Category Archives: Records, All

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

Jumbo care! India gets its first dedicated elephant hospital near Taj Mahal

India’s first elephant hospital is jumbo sized: with a built-up area of almost 12,000 square feet that includes an observation area for the overnight monitoring of elephants under treatment using Close Circuit Infra-Red CCTV cameras.

India’s elephants now have their first fully equipped dedicated hospital near the Taj Mahal, complete with wireless digital X-Ray, laser treatment and dental X-ray facilities. The ‘jumbo’ hospital is the result of a collaborative effort between the Uttar Pradesh Forest Department and conservation NGO Wildlife SOS.

The veterinary hospital has modern medical facilities for the treatment of elephants in distress including thermal imaging, ultrasonography, hydrotherapy, tranquilization equipment and quarantine facilities. Located near Agra, the facility is in the Farah block of Mathura near the Elephant Conservation and Care Centre (ECCC) run by Wildlife SOS.

“The Wildlife SOS Elephant Hospital is designed to treat injured, sick or geriatric elephants and is equipped with a medical hoist for lifting elephants requiring critical care, a pathology laboratory, digital weighing scale, Elephant Restraining Device (ERD) with a dedicated indoor treatment enclosure for longer medical procedures,” said Wildlife SOS founder Kartick Satyanarayan. “An observation deck will allow veterinary students and interns to observe and learn elephant treatment routines from a safe distance,’’ he added.

India’s first elephant hospital is jumbo sized: with a built-up area of almost 12,000 square feet that includes an observation area for the overnight monitoring of elephants under treatment using Close Circuit Infra-Red CCTV cameras. Training courses would be organized by Wildlife SOS to spread knowledge on elephant medical care, humane elephant management and veterinary procedures to spread compassion.

“This is a huge milestone for elephant protection in India,” said Geeta Seshamani, co-founder of Wildlife SOS.. “This hospital will help us take better care of injured elephants in distress. We hope this hospital will put India on the map as a scholarly destination for humane management of elephants which will go a long way to address the protection and conservation of elephants in India,’’ she added

In 2010, Wildlife SOS established the ECCC, which is currently providing lifetime care and treatment for over 20 rehabilitated pachyderms, rescued from illegal captivity and circuses where they were ill-treated and subjected to cruelty. The Elephant Hospital was built entirely with private donations and CSR support.

source: http://www.thehindu.com / The Hindu / Home> Sci-Tech> Environment / by Bindu Shajan Perappandan / New Delhi – November 17th, 2018

A film based on the real struggle of Laxmi and Kiran of Lucknow’s Prerna School to be featured in Obama Foundation Summit

Lucknow, UTTAR PRADESH :

Laxmi, the eldest of five siblings, was forced to put her education on hold, when her mother became very ill. Her mother passed away when she (Laxmi) was only 13 years old. From then on, Laxmi had to work as a cleaner to help support her family as her father, an alcoholic, was unable to earn for them.

Former US President Barack Obama’s foundation has invited an alumnus and a student of the Lucknow-based Prerna Girls’ School to address the Obama Foundation Summit 2018 in Chicago where they will talk about how they battled adversity to educate themselves and give their families a shot at a better life.

Apart from the former US President, former US First Lady Michelle Obama will be present at the Obama Foundation Summit 2018 where a film based on the struggles of the Prerna duo, Laxmi Nishad and Kiran Sahu, will be screened. The summit is scheduled on November 18 and 19.

Laxmi is an alumnus of the Prerna Girls School run by the Study Hall Educational Foundation while Kiran studies in class 10 at the same school.

“Kiran Sahu, who is currently a student of Prerna Girls’ School, has played the role of Laxmi in the film. She will also accompany Laxmi to the summit. Interestingly, the stories of Laxmi and Kiran are quite similar. That’s why Kiran was also called by Obama,” said Rakhi Panjwani, the principal of Prerna School.

Panjwani also said, “Laxmi’s story will be an integral part of the summit. The Obama Foundation brought in film- makers from the USA and South Africa to make the film which will be released during the summit in Chicago.”

