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INDIA SURGES AHEAD NEWS
April 2008
Culture, Entertainment & Literature
 
Bhojpuri film star Manoj Tiwari, Indian face on Dutch stamp
 

Bhojpuri superstar Manoj Tiwari is on cloud nine as he has piped maestro Pandit Hari Prasad Chaurasia to be the Indian face on a Dutch postage stamp. Dazed, delighted and quite disbelieving at the honour, Tiwari says the Dutch government's decision to issue a postage stamp with his face on it comes as a complete surprise to him. "About a month back, I got a call from them (Dutch government) saying they needed my picture for a postage stamp. I guided them to my website and gave the matter no serious thought. When I got to know that they had actually issued a stamp with my face in the Netherlands I couldn't believe it," Manoj said. "Two Indian names were put forward for the honour. Pandit Hari Prasad Chaurasia and mine, the fact that I was chosen over a man of such stature and seniority fills me with both pride and humility." The Netherlands has a sizeable population of Bhojpuri-speaking north Indians who regard Manoj as an icon. "For an actor who belongs to a cinema that's seen as a poor country cousin of Bollywood, I feel I've contributed my bit. I felt all my years of working towards popularising the Bhojpuri language through films and by other means have paid off," says the Bhojpuri superstar, who sang more than 2,000 songs in Bhojpuri from 1996 until acting beckoned with a film. "Sasura Bada Paise Wala" was made in 2003 with Manoj in the lead. A three million rupees budget film made over Rs 200 million profit. Since then, there was no looking back for Manoj. The actor, along with Ravi Kissan, has been credited with reviving the Bhojpuri film industry. "Not just Bhojpuri cinema, but I've been toiling tirelessly to promote Bhojpuri all over the world wherever there's sizeable Bhojpuri population, like in Mauritius and Surinam which is a former Dutch colony. I feel the postage stamp has a lot to with my popularity and the popularity of the Bhojpuri 'bhasha' (language) among Indians in Surinam and the Netherlands," says the actor in Hindi. Manoj feels the pride for regional languages is evaporating in the north. "That is why I've opened Bhojpuri academies in various cities all over the world including Surinam. I feel the Bhojpuri that Indians speak in foreign countries is hybridised and incorrect," says the actor, who proceeds to the Netherlands May 22 to be honoured in person. Manoj has now set his eyes on Bhojpuri cinema and language gaining credence all over the world. "In Mauritius, where the Indian population dates back 150 years, I've been a regular visitor. In fact, I accompanied Bihar Chief Minister Nitish Kumar's contingent to Mauritius. If I say so myself, I paved the way for a political dialogue in Mauritius. Unfortunately, my work doesn't get the recognition that it deserves."

Courtesy: www.headlinesindia.com, April 14, 2008

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Shah Jahan's dagger auctioned for 1.7 mn pounds
 

An elegant personal dagger carried by emperor Shah Jahan was sold at a London auction for an astounding 1.7 million pounds - more than three times the expected bid. "Of course we are very happy - it was a great sale," said a spokeswoman for auctioneers Bonhams minutes after the dagger went under the hammer on Thursday. She was unable to immediately disclose name of the buyer. The dagger, which has fine gold inscriptions and decorations and dates back to 1629-30, was expected to attract bids of around 300,000 to 500,000 pounds. It was the star attraction at an auction of objects belonging to the late French collector Jacques Desenfans, who spent over 50 years amassing Indian, Islamic and Southeast Asian arms and armour, early pottery and works of art. The inscriptions in the nasta'liq script on the 40.8 cm-long dagger include Shah Jahan's official titles, date and place of birth, and the honorific parasol, the ancient pan-Asian symbol of divinity of royalty, all of which point to the fact that it was the personal dagger of Shahjahan. In an article written for the Bonhams Magazine, New Delhi-based author William Dalrymple says: "The emperor's love of beautiful and precious objects - damascened and gold-embellished blades, enamels and hammered metals, precious lapidary, inlaid hard stones and inscribed gems - was something many visitors commented on." Dalrymple said Edward Terry, the chaplain to the British ambassador, described Shah Jahan as "the greatest and richest master of precious stones that inhabits the whole earth".

Courtesy: www.timesofindia.indiatimes.com, April 10, 2008

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India images sold at 512,000 pounds at Bonhams
 

A collection of photographic images of India from 1850s to 1940s owned by NRI businessman Kanwardip Gujral was sold for a record price of 512,000 pounds at the Bonhams Auction House in London on Wednesday. The strength of interest in the sale impressed Bonhams specialists who said the sale had set a new benchmark for images of this kind. David Park, head of Books Maps and Manuscripts at Bonhams said: "The sale of Collection received a huge amount of interest. As a result the sale made 512,000 pounds with many items going to three to four times their estimate." This sale has rewritten the prices for all the major photographers whose works were featured in the sale. The value of their work has been seriously raised, he said. Top item in the sale was Lot 14 , a series of 102 prints of Kashmir in the 1860s and 70s owned by Lord Lansdowne, Viceroy of India from 1886 to 1894. It had been estimated to sell for 10,000 to 20,000 pounds but at the Bonhams sale it went for 72,000 pounds. The photographs were by John Burke, William Baker and James Craddock. The Collection was that of the late Kanwardip Gujral, a Hamburg-based businessman who was born in Lahore before partition but brought up in Agra after 1947. His first purchase of Indian photographs was in 1976, but he began collecting in earnest in 1990 when he bought a group of nineteenth century albums while on holiday in Italy.

