Tag Archive | "Human interest"

The man who moved a mountain

Saturday, May 2, 2009

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HOW HE BROKE NEW GROUND  The challenge for Manjhi was formidable — a 300-feet-high hill stood between his village and development. With no faith in the government, he chose to go it alone. He sold his goats to buy chisel, hammer and rope. Hammered constantly at the rock-face for 22 years, to create a 16-feet-wide passage.  Gahlor Ghati (Gaya): Over [...]

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A Life of Selfless Service

Monday, October 13, 2008

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A Life of Selfless Service

Hidden amid the dazzling human mosaic of India are millions of tribal people. For centuries, they have lived apart in remote highlands and forests. The Madia Gonds, for example, occupy 150 square kilometers of dense forest in eastern Maharashtra, bordering Andhra Pradesh and Chattisgarh states. In a thousand isolated villages, they survive by hunting and [...]

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The Killer has Arrived

Friday, October 10, 2008

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The Killer has Arrived

India’s rapid economic growth could be slowed by a sharp rise in the prevalence of heart disease, stroke and diabetes, and the successful information technology industry is likely to be the hardest hit, a study has found. So-called lifestyle diseases are estimated to have wiped $9bn off the country’s national income in 2005, but the cost [...]

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The Unknown Innovator

Thursday, October 9, 2008

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The Unknown Innovator

Dr.Anil Kumar Gupta, a professor at the Indian Institute of Management, Ahmedabad has been championing the cause of thousands of faceless creative individuals scattered all over India. Because most of them are far removed from the modern organised world of business, they are unaware of their own worth, rights and the opportunities that await them. [...]

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The Carriers

Tuesday, October 7, 2008

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The Carriers

A startling study indicates that almost 40 percent of India’s truck drivers and their helpers are infected with AIDS virus and there is an urgent need to create awareness// among this community to check the spread of the fatal disease. India currently has over 5.1 million AIDS patients and truckers are possibly one of the largest groups carrying the [...]

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The Great Indian Migration

Sunday, October 5, 2008

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CITIES ARE centres of opportunities, of all types: entertainment, employment, education, healthcare and so on. When it is a matter of development, it is true that everything new comes to the city first. But sometimes it takes ages for a particular technological innovation find its way to the fringes of rural India. By the time [...]

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Kashmir – Healing with Music

Thursday, October 2, 2008

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“The Muslim and Hindu peoples of Kashmir have lived in relative harmony and friendliness since the 13th century when Islam first became the majority religion in Kashmir. The Sufi-Islamic way of life that ordinary Muslims followed in Kashmir complemented the rishi tradition of Kashmiri Pandits (Hindus), leading to a syncretic culture where Hindus and Muslims [...]

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No points for Brownies

Wednesday, October 1, 2008

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The presence of Caucasian models in Indian advertisements has grown in the past three years, industry analysts say. The trend reflects deep cultural preferences for fair skin in this predominantly brown-skinned nation of more than 1 billion people. But analysts say the fondness for “fair” is also fueled by a globalized economy that has drawn [...]

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The Last of the Todas

Tuesday, September 30, 2008

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The Last of the Todas

  Years of travel have made me long for exotic spots, places at the edge of the wilderness, where one might find a few creature comforts along with a chance to discover something new about human nature. Can such longings ever be satisfied? I found the answer recently, on a trip to the Nilgiri Mountains of [...]

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The DISNEY of India

Tuesday, September 30, 2008

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The DISNEY of India

Although the comics and the magazines found a following among Indian children, the books authored by Indians took longer to find acceptance. Most children were by then so totally hooked on the wonderfully limited world of Enid Blyton that it was impossible to wean them away. And so we continued to pay homage at the [...]

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