Laxmi, the eldest of five siblings, was forced to put her education on hold, when her mother became very ill. Her mother passed away when she (Laxmi) was only 13 years old. From then on, Laxmi had to work as a cleaner to help support her family as her father, an alcoholic, was unable to earn for them.

But her life took a positive turn when she enrolled herself in the Prerna Girls’ School.

“I didn’t want a life like my mother’s,” says Laxmi, when asked why she was determined to get an education at the age of just 13 years.

“Prerna gave me a voice and taught me to value myself,” she adds.

“I have completed my post-graduate degree and I have been working as a sales manager at a call centre where the starting salary is Rs 25,000, which is enough for the family’s food, clothing and education expenses,” she says.

Laxmi has been able to improve the condition of the dilapidated two-room house she has lived in with her family for the past 15 years. She has built a bathroom with plumbing and bought a new gas stove.

“I also purchased a scooter to reach my workplace and have just bought a 1,000 square feet plot of land on which I dream of building a house one day,” says Laxmi.

“My life is very different now,” Laxmi says on an emotional note. She adds that she is financially independent, able to look after her siblings and ensure they have a better future, and that she will now have a choice in who she marries and when she does so.

“While my father sold my books to buy alcohol, I see how my sisters’ life is now so different from mine. They have all got an education. I see Kiran, who has similar struggles, but has perhaps more aspirations and strength. I hope that my story will give strength to girls around the world,” says Laxmi.

Kiran’s life too is full of struggle. She says she is one among six sisters and two brothers. Her family, which belongs to Chhattisgarh, migrated to Lucknow in search of work. Her father was a daily-wage labourer before he fell to his death from an under-construction building under suspicious circumstances. She had to drop out of school three times before she finally managed to continue her education. Now, she is studying in class 10 at the Prerna Girls School. Two of her younger sisters are in class 5 and 6 here.

She says, “I still work in five homes to support my mother and five sisters. I have a brother who cannot stand to see me go to school. He burnt my books and uniform when I was 13, and pulled me out of school five times. But my mother was always with me, supporting me. Today, I can proudly say that, much like Laxmi didi, I am the most educated person in my family.”

source: http://www.hindustantimes.com / Hindustan Times / Home> Lucknow / by Anupam Srivastava, Hindustan Times / November 14th, 2018

Varanasi contractor buys Aussie mining co at bankruptcy court, Axis Bank takes haircut

Varanasi-based Sanrachna Group, which is into construction and real estate development, has become the new owner of the troubled Aussie mining company, India Resources, which has been operating Hindustan Copper’s mine in Surda.

Owned by architect Anurag Kushwaha, Sanrachna has acquired India Resources through its Australian arm Avidsys Pty Ltd which is into mining and commodity trading with the presence in US and Russia.

Following a decade-long dispute between the state-owned sole copper mine owner and its Australian contractor, India Resources had turned sick and went to the administrator in a process similar to Indian government’s effort to find buyers for stressed assets by appointing resolution professionals at National Company Law Tribunal.

After erosion of most of its worth, the deal for India Resources has been valued at about AU$4 million or about Rs 20 crore paving the way for settlement of dues worth about Rs 40 crore with most of the creditors, including lender Axis Bank, earlier agreeing to haircut, Arvind Mishra, former managing director of India Resources, told DNA Money.

Axis Bank, which would be paid AU$1 million, would suffer a haircut of more than 50%, Mishra said.

There is a catch though as the agreement to acquire the company is conditional upon India Resources getting back the mining contract for the Jharkhand mine.

But with the mine now being operated by Shriram EPC and Hindustan Copper aggrieved by the Australian company’s exit, that condition might not get fulfilled.

Apart from the haircut, which is roughly about 50% for most of the debtors, the cost had been heavy for Australian investors who had bet on the opening up of mining and natural resources sector in India to foreign investors.

“Our AU$40 million Foreign Direct Investment created 1500 jobs and contributed AU$140 million to Indian government with profits and taxes, yet our Australian shareholders have lost it all,” lamented Mishra.

While areas of disputes between Hindustan Copper and India Resources were many, the last trigger for the Aussie company calling off its contract was Hindustan Copper’s refusal to reimburse doubling of minimum wages by the Indian government in early 2017.

