Yeh Hum Nahin

किसी के इतने पास न जा
कि दूर जाना खौफ़ बन जाये
एक कदम पीछे देखने पर
सीधा रास्ता भी खाई नज़र आये

किसी को इतना अपना न बना
कि उसे खोने का डर लगा रहे
इसी डर के बीच एक दिन ऐसा न आये
तु पल पल खुद को ही खोने लगे

किसी के इतने सपने न देख
कि काली रात भी रन्गीली लगे
आन्ख खुले तो बर्दाश्त न हो
जब सपना टूट टूट कर बिखरने लगे

किसी को इतना प्यार न कर
कि बैठे बैठे आन्ख नम हो जाये
उसे गर मिले एक दर्द
इधर जिन्दगी के दो पल कम हो जाये

किसी के बारे मे इतना न सोच
कि सोच का मतलब ही वो बन जाये
भीड के बीच भी
लगे तन्हाई से जकडे गये

किसी को इतना याद न कर
कि जहा देखो वोही नज़र आये
राह देख देख कर कही ऐसा न हो
जिन्दगी पीछे छूट जाये

ऐसा सोच कर अकेले न रहना,
किसी के पास जाने से न डरना
न सोच अकेलेपन मे कोई गम नही,
खुद की परछाई देख बोलोगे "ये हम नही"

-- Keep the faith in Dreams
- - Kalingaa...

Dil Tod Ke Na Naa... Mukh Mod Ke Na Jaa...

Just randon thought about one of my favourite songs sang by Kishore Da -
Pal bhar ke liye koi humme pyaar kar le
Jhoota hi sahi
Do din ke liye koi ikraar kar le
Jhoota hi sahi
Pal bhar ...

Humne bahut tujhko chup chupke dekha
Humne bahut tujhko chup chupke dekha
Dil pe khichi hai tere kaajal ki rekha
Kaajal ke rekha bani laxman ki rekha
Ho Ho Ho Ho kaajal ki rekha ...
Ram mein kyun tune rawan ko dekha
Ram mein kyun tune rawan ko dekha
khade khidki pe ...
Khade khidki pe jogi sweekar kar le
Jhoota hi sahi
Pal bhar ...

La La La ... pyaar kar le

Jhoota hi sahi
Dheere se jade tere nain bade,
Jis din se lade tere dar pe pade
Dheere se jade tere nain bade,
Jis din se lade tere dar pe pade

Sun Sunkar teri nahi nahi
Jaan ... Apni nikal jaye naa kahi
Jara haan kah de meri jaan kah de
Meri jaan kah de jara haan kah de
Jab raain pade nahi chain pade
nahi chain pade jab raain pade

Mana tu saare haseeno se haseen hain
Mana tu saare haseeno se haseen hain
Apni bhi soorat buri tho nahi hai
Apni bhi soorat buri tho nahi hai

Kabhi tu bhi
O kabhi tu bhi humara deedar kar le
Jhoota hi sahi
Pal Bhar Ke Liye Koi hume Pyaar Kar Le ...
-- Keep the Heart open. Love Just Happens ...
- - Kalingaa...

Rabba main itna bura nahin hota

Evils of Success...

After getting information about conviction of Sanjay Dutt in Arms Act, once again I was stunned that Fame comes with a lot of tension and pity in Life. Rarely a person can survive ills and pitfalls of celebrity life. Life where you don’t have privacy, every single step is being watched by millions and no space for individual. Everyone wants to attain that fame, and glitterati with a lot of hard cash and assets, but everytime we achieve it, we unintentionally fall for its innovative wrong-ones and the moment we realize about it, we are a long way down the road. Turning back seems like trying to reach to Mt. Everest and eventually we see shame for us in eyes of our beloved ones.


I may not have been well-known person but I have seen few such moments where I was on opposite side of social norms and I can understand what emotional stress a person goes through in such situation.

"Be not afraid of greatness: some men are born great, some achieve greatness and some have greatness thrust upon them."
- William Shakespeare

"I don't know the key to success, but the key to failure is trying to please everybody."
- Bill Cosby

Yes, Sanjay Dutt did something which was against Unity of India and if his crime is big enough than hang him for his crime, But also we should look for reasons that why a person of such caliber and status do a crime against society? Kill the evils of society and criminals will be dead automatically.

Socha nahin tha taqdeer yahan layegi

Manzil pe aate hi jaan chali jayegi
O, yeh to Sikandar ne bhi nahin tha socha
Aane se pehle khushi laut jayegi
Humne socha tha kya, aur kya se kya hua
Jaa rahe hai aaj yeh zamane ko batake

Yeh kya ho gaya rama re, yeh kya ho gaya maula re

Tera kusoor tha ya mera kusoor tha
Tera guroor tha ya mera guroor tha
Rabba main itna bura nahin hota
Tu agar bewafa nahin hota
Itna bata mujhe, kya mila tujhe
Gham ke yeh kaante meri raahon mein bichhaake

Yeh kya ho gaya rama re, yeh kya ho gaya maula re

-- Keep the Society alive by killing Crime
- - Kalingaa…

P.S. – On the side note, Bring Dada in Indian Cricket team for revival of Titans

All I can do

An old man lived alone in Minnesota. He wanted to spade his potato garden, but it was very hard work. His only son, who would have helped him, was in prison. The old man wrote a letter to his son and mentioned his situation:

Dear Son,
I am feeling pretty bad because it looks like I won't be able to plant my potato garden this year. I hate to miss doing the garden, because your mother always loved planting time. I'm just getting too old to be digging up a garden plot. If you were here, all my troubles would be over. I know you would dig the plot for me, if you weren't in prison.
Love,
Dad

Shortly, the old man received this telegram:

For Heaven's sake, Dad, don't dig up the garden!! That's where I buried the GUNS!!

At 4a.m the next morning, a dozen police officers showed up and dug up the entire garden without finding any guns. Confused, the old man wrote another note to his son telling him what happened, and asked him what to do next.

His son's reply was: "Go ahead and plant your potatoes, Dad. It's the best I could do for you from here."
-- Keep doing whatever you can do for all your loved ones
- - Kalingaa...

Complex nature of English

Can you decipher this:

Two individuals proceeded towards the apex of a natural geologic protuberance, the purpose of their expedition being the procurement of a sample of fluid hydride of oxygen in a large vessel, the exact size of which was unspecified. One member of the team precipitously descended, sustaining severe damage to the upper cranial portion of his anatomical structure; subsequently the second member of the team performed a self rotational translation oriented in the same direction taken by the first team member

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(in simple English what does this translate to??)
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Jack and jill went up the hill to fetch a pail of water Jack fell down and broke his crown and jill came.

-- Keep complex nature away and be simple
- - Kalingaa..

Close All Schools

Following is an Article in Times of India written by Sauvik Chakraverti.
Individuals require less knowledge in order to survive in today’s complex world than they did in the far simpler past. Village life requires knowing how to grow your food, look after and milk your cows and build your own house. In a modern city, one can easily get by just knowing how to play the guitar well. A musician in the urban ‘division of labour’ can then happily rely on the specialised knowledge of others. His car is built by engineers, kept in good repair by mechanics and driven by a skilled chauffeur. His house is built by an architect and aesthetically furnished by an interior decorator. Farmers grow his food and this is cooked by a trained chef. In all these (and all other) areas, our musician is blissfully ignorant. Economists call this phenomenon ‘rational ignorance’: It shows how, as the economy diversifies, less real knowledge is required on the part of each participant. This has enormous implications on the sort of education system required in a modern ‘knowledge economy’.

