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Murungai, parangi, sakkaravalli rustic veggies or wonderfood

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We read every year of malnutrition related deaths in Maharashtra, children who are infected by out of date iron supplements at noon meal centres, poor pre-natal and post-natal health care for rural women. It is not that rich and famous in the cities don’t face this, but there are enough and more clinics and hundreds of crores worth of nutritional supplement that get sold to compensate for the carbs and white they will cut from their diets to stay slim and fit. I lived my early days, till I moved to Bombay with my first job in 1990 in a small town, with close connection to villages, though not much of nature. There have been certain cheap, but highly nutritional food that was available for the poor, without much fuss they consumed them. Source of iron, anti-oxidants and many medicinal value is the moringa or murungai tree, drumstick tree. The leaves are cooked with dal and eaten, the flowers may be some had recipes to cook them, and of course the staple veggie of the sa...

Essar Oil - Rosneft deal to change the refining landscape in the country

Essar Oil has sealed definitive agreements to sell its flagship asset, refinery business along with retail network and related infrastructure of Ports to Russian oil conglomerate Rosneft, international trading firm Trafigura and Russian Investment fund UCP  for an enterprise value of approximately $13 billion. This is a landmark deal for India, which over the years tried to attract investments in the refining sector without much success. As long as the petrol and diesel prices were controlled, the market wasn’t lucrative for any foreign player. The Rosneft deal first came up when both petrol and diesel prices were deregulated giving a level playing field between the private and public sector refiners to market their products within the country. While Reliance, the only other private player in refining company built, expanded its refineries with export focus, Essar by far sold much of its refined petroleum products within the country through public sector refining and ...

Let us not call them "Parks" anymore, get serious and just call them forests or sanctuaries

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A week ago, there was a news about connecting Borivili and Thane by a ropeway, and wait where would it rest on or go through? The hills of Sanjay Gandhi National Park. Sounds crazy and those of us who know what SGNP is have been left in a state of shock. First you have plans to cut through the “Park” for a high speed train service, next you want ropeways and what next? Open it up for “development”? Mumbai and its ecological hotspots are under threat, constant threat and in some ways the space crunch the city faces is also due to its geography. But, the greatness of this city is also about its geography, the sea one side, the forests and the hills on the other side, bringing abundant rains, feeding many small rivers and filling up many natural and man made lakes. There may be a million climate change naysayers, but for me having lived here for 25 years, the climate change is a reality. It doesn’t rain like that anymore …. not the predictable torrential monsoon showers an...

Rs.2000 crore to flatten a hill, but would that amount create one afresh?

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I am not an engineer, cannot assess value of construction, cost of projects etc., But this bit of news in the morning paper caught me by surprise. “The tender for hill cutting is worth around Rs 2,000 crore. The first two parts of the tender, said to be around Rs 550 crore, was repackaged owing to change in engineering works and design for combining the cutting and diversion of the Ulwe river. This part is currently under tendering process. The other two parts have been finalised.”  From TOI’s repot on ground work having started at the Navi Mumbai Airport site. Is it normal to include a whopping 2000 crore rupees to cut a hill to make way for the airpot? How much would that add to our “airport maintenance charges” or “user charges” per ticket? Does cutting the hill not yield any granite? Does 2000 crore include the value of granite to be mined? Or is it just the cost to cut and dispose the quarried stones? It is not unusual for big ticket projects in India being h...

Nadabrahmam

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Tyagaraja  “Naa jayammunu joochi nammare devuni” Last August, senior musician O.S.Thyagarajan was performing at Mumbai’s Shanmukhananda Sabha. One after other Tyagaraja kirtanas flowed. It was blissful, but was a surprise as well. It was not specifically a Tyagaraja festival, but one was delighted. Just a few days before that an article appeared that tried to portray a composer, revered as a Saint by singers of many generations now not in the right spirit. The writer had tried to show Carnatic Music is inherently casteist and how it is proved from what Tyagaraja himself had written in his famous Gowlai Pancaratna Kriti, ‘Dudugukala’ in one of the Caranams. Coming soon after the publication of that article, perhaps many in the audience would have been grateful to OST for making his whole concert a homage to Tyagaraja. OST brought out the greatness of Tyagaraja in all his true colours. When he sang ‘Sattaleni dinamulu vaccena’ in Naganandhini, Tyagarja’s lament on the nat...

Vamana Jayanthi or MahaBali's return? Are they mutually exclusive?

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I got a lesson in how not to tell stories to our children about our past, about our puranas, itihasas and our festivals recently. My cousin who grew up in Kerala, went to school there apparently commented that what a state it is to celebrate a fall guy. How insensitive, arrogant it is I thought when I heard his mother say this, and immediately told her, don’t we celebrate Narakasura on Diwali. There is a problem about how we look at our festivals, and how we narrate our puranas and itihasas to our children. For long I have been irked by, should I say the western way of looking at every festival as “victory of good over evil”.  We have no clear good and evil, for an evil can transform to good, a saintly soul can turn a sinner. I am still angry at what my cousin had said, for his parents now live not very far from the Thirukatkarai temple, the Lord who graced Bali. When we were there last week, Onam utsavam was in full swing and we had darshan of Thirukatkappan as Nar...

Double standards

I had to write this as a follow up to the Slander post that I wrote in June. Sunday, September 4th Raghuram Rajan will leave Reserve Bank of India, handing over the reins to Urjit Patel. By now many questions would have been raised on the choice of Patel, markets reacted, and Prime Minister’s detractors taking their usual potshots at the Ambani connection. But, in all this the man who went against Rajan, first mainly on him being not fully Indian has endorsed Patel. Subramaniam Swamy has no problems with the fact that Patel didn’t “officially” become a citizen till 2013 when he had to assume office as deputy governor of RBI. The charge against Rajan was he held on to his green card, that was akin to being a US citizen for Swamy. But, Patel having worked with the government in various capacities since 1998 opted for Indian citizenship only in 2013 is immaterial. Patel was also educated in institutions abroad, from London School of Economics to Oxford and Yale. ...