“There were violent strikes by the workers which stopped operations. It wasn’t possible to run the operations in a sustainable way if we had to shoulder the burden,” Mishra said.

DIGGING DEEPER
The deal for India Resources has been valued at about Rs 20 cr
It will pave the way for settlement of dues worth Rs 40 crore

source: http://www.dnaindia.com / DNA / Home> Business / by Sumit Moitra / February 07th, 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

The Allahabad in Prayagraj

Renaming places creates ruptures in the people’s lived experiences.

Allahabad will now be known as Prayagraj (Name/Source: Superfast1111/ Wikimedia Commons)

The naming and renaming of places is not new in India. The British, for example, renamed Kochi to Cochin, derived the name Calcutta from Kolkata and affirmed their power through urban planning and architecture. Recently, several cities as well as streets and bazaars in the country have been renamed. Modern communication methods ensure that such changes in nomenclature have an instant impact.

Such projects are deeply political. They aim to politicise community memories. But not only do such endeavours not acknowledge the ruptures they create, they also overlook the history of cultural consciousness. Cities, streets and bazaars evolve their own identities with time. In doing so, they reflect historical experiences and changes. This is why the public often resist the overt manipulation of renaming. For example, though several years have passed since Connaught Place in Delhi was renamed Rajiv Chowk, the public relates to the market by its colonial name. The new name is only linked to the metro station — a new public space within the larger one.

Re-naming results in tangible changes, but several intangible aspects of places continue to be associated with the lived reality of communities. For example, Varanasi may today be the official name of the historical city, but culturally, its idea will always be “Banarasi”. The local carefree, bold and energetic lifestyle of the city’s people is still called Banarasi bindaas and the old name is still the identifier of the sarees produced in Banaras as well as the paan and the Langda mango.

The recent renaming of Allahabad as Prayagraj ignores the existence of a Prayag railway station in Allahabad district. Enormous resources and paperwork is required to establish the new political/official identity of not only the city but of the entire district. The renaming could create confusion. It overlooks memories of the city’s cultural identity that is linked to poets like Akbar Allahabadi, artists like Jankibai “Chhappan chhurivali” and even guavas (Allahabadi amrood). Allahabadis pride themselves on producing writers like Firaq Gorakhpuri, Harivansh Rai Bachchan, Nirala, Dharamvir Bharati in much the same way as Banarasis are proud of Premchand, Bhartendu Harishchandra, Kishan Maharaj and Bismillah Khan. Often places in cities are named after such people, and the nomenclature, anchors the cultural histories of urban centres. The distinct identity of institutions very often go against re-naming projects. The Banaras Hindu University is one such example. In the case of Allahabad, questions will be raised about the names of institutions like the Allahabad University or the Allahabad Bank, with which millions identify.

Re-naming Bombay as Mumbai, after Mumba Devi, by the Shiv Sena government in 1995 — along with renaming the Santa Cruz Airport as Chatrapati Shivaji Airport — was not merely about shedding associations with the colonial past. The renaming also marked an assertion of Maratha identity. The American political scientist, Myron Weiner’s work, Sons of the Soil, Migration and Ethnic Conflict in India, is useful to understand the politics of renaming. New names are cultural tools to overcome the fears of economic subordination by adventurous immigrants. The changes create fissures in local and regional political arenas and make them rife for conflict.

Renaming cities results in economic and logistical upheaval. A large amount of the tax payer’s money is spent on changing signboards on public properties such as railways, metros, buses and street signs, not to mention the time and energy invested in bureaucratic, administrative and legal procedures. Maps have to keep pace with the frequent renaming. Mayawati changed a number of names of cities, locations, public spaces and streets to assert Dalit identity when she was the UP chief minister. Akhilesh Yadav’s Samajwadi government reversed many of her decisions. One can imagine the amount of resources that were spent on both the projects.

Satellite cartographic networks often fail to keep up with the frequency of changed ground realities and people and transporters waste time to reach their destinations.