The existing school system provides generalised knowledge of dubious quality. Even after 12 years of schooling, a student does not possess any knowledge
that could be useful in the market. Further, higher education is required. This generalised, broad education is difficult for students to assimilate: Many commit suicide. The only career open for those with this generalised education is the bureaucracy, who are the proverbial ‘jack of all trades’. This horrible school system should be closed down. All Indian children should be publicly informed that survival in the modern world requires fragmented bits of specialised knowledge, and that the search for such knowledge is simplicity itself. Apart from basic language skills, preferably in English, and knowing how to use a calculator, all that a young person needs is knowledge in one single field. He must, therefore, find a calling, and seek knowledge relevant to that calling alone. He can find this by apprenticeship. He can acquire it from a guru. Or from a specialised school. This will give the aspiring student hope. The search for knowledge will not seem such a long, uphill task as it is today. So close every school down, and let the knowledge economy explode.
-- Keep the knowledge Intact
- - Kalingaa...

"Die Every Day" - J. Krishnamurti

I am reading writings of J. Krishnamurti now-a-days and he is great philosophy writer. Following is a pharase from his book "A Book of Life". I am trying to grasp as much books as possible.

"What is age? Is it the number of years you have lived? That is part of age; you were born in such and such a year, and now you are fifteen, forty or sixty years old. Your body grows old - and so does your mind when it is burdened with all the experiences, miseries and weariness of life; and such a mind can never discover what is truth. The mind can discover only when it is young, fresh, innocent; but innocence is not a matter of age.

It is not only the child that is innocent - he may not be - but the mind that is capable of experiencing without accumulating the residue of experience. The mind must experience, that is inevitable. It must respond to everything - to the river, to the diseased animal, to the dead body being carried away to be burnt, to the poor villagers carrying their burdens along the road, to the tortures and miseries of life - otherwise it is already dead; but it must be capable of responding without being held by the experience.

It is tradition, the accumulation of experience, the ashes of memory, that make the mind old. The mind that dies every day to the memories of yesterday, to all the joys and sorrows of the past - such a mind is fresh, innocent, it has no age; and without that innocence, whether you are ten or sixty, you will not find God."

-- Keep the fear of death away and Njoi your life
- - Kalingaa...

Children and You


Its better to be a stupid child than to be a mean grown up.
Keep your child part alive and smiling because "Bachche Mann Ke Sachche".

Happy Children's Day.

Support CRY (Child Relief and You) at www.cry.org .
Your one step will make difference in someone's life.

-- Keep smiling
- - Kalingaa...

Gitanjali

I don't have to say anything about "Ravindernath Tagore" and his most known work "Gitanjali".

Its a part of this work -
Where the mind is without fear and the head is held high
Where knowledge is free
Where the world has not been broken up into fragments by narrow domestic walls
Where words come out from the depth of truth
Where tireless striving stretches its arms towards perfection
Where the clear stream of reason has not lost its way into the dreary desert of dead habit....
Where the mind is led forward by thee
Into ever-widening thought and action
Into that heaven of freedom, my father, let my country awake.
-- Keep the free spirit of mind
- - Kalingaa..

A Tryst with Destiny of REPUBLIC

After reading speech by Mahasweta Devi, first speech which came in my mind was speech by Mr. Jawaharlal Nehru Delivered on August 14th, 1947. He gave this Speech in the Constituent Assembly of India, on the eve of India's Independence. This speech in important to remember the pledges which our forefather made to this country and we have to re-think why we fell short of our vision.

They had a vision and we as youth have will power so let's take the target of "One India, Only India".

Long years ago we made a tryst with destiny, and now the time comes when we shall redeem our pledge, not wholly or in full measure, but very substantially. At the stroke of the midnight hour, when the world sleeps, India will awake to life and freedom. A moment comes, which comes but rarely in history, when we step out from the old to the new, when an age ends, and when the soul of a nation, long suppressed, finds utterance. It is fitting that at this solemn moment, we take the pledge of dedication to the service of India and her people and to the still larger cause of humanity.

At the dawn of history, India started on her unending quest, and trackless centuries are filled with her striving and grandeur of her success and failures. Through good and ill fortune alike, she has never lost sight of that quest, forgotten the ideals which gave her strength. We end today a period of misfortunes and India discovers herself again. The achievement we celebrate today is but a step, an opening of opportunity to the greater triumphs and achievements that await us. Are we brave enough and wise enough to grasp this opportunity and accept the challenge of the future?

Freedom and power bring responsibility. The responsibility rests upon this Assembly, a sovereign body representing the sovereign people of India. Before the birth of freedom, we have endured all the pains of labour and our hearts are heavy with the memory of this sorrrow. Some of those pains continue even now. Nevertheless, the past is over and it is the future that beckons us now.

That future is not one of ease or resting but of incessant striving so that we may fulfill the pledges we have so often taken and the one we shall take today. The service of India means, the service of the millions who suffer. It means the ending of poverty and ignorance and poverty and disease and inequality of opportunity. The ambition of the greatest men of our generation has been to wipe every tear from every eye. That may be beyond us, but as long as there are tears and suffering, so long our work will not be over.

And so we have to labour and to work, and to work hard, to give reality to our dreams. Those dreams are for India, but they are also for the world, for all the nations and peoples are too closely knit together today for any one of them to imagine that it can live apart. Peace is said to be indivisible, so is freedom, so is prosperity now, and also is disaster in this one world that can no longer be split into isolated fragments.

To the people of India, whose representatives we are, we make an appeal to join us with faith and confidence in this great adventure. This is no time for petty and destructive criticism, no time for ill-will or blaming others. We have to build the noble mansion of free India where all her children may dwell.


The appointed day has come -the day appointed by destiny- and India stands forth again, after long slumber and struggle, awake, vital, free and independent. The past clings on to us still in some measure and we have to do much before we redeem the pledges we have so often taken. Yet the turning-point is past, and history begins anew for us, the history which we shall live and act and others will write about.

It is a fateful moment for us in India, for all Asia and for the world. A new star rises, the star of freedom in the East, a new hope comes into being, a vision long cherished materializes. May the star never set and that hope never be betrayed!

We rejoice in that freedom, even though clouds surround us, and many of our people are sorrow-stricken and difficult problems encompass us. But freedom brings responsibilities and burdens and we have to face them in the spirit of a free and disciplined people.

On this day our first thoughts go to the architect of this freedom, the Father of our Nation, who, embodying the old spirit of India, held aloft the torch of freedom and lighted up the darkness that surrounded us. We have often been unworthy followers of his and have strayed from his message, but not only we but succeeding generations will remember this message and bear the imprint in their hearts of this great son of India, magnificent in his faith and strength and courage and humility. We shall never allow that torch of freedom to be blown out, however high the wind or stormy the tempest.

Our next thoughts must be of the unknown volunteers and soldiers of freedom who, without praise or reward, have served India even unto death.

We think also of our brothers and sisters who have been cut off from us by political boundaries and who unhappily cannot share at present in the freedom that has come. They are of us and will remain of us whatever may happen, and we shall be sharers in their good [or] ill fortune alike.

The future beckons to us. Whither do we go and what shall be our endeavour? To bring freedom and opportunity to the common man, to the peasants and workers of India; to fight and end poverty and ignorance and disease; to build up a prosperous, democratic and progressive nation, and to create social, economic and political institutions which will ensure justice and fullness of life to every man and woman.

We have hard work ahead. There is no resting for any one of us till we redeem our pledge in full, till we make all the people of India what destiny intended them to be. We are citizens of a great country on the verge of bold advance, and we have to live up to that high standard. All of us, to whatever religion we may belong, are equally the children of India with equal rights, privileges and obligations. We cannot encourage communalism or narrow-mindedness, for no nation can be great whose people are narrow in thought or in action.

