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Another feather in Kolkata’s wetlands cap
The secretary-general of Ramsar Convention, Martha Rojas-Urrego, has recognised East Kolkata Wetlands (EKW) among two of world's most precious natural resources for waste water treatment and a desired model for optimum reuse of water to combat global water crisis. The other site is Nakivubo Swamp in Kampala, Uganda.

In a statement issued by the Ramsar top boss on World Water Day, she remarked: "Nakivubo Swamp filters all the sewage and industrial waste for free. A treatment plant to do the same would cost over $2 million per year. EKW also treats waste from Kolkata and has saved on the cost of building and maintaining a treatment plant." The sewage treated at EKW is 10 times that of Nakivubo.
The recognition of EKW is significant as the wetlands has recently been confronted with existential threat following doubts on its utility. City mayor and environment minister Sovan Chatterjee, who has taken over as the chairman of the wetland's management authority, wants to utilise the land for urban projects. He has already convened a meeting of stakeholders, including Ramsar representative Lew Young, to push for modification of rules governing the site.


"The Ramsar statement makes EKW a matter of national pride. It is a timely reminder that we have in our backyard something that any other world city would die to have," said ecologist Dhrubajyoti Ghosh, who in 1981 stumbled upon the remarkable use of EKW by the local population that farmed table fish with the waste water through a process that led to its natural treatment before being discharged into the Bay of Bengal.

Ghosh believes EKW is even more significant than Nakivubo Swamp as the latter is not community-based. What makes EKW unique is that the practice was developed by locals who may not have had scientific knowledge but had deep insight into local ecology. "EKW not only treats waste water, it is a source of livelihood for nearly a lakh people. EKW subsidises living in Kolkata. It's the reason why cost of living is lower than other metros," he said.


Environment activist Bonani Kakkar of Public, whose PIL in 1992 against a government plan to construct a World Trade Centre in the area is considered the most critical move that saved the wetlands, termed the latest pronouncement a validation of Justice Umesh Banerjee's judgment. "He had talked about Kolkata's ecological balance, way before it became the buzzword. EKW's economic value cannot be estimated as the city owes its very survival to it. There is no recurring cost on sewage treatment plants due to EKW. Today when Kolkata is faced with extremities of climate change, EKW is all the more relevant," said Kakkar.
http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/...etlands-cap/articleshow/57880913.cms?from=mdr
 
How One Maharaja Helped Save the Lives of 640 Polish Children and Women During World War II
Anandita Jumde

April 17, 2016

Heartwarming, History, Inspirational
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During World War II, an Indian king set up a home away from home for Polish refugees and orphans: a Little Poland in India. His efforts saved the lives of more than 640 women and children.

The ravages of the Second World War left Poland a shadow of the country it once was. The nation was torn apart by destructive forces, its people held captive in concentration camps and countless of its children left orphans.

Overcoming grave obstacles and challenges, hundreds of Polish children (and women) managed to escape the dire circumstances in their country. Contradictory reports exist on how the kids planned their escape. However, it is known that they were turned away from every country they approached for help.

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When their ship docked in Mumbai, the British governor too refused them entry. Maharaja Digvijaysinhji Ranjitsinhji Jadeja of Nawanagar, who had heard of the plight of the refugees, sought to help them and pressurized the British government to allow the refugees to disembark. Frustrated by the lack of empathy and the unwillingness of the government to act, the Maharaja ordered the ship to dock at Rosi port in his province. Thus began the story of Little Poland in India.

On disembarking, the Maharaja warmly welcomed the Polish women and children, saying “Do not consider yourself orphans. You are now Nawnagaris and I am Bapu, father of all the people of Nawanagar, so also yours.”


Source: Youtube
The children were set up in tented accommodations, while the Maharaja set about building the Balachadi camp, located near his summer palace and 25 km away from the capital city of Jamnagar. Facing severe objections from the British government for taking in foreign refugees, the Maharaja proudly claimed they were part of his family, even going so far as to provide the government with adoption certificates for them! “Our father politically adopted them,” the king’s daughter Harshad Kumari, told Outlook Magazine.

Read also: An Awesome History Of The Lost Indian City That Traded With Romans

The Maharaja took many personal risks to ensure that more than 640 women and children found a safe haven in Balachadi. He didn’t just provide the Polish citizens with the bare necessities either, but went to great lengths to ensure that Balachadi became a home away from home for these people.