Several instances of renaming are simply preposterous. For example, there is a proposal to rename Shimla, that receives a lot of snow, as Shyamala or the dark one. Or renaming Humayun Nagar as Hanuman Nagar. In the absence of a comprehensive cultural policy, the politics of renaming is inimical to urban community consciousness. Those in power may want to escape their responsibility by saying that they are merely following the footsteps of preceding governments. However, the point is that they were voted to invest in development and not to continue fragmentation and create more ruptures.

The writer, a dancer, is the vice president of the Centre for New Perspectives

source: http://www.indianexpress.com / The Indian Express / Home> Opinion> Columns / by Navina Jafa / October 25th, 2018

‘Hum Lucknow Sey Hain…’

Lucknow didn’t just happen

Both sides of my Punjabi grandparents had fled the violent senselessness of Partition, and settled in Lucknow, the provincial capital of the United Provinces – aptly perhaps, as it approximated the refined sensibilities of a Lahore unwillingly left behind. The air of liberality, multi-culturality and fine aesthetics was so common, that all other relatives who had settled in the other cities of fleeing continued to yearn for their Lahore; while my grandparents wove their lives into the tapestry of Lucknow the way countless others from far more distant lands had done, since time immemorial, enriching this habitation on the banks of Gomti to give it an unmatched romance and character.

The land of Awadh (or its more mellifluous name Oudh, almost fragrant, if words could be so) healed the weary, wounded and tired souls from Lahore into a familiar embrace of inclusivity. Both cities had had mythological references, Vedic genealogical claims… and if Lahore boasted of an Amir Khusrow, then Lucknow had a Mir Babar Ali Anis, a Josh Malihabadi, a Bismil and countless others. The sheer genteelness of Lucknow, its mannerisms and its citizenry had survived the ravages of time and history – to remain quintessentially ‘Lucknow’.

I didn’t know of any other identity except the innocent pride in saying ‘Hum Lucknow sey hain…’ Befittingly baptised into the cosmopolitan pot of Lucknow, my ‘wonder years’ were spent in an institution, La Martiniere Boys College, founded by a reckless French adventurer in 1845. We happy souls included an eclectic bunch from the families of swaggering Taluqdars, wistful Nawabs, pedigreed landed-peasantry, stunningly good-looking Anglo-Indians and then some like us, Lucknow’s newest thoroughbreds.

They say time and distance change one’s perspective – but it never did for us, as many moons later, after much water had flowed down the Gomti, the Old Martinieres still wear their Lucknow on their hearts. Our conversations are still peppered with the exaggerated drags on our de-rigeur ‘amma yaars’ and the ‘hums and aaps’ are resolutely observed. Old boys still mischievously rue the absence of ‘adaa’ (and ‘grace’ is such an inadequate description of the complexity of ‘adaa’ – we realised that like a lot many expressions of Lucknowi-Urdu, English remains a very soulless, dull and poor language).

Inside a very political state, somehow our principal identity remained always above the narrow trappings of religious, casteist, socioeconomic or regional identities – we were simply ‘from Lucknow’, and that said a lot. The patented tehzeeb and nazaakat was certainly not the preserve of the privileged classes – it was in the DNA of the rickshawallah at Charbagh Railway Station, who greeted you in his inimitable Lucknowi.

It was ever a moment of very personal and unsaid joy when someone would say, ‘I should have guessed that you are from Lucknow, from the way you speak.’ We always knew the immediate impact and perception of asserting our Lucknow identity, and admittedly there was a reverse snobbery in being well-mannered, sophisticated and gracious, especially since in these times, it is generally more fashionable to be aggressive, loud and violent.

Unbeknownst to many, Lucknow didn’t just happen. It was nurtured by an embarrassment of richness in diversity. The Delhi Sultanate, the Mughal empire, the Marathas, Rajputs, Avadh principalities, British Raj etc. all added to the mysticism, taste, feel and sound of Lucknow, to compose what is now called Ganga-Jamuni tehzeeb.