To the nations and peoples of the world we send greetings and pledge ourselves to cooperate with them in furthering peace, freedom and democracy.

And to India, our much-loved motherland, the ancient, the eternal and the ever-new, we pay our reverent homage and we bind ourselves afresh to her service.

JAI HIND.

- Jawahar Lal Nehru

-- Keep the pledges to your heart
- - Kalingaa..

THE REPUBLIC OF DREAMS

Mahasweta Devi - the Great Old Lady of Indian Lit.
She is one of most prominent authors from Indian sub-continet and I have priviledge of reading many of her writings like Hajar Churashir Ma (No. 1084's Mother), Aranyer Adhikar (The Occupation of the Forest) , Choti Munda evam Tar Tir (Choti Munda and His Arrow) etc.

In her own words, she simply puts her insipiration in -
"I have always believed that the real history is made by ordinary people. I constantly come across the reappearance, in various forms, of folklore, ballads, myths and legends, carried by ordinary people across generations....The reason and inspiration for my writing are those people who are exploited and used, and yet do not accept defeat. For me, the endless source of ingredients for writing is in these amazingly, noble, suffering human beings. Why should I look for my raw material elsewhere, once I have started knowing them? Sometimes it seems to me that my writing is really their doing."
Recently she had people in tears at this year's Frankfurt Book Fair. Delivered with passionate heart, her inaugural speech about our freedom still on hold stirs a kind of moral transformation.


Excerts of Mahasweta Devi's speech in Frankfurt Book Fair 2006-

At 80-plus I move forward often stepping back into the shadows. Sometimes I am bold enough to step back into the sunlight. As a young person, as a mother, I would often move forward to when I was old. Amuse my son. Pretend I couldn’t hear or see. Make mockery of memory, forget things that had happened a moment ago. These games were for fun. Now they are no longer funny. My life has moved forward and is repeating itself. I am repeating myself. Recollecting for you what has been. What is. What could have been. May have been.

See the tree, the forest, the field lush with crops, a stream dazzling in sunlight. And see, the spotted deer are jumping and fleeing to the forest, the mothers are filling the pitchers from the stream, clutching their children. And the houses are the ones they left behind at Badihatta. The sun is leaning to see the earth. The peasants are irrigating their fields. What an expanse of forest. How green the hills are.

Nothing happens unless you know how to dream. The Establishment is out to destroy, by remote control, all the brain cells that induce dreams. But some dreams manage to escape. I am after the dreams that have escaped from jail. The right to dream is what allows mankind to survive. If you end the right to dream — which the entire world and everyone is doing — you destroy the world. The right to dream should be the first fundamental right. The right to dream. [...]

There’s a story about Nanak — his father made him sit in a shop, told him to sell goods… dus, gyarah, barah, tera… tera, tera, tera... and he gave everything away. Everything is yours. With me, everything became tera… nothing touches the inside. Material things don’t touch me, I remain an outsider, I can’t always be an insider. Genuine warmth, real understanding, some friendship, a few strange things touch me, but I’m an outsider and an insider at the same time. [...]

Since the 1980s, I have been vocal about the daily injustice and exploitation faced by the most marginalised and dispossessed of our people: tribals, the landless rural poor who then turn into itinerant labour or pavement dwellers in cities. Through reports in newspapers, through petitions, court cases, letters to the authorities, participation in activist organisations and advocacy, through the grassroots journal I edit, Bortika, in which the dispossessed tell their own truths, and finally through my fiction, I have sought to bring the harsh reality of this ignored segment of India’s population to the notice of the nation, I have sought to include their forgotten and invisible history in the official history of the nation. I have said over and over, our Independence was false; there has been no Independence for these dispossessed peoples, still deprived of their most basic rights.

How to save and protect one’s culture in these circumstances? Which culture do we protect? And what do we mean when we speak of Indian culture in the 21st century? What culture? Which India? Sixty years after our hard-won Independence, the khadi sari is India just as the mini skirt and the backless choli is. A bullock cart is India just as much as is the latest Toyota or Mercedes car. Illiteracy haunts us, yet the same India produces men and women at the forefront of medicine, science and technology. Eight-year-old children toil mercilessly, facing unimaginable working conditions and abuse as child labourers. That is India. On the other hand, there is another lot of eight-year-olds who spend their time in air-conditioned classrooms and call their mothers at lunch break using their personal mobile phones. That too is India. Satyam Shivam Sundaram is India. Choli ke peechchey kya hai is also India. The multiplex and the mega mall are India. The snake charmer and the maharishi — they too are India.

Indian culture is a tapestry of many weaves, many threads. The weaving is endless as are the shades of the pattern. Somewhere dark, somewhere light, somewhere saffron, somewhere as green as the fields of new paddy, somewhere flecked with blood, somewhere washed cool by the waters of a Himalayan spring. Somewhere the red of a watermelon slice. Somewhere the blue of an autumn sky in Bengal. Somewhere the purple of a musk deer’s eye. Somewhere the red of a new bride’s sindoor. Somewhere the threads form words in Urdu, somewhere in Bengali, somewhere in Kannada, somewhere in Assamese, yet elsewhere in Marathi. Somewhere the cloth frays. Somewhere the threads tear. But still it holds. Still. It holds.

The pattern shifts, flows, stutters, forms again and changes shape from one season to the other. I see one India in the pattern. You see another. Light and shadow play. History and modernity collide. Superstition and myth, Rabindrasangeet and rap, Sufi and Shia and Sunni, caste and computers, text and sub-plot, laughter and tears, governments and oppositions, reservations and quotas, struggles and captivity, success and achievement, hamburgers and Hari Om Hari, Sanskrit and sms, the smell of rain and the sound of the sea. A seamless stitching. Many, many hands have stitched, are stitching and will continue to stitch India. My country. Torn, tattered, proud, beautiful, hot, humid, cold, sandy, bright, dull, educated, barbaric, savage, shining India. My country. And its myriad cultures. From time immemorial to now, the 21st country. From the Indus Valley to the bluetooth handset, India has seen it all, contains it all within itself and its cultures. There is room in India for all faiths, all languages, all people. Despite the communal crises, despite the fundamentalism, the backwardness of rural life, the memories of underdevelopment which are no memory but reality for us, the threat of aids, tsunamis, earthquakes, floods and droughts, farmer suicides, police violence, environmental disasters wreaked by industries and farmland being bought over by multinational companies, despite the battering by history and circumstance, India still is. Its culture still is. Hence we all still are. India has learnt to survive, to adapt, to keep the old with the modern, to walk hand in hand with the new millennium whistling a tune from the dawn of time. This is truly the age when the joota is Japani, the patloon Englistani, the topi Roosi. But the dil — the dil is and always will remain Hindustani.

As we face the future, and as I stand here, invited to speak of my country’s culture before such an eminent gathering and at such an honourable occasion, I wish to share my dream of where I would like to see my India go. I have spoken of the fundamental right to dream. I would now like to exercise that right.

I dream of an India where the mind is without fear and the head is held high. Where knowledge is free. Where the world has not been broken into fragments by narrow domestic walls. Where words come out of the depth of truth. Where tireless striving stretches its arms towards perfection. Where the clear stream of reason has not lost its way in the dreary sand of dead habit.

I dream of an India to which the world ‘backward’ does not and cannot ever apply. I wish to be Third World no more but First, the only world. I wish for children to be educated. I wish for women to step into the light. I wish for justice for the common man. Survival for the farmer. Homes for the poor. And hope for all. I wish for debts to cease. For poverty to vanish. For hunger to become a bad word that no one utters. I wish for the environment to be protected, to be loved and restored. I wish the land to be healed, the waters to be pure again. For the tiger to survive. I wish for self reliance, for self respect, for independence from the shackles of superstition. I wish for equal medical aid for all.

