Sunday, June 27, 2010

My January at Lavale

Feels like heaven !!!

Starting from the first day after reaching Pune, it feels like a Paradise over here. Meeting new people from different parts of the "United India" was another bonus. After the Orientation , we all headed to Pune trip for getting acclimatized to the city on hills. What fascinated me the most is the people at lavale. Its just been a month and I know more than 200 new people around me .

It was never the same life then. Its feels blissful when you have many people sharing different wavelengths for a same topic just under one roof . I truely feel the meaning of  'Vasudhaiv Kutumbakam' which means 'the World is One family'. 

I started developing much more interest in what I do now and have thought of going towards a holistic approach in whatever I do now towards the achievement of my goal. What I learnt as my first and the basic step is I need to take as much knowledge as I can , No one is gonna spoon feed me .


Pune trip was fascinating not for the reason that I got see new places but for the reason I got to know many people. The symbiotic relation between my college mates has been terrific till now. Be it the nut-crackers of the class , the cool hunks or the pretty chicks at Lavale.


The interactive sessions with seniors and the lectures of the high-profile guest faculties was mesmerizing. On a different note , the place where I come from has always been discouraging me for my dreams, even if you have had what it takes to reach the spot light. Pune is like a dream catch for me. It feels like my purpose for being here is now getting clear day by day. Also on a different note , mood swings help you out to get the best from you. My getting some what gloomy helps me to work more and more towards the happiness .

In short, My January at Lavale has been the most incredible and fascinating one. Shall see what the feb says about me at lavale...


Dis is it for now...
Bloggin off....Directly Dilse...
Rishi Doshi

Sunday, May 23, 2010

When Man Plays a Creator....


 A team of scientists in the United States, including three researchers of Indian origin, has created life in the laboratory.

In a profound - and some would say provocative - work, the 24-member team at the privately-held J Craig Venter Institute has created bacterial cells that are completely controlled by genes manufactured in the lab. The cells can multiply.

The successful construction of the first self-replicating bacterial cells opens the way for making and manipulating life on a previously unattainable scale, calling into question some of the very basis of creation.

Previously, scientists have altered and manipulated DNA piecemeal to produce a variety of genetically engineered plants and animals. But the ability to artificially design an entire genome - the `book of life' that controls an organism's functions - puts a different spin on the meaning of terms such as creation, evolution and life.

The J Craig Venter Institute (JCVI), which is a not-for-profit genomic research organization based in Rockville outside Washington DC and in San Diego, California, did not say when exactly its team synthesized the 1.08 million base pair chromosomes of a modified Mycoplasma mycoides, a parasite bacteria that lives in cattle and goats.

But it said the synthetic cell, called Mycoplasma mycoides JCVI-syn1.0, "is the proof of principle that genomes can be designed in the computer, chemically made in the laboratory and transplanted into a recipient cell to produce a new self-replicating cell controlled only by the synthetic genome".

The most remarkable thing about the synthetic cell, a JCVI scientist explained, is that its "genome was brought to life through chemical synthesis, without using any pieces of natural DNA."

The implications of the breakthrough was not lost on the founder of the institute J Craig Venter, the maverick American biologist and entrepreneur who is most famous for his role in sequencing one of the first human genomes.

"We have been consumed by this research, but we have also been equally focused on addressing the societal implications of what we believe will be one of the most powerful technologies and industrial drivers for societal good. We look forward to continued review and dialogue about the important applications of this work to ensure that it is used for the benefit of all," he said in a statement.

The 24-member team includes three scientists of Indian origin - Sanjay Vashee, Radha Krishnakumar and Prashanth P Parmar.

The first synthetic cell did not come cheap or easy. The process of constructing and booting up the cell took nearly 15 years and cost upwards of $30 million, the institute said.

Ethicists called the breakthrough a "turning point in the relationship between man and nature" when humankind had generated life from scratch in a lab with the ability to pre-determine its properties.

But JCVI scientists were careful to point out the positives in the breakthrough, maintaining it would "undoubtedly" lead to the development of many important applications and products including biofuels, vaccines, pharmaceuticals, clean water and food products.

