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Wednesday, June 23, 2010

Road Trip - Boston

As I hail from tropical climate, summer is a much awaited season. It is a lively season with people buzzing around on the path ways and trails. Strolling grand parents who are visiting from back home, people burning calories, toddlers improving their motor skills and kids with bicycles and scooters is a vibrant picturesque so unique to Summer – a season with parks and barbecues, Popsicles and lemonade.


Among these entire, Road trip is one of my favorite venture. Every time I go on the road trip here in US I will not fallback from appreciating the infrastructure that they have created. Whether it is the long stretching bridges, the tunnels running underground with the river or the high raising buildings over them, every thing exemplifies the meticulous well planned outcome. Maintaining these well laid infrastructures all through these years is a magnanimous effort in itself.


A road trip to Boston few weeks back has exposed the 'Big Dig' project - an infrastructure project for managing traffic in Boston. If having a vision for modern architecture and efficient planning of infrastructure for years to come is one passionate and intellectual aspect, executing that vision to reality needs much more skill and knowledge. The visionaries have a challenge to consider needs and growth of population, the rescue plans, the maintenance to name a few keeping aside the practical hurdles that have to be addressed for implementing it. I was wondering about the two lane tunnel in NY City all these years but the 6 lane tunnels with exits within the tunnels in Boston left me awe struck. Of course, the Big Dig project is quite recent, when technology was much matured compared to the times of construction of NY tunnels.


It is so apt to say America icons for modern infrastructure. All its infrastructure projects from Hoover dam to Erie Canal project to Tunnels in Boston shows their vision, planning, organizing and execution skills which everyone from individuals to nations could learn and inspire.


All said, have you ever felt gruesome while riding through the tunnels? I do. I will be looking for the end of the tunnel as eagerly as admiring the infrastructure. :) . I wonder what would be the experience riding through the Channel Tunnel - Tunnel connecting UK to France.

Tuesday, May 25, 2010

Ratanala Muggulu



...
...
తీరాయిన సంపద ఎవరిన్టనున్డు
దిన దినము ముగ్గున్న లోగిళ్ళనున్డు
...
...goes the lyrics of C.Na Re. One of the favorite lyricists of my Dad. Do really the homes with amuggu or kolamon their front entrance are blessed? As with most of the Indian traditions, muggucould be a way of making people to get up early in the morning and clean the surroundings. A healthy habit to keep oneself active and in good mood which in turn may reflect on the family to be happy. May be this happiness is what interpreted as 'blessed'.

It is a very native of India, especially Southern part to have a glimpse of, women in the street sweeping and sprinkling water and then drawing designs with flour at dawn. And drawing these designs becomes a passion from a daily chore during the festival time of Sankranti. Sankranti itself has become a metaphor for colorful rangoli or vibrant and large designs of muggulu. Though this festival stands for a lot of other things as getting home the harvest, celebrating winter and others, but the most significant blink for the people in the city is colorful rangoli. The colors in rangoli has a beauty of its own but the kolam with lines (without dots) is a definite classic of our culture and heritage.

Kolam is like symmetrical equation. The modern versions of muggu include dots, which eases the depiction of complicated images or patterns for ones artistic expressions. The aspect of dots itself could have emerged from the tradition of drawing designs with simple lines. Still we could see these age old traditional kolams with lines during the time of Sankranti. It is much similar to folk art where canvas is filled with figures made of lines and some simple shapes if required.

My (paternal) grandmother could make a large patterns of these for Sankranti. The 2 or 4 parallel lines that make the design are drawn together with passing the flour from between the fingers of the hand while the knuckles face down the ground.

I myself could not draw much of these except for chariot pattern that is done for radha saptami.. which follows Sankranti. The actual drawing near the entrance with white flour on a flattened ground, brushed with cow-dung and water is a spectacular art in itself. Over the past years I neither improved nor learned other patterns of it....hoping to learn and share more of these patterns sometime... may be for next Sankrathi. :)

Saturday, April 24, 2010

కుల్ల - The Obsolete Quilt

As I was browsing through the New Non-Fiction section of the library few weeks ago, I caught a book with the title "Sewing Green" by Betz White. As the title goes, it is the book about repurposing or reusing the fabric for different projects. Aren't the people used to recycle the fabric from the worn out clothes for various practical purposes earlier? There used to be cloth diapers, quilts and kitchen towels to name a few. At least people are still reusing the fabric for cleaning.



I remember my (paternal) grandmother's quilt. It is called "Kulla" - కుల్ల . It was in no comparison with the modern day quilts, but none the less it used to serve the purpose. It was a thick double layered square of fabric. It was made either by patching few small pieces together or with a single piece of fabric. The two layers were not binded together as we see in the quilts today. It was hollow in between the layers so that, it could be turned as a hood, by pushing one corner of the quilt inside. "Gongadi" -గొంగడి is also the same, except that it is made of wool and 'Kulla' is made of cotton fabric. It was a multi purpose accessory which sufficed as a raincoat, an umbrella, a mat to sit or as a shawl to wrap depending on the necessity for that day. My grandmother used to carry it with her every morning when going for administering or to fore look the fields. She was a versatile woman. She could do from sewing her own accessories, to take care of household and to manage her finances. Women were and are always versatile in every era.



"American Quilting" is looked and perceived with great admiration here. It is treated to be the part of their heritage, culture and art. The visible hand sewn stitches on the quilt are one of the prominent reasons for the price on the quilt. Why did we forget 'our' quilts? Were they not eye catching? Were they not practical? Were they not part of "Go Green" and environmentally friendly? They were all of it. It might be our eagerness in western culture and modernization that made us to forget few habits, values and art over the past couple of decades. We never tried to improvise the technique or art to adapt the changing environment and culture.It also might be the growth in the economic power that made people to afford new things rather than holding on to the old ones. Repurposing was not perceived as a step towards conserving the nature but was looked as an adjustment for economic backwardness.