For light and water and a roof above every head. I wish for more and more books to be written, to be published, in every language there is in the country. Let the words pour out. Let the stories be told. Let the people read. Let them learn to read. To trace their fingers over every alphabet until they can spell their names. Their addresses. Until they can write for themselves: I know. I can. I will. Let us fight ignorance with knowledge. Let us battle hatred with logic. Let us slay evil with the sword of the pen.

I wish for no more satis, no more dowry deaths, no more honour killings, no more flesh being bought and sold. Let no more parents sell their children to survive. Let no more mothers drown their daughters in the dead of night. Let the downtrodden awake, let the forgotten faces and the muffled voices arise to claim their own. Let the pattern make room, let these new threads find place, let new colours set afire the tapestry. Set ablaze the future. Into that heaven of freedom, let my India awaken again and again. It is a big dream, I know. But not an impossible one.

When I speak of Indian culture, then, I speak of all this. Culture is what will take us into the future yet keep us in close contact with our roots, our history, our tradition, our heritage. Culture will let us take a quantum leap and land on the moon bur first, before all that, it must help us take a few small steps towards understanding ourselves better, towards knowing each other better. Culture must once again remind us to be a tolerant and truly secular people.

I have tried in my own way to give you a picture of this culture. But how am I to even to begin arriving at a definition that will be acceptable to all across an India that is so chaotic. So calm. So flexible. So rigid. So rich. So poor. So understanding. So easy to be misunderstood. After all, there are many Indias, as I say over and over again. Simultaneous. Even parallel.

And whose culture is it anyway? Yours? Mine? Theirs? There are so many ‘theirs’ in the land of my birth who have nothing but the harsh landscape of surviving from day to day. The dispossessed remain with us after six decades of becoming possessed of a freedom we all fought for. They all fought for.

I claim elsewhere to have always written about the ‘culture of the downtrodden’. How tall or short or true or false is this claim? The more I think and write and think some more, the harder it gets to arrive at a definition. I hesitate. I falter. I cling to the belief that for any culture as old and ancient as ours to have survived over time and in time, there could only be one basic common and acceptable core thought: humaneness. To accept each other’s right to be human with dignity.

This then is my fight. My dream. In my life and in my literature.

I wish that I was there to listen this speech.
-- Keep India in your heart
- - Kalingaa...

Close to Heart

Is Hariyali Mein Aag Lagadi Aaj
Kisi Dariya Ke Thahre Thahre Paani Ne
Kitni Bhayavah Uthalta Dikhayee
Kisi Dariya Ke Gahre Gahre Paani Ne

"Esa onda irá creciendo cada día que pase, esa onda ya no parará mas."
(This wave of revolution will grow with everyday that passes, this wave will never stop. )

-- Keep the Promises fulfilled
- - Kalingaa...

Lasting Legacies - J R D Tata

I believe Tata's were first true Indian Industrialists from Indian sub-continent and JRD Tata was a visionary.

Sometime back I got one email about an article from Sudha Murthy who is a widely published writer and chairperson of the Infosys Foundation involved in a number of social development initiatives. Infosys chairman Narayan Murthy is her husband. She is a legend in herself.
She wrote this article about JRD and this article is sourced from: Lasting Legacies (Tata Review- Special Commemorative Issue 2004), brought out by the house of Tatas to commemorate the 100th birth anniversary of JRD Tata on July 29, 2004.

It was probably the April of 1974. Bangalore was getting warm and gulmohars were blooming at the IISc campus. I was the only girl in my postgraduate department and was staying at the ladies' hostel. Other girls were pursuing research in different departments of Science. I was looking forward to going abroad to complete a doctorate in computer science. I had been offered scholarships from Universities in the US. I had not thought of taking up a job in India.

One day, while on the way to my hostel from our lecture-hall complex, I saw an advertisement on the notice board. It was a standard job-requirement notice from the famous automobile company Telco (now Tata Motors). It stated that the company required young, bright engineers, hardworking and with an excellent academic background, etc. At the bottom was a small line: "Lady Candidates need not apply." I read it and was very upset. For the first time in my life I was up against gender discrimination. Though I was not keen on taking up the job, I saw it as a challenge. I had done extremely well in academics, better than most of my male peers. Little did I know then that in real life academic excellence is not enough to be successful?

After reading the notice I went fuming to my room. I decided to inform the topmost person in Telco's management about the injustice the company was perpetrating. I got a postcard and started to write, but there was a problem: I did not know who headed Telco. I thought it must be one of the Tatas. I knew JRD Tata was the head of the Tata Group; I had seen his pictures in newspapers (actually, Sumant Moolgaokar was the company's chairman then).

I took the card, addressed it to JRD and started writing. To this day I remember clearly what I wrote.

"The great Tatas have always been pioneers. They are the people who started the basic infrastructure industries in India, such as iron and steel, chemicals, textiles and locomotives. They have cared for higher education in India, such as iron and steel, chemicals, textiles and locomotives. They have cared for higher education in India since 1900 and they were responsible for the establishment of the Indian Institute of Science. Fortunately, I study there. But I am surprised how a company such as Telco is discriminating on the basis of gender."

I posted the letter and forgot about it. Less than 10 days later, I received a telegram stating that I had to appear for an interview at Telco's Pune facility at the company's expense. I was taken aback by the telegram. My hostel mated told me I should use the opportunity to go to Pune free of cost and buy them the famous Pune saris for cheap! I collected Rs 30 each from everyone who wanted a sari. When I look back, I feel like laughing at the reasons for my going, but back then they seemed good enough to make the trip. It was my first visit to Pune and I immediately fell in love with the city. To this day it remains dear to me. I feel as much at home in Pune as I do in Hubli, my hometown. The place changed my life in so many ways. As directed, I went to Telco's Pimpri office for the interview.

There were six people on the panel and I realized then that this was serious business. "This is the girl who wrote to JRD," I heard somebody whisper as soon as I entered the room. By then I knew for sure that I would not get the job. The realization abolished all fear from my mind, so I was rather cool while the interview was being conducted. Even before the interview started, I reckoned the panel was biased, so I told them, rather impolitely, "I hope this is only a technical interview." They were taken aback by my rudeness, and even today I am ashamed about my attitude. The panel asked me technical questions and I answered all of them. Then an elderly gentleman with an affectionate voice told me, "Do you know why we said lady candidates need not apply? The reason is that we have never employed any ladies on the shop floor. This is not a co-ed college; this is a factory. When it comes to academics, you are a first ranker throughout. We appreciate that, but people like you should work in research laboratories."

I was a young girl from small-town Hubli. My world had been a limited place. I did not know the ways of large corporate houses and their difficulties, so I answered, "But you must start somewhere otherwise no woman will ever be able to work in your factories." Finally, after a long interview, I was told I had been successful. So this was what the future had in store for me.

Never had I thought I would take up a job in Pune. I met a shy young man from Karnataka there, we became good friends and we got married. It was only after joining Telco that I realized who JRD was: the uncrowned king of Indian industry. Now I was scared, but I did not get to meet him till I was transferred to Bombay. One day I had to show some reports to Mr. Moolgaokar, our chairman, who we all knew as SM. I was in his office on the first floor of Bombay House (the Tata headquarters) when, suddenly JRD walked in. That was the first time I saw "appro JRD". Appro means "our" in Gujarati. This was the affectionate term by which people at Bombay House called him. I was feeling very nervous, remembering my postcard episode. SM introduced me nicely, "Jeh (that's what his close associates called him), this young woman is an engineer and that too a postgraduate. She is the first woman to work on the Telco shop floor." JRD looked at me. I was praying he would not ask me any questions about my interview (or the postcard that preceded it). Thankfully, he didn't. Instead, he remarked. "It is nice that girls are getting into engineering in our country. By the way, what is your name?" "When I joined Telco I was Sudha Kulkarni, Sir," I replied. "Now I am Sudha Murthy." He smiled and kindly smile and started a discussion with SM. As for me, I almost ran out of the room.

