Monthly Archives: January 2016

‘My parents’ dream has come true’

Lucknow:

A farmer’s son, Sumit Kumar, who bagged a gold medal for securing highest marks in agricultural engineering in APJ Abdul Kalam Technical University is an example to prove no dream is too big.

A native of Jahangirabad in UP’s Bulandshahr, Kumar pursued his engineering from Aligarh College of Engineering and Technology. Since he couldn’t afford the hostel fees, he lived in a small rented room, near the college. “Living near the college saved my traveling expenses,” said Sumit.

“It’s a moment to celebrate as my parents’ dream has come true. My father always encouraged me to study agricultural engineering and help farmers who are in an extremely poor condition,” said Sumit, who now aims to pursue MTech from IIT and then get into research. Sumit’s father Anil Kumar, a class X drop-out, took a loan to fund his son’s education. “My father could only manage to pay fees for the first year. He borrowed to fund rest of my education,” said Sumit, who is looking for a scholarship for his MTech course. Sumit’s mother Rajesh Devi is uneducated.

With a meager income of Rs 8,000 per month, it was a challenge for Anil to educate his two sons. “Because of climate change, we have lost 70% of our crops. We don’t have grains even for our consumption and will have to purchase from others,” said Anil. Living in a one-room semi-pucca house in Bulandshahr, Sumit completed his class X and XII from UP board in Jahangirabad. He secured 62% in class X and 75% in class XII.

On the occasion, governor Ram Naik, Chancellor of state universities, appreciated the Indian outfit worn by the students. “The caps attached to the black gowns caused inconvenience in receiving the medals. The Indian dress looks good and is comfortable,” said Naik.

The university also conferred honoris causa on ISRO chairman A S Kiran Kumar.

source: http://www.timesofindia.indiatimes.com / The Times of India / News Home> City> Lucknow / TNN / January 24th, 2016

Lucknow University faculty receives NASI Young Scientist Award

Lucknow :

Smita Kumar of Lucknow University faculty from department of biochemistry has been conferred the prestigious Young Scientist Platinum Jubilee Award by the National Academy of Sciences, India (NASI) for her contribution in the field of plant sciences and agriculture.

Smita is among the four teachers to have received this award in her field. The three others, one each from IIT-Roorkee; Ghent University, Belgium and International Crops Research Institute for the Semi-Arid Tropics, Patancheru in Telangana.

“It’s a privilege to have won the award,” said Smita.

Smita completed her MSc from department of biochemistry, LU in 2007 and PhD from Banaras Hindu University in 2013 while working in National Botanical Research Institute (NBRI), Lucknow. “I worked on molecular aspects of heavy metal stress in plants with special reference to arsenic which is a big public health menace in Indo-Gangetic plain and causes various skin diseases and cancer,” said Smita.

After completing her PhD, Smita was awarded prestigious DST-INSPIRE Faculty Award, after which she joined LU in June 2014 to pursue her future research on heavy metal stress in Arabidopsis (a small genus of annual or biennial herbs of north temperate regions) natural variations.

Smita was awarded the NASI Young Scientist Platinum Jubilee Award in the 85th meeting of NASI held recently at Bhubaneshwar.

source: http://www.timesofindia.indiatimes.com / The Times of India / News Home> City> Lucknow / by Isha Jain, TNN / January 19th, 2016

How this Fijian ‘girmitiya’ found his India home

Lucknow :

His life’s story is the stuff films are made of.

And though Satish Rai’s own story remains untold – until right now – the Sydney-based documentary filmmaker makes do with telling the tales of others like him, who set out in search of their roots, and stumbled upon cousins and family they never knew existed.

For the uninitiated, Rai is the descendant of girmitiyas – indentured Indian labourers who travelled to Fiji and Caribbean Islands to work on sugar plantations in the early 19th century, upon signing an “agreement” – distorted eventually to be known as ‘girmit’ – with the British Government that promised them to return to India after they completed the term of their contractual agreement for work in Fiji and the Caribbean Islands.

Many contracts were reneged upon, and only a few could return home. And for those like Satish Rai, the real homecoming could only happen nearly a century after his family first left the Indian shores.

Rai’s first visit to India was in 1994 – to Basti district – where his cousins were settled.

A brush with a local rickshaw puller gave him his first brush with his caste – and his roots. “He told me I am a Bhumihar Brahmin. And I didn’t know what that meant,” Rai said.

The first trip yielded little ground.

After two more visits, one in 1995 when a Brahmin priest led him on a wild goose chase, and a second in 2001 when he accompanied a cousin on her quest to find her family, Rai’s own story saw mild progress.

He said, “During that time in Basti, there was a man who helped us and took us to Balrampur. He made me meet some people. Then, three months later, I got an email from him telling me my family had been traced.

In 2004, I went back to Balrampur.” And here’s the twist in Rai’s tale. Satish Rai met his cousin, thrice removed, a man they knew by the name of Naeem Rai. “This was a Muslim name. And I already knew my grandmother was a Hindu. So I knew it couldn’t be the right family,” Rai said.

Whether it was curiosity or sheer desperation that drove him 15km into Balrampur’s belly is unclear. But Rai was on his way the next morning, looking to dig for, and to find his roots. “The first time I saw them, I felt the connection. The resemblance was uncanny,” he said. But how did it happen? After the initial rush of emotion, the mystery unravelled.

Rai’s grandmother was married to a Rai Bahadur, a dominating, violent man, he said. And after suffering many years of domestic violence and abuse, she walked out on the Rai Bahadur. Staying away from the powerful landlord within the village would have been impossible, and Rai’s grandmother took the next best available option; she boarded the ship to Fiji with Rai’s grandfather, a man headed for greener pastures in the faraway lands. When the irate Rai Bahadur found out about her escape, though, he did the only thing that remained in his power to do: issue a diktat that disallowed all Hindu families in the area to wed.

“My grandmother’s cousin at that time had four children. And to escape the bizarre diktat, they all converted to Islam. The family name of Rai, however, stuck.”

For Satish Rai, the family name served as the final missing piece in his quest to find his family. A century after his grandmother boarded that ship to Fiji, Satish hugged his cousin Naeem and celebrated his homecoming.

source: http://www.timesofindia.indiatimes.com / The Times of India / News Home> City> Lucknow / by Swati Mathur / TNN / January 17th, 2016