Even in independent India, we were lucky with the caliber, class and standing of our political representatives, from a Vijayalakshmi Pandit, H.N. Bahuguna, Sheila Kaul to the unmatched genius of Atal Bihari Vajpayee, and even those who lost out included luminaries like Dr Karan Singh, Muzzafar Ali and Nafisa Ali Sodhi. The epicentre of various societal and political churns, Lucknow retained its poetic softness and profundity. I remember smiling to myself when from the corner of my eye I caught a line that could have only been written for Lucknow in an otherwise very formal and official ‘UP Investment Summit’, as the welcoming line had read ‘Zahe Naseeb, Aap Tashreef Laaye’.

In a rapidly failing world, Lucknow had not failed itself, and I now understood more than ever before, how my grandparents had afforded me a priceless, Lucknow.

Sadly, in recent years the recurring civic, societal and administrative news emanating from Lucknow had us all concerned, but nothing wounded our spirits more than a recent incident where an affluent young man, with a heightened sense of entitlement got into a ugly fracas with some others in a posh Delhi hotel. Along with the gun and expletive-laden threats, he said something strange, that instinctively didn’t sound right: ‘Mein Lucknow sey hoon’, he coldly warned!

Even before we had decoded the regrettable import of his statement, the substitution of ‘Hum’ with ‘Mein’ was obviously not from the Lucknow that I knew. It represented a deeply different context, nuance and sensibilities. The inexplicable pride with which we waxed, ‘Hum Lucknow sey hain…’ conveyed an emotion of almost divine purity, dignity, grandeur and extreme delicacy. Not once was a boorish or uncouth aggression part of our emotional, psychological or vocal syntax. This new context with which ‘Lucknow’ was unequivocally ridiculed, shamed and debased, was almost blasphemous to our ears, spirit and soul.

Was this the new reality I would have to accept, or was is it just the consequence of an oversensitive heart deciphering an unwarranted context to his beloved ‘Lucknow’? It is, actually and sadly, a bit of both.

Time and tide have indeed taken their toll on Lucknow, and yet not wholly. I still take heart in the gracious rickshawallah at Charbagh, who still insists on and perpetuates the Lucknow that I want to know.

Mirza Dabeer once wrote about a Mir Aniz from Lucknow: ‘Aasman Bey Mah-e-Kamil, Sidray Bey Rooh-ul-Ameen, Toor-e-Seena Bey Kaleem-ul-Lah, Mimber Bey Anis’ (Poor is the sky without the full moon, And the empyrean without Gabriel is meaningless, Nothing is Mount Toor without Moses, And the pulpit without Anis is worthless).

The euphemistic pulpit of Mir Anis in the context of Lucknow resonates, thrives and lives in the Lucknow of my heart, soul and imagination, and I cannot but continue saying with justifiable pride, ‘Hum Lucknow sey hain…’

Cover Photograph: Charbagh railway station in Lucknow

(Anurag Dewan is an entrepreneur and freelance writer).

source: http://www.thecitizen.in / The Citizen / Home / by Anurag Dewan / October 23rd, 2018

Lucknow: Sanitary pad making unit at women’s prison

To provide financial support and better health to women inmates, a sanitary pad making machine was installed on the premises of the women’s prison.

To provide financial support and better health to women inmates, a sanitary pad making machine was installed on the premises of the women’s prison here on Wednesday.

“Better sanitation is the right of every woman and this initiative will go a long way to ensure this,” said women and child welfare minister Rita Bahuguna Joshi, addressing the gathering at the inaugural event. DIG (Prisons) Umesh Kumar also attended the function. The machine was installed in tandem with a Kanpur-based NGO.

The novel idea, according to jail officials, came from a recent Bollywood hit that showed the struggle of a man trying to manufacture cheap sanitary napkins .

Till now, 232 women inmates were provided sanitary pads by the government or they had to rely on their relatives to get them. This is expected to change following the installation of the machine.

“The machine has a capacity to make 10,000 sanitary pads each month. That will not only cater to our internal demand but give enough extra output to be sold in the market on competitive prices,” said senior superintendent of Lucknow Prison PN Pandey. “The inmates will be provided a short training to manufacture the sanitary pads so that they may run it independently,” he added.

source: http://www.hindustantimes.com / Hindustan Times / Home> Lucknow / by Chandan Kumar, Hindustan Times,Lucknow / October 18th, 2018

Now, a Guinness record for ‘largest first aid lesson’

Breathtaking feat: As many as 3,540 students of Lucknow come together under one roof to learn lesson on first aid.