After that I used to see JRD on and off. He was the Tata Group chairman and I was merely an engineer. There was nothing that we had in common. I was in awe of him. One day I was waiting for Murthy, my husband, to pick me up after office hours. To my surprise I saw JRD standing next to me. I did not know how to react. Yet again I started worrying about that postcard. Looking back, I realize JRD had forgotten about it. It must have been a small incident for him, but not so for me. "Young lady, why are you here?" he asked. "Office time is over." I said, "Sir, I'm waiting for my husband to come and pick me up." JRD said, "It is getting dark and there's no one in the corridor. I'll wait with you till your husband comes." I was quite used to waiting for Murthy, but having JRD waiting alongside made me extremely uncomfortable. I was nervous. Out of the corner of my eye I looked at him. He wore a simple white pant and shirt. He was old, yet his face was glowing. There wasn't any air of superiority about him. I was thinking, "Look at this person. He is a chairman, a well-respected man in our country and he is waiting for the sake of an ordinary employee." Then I saw Murthy and I rushed out. JRD called and said, "Young lady, tell your husband never to make his wife wait again."

In 1982 I had to resign from my job at Telco. I was reluctant to go, but I really did not have a choice. I was coming down the steps of Bombay House after wrapping up my final settlement when I saw JRD coming up. He was absorbed in thought. I wanted to say goodbye to him, so I stopped. He saw me and paused. Gently, he said, "So what are you doing, Mrs Kulkarni?" (That was the way he always addressed me.) "Sir, I am leaving Telco." "Where are you going?" he asked. "Pune, Sir. My husband is starting a company called Infosys and I'm shifting to Pune." "Oh! And what will you do when you are successful." "Sir, I don't know whether we will be successful." "Never start with diffidence," he advised me. "Always start with confidence. When you are successful you must give back to society. Society gives us so much; we must reciprocate. I wish you all the best." Then JRD continued walking up the stairs.

I stood there for what seemed like a millennium. That was the last time I saw him alive. Many years later I met Ratan Tata in the same Bombay House, occupying the chair JRD once did. I told him of my many sweet memories of working with Telco. Later, he wrote to me, "It was nice hearing about Jeh from you. The sad part is that he's not alive to see you today." I consider JRD a great man because, despite being an extremely busy person, he valued one postcard written by a young girl seeking justice. He must have received thousands of letters everyday. He could have thrown mine away, but he didn't do that. He respected the intentions of that unknown girl, who had neither influence nor money, and gave her an opportunity in his company. He did not merely give her a job; he changed her life and mindset forever.

Close to 50 per cent of the students in today's engineering colleges are girls. And there are women on the shop floor in many industry segments. I see these changes and I think of JRD. If at all time stops and asks me what I want from life, I would say I wish JRD were alive today to see how the company we started has grown. He would have enjoyed it wholeheartedly. My love and respect for the House of Tata remains undiminished by the passage of time. I always looked up to JRD. I saw him as a role model for his simplicity, his generosity, his kindness and the care he took of his employees. Those blue eyes always reminded me of the sky; they had the same vastness and magnificence.

-- Keep the faith in yourself
- - Kalingaa...

If ....

If you can keep your head when all about you
Are losing theirs and blaming it on you,
If you can trust yourself when all men doubt you,
But make allowance for their doubting too;
If you can wait and not be tired by waiting,
Or being lied about, don't deal in lies,
Or being hated, don't give way to hating,
And yet don't look too good, nor talk too wise;
If you can dream — and not make dreams your master;
If you can think — and not make thoughts your aim;
If you can meet with Triumph and Disaster
And treat those two imposters just the same;
If you can make one heap of all your winnings
And risk it on one turn of pitch-and-toss,
And lose, and start again at your beginnings
And never breath a word about your loss;
If you can talk with crowds and keep your virtue,
Or walk with Kings — nor lose the common touch,
If neither foes nor loving friends can hurt you,
If all men count with you, but none too much;
If you can fill the unforgiving minute
With sixty seconds' worth of distance run,
Yours is the Earth and everything that's in it,
And — which is more — you'll be a Man, my son!
- Rudyard Kipling
-- Keep the Touch
- - Kalingaa..

Man of Steel

This poem is written during Indo-China War 1965 by one of greatest hindi poet "Ramdhari Singh Dinkar". It speaks for more courage from india and not honour.

पुरुष वीर बलवान,
देश की शान,
हमारे नौजवान
घायल होकर आये हैं।

कहते हैं, ये पुष्प, दीप,
अक्षत क्यों लाये हो?

हमें कामना नहीं सुयश-विस्तार की,
फूलों के हारों की, जय-जयकार की।

तड़प रही घायल स्वदेश की शान है।
सीमा पर संकट में हिन्दुस्तान है।

ले जाओ आरती, पुष्प, पल्लव हरे,
ले जाओ ये थाल मोदकों ले भरे।

तिलक चढ़ा मत और हृदय में हूक दो,

दे सकते हो तो गोली-बन्दूक दो।

- Ramdhari Singh "Dinkar"
-- Keep the courage to fight against mightiest
- - Kalingaa..

Baavra Mann Dekhne Chala Ek Sapna ....

Again its "Hazaron Khawahishen Aisi" which is best movie to come in last few years. It gives more questions to think about your way of life and what we all want out of our lives ...
This songs is 3rd most played song(along with other version of it) on my playlist after its release and still I want to listen more and more ..... Catch a mp3 and I am sure you will love it ..
Baavra man dekhne chala ek sapna
Baavra man dekhne chala ek sapna

Baavre se man ki dekho
Baavri hai baatein

Baavre se man ki dekho
Baavri hai baatein

Baavri si dhadkane hain, Baavri hi saansein
Baavri si karvatoin se Neendiya door bhage
Baavre se nain chahe
Baavre jharokhon se Baavre nazaaron ko takna

Baavra man dekhne chala ek sapna

Baavre se is jahaan mein Baavra ek saath ho
Is sayani bheed mein Bas haathon mein tera haath ho

Baavri si dhun ho koi Baavra ik raag ho
Baavri si dhun ho koi Baavra ik raag ho

Baavre se pair chahe Baavre taraanon ke
Baavre se bol pe thirakna

Baavra man dekhne chala ek sapna

Baavra sa ho andhera , Baavri khamoshiyan
Baavra sa ho andhera ,Baavri khamoshiyan ...
Thartharati loh madham , Baavri madhoshiyan

Baavra ek ghungta chahe Haule haule bin bataye
Baavra ek ghungta chahe Haule haule bin bataye
Baavre se mukhre se sarakna

Baavra man dekhne chala ek sapna

Baavra man dekhne chala ek sapna
-- Keep Dreaming for more
- - Kalingaa..

Baavra Mann ....

No words to define beauty of this songs and specially instrumentals being played along ...
sun in the earth...sunflower
bird in the air...rain
eye within eye...daybreak

baavra mann dekhne chala ek sapna...

streets we have never walked on
windows we have never opened
hands we have never held
dreams we shall never...never see again

baavra mann dekhne chala ek sapna...
baavre se mann ki dekho baavri hain baatein...

sun in the earth...sunflower
bird in the air...rain
eye within eye...daybreak
lives we have never lived
hopes we have never realized
fires we have never lit
loves we shall never...never make again

baavra mann dekhne chala ek sapna...

sun in the earth...sunflower
bird in the air...rain
eye within eye...daybreak

i hear those strange whispers again...