Courtesy: www.timesofindia.indiatimes.com, April 10, 2008

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Bulk betrothals
 

This is Balaji's blessing," coo Chandravenu and his coy bride Rajani at Muthyalareddypalle in Chittoor district, almost in chorus. Like most people in the state's countryside these days, they had also chosen to be part of the unique TTD (Tirumala Tirupati Devasthanams) sponsored kalyanamastu (mass marriage ceremony). A wedding in the traditional sense would have cost both families about Rs 1 lakh each, plus the cost of wedding clothes and travel. Nothing has caught the imagination of young couples in the state as the mass marriages, which TTD first organised in February 2007. "The poor borrow large sums for marriages and get stuck in debt. With kalyanamastu, they are free now," points out TTD's Executive Officer K.V. Ramanachary. Kalyanamastu is not just for the indigent. It is also aimed at creating awareness among Hindus to curb wasteful expenditure. Couples who avail the services offered by TTD, get clothes, a mangalsutra (gold chain symbolising wedlock) weighing 2 gm and silver mettalu (toe rings) for the bride. Those wanting to get married have to obtain the consent of their parents and register their names in advance with the local kalyanamastu committee. TTD spends about Rs 7,000 on each couple, which includes arranging for the priests, a band and hosting a vegetarian meal for the guests- restricted to 60 persons for each couple. Thereafter, the newly-weds and the parents of both are given six tickets to visit Tirumala Temple within three months of their marriage. Kalyanamastu has become popular because it is held simultaneously at 294 places across the state, either at TTD kalyana mandapams, prominent Hindu temples in its vicinity or open grounds, depending on the number of registered applicants in a place. The mangalsutras gifted to the couples are kept at the feet of the presiding deity at Tirumala during a special prayer and sanctified before their dispatch to the wedding venues. Those who wish but cannot afford to invite Brahmins to perform their marriage, this TTD initiative is truly Godsend. Amidst Vedic chants, the priests of TTD and others hired for the occasion solemnise the weddings. TTD employees arrange for the kalyanamastu in tandem with district officials, public representatives, social activists and volunteers called Srivari Sevaks. To lend a touch of glamour to the occasion, local celebrities are invited to greet the newly-weds. TTD has conducted the kalyanamastu thrice- the latest on March 9-spending more than Rs 12 crore with 19,140 couples having taken their marriage vows so far. The number is bound to grow, judging by the concerted efforts to spread awareness and incentives coming in the way of those entering into wedlock. Local committees are offering clothes and other freebies depending on the generosity of philanthropists in different places. Some donors have come forward to pay for short honeymoon trips for those getting married in Tirupati. The Andhra Pradesh State Road Transport Corporation is planning to offer subsidised tickets for a three-day round trip to the newly-weds. Such small misadventures aside, TTD is planning to set up an exclusive kalyanamastu trust as Reddy's plan "is to perpetuate the Hindu marital system which is the most sacred among all institutionalised marriages". He is optimistic that with the flux of time even the well-to-do will opt for these less ostentatious marriages. And it may well lead prospective newly-weds as well as parents of eligible boys and girls to chant louder "in Venkateswara we trust."

Courtesy: India Today, April7, 2008

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UK Army's first Hindu chaplain uses Bhagwad Gita to comfort soldiers
 