Mr Wieslaw Stypula, a Polish survivor, remembers the Maharaja’s concern for their eating habits, “When we arrived at the camp, the Maharaja gave a party but he did not know what we children liked to eat… Despite being hungry, we didn’t like to eat at all. Bapu saw this and said ‘Don’t worry, I will fix this.’ He brought seven young cooks for us from Goa!”

Recalls another survivor, Mrs Jadwiga Tomaszek, “We never liked the spinach that was cooked in the camp and so we decided to have a spinach strike. When Bapu heard of this, he immediately ordered the cooks not to make spinach anymore.”


Source: Youtube
Mr Jerzy Tomaszek, a member of the ‘Survivors of Balachadi’ (as they fondly refer to themselves) says, “I met Jadwiga (his wife) in Balachadi camp. I loved her since the age of 15 but married her at the age of 78. We perhaps need to thank Maharaja Jam Saheb for our meeting.”

Mr Jan Bielecki, yet another ‘Survivor of Balachadi, remarked:

“If not for the Maharaja, we would have been in trouble…. I still do not understand that in spite of being a true patriotic Polish, one part of my soul still misses India and thus does not make me fully comfortable in Poland, as I feel that India is still my home too.”


Source: Youtube
Their fond memories of the camp and the Maharaja are evidence that the four years they spent under his care were life-changing and memorable.

Read also: TBI Specials: The Welcome Shores Of Nargol – A History Of The Parsi Community In India

When asked about his decision to house the Polish kids, the Maharaja is believed to have told Polska, a weekly Polish magazine:

“Maybe there, in the beautiful hills beside the seashore, the children will be able to recover their health and to forget the ordeal they went through…. I sympathise with the Polish nation and its relentless struggle against oppression.”

The Maharaja’s gesture went on to inspire many others to open their hearts and homes to the innocent victims of war, not just in India but across the world. His act of generosity is clearly still remembered in Poland, where he was posthumously award the Commander’s Cross of the Order of Merit by the President. Poland has also named the Maharaja the Honorary Patron of the popular Warsaw Bednarska High School. In 2013, the Government of Poland inaugurated the ‘Good Maharaja Square’ in Warsaw.

The Maharaja’s actions are more noteworthy still given that while the world was at war, India was fighting an important battle of its own – one of self determination, against the backdrop of severe famine and drought.


Source: Youtube
As historian Anuradha Bhattacharya once remarked “There is no denying that Jam Saheb’s generosity is unparalleled. It was the cornerstone for other Polish people to get sanctuary in India. That they found refuge here also, speaks volumes about the national movement, which was not xenophobic, and about the Indian people who showed no antagonism to the presence of the Polish children in a year of severe drought and famine.”

https://defence.pk/pdf/threads/incredible-india-indian-tourism-places.351882/page-265

Maharaja made special arrangement for study of Polish children in his summer palace and converted it into school.

This school is known as sainik school Balachhadi.

This is that school (Palace ) Which Maharaja emptied for making school of Polish children.

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http://newdelhi.mfa.gov.pl/en/news/...onid=A6A8EEBD502F3978A62F42449C9E01CC.cmsap2p
 
An illuminated Rajasthan Assembly during the closing ceremony of Rajasthan day celebrations in Jaipur.
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Hill Stations in India
Srinagar, Kashmir
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Manali, Himachal Pradesh