-- Keep listening to those strange whispers
- - Kalingaa..

Forgotten Poets

Along with some random thoughts I put poems and ghazals from shayar which people otherwise dont know about. This blog is dedicated for people who wanted to express their feelings by their own style. As by an earlier post I blogged about Meena Kumari and I love the way she writes about emotions ....

This one is about circumstances in life when you cant make picture of future .. and just read last three lines again after reading completely ..
Yeh Nur Kaisa Hai - Meena Kumari

yeh nur kaisa hai , raakh ka sa rang pahne

barf ki laash hai , laave kaa saa badan pahne

gungi chaahat hai , rusvaai kaa kafan pahne

har ek qatra muqaddas hai maile aansu ka
ek hujum-e-apaahij hai aab-e-kausar par

yeh kaisa shor hai jo be-awaaz phaila hai
rupahli chaanv mein - badnaamion ka deraa hai

yeh kaisi jannat hai jo chaunk-chaunk jaati hai
ek intizaar-e-mujassam ka naam - Khamoshi

aur ehsaas-e-bekaraan pe yeh sarhad kaisi?
dar-o-diwaar kahan ruh ki awaargi ke

nur ki vaadi talak lams kaa ek safar-e-tavil
har ek mod pe bas do hi naam milte hain

maut kah lo - jo muhabbat nahiin kahne pao
-- Keep looking for Light
- - Kalingaa..

Continue from last Post...

Also when you think that someone whom you trusted the most lets you down .... and you feel that "drinking till you fall" is only option left for you to choose so that you will forget everything for a moment ... But this actually increases the pain and suffering, as I believe everyone must have tried to forget pains and nobody is really successful in this ....

Koyi kisi ka nahi ye jhoote,
Naate hain naaton ka kya

Kasme waade pyaar wafaa sab,
Baatein hain baato ka kya

Hoga masiha ...
Hoga masiha saamne tere,
Phir bhi na tu bach paayega
(according to Christians, after dead everybody will have to meet god for justice)
Tera apna…
Tera apna khoon hi aakhir tujhko aag lagaayega
(
according to Hindus, Cremation is placing the first fire in the mouth of a dead man on the
funeral pyre by the eldest son.
)
Aasmaan mein ...
Aasmaan mein udane waale mitti mein mil jaayega
(according to Islam, Cremation is placing body in earth and putting sand on by relatives)
Kasme waade pyaar wafaa sab, baatein hain baato ka kya

Sukh mein tere ...
Sukh mein tere saath chalenge,
Dukh mein sab mukh modenge
Duniya waale ...
Duniya waale tere bankar tera hi dil todenge
Dete hain ...
Dete hain bhagwaan ko dhokha,
Insaan ko kya chhodenge
Kasme waade pyaar wafaa sab,
Baatein hain baato ka kya
-- Keep trsuting youself more and more
- - Kalingaa..

Koi Hota Jisko Hum ....

When I feel lonely I have this songs to remember because this songs give the same words which i want express to this world. When you are away from family and friends, you get to know that you need them more then ever before. Also you become more closer to yourself and try to think what you need in life and what is more significant to our social life. Still you need people with whom you can share your happiness and sorrow, your success and failure, your words and your fears ......
Koi Hota Jisko Apna
Hum Apana Keh Lete
Koi Hota Jisko Hum Yaaron
Paas Nahin To Door Hee Hota
Lekin Koi Mera Apna

Aakhon Mein Neend Na Hoti
Aansoo Hi Tairte Rehte

Khwabon Mein Jaagte Hum Raat Bhar
Koi To Gham Apnataa
Koi To Saathi Hota

Koi Hota Jisko Apna
Hum Apana Keh Lete Yaaron
Paas Nahin To Door Hee Hota
Lekin Koi Mera Apna

Bhoola Hua Koi Waada
Beeti Huyi Kuchh Yaadein
Tanahai Dohraati Hain Raatbhar
Koi Dilasa Hota
Koi To Apna Hota

Koi Hota Jisko Apna
Hum Apana Keh Lete Yaaron
Paas Nahin To Door Hee Hota
Lekin Koi Mera Apna
-- Keep looking for the "ONE"
- - Kalingaa...

One of Funniest Mails Ever

Actual call centre conversations !!!!!

Calling Customer Care is very tough -
Customer: "I've been ringing 0700 2300 for two days and can't get through to enquiries, can you help?".
Operator: "Where did you get that number from, sir?".
Customer: "It was on the door to the Travel Centre".
Operator: "Sir, they are our opening hours".
Samsung Electronics
Caller: "Can you give me the telephone number for Jack?"
Operator: "I'm sorry, sir, I don't understand who you are talking about".
Caller: "On page 1, section 5, of the user guide it clearly states that I need to unplug the fax machine from the AC wall socket and telephone Jack before cleaning. Now, can you give me the number for Jack?"
Operator: "I think you mean the telephone point on the wall".
RAC Motoring Services
Caller: "Does your European Breakdown Policy cover me when I am travelling in Australia?"
Operator: " Doesn't the product name give you a clue?"
Caller (enquiring about legal requirements while travelling in France):
"If I register my car in France, do I have to change the steering wheel to the other side of the car?"
Directory Enquiries
Caller: "I'd like the number of the Argoed Fish Bar in Cardiff please".
Operator: "I'm sorry, there's no listing. Is the spelling correct?"
Caller: "Well, it used to be called the Bargoed Fish Bar but the 'B' fell off".
Then there was the caller who asked for a knitwear company in Woven.
Operator: "Woven? Are you sure?"
Caller: "Yes. That's what it says on the label; Woven in Scotland".
On another occasion, a man making heavy breathing sounds from a phone box told a worried operator:
"I haven't got a pen, so I'm steaming up the window to write the number on".
Another Tech-Support -
Tech Support: "I need you to right-click on the Open Desktop".
Customer: "OK".
Tech Support: "Did you get a pop-up menu?".
Customer: "No".
Tech Support: "OK. Right-Click again. Do you see a pop-up menu?"
Customer: "No".
Tech Support: "OK, sir. Can you tell me what you have done up until this point?".

Customer: "Sure. You told me to write 'click' and I wrote 'click'".
Customer Care People are Extra-ordinary -
Tech Support: "OK. In the bottom left hand side of the screen, can you see the 'OK' button displayed?"
Customer: "Wow. How can you see my screen from there?"
Now Customer is Smart Here -
Caller: "I deleted a file from my PC last week and I have just realised that I need it. If I turn my system clock back two weeks will I have my file back again?".
----------------------------------------------------------------------

There's always one. This has got to be one of the funniest things in a long time. I think this guy should have been promoted, not fired. This is a true story from the Word Perfect Helpline, which was transcribed from a recording monitoring the customer care department. Needless to say the Help Desk employee was fired; however, he/she is currently suing the Word Perfect organization for "Termination without Cause".