Dr Venter said he and the team at JCVI continue to work with bioethicists, outside policy groups, legislative members and staff, and the public to encourage discussion and understanding about the societal implications of their work and the field of synthetic genomics generally. 

Monday, April 26, 2010

Winter of the Heart

I’m used to many relationships where it comes to the point that one is far distant esp. when I need them but they are nowhere to find. I’ve to people that I got to know in a very short period and yet we talk, we chat as if we've been together for so long. Then comes a time that we're totally silent, as if the world stops for our relationship. It’s declining as time goes by until we don't longer remember that once we became friends.
I’m so sick of people leaving my life, esp. when I already learned to love them. It’s painful whenever time comes that I know it will be the last time to see them or I don't know when I will see them again. It hurts also when the one I love, including my friends are far distant from me and I don't see them for a long time.
I have a hard time giving my trust to strangers because I find it futile when we become friends and then they have to go. For what that I learned to love them and I’m used to be with them? I’m just hurt for their leaving. 
When someone has promised that they will stay for last, and got my heart to believe them, I hold on to their promise that they won't go out my life. And I will get too much once it was broken. It’s my nature. I have hard time trusting people but my heart isn't hard enough not to learn to love them. And when I do, I give them what they need. I sacrifice my time, money, and sometimes great opportunities.
There’s wrong with my attitude, friends promise to stick with you forever but they don't promise that you'll be together always in reality. They are human beings like you that have to be grown up. Sometimes you'll get maturity when you face your troubles alone. People often hide their faces against the world at some point of time. They have no problem, it's just that they needed some space to think and evaluate their selves and you have to accept them anyway and forgive their absence.

Sunday, April 25, 2010

The Eyjafjallajokul Effect


How to say it: AY-uh-fyat-luh-YOE-kuutl-uh, that is -ay as in day, -fy as in few, -oe as the ‘u’ in cur, -uu as in boot, -tl as in atlas. The -uh is ‘a’ as in ago. Stressed syllables are in capital letters.

What it means: Island mountain glacier. 

When a minor European Volcano decides to erupt, it does not often make the major headlines of the news. But the Eyjafjallajokull effect has been a different story, closing down European aerospace and casting a large cloud of volcanic dust across much of Europe. What is the potential effect of 'that' volcanoes eruption in Iceland?
Europe is not usually associated with volcanic activity, neither is Iceland much in the news nowadays. But when Eyjafjallajokull, started to erupt and spit out ice and lava earlier this year, few people noticed, until airports were closed.
Eyjafjallajokul, sounds spectacular but the name simply means the "islands mountains glacier". Icelanders generally see this volcanoes sister, Katla as the biggest threat but are probably bemused as the current cloud of ash is floating across mainland Europe, and the UK causing some panic.
Norse legend has it that humankind was created after the volcanoes in Iceland erupted. These potent and often ignored Volcanoes are a modern day source of geo-thermal energy, and a must see spot for curious tourists. But also serve as a warning as to how nature can disrupt modern hi-tech societies.
Despite claims that the eruption of Eyjafjallajokul, is subsiding some geologist fear a repeat of the last great eruption of 1821-23 when the first volcanic eruption, lead to the second eruption of Katla-causing much more damage then just closed airports.
If Katla does erupt, then experts state that sea levels may rise due to the break up of ice in the area surrounding both Eyjafjallajokul, and Katla. Whilst the volcanic dust cloud could get far worse, and close off much of Europe's airspace for months - not only disrupting air traffic but grounding it.
How this would effect Europe's transport routes and trade is anyone's guess. One theory is that the areas affected by volcanic dust may get colder, whilst global trade would switch to shipping, rail and road transport. This could hurt perishable products, which often need air transport like pharmaceuticals, fresh fruit and vegetables- driving up prices.
It could also effect the up-coming European tourist season, were traditionally people head for warmer climates like Southern Europe, and Turkey for their vacation. If flights are grounded, then Europe's roads will be congested, whilst long-haul destinations could see a further fall in tourist numbers.
One potential winner in all this could be Iceland. Currently mired in a deep recession, curious visitors could flock to see the volcanic activity, and create a much needed minor boom in ecological tourism. If they can get to Iceland by sea.
Yet, the final result of a possible dual eruption of both Eyjafjallajokull, and Katla could be the realization that humankind has no control over nature, despite the technology we use. And as in old Norse legend, the eruption of Volcanoes may after all, create something very new.