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Nainital, Uttarakhand

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Munnar, Kerala
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Temple of Karthik Swami above the town of Rudraprayag in Uttarakhand.
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Not far from the road to the Kedarnath pilgrimage lies the relatively unknown temple of Karthik Swami above the town of Rudraprayag in Uttarakhand. The site sits at an altitude of over 10,000 feet offering a unique panorama of Garhwal’s majestic Himalayan peaks. Each year while hundreds of pilgrims throng the Char Dham yatra routes, locals make their way to this revered temple to seek blessings from the elder son of Lord Shiva, Kartikeya. (Gurinder Osan/HT PHOTO)
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Sunset above Rudraprayag, at the Kartik Swami Temple where after evening prayers bells ringing can be heard from afar. (Gurinder Osan/HT Photo)
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Festivals attracts devotees from many surrounding villages annually, who express their devotion through songs and dance. (Gurinder Osan/HT Photo)
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Women from the Bhutia community in traditional attire from the surrounding Chamoli district visit the Kartik Swami Temple on a festive occasion, seen here in the backdrop of higher Himalayan ranges including Chaukhamba, right, and the Kedarnath ranges, left. (Gurinder Osan/HT Photo)
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The planet Venus, center, adds a spark to the twilight sky, framed here with the foreground of temple bells outside the Kartik Swami Temple. (Gurinder Osan/HT Photo)
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Young locals from Garhwal engage in shooting selfies at the temple. (Gurinder Osan/HT Photo)
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A percussionist from a nearby village, plays his drum, the sound of which is carried to all neighbouring villages to announce continuing festivities on an auspicious day at the Kartik Swami Temple. (Gurinder Osan/HT Photo)
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Village womenfolk seek blessings as they offer prayers to the almighty. (Gurinder Osan/HT Photo)
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A special 'teeka' or forehead mark, made of turmeric is placed using a marigold flower by the priest at the holy temple. (Gurinder Osan/HT Photo)
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Village women break into song and dance singing traditional folk songs before an occasional feast for devotees and tourists. (Gurinder Osan/HT PHOTO)
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Kanak Chauri village, about thirty kilometres from Rudraprayag is the last road-connected village from where devotees hike about three kilometres to reach the top of the hill where the shrine resides. (Gurinder Osan/HT Photo)
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Close-ups of devotees in different moods after receiving blessings and offering prayers at the temple. (Gurinder Osan/HT Photo)
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Artists dressed as lord Hanuman takes a selfie during a procession celebrating Ram Navami in New Delhi. (Raj K Raj/HT PHOTO)
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Behrupiya artist from Delhi pose around a ‘Shivling’ (a representation of a unique combination of Shiva and Shakti) . (Raj K Raj/HT PHOTO)
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Lord Hanuman’s monkey sena line up for a photo. (Raj K Raj/HT PHOTO)
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A fire-eater from Punjab performs to the heady beat of the traditional dhol. Participants from various states danced, sang and performed as they walked the 5km long rally. (Raj K Raj/HT PHOTO)
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Students in traditional outfit make the best of the moment as they pose for a friend’s camera. (Raj K Raj/HT PHOTO)
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A cold water bottle provides some respite from the hot day . Enthusiasm remained high despite the heat. (Raj K Raj/HT PHOTO)
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A woman dressed as Jhansi ki Rani, left, takes a selfie with members VHP women’s wing Durga Vahini in front of Ram Mandir replica. (Raj K Raj/HT PHOTO)
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Members of VHP’s women’s wing Durga Vahini taking a group selfie before the procession. Approximately 5000 people participated in this march. (Raj K Raj/HT PHOTO)
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Hindu youth sit atop a truck before the start of the procession from Delhi’s Ramlila Maidan to Karol Bagh. (Raj K Raj/HT PHOTO)
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Enthusiastic youth take a picture with a sword during the event. 105 tableaux participated showcasing various initiatives like (Raj K Raj/HT PHOTO)
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Many youth showed swords, knife and flags as they participated in the rally. (Raj K Raj/HT PHOTO)
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The six-day Urs of Dargah Ajmer Sharif festival is considered as one of the most sacred celebrations in Sufism. A Sufi saint of the Chishti order, Hazrat Khwaja Syed Nizamuddin Auliya is remembered on Urs and is celebrated with enthusiasm by thousands of pilgrims who throng his shrine in New Delhi during this festival. (Burhaan Kinu/HT PHOTO)
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Artists dressed as characters of Ramayana performing during a road show on the occasion of the 9th day of Navratri at Hanuman Temple near Kempegowda Railway Station in Bengaluru on Wednesday, April 5, 2017. Ram Navami is being celebrated on two days this year as many people celebrate the occasion according to when the lunar calendar shifts into the ninth day, or when the sun rises on the ninth day depending on their interpretation. (Arijit Sen/HT Photo)
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Ram Navami procession in Hyderabad A procession to mark Rama Navami began from the labyrinth lanes of Manghalhat to mark the birthday of Lord Ram. The procession will pass through Manghalhat, Jummerat Bazaar, Begum Bazaar, Afzalgunj, Putlibowli before culminating at Hanuman Vyamshala in Sultan Bazaar. A 5,000-strong police force has been deployed for the bandobast. The police have installed around 500 closed circuit cameras on the entire procession route. Commissioner of Police Mr. Mahender Reddy spotted monitoring the procession.