Actual dialogue of a former WordPerfect Customer Support employee. (Now I know why they record these conversations!):

Operator: "Ridge Hall, computer assistance; may I help you?"
Caller: "Yes, well, I'm having trouble with WordPerfect."
Operator: "What sort of trouble??"
Caller: "Well, I was just typing along, and all of a sudden the words went away."
Operator: "Went away?"
Caller: "They disappeared."
Operator: "Hmm So what does your screen look like now?"
Caller: "Nothing."
Operator: "Nothing??"
Caller: "It's blank; it won't accept anything when I type."
Operator: "Are you still in WordPerfect, or did you get out??"
Caller: "How do I tell?"
Operator: "Can you see the C: prompt on the screen??"
Caller: "What's a sea-prompt?"
Operator: "Never mind, can you move your cursor around the screen?"
Caller: "There isn't any cursor: I told you, it won't accept anything I type."
Operator: "Does your monitor have a power indicator??"
Caller: "What's a monitor?"
Operator: "It's the thing with the screen on it that looks like a TV. Does it have a little light that tells you when it's on??"
Caller: "I don't know."
Operator: "Well, then look on the back of the monitor and find where the power cord goes into it. Can you see that??"
Caller: "Yes, I think so."
Operator: "Great. Follow the cord to the plug, and tell me if it's plugged into the wall.
Caller: "Yes, it is."
Operator: "When you were behind the monitor, did you notice that there were two cables plugged into the back of it, not just one??"
Caller: "No."
Operator: "Well, there are. I need you to look back there again and find the other cable."
Caller: "Okay, here it is."
Operator: "Follow it for me, and tell me if it's plugged securely into the back of your computer."
Caller: "I can't reach."
Operator: "Uh huh. Well, can you see if it is??"
Caller: "No."
Operator: "Even if you maybe put your knee on something and lean way over??"
Caller: "Oh, it's not because I don't have the right angle - it's because it's dark."
Operator: "Dark??"
Caller: "Yes - the office light is off, and the only light I have is coming in from the window."
Operator: "Well, turn on the office light then."
Caller: "I can't."
Operator: "No? Why not??"
Caller: "Because there's a power failure."
Operator: "A power......... A power failure? Aha, Okay, we've got it licked now. Do you still have the boxes and manuals and packing stuff your computer came in??"
Caller: "Well, yes, I keep them in the closet."
Operator: "Good. Go get them, and unplug your system and pack it up just like it was when you got it. Then take it back to the store you Bought it from."


Caller: "Really? Is it that bad?"
Operator: "Yes, I'm afraid it is."
Caller: "Well, all right then, I suppose. What do I tell them??"
Operator: "Tell them you're too $*%ing stupid to own a computer!!!!!"
-- Keep on laughing till you fell from your Chair
- - Kalingaa..

History will absolve me.

I have always believed that "what legend and leaders thought" was way aheaf of their time. It was act of shear determination and will power that is essential for a human to succeed in way of life.
"Condemn me. It does not matter. History will absolve me." - Fidel Castro
I have an intrest to look into writings of people who took challange to fight against mightiest enemy they can have. GreatPoet Surya Kant "Nirala" (or few claim tah it is written by Dr. Haribansh Rai Bachchan but i believe Nirala wrote this) wrote this legendary poem to give a glimpse of what is truth behind these people's success ....
Lehron Se Darkar Nauka Paar Nahin Hoti,
Himmat Karne Waalon Ki Kabhi Haar Nahin Hoti.

Nanhi Chinti Jab Daana Lekar Chalti Hai,
Chadti Deewaron Par Sau Baar Fisalti Hai,
Mann Ka Vishwaas Ragon Mein Saahas Bhartaa Hai,
Chadkar Girna, Girkar Chadna Na Akharta Hai,
Mehnat Uski Bekar Har Baar Nahin Hoti,
Koshish Karne Waalon Ki Kabhi Haar Nahin Hoti.

Dubkiyan Sindhu Mein Gotaakhor Lagata Hai,
Jaa Jaakar Khaali Haath Lautkar Aata Hai,
Milte Na Sahaj Hi Moti Gehre Paani Mein,
Badta Doona Vishwaas Isi Hairaani Mein,
Muththi Uski Khaali Harbaar Nahin Hoti,
Koshish Karne Waalon Ki Kabhi Haar Nahin Hoti.

Asafaltaa ek Chunauti hai Sweekaar Karo,
Kya Kami Reh Gayi Dekho Aur Sudhar Karo,
Jab Tak Na Safal Ho Neend Chain Ki Tyago Tum,
Sangharshon Ka Maidaan Chod Mat Bhaago Tum,
Kuch Kiye Binaa Hi Jai Jaikaar Nahin Hoti,
Koshish Karne Waalon Ki Kabhi Haar Nahin Hoti.
-- Keep the will power in you
- - Kalingaa...

Poetry - by Uncle Ho

"Ho Chi Minh" remains a cult figure throughout the world for his stand for Nationalism and Vietnam. He was "Uncle Ho" for all who believed in independence without any capitalistic and imperialistic force. He wrote these two poems while in prison of French colonials.

GOOD DAYS COMING

Everything changes, the wheel
of the law turns without pause.

After the rain, good weather.

In the wink of an eye

The universe throws off
its muddy cloths.

For ten thousand miles
the landscape

Spreads out like
a beautiful brocade.

Gentle sunshine.
Light breezes. Smiling flowers,

Hang in the trees, amongst the
sparkling leaves,

All the birds sing at once.

Men and animals rise up reborn.

What could be more natural?

After sorrow comes happiness.

FREE, I WALK ON THE MOUNTAIN
AND ENJOY THE VIEW

Mountains. Clouds.
More mountains. More clouds.

Far below a river gleams,
bright and unspotted.

Alone, with beating heart,
I walk on the Western Range,

And gaze far off towards the South
and think of my comrades.

- Ho Chi Minh
-- Keep your Faith in your Natianal Uniqueness
- - Kalingaa...

Khamoshiyan Gungunane Lagi !!

परिंदो को मिलेगी मंजिल एक दिन
ये फैले हुए उनके पर बोलते हैं ...
वही लोग रहते हैं खामोश अक्सर
जमाने में जिनके हुनर बोलते हैं ...
-- Keep the Words for better use
- - Kalingaa...

Mercy

And then no one will grasp why we feel pain here
And who before whom is guilty.
This silence an unbearable load
For a heart who loves your world for naught
How can my eyes be glad
If my corpse is left unclothed ?

Constitutional freedom of "Speech and Expression"

Being in indian democracy and born in a open & righteous family, I always knew that we can speak anything if we have a faith and command of that topic. This never meant to offend anyone but being true to myself was a dignity I always Njoied. In course of life, some time this strength meant being arrogant and hard to others as truth is not always right. But I choose truth over all because i knew that at end of the day all will feel good for the same.

Now after so many years of that air has made me a sharp and spontanous truth speaker which is not good to be in social life. Till date it was just school, college and friends and so.. But now while changing myself to a new environment I feel hard to be silent. Also the change comes so drastically that I am a geographic zone where monarchy is alive, no freedom of speech at all, people just dont care for their right (i think so) and worst of all they have no laws at all. So either I will have to change according to them or I will not the same person I was.

I have taken the first few steps to change and experience is .... not what i expected. At end I can say that whatever we feel about Indian Democracy, its best for indian Society.

-- Keep faith in India
- - Kalingaa..

Happy Independence Day to all Indians

From the day I can remember, I am used to go to school or near-by flag ceremony on I-Day. After that we had few cultural programme and in the end we used to get "Sweets".

Earlier it was for Sweets, then as I had more and more knwledge about India, It became emotional visit for me. After all this ceremonial processing, we used to ran to TV and watch live telecast from Red Fort,Delhi.

Now for the first time I am going to miss this great day as I am away from it. but Tiranga is in my heart. So I am with all of my dear friends. Also on the side "Happy I-Day" to Pakistan also.

Happy
Independence
Day to India



-- Keep India in your Heart
- - Kalinga..