As it is said, everything goes in rounds and history repeats itself, there might be days in life of our kids with shrinking resources, where they had to learn the things that we unlearned.


-PHOTO: S. HARPAL SINGH Publisher: The Hindu
Fading away: Shepherds are now preferring mill-made bedsheets to the trade mark ‘gongadi’.

Friday, March 12, 2010

A Memoir Of Telugu Words...

I remember the days spent as a kid at my native place for every summer vacation. All those vacations have given me a fond memory. Today I was thinking about few of the words which were very common and very native in those days without the influence of TV or the cellular technology.

Being a kid from the city I used to ponder on some of the words that were part of day to day conversations with the people there. As with the word తాతిన్‌లు - a common word for holidays or సాలె - which means school. These might be a native slang of Mahabubnagar and may not have been used in other places.

As with everything, most of these words have become rare or replaced with more authentic (without the slang) words or substituted with English words.If I visit my village today, I don't hear the word తాతిన్‌లు . Now most of the people tend to use సెలవులు or "Holidays". It could be due to the increase in percentage of educated people and percentage of school goers. Which is a good sign of our progress. However, just try to remember how many of those native words do we still remember which were common once?

I am not saying that these words have become obsolete, but the frequency at which we hear now is decreased tremendously from the past. At least it had in my experience.

Lets begin with Telugu words for colors. Almost all of us know the Telugu names of the main colors as Red, Green and Yellow. Do we still remember names for different shades of color? I could recollect only చిలక పచ్చ(Lime or Peridot), పోక బంతి రంగు (Chocolate Brown) , నారింజ రంగు (Orange),కృష్ణ రంగు (Blue) and పాల పిట్ట రంగు (Turquoise). I am not sure if we could still see a పాల పిట్ట (Blue Jay) early in the morning. That said, we might not forget some words as వడ్రంగి పిట్ట, which is a Woodpecker, since it is more or less straightly translated to English.

This post is not about saving the Language. Fortunately it is not in the verge of collapse and I don't think it will ever vanish. This post is just about feel good reminiscence of my childhood. If you know any of such words (not from Google but from your knowledge or memory), then please let me know.





Monday, February 22, 2010

Kindly Donate 30min To Sri Krishna Committee

By now most of you might be agreeing with me that no decision will be made by Central Government until the Sri Krishna Committee completes their task and provides their report and analysis.

We are usually pessimistic people. We think as what could come out of this particular commission when nothing turned out positive with Fazal Ali Commission or other committees.

It is possible that Central Government is just playing a tactic on us on the name of this commission or it might take Committee as a proof of concept or reason to show the people for carving Telangana as separate State.

Let us be optimistic for 30min and write our stand point to them. Let us not forget that all the members of the panel are highly educated and sincere in their work. May be the Committee is formed to know the real pulse of the people. May be they want to find out how far this is a political strategy to win votes and how far is it a people movement? Committee is asking for opinions and suggestions from public. So, lets make use of this opportunity.

This is the way to show our protest. Your donation of 30min of time might prove valuable for fulfilling our dream.

So, here are the steps to get you started.

Email to vkduggal.ccsap@mha.gov.in . Write a few lines as why we are demanding for a separate State. Here is the
Draft that I sent to them this morning.

Spread the Word: Ask your friends and relatives here and back in India to write.

And finally I don't think one email per family would serve the purpose. Please remember that it is an individual vote. Every voice counts.

Here are the other ways to reach the committee
Contact Sri Krishna Committee

Your communication must reach the committee within 30 days. So please make sure it reaches them before March 20.

Do write and make fellow people of Telangana to write.

Saturday, February 20, 2010

Why Blog... And Why Today?

Last night, I was watching 'Assembly Muttadi' - A rally taken up by students of Telangana, to show their desire to see Telangana as an independent state within in India. While viewing I felt that I should have been there in Hyderabad, my home town, back in India than being here and watching it on my laptop. I cannot say for sure that I would have participated in the rally, though.

I appreciate from the bottom of my heart to all those parents who have supported and encouraged those students to be there on the road to show their views, desire and need inspite of the cruel and unethical events that took place in Osmania University by Andhra Pradesh Police just a couple of days back. It seems as though the whole world is listening to the agony of Telangana people except for those politicians within the country. Resignation of the constitution memebers may or may not be the solution for acheving our goal of seperate state. If Constitution Members of Telanga beleive in the later, then they should make an effort to make their point taken seriously by Central Government. Unfortunately, it is not looking so.

Like many people of Telangana Origin, I was never more proud of Telangana Telugu as I am today. It is the resignations of Constitution Memebers of Andhra that made us more aware of what we are and what we have been deceived of over the past years. Until last December I was of the opinon as how the people of one region within the same state could grab our jobs or our opportunities? Till then, I was of impression that the 'Best Gets Selected'. All those views are now replaced by contradicting statements. Today I beleive that in a Democratic system, majority group could suppress a genuine necessity and need of a minority sector. Thanks to the media and vast content that is being uploaded to the cyber space by Telangana Activists for giving me this awareness.

I thought what could we, who are away from our home land do, to hike the momentum of the present Telangana Agitation? We are conttributing monetary resources and we are constantly encouraging and giving assurance to the Telangana People back home that we are there in support to them. We could also pen down our thoughts and support through the blogs. As you know in todays world Virtual Presence and Virtual support does make a valuable contribution. Do write and spread the Telangana Awareness among our fellow people about our cause.

Jai Telangana!
Jai Hind!