Dis is it for now...
Bloggin off....Directly Dilse...
Rishi Doshi

Monday, April 19, 2010

Blood on Silk

THE beautiful silk sarees you buy often have on them the sweat and blood of children like Naushad.
Naushad, 12, died on November 14 (Children's Day), 2000, of 79 per cent burns sustained while working in a silk reeling unit in Ramanagaram, 48 km from Bangalore. His employers say he committed suicide, but several residents of the town allege that he was burnt to death.
The eldest child of Shafiullah and Kamarunissa, Naushad lived with his parents and six siblings in Yarab Nagar in the town. When he was nine he joined Dadu Fayaz's silk reeling unit as a "cocoon cook" for Rs.15 a day - for 11-hour's work that steamed his hands into a pulpy mass. Most children in the silk industry start working at the age of eight. "Children do all the dirty jobs, like killing and extracting the worms and cleaning up the waste. We adults would never do such things," says a worker in a silk factory. Most of the children are bonded to their employers, who would be recovering loans of around Rs.5, 000 taken by their parents. Such repayments often mark an endless process.
According to Naushad's relatives and neighbours, some of whom went into hiding in the wake of the death in fear of Fayaz's men, the boy was locked up in a dingy room adjoining the factory shed for a fortnight. At work, he was allegedly tortured physically y and emotionally for not reporting regularly. When Naushad cried to go home for Id-ul-Fitr on November 12, his employer was stated to have thrashed him. Naushad's ensuing sullenness apparently enraged his employer. Akbar, Naushad's co-worker, who was stealthily carrying salna (a soggy mixture of rice and dal) for Naushad for about four days before he died that Sunday, said that he used to see Naushad being beaten.
Naushad was admitted to the Government Victoria Hospital, Bangalore, at 9:45 a.m. on November 13. He died that night at 1 a.m. The employer's men claim that the child committed suicide by setting himself on fire after dousing himself with kerosene. Nanjunda Char, Assistant Sub-Inspector at the hospital police station, said: "It is an open and shut case, with no complications." The hospital's records state that Naushad was 12 years old, but Char refutes this, saying it was a mistake made by his family in the rush to admit the child. According to Char, Naushad was 17 years old.
Activists of the Movement for Alternatives and Youth Awareness (MAYA), a non-governmental organisation working in the area of child rights, allege that the employer's representatives are trying to hush up the case by promising money and at the same time extending threats to the bereaved parents. Naushad's mother admitted to MAYA activists that she was paid Rs.15, 000 to tell the police and the hospital authorities that the 'accident' did not take place at the work place but at their home. She is under pressure from various quarters to stick to this version.

The situation in the area where Naushad's workplace is situated is tense. On Monday, November 20, 2000, representatives of MAYA met the Superintendent of Police and the Collector, Bangalore Rural district, to discuss the action taken in Naushad's case. Following the meeting the SP, S. Ramakrishna, visited Ramanagaram town. How-ever, the employer is absconding since then.
On November 25, after a public meeting at the taluk level, representatives of the Child Labour Eradication Committee (comprising individuals from organisations/groups of Channapatna and Ramanagaram taluks) submitted a memorandum to District Collector, G .S. Narayanswamy demanding the removal of child workers from the silk filature units and the prevention of children working in the industry.
WHAT circumstances would drive a 12 year-old to suicide? The working conditions in a reeling unit are appalling. According to the Government of Karnataka's Human Development Report, 1999, approximately 400,000 people make a living from the sericulture industry. Of these, an estimated 100,000 are children. The figures for the reeling segment, in which Naushad worked, are shocking. More than 80 per cent of silk reelers are under the age of 20, most of them between the age of 10 and 15.
India, the world's second largest silk producer after China, accounts for just 5 per cent of the global silk market since the bulk of Indian silk thread and cloth are used domestically. Today Karnataka produces 9,000 tonnes out of the country's total production of 14,000 tonnes of mulberry silk. Sericulture is the source of livelihood for over 51,700 families in Channapatna, Ramanagaram, Magadi, and Kanakapura taluks of Bangalore Rural district, the major silk production centres of the State.