Orkut.com

It was most easy way for me to communicate to people around me and people from other places too.
But from last few days and I think for next few months I have to be away from this as Where I am currently this site is not supported and I cant even view who scrapped me or not.

So do make any comment on this blog or mail me on kalingaa22@gmail.com to be in touch.
Hoping to get you all with this.

-- Kalingaa .. ( or Gajodhar ) what you name me....

Going Home ...

It takes planning one month ahead to get a ticket in Indian Railways and i prefer rail over other modes of travel because it is real india on show in Train travel. You meet people whom you never knew and you won't meet them again but you make abond with them foe your travel time and you keep those memories with you for a long time. As i was going away from rainy Bombay to my home, i felt that this may be last time i am seeing all this greenry and i felt nostalgic for sometime.

After sometime i started talking with fellow pessengers and time just went suddenly and it was end of journey for me.

"Hum chalte hain ab, Shayad phir kisi mod pe mulaqat ho jaaye .."


After this, it was long not so wet road to home and cool breeze with essence of my homeland (though i feel india as my homeland but my village have special place in my heart) and people whom i know very well. They were not running for trains or buses, and they were happy to see me which is not case for me in Bombay or so-other-metro.

I love you all my fellow villagers ...

Rest of diary will come up soon in more break-up manner ..

-- Keep your homeland in your Hearts
- - Kalingaa...

New Phase ...

As world is becoming faster and faster as time moving ahead. As i am at a point to make decision of my career, I have many questions to ask from myself than from anyone else. What i should choose as path of future lies in my hand and I will unable to handle things like fear of failure and greed of money ..
If i make a decision and i achieve success in life than i dont have to regret for it .. But if i dont get what i dream than I hope that i will take that as part of life and blow on career...
I am hoping for the Best ....
-- Keep the Flame Up & Burning
- - Kalingaa..

World Cup is Over ....

I learned the word "The Wrold Cup Soccer" in 1994 when i saw world cup soccer for first time. Before that it was just on nwespapers and the feel was not of the level of what i had during and after that cup.

From very start of USA'94 , i am fan of Brazil and i have seen Brazil in Final in all three times in 94, 98 and 2002. Now as i dont see brazil in final so i am heartbroken
See you Brazil in south Africa and i hope i will be there for you too.

-- Keep the Flame Up & Burning
- - Kalingaa..

Kehdo Aaj ...

After a long time i feel like being free from all nets and webs around me. It great to do nothing for sometime but as some wise man said a long time ago "Silence is just a cover for Storm to follow". But i dont want to let this moment go so soon and under-utilised.

Hawa se kehdo Aaj Hum Azaad Hain
Agar Azal se nahin ho sake to kya
Lekin ab Abad tak nahin bandhane payenge
Lehar se kehdo hum unke saath hain

Aaj ka sard sa mausam bhi hai khushnuma sa
Manzil to nahin mili lekin saamne padav to hai
Jaake kehdo un rukavaton se jo raaste mein hain
Aaj kalingaa akela nahin uske saath sailaab hai
Kehdo aaj is jahan se Hum Azaad Hain

-- Keep the Flame Up & Burning
- - Kalingaa..

India - The Great Laughter Show

As quest for knowledge is ever increasing for me ... I search and look various blogs to get new approach to life and related things.

I was looking for topics on the so-called The Indian Laughter Show and i saw this blog entry which is very good assessment of what we are today in india.

http://o3.indiatimes.com/anant_rulz/archive/2006/06/26/851859.aspx

Thank you "anant_rulz" for writing this as you have just wrote what i always wanted to read and hoping that we just dont forget it this time.

Are we brave enough & wise enough to accept the challenge of the future and that future is not one of ease or resting but of incessant striving so that we might fulfil the pledges we have so often taken and the One we shall take today. At this Moment, We take the pledge of dedication to the service of India and her people and to a larger cause of equality.

-- Keep the Flame Up & Burning
- - Kalingaaa..

Yeh Raat Yeh Tanhai - Meena Kumari

We all know that "Meena Kumari" was a great acctress , sea of talent and great speaker in movies but very few know that she was a great urdu writer too. She expressed her sorrows and miseries in many places and most importantly in her poetry which is the best reflection of her feelings.

Tum kya karoge sunkar mujhse meri kahani
Beluft zindagi ke kisse hain pheeke pheeke

At the time of divorce she had said -

Talaak to de rahe ho Nazar-e-kahar ke saath
Jawani bhi meri lauta do Mehar ke saath

This is one of her ghazal which she wrote in time of loneliness and at height of popularity

ye raat ye tanhai
ye dil ke dhadakane ki awaaz
ye sannata

ye dubate taaron ki
khamosh Gazalkhvani
ye waqt ki palkon par
soti hui virani
jazbaat-e-muhabbat ki
ye aakhiri angadai
bajati hui har jaanib
ye maut ki shahanai

sab tum ko bulaate hain
pal bhar ko tum aa jao
band hoti meri aankhon mein
muhabbat ka
ik khwaab sajaa jao


-- Keep the Flame Up & Burning
- - Kalingaa..

A Ghazal from 'Mir Taqi Mir'

Mir Taqi Mir was a great Urdu Poet in 18th Century just Before Ghalib's Time. He has forgotten by most of people as at that time India had many other poets of same caliber. This is one of best poem he wrote ... Just Read decide what you would say about him.


Patta patta, boota boota, haal hamaaraa jaane hai,
Jaane na jaane gul hi na jaane, baagh to saaraa jaane hai.

Aage us mutkabbar ke ham Khuda Khuda kiya karte hain,
Kab maujud Khuda ko woh maghrur khud-aara jaane hai.

Aashiq saa to saada koi aur na hoga dunya mein,
Ji ke zian ko ishq mein uske apna waara jaane hai.

Chaaraa gari beemari-e-dil ki rasm-e-shahr-e-husn nahin,
Warna dilbar-e-naadaan bhi is dard kaa chaara jaane hai.

Mehr-o-wafa-o-lutaf-o-inait, ek se waqif in mein nahin,
Aur to sab kuchh tanz-o-kanaya, ramz-o-ishara jaane hai.

Aashiq to murdah hai hamesha ji uthta hai dekhe use,
Yaar ke aa jaane ko yakaayak umr do baara jaane hai.

Tashna-e-khun hai apna kitna, Mir bhi naadaan, talkhi-kash,
Damdaar aab-e-tegh ko uske aab-e-gawara jaane hai.
- 'Mir Taqi Mir'


-- Keep the Flame Up & Burning
- - Kalingaa..

Dukh Anmol Hote Hain ...

Dukh Anmol Hote Hain
Qudrat Ki Wadeeat Hain
Kabhi Kuch Dey Ke Jate Hain
Kabhi sab Chheen Lete Hain
Kabhi Bechain Karte Hain
Kabhi Jeena Sikhate Hain
Kabhi Bannte Hain Jab Aansoo
Umar Bhar Lahoo Rulate Hain
Kabhi Lub Ki Hansi Ban Kar
Nayi Duniya Sajaate Hain
Kabhi Meethi Kasak Ban Kar
Anjaani Khalish Ban kar
Makeen-E-Dil Yeh Bante Hain
Kisi Soorat Nahin Mit'tey
Jo In Se Door Bhaago Toh
Kaheen Jaane Nahin Dete
Na Zinda Rehne Dete Hain
Na Yeh Aazaad Karte Hain
Nahin Jiski Dawa Koi
Yeh Aisa Dard Hote Hain
Magar Yeh Bhi Ik Haqeeqat Hai
Har Ik Ko To Nahin Milte
Bare Nayaab Hote Hain
Dukh Anmol Hote Hain!!


-- Keep the Flame Up & Burning
- - Kalingaa..