Students from 15 public and private schools in Lucknow created another Guinness World Record when 3,540 of them came together under one roof for a training session on first aid in the ongoing India International Science Festival-2018 (IISF) here at the Indira Gandhi Pratishthan on Sunday afternoon.

Union minister for science and technology, Dr Harsh Vardhan and secretary, department of biotechnology, government of India, Dr Renu Swarup jointly received the certificate of Guinness World Record from its adjudicator Rishi Nath in the presence of participants.

Dr Vardhan and Dr Swarup congratulated students on this accomplishment.

The previous record was held by a group of 2,580 people at an event that took place at the directorate of emergency and public safety, United Arab Emirates, Abu Dhabi on April 18, 2018, said coordinator Dr Omkar Tiwari (DBT).

The pandal reverberated with a thunderous applause when chief instructor Shweta Singh of St John’s Ambulance at Red Cross announced that Lucknow students created a new record.

“I was excited to be a part of this event and liked the way first aid techniques were explained,” said Ritika, student of Class 8 in Pioneer Montessori Inter College. Ayushi, a student of Class 9 from the same school said it was a dream for her to be a part of Guinness World Record.

On Saturday, 550 students of GD Goenka Public School, Lucknow had also created a Guinness World Record for simultaneously conducting DNA isolation experiment of banana.

“It takes only six minutes for the human brain to expire due to lack of oxygen. First aid helps ensure that the right methods of administering medical assistance are provided,” informed Shweta Singh. After this training session, these students will always be ready to come forward and extend help in rushing the injured to hospital in the right manner, she added.

The final part of the training included identifying fractures and providing first aid in such a situation. The students acquired hands-on learning on how to provide first aid in case of head injury, jaw injury, collarbone injury or spinal fractures by administering first aid to their fellow student volunteers post demonstration by Shweta.

The ‘Largest First Aid Lesson’ involved lesson explanation with slides support and demonstration with volunteers on stage. GD Goenka Public School, Shaheed Path, Lucknow roped in 300 students and invited Shweta Singh from Indian Red Cross Society, UP, state branch to train students how to administer basic first aid techniques.

source: http://www.hindustantimes.com / Hindustan Times / Home> Lucknow / by Rajeev Mullick, Hindustan Times,Lucknow / October 08th, 2018

550 Lucknow Students Extract DNA Simultaneously, Set Guinness Record

The students, from G D Goenka School in Lucknow, participated in a massexperiment to extract DNA at the ongoing India International Science Festival or IISF, and completed the task in a mere 90 minutes.

Lucknow :

For 550 students of a private school in Lucknow, no moment so far could have been this special. After all, they all just set a world record, acknowledged by none other than the prestigious Guinness World Records.
The feat these teenagers achieved – being the highest number of people in the world to simultaneously extract DNA from bananas.

The students, from G D Goenka School in Lucknow, participated in a mass experiment to extract DNA at the ongoing India International Science Festival or IISF, and completed the task in a mere 90 minutes.

On the successful completion of the experiment, participant Anand Agarwal said he was very happy at seeing the DNA — the universal genetic material of living organisms.

Applauding the students, Guinness World Record official Rishi Nath said, “Congratulations we have a new world record, you have done it children.”

The earlier record was set up in 2017 in America when 302 students performed a similar experiment.

Dr Saroj Barik, director National Botanical Research Institute, Lucknow, said, “Children have created a world record and done India and Lucknow proud. DNA the children extracted can be seen as a white globule at the end of the stick.”

In 2015, the same festival when held in IIT-Delhi won a Guinness Record for the single largest chemistry experiment.

Last year, at the third edition of the IISF in Chennai, the city students created a huge Guinness record of the single largest biology class.

source: http://www.ndtv.com / NDTV.com / Home> Lucknow> Sections / by Pallava Bagla / October 06th, 2018