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Devotees throng the Srikanteshwara Swamy temple to attend the annual rathotsava in Nanjangud, Mysore.
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Granddaughter of Nizam VII, Shehzadi Rasheedunnisa Begum views a painting of her grandfather on display on the occasion of Mir Osman Ali Khans 132nd birth anniversary on Thursday.(Photo: DC)
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Two families, who had been fetching water from outside for 30 years, benefit

The MGNREGS workers dug the wells in a span of two weeks and managed to trace water at depths of 4.30 metres and 5.70 metres. The works were initiated by former panchayat ward member T.V. Padmini, under whose supervision the MGNREGS works were executed with support from ward member T. Madhavan.

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Arubathimoovar festival at Kapaleeswarar Temple

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Ram Navami rally in Durgapur, Bardhaman district.
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A pair of peacocks in the garden of the Gol Gumbaz in Vijayapura. | Photo Credit: Special Arrangement

Between the famous Hashimpeer shrine and the nursery, there is vast open area which has thick vegetations.

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A view of the Bekal Fort in Kasaragod. | Photo Credit: H_Vibhu
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India jumps 12 spots in WEF's global travel & tourism ranking
India has jumped 12 places to 40th rank globally in travel and tourism competitiveness list by World Economic Forum.

India is one of the countries that improved the most as it gained 12 places in Asia, but lagged behind its other Asian peers like Japan and China which were ranked way ahead at 4th and 13th place, respectively. Spain is ranked at the top in the list.

"India continues to enrich its cultural resources, protecting more cultural sites and intangible expressions through UNESCO World Heritage lists, and via a greater digital presence," WEF said in its Global Travel and Tourism Competitiveness Report 2017.

Some of the factors that helped India climb up the ladder include international openness through strong policies such as implementing visa on arrival and e-visas, and improvements in the country's ground transport infrastructure which benefited the travel and tourism sector in the country, it added.

India has seen continued growth in international arrivals over the past 15 years, reaching the 8 million mark in 2015, WEF said, adding the country's vast cultural and natural resources, and its price competitiveness advantage also attracted international tourists.

The report, however, noted that though health conditions are improving, they remain "inadequate". Similarly, ICT readiness, security concerns and human resources are improving, but remain "weak".

"While further improvements are needed across these dimensions, India is taking small but important steps in the right direction," WEF said, adding that the Indian travel and tourism sector presents significant opportunities that are yet to be reaped, especially in the provision of tourist service infrastructure, and in terms of additional accommodation capacity and entertainment facilities.

In the global ranking Spain, France and Germany were ranked at the top three positions, making them the most tourism friendly economies.

Traditional strong travel and tourism destinations, including Japan (4th), the United Kingdom (5th), the United States (6th), Australia (7th), Italy (8th), Canada (9th) and Switzerland (10th), have also made it to the top 10.

While advanced economies still hold the top slots, 12 of the top 15 most improved countries are emerging markets.

"The rise of Asia's giants shows that the Asian Tourism Century is becoming a reality. To reach their potential, the majority of countries still have more to do, from enhancing security, promoting their cultural heritage, building their infrastructure and creating stronger visa policies," WEF Community Lead of the Aviation, Travel and Tourism Industries Tiffany Misrahi said.

These results are of significant importance as tourism helps economic growth and job creation – up to 1/10th of global GDP and jobs are tourism-related, WEF noted.
The report ranks 136 countries across 14 dimensions, revealing how well countries could deliver sustainable economic and societal benefits through their travel and tourism sector.
http://www.moneycontrol.com/news/bu...fs-global-travel-tourism-ranking-2254111.html
 
The three-in-one multi-platform machine that costs ₹12-lakh also enables in removal of tattoos and tightening skin, according to C. Dharmambal, professor and head, Department of Dermatology, GVMCH.

New facility: GVMCH Dean Usha Sadasivam commissioning a three-in-one equipment at the Department of Dermatology.

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a group of Indian children huddle around a tablet and experience the internet for the very first time.

The remote wi-fi connection is powered by a van bringing the digital world to around 10,000 families living on the inhospitable salt flats of western Gujarat state, where they work eight months a year in extreme conditions.

The salt desert known as the Little Rann of Kutch, is roughly 180 km (110 miles) from state capital Ahmedabad.

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In reverence: A man performing during the Urs procession at Badapahad of Nizamabad district. | Photo Credit: K_V_ RAMANA
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Devotees participating in Hanuman Jayanti rally in old city of Hyderabad on Tuesday. PTI Photo
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