The first Hindu chaplain to the British Army believes Bhagwad Gita is one of his most crucial tools to help Hindu recruits, of whom 470 are in the Armed Forces, going to war in Iraq or Afghanistan. Acharya Krishan Kant Attri has been serving the British Army since 2005. ''I use it all the time,'' said the priest when asked about the Bhagwad Gita. Mr Attri said the Mahaabharata could help soldiers worried about going to war in Iraq or Afghanistan and fearing they would not be able to come back. He turned to the Sanskrit text, the portion of the epic in which the god Krishna counsels the hero Arjuna just before battle. The famous second chapter has been the most trenchant for young British Hindu soldiers. Mr Attri said, ''Arjuna is concerned about going to fight, and Krishna tells him 'You are not a killing machine. You are just doing your duty, and should leave the rest to almighty God''. In whichever of his eight languages Mr Attri used to counsel the soldier, the message was the same, ''I tell them, 'God has given you an opportunity to protect your country and maintain peace in the world'. They need to know they are not killing anybody but just performing a duty, he added. When the priest was interviewed at the Ministry of Defence for the job of Britain's first Hindu chaplain, he was asked what he would say if a soldier did not want to go to war. Hindu teachings, he responded, offer good guidance. ''Duty is our priority. It's our karma, and we have to face it,'' he told them. Hindu teachings have armed most of the soldiers he counseled with resolve. ''They know they've undertaken a contract to look after the boundary walls of the country,'' said the 45-year-old pandit. Mr Attri performed army weddings, supported soldiers and their families, and acted as a liaison between Hindu troops and their commanding officers, explaining small but symbolically charged issues. Why Hindu soldiers want to wear rakhi, or symbolic red strings, around their wrists, or why strict vegetarians do not want to use spoons that have touched meat at meals. He has also gone to Nepal to select chaplains for the Gurkhas, and this spring would visit troops in Afghanistan. ''I want to see what the soldiers go through, to help me advise them and support the families left behind,'' he informed. The son of a Brahmin sweet-shop owner in Kasauli, in the north Indian state of Himachal Pradesh, Mr Attri came to Britain as a 22-year old priest to serve at the Hindu temple in Newcastle upon Tyne. He arrived in Britain with no English, no Britain-based relatives or friends. About British Hindus, he said, ''Religions are to unite, not to divide. Our tradition says 'intermingle with other communities, don't create problems, and don't try to impose your own belief on others.'' The few Hindus he has seen tempted by Hindu extremism, he said, have been dealt with at ''a grass roots-level, through community and temple leaders.'' India's multi-faith history has served them well, ''We don't expect society to change for us. You adapt to the environment around you, and respect your neighbours,'' he said.

Courtesy: www.webindia123.com, April 06, 2008

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New TV channel for British Asians
 

Brit Asia TV , a new free-to-air television channel aimed at the British Asian audience, will be officially launched on Monday. The Birmingham-based channel says that its aim is to "broadcast and promote Asian culture amongst British Asians" in the UK and across Europe. It will be available on the Sky Digital platform, but unofficial broadcast has already begun. With a mix of feature shows, music, entertainment news, chat shows, drama serials, reality TV shows and more, the station hopes to capture the lucrative young British Asian market, joining similar rivals such as Raj TV. Director of Brit Asia TV Jaz Bal said: "This is a unique and highly entertaining TV channel that will plug the gap for quality programming by British Asians for British Asians." "This unique television channel is determined to put its UK British Asian audience first by giving them the television content that they want to see with original and exclusive shows. All material on the channel is relevant and focused on Asian lives in Britain," a channel spokesperson said. Apart from several popular channels beamed out of the Indian sub-continent, there are many channels that are based in the UK and target the British Asian audience. These include the Leicester-based MATV. The growth of channels within the UK targeting the British Asian audience reflects market research that the vast majority of British Asians and other ethnic minorities are not satisfied with the mainstream programming available on BBC. The channels also broadcast advertising aimed at the prosperous British Asian audience that is identified with the 'brown pound' the increasing economic clout in Britain of people from the Indian sub-continent, as consumers as well as entrepreneurs.

Courtesy: www.timesofindia.indiatimes.com, April 05, 2008

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Reliance Entertainment's Big cinemas to open in US
 

Reliance Entertainment Private Limited (REPL) is all set to start its cinema chain in the US under the brand name Big from next month. More than 200 theatres will screen Hindi as well as regional films from India. Confirming the schedule, a company official said, "We are still renovating and refitting the cinemas we have acquired in some cities there. A formal announcement about their opening will be made later." Over the last one year, Reliance Entertainment has acquired over 200 cinema halls in 28 North American cities, including New York, Los Angeles, Chicago, Atlanta, Detroit and Washington. Taken on a long-term lease, these theatres will bear the company's entertainment brand name Big, and not Adlabs, as REPL's cinemas in India are called. It is learnt that REPL has also bought over an American theatre management firm to oversee the operations of its Big cinema chain. REPL may also distribute movies overseas. Since it is already into producing movies in Hindi and other Indian regional languages under the Big Pictures banner, its exhibition outlets abroad will help it firm up its distribution venture. In order to expand its overseas exhibition network, the company is now scouting for more cinema halls in other countries as well. The Big cinema chain in the US will not only screen Bollywood movies, but will also run Indian regional language movies, particularly the productions from the south, and movies from other Asian countries to cater to large expatriate populations. These 200-odd cinema halls are located in cities where there are large concentrations of people from the Indian subcontinent and other parts of Asia. The chain will be marketed as any other American cinema chain. Mainstream Hollywood movies, art house productions and movies made by the independent producers will also adorn the marques of the Big cinemas. REPL's cinema operations in the US, spread across different cities, will go a long way in making the presence of the Bollywood movies, in particular, more prominent there and help them reap good harvest from the US box-office. Already, some recent Bollywood movies have made it to the top of the US box-office chart. UTV-distributed Tip Films' "Race," for example, has secured 18th position in the US box-office in the first week of its release on 96 screens.

Courtesy: www.headlinesindia.com, April 02, 2008

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