dialogues’ in the official curriculum,” she said.

Sahni said the biggest challenge to remain sustainable is building teams that believe in the idea, the mission, the underlying philosophy, the culture of the enterprise and above all a culture of entrepreneurship. “Having a secure flow of funding is important too, but in my opinion if the social entrepreneur has invested enough in building a strong team, they will ensure the flow of funding. I work very hard at building my team in the ways described above. We are a learning organisation and that is what sustains us,” she said.

To be a successful social entrepreneur, passion is more important than expertise, Sahni said. “Expertise is sterile without passion. But passion alone can only go so far and will burn itself out if it isn’t guided by expertise. Passionate social entrepreneurs, either seek out and develop the expertise they need to execute their ideas, or then find people who have the expertise. But they are very good and fast learners themselves. In our case, we are all thinking and learning all the time and working at developing the expertise we need and reaching out to other partners who have the expertise we don’t have,” she said.

Schwab Foundation for Social Entrepreneurship is a sister organization of the World Economic Forum. The Foundation provides unique regional and global platforms to promote social entrepreneurship as a key element to advancing societies and addressing social problems innovatively and effectively. It also fosters a peer global community of social entrepreneurs.

Jubilant Bhartia Foundation, established in 2007, is the not-for-profit organization of the Jubilant Bhartia Group. It focuses on conceptualizing and implementing the Corporate Social Responsibility initiatives (CSR) for the Group. The Jubilant Bhartia Foundation’s activities include various community development works, health care programs, cultural and sports events, an environmental preservation initiative, vocational training, women empowerment and educational activities.

Seema Chowdhry contributed to the story.

The promoters of HT Media Ltd, which publishes the Hindustan Times and Mint, and Jubilant Bhartia Group are closely related. There are, however, no promoter crossholdings.

source: http://www.livemint.com / Live Mint / Home> Companies / by Asit Ranjan Mishra / Thursday – October 05th, 2017