The majority of the working population in Ramanagaram taluk is employed in one or the other segment of the sericulture industry. Ramanagaram is the largest market for cocoons in Asia; 15 to 50 tonnes arrive at the Ramanagaram cocoon market daily. The Muslim community has traditionally accounted for 90 per cent of the reelers and reeling entrepreneurs, although non-Muslims have also entered the field in the last 20 years. More than 50 per cent of Ramanagaram's silk reelers are migrants from Kollegal, Yelandur and Chamrajnagar who came to the town in search of work in the last two decades.
The State government has promoted sericulture as a high employment, agro-based, income-generating industry. The industry comprises many processes - growing mulberry plants, rearing silkworms, producing cocoons, and reeling silk yarn. While the cultivation of mulberry and the rearing of silk worms are agricultural in character, the reeling, twisting and weaving of silk are distinctly industrial in nature. The reeling of cocoons is done in cottage establishments or in larger factories called filatures.
A study conducted by MAYA in 1999 showed that children work in all segments of the sericulture industry - in mulberry cultivation, cocoon rearing, winding, doubling, twisting, and re-reeling. Before the reeling process begins, the cocoons are boiled in h to water to kill the worms. Children do this work in damp and unhealthy conditions. A 1997 report on child labourers in World Bank-aided programmes described the process thus: "As reelers, the children dip their hands into scalding water and palpate the silk cocoons, sensing by touch whether the fine silk threads have loosened enough to be unwound. They are not permitted to use spoons instead of their hands when checking the boiling cocoons, on the theory that their hands can more easily discern when the e threads are ready to reel. At age 10, their palms and fingers are white with the thick tracks of fissures, burns and blisters."
The raw silk is processed in winding units by children between the ages of six and nine. They wind the silk into strands, a process which can cut their wet, sore hands. Injuries do not heal in these conditions. In the process of doubling the strands of s ilk, children in the age group six to 14 are employed. As in the case of winding, children must stand continuously and closely observe the yarn to ensure that it does not break or not. The strain of this work often leads to backache and eye problems. Children in the age group of six to 10 years work in re-reeling units. Reeling units and machines are in fact designed in such a manner that only children can work on them.
Children work in the units for 10 to 12 hours and are paid daily wages fixed at the employer's discretion. Usually they are not paid even Rs. 10 a day. There are no weekly rest days or holidays. When there is no power supply, the children are made to work k in the employer's homes.
The units are cramped, dark, wet and poorly ventilated, and often have small generators running inside, which release carbon monoxide and other noxious fumes. Complaining is taboo. "They beat us very hard with belts if we make a small mistake or if we co me late to work. Often if we have a cut or bruise on our hands, we just have to daub some cream and get back to work. Otherwise they hit us on the head and sometimes even lock us up in the unit premises," a child worker told this writer.
Bronchial ailments, coughs, colds, persistent back pain, leg pain, asthma, lung infection and tuberculosis are endemic among child reelers. Constant exposure to the dead worms and the stench causes dizziness and fever. The children are made to listen to loud music, ostensibly to mask the deafening noise of the machines. This often leads to deafness. "I have a constant problem of heavy breathing, cough, stomach ache, fever, headache, pus in my ears and dizziness," says a child. His eight-year-old sister complains of persistent leg pain, back pain and dizziness. Throughout the long working day, both drink up to eight cups of tea in order to ease the pangs of hunger.
Some children also suffer from silk-related allergies. Having to stand throughout the day could lead to menstrual disorders in girl children.
Employers would argue that poverty forces the children to work in the silk industry. But Venkataraju, a silk unit owner in Sidlaghatta, admits that if he does not employ children, he would be running the unit at a loss. He says that children do not argue if they are paid between Rs.10 to Rs. 20. An adult would have to be paid Rs.60 to Rs.70 to do the same job.
MOST children in this sector work under conditions of bondage. Parents take an advance from their employers and give their children in bondage to their employers for several years until the loans are repaid. "When my children ask me now why I did not send d them to school, I feel guilty. But then I was helpless. My elder daughter had to get married and we needed money. The schools in our areas were not teaching the children anything useful and I felt it was better that they start working and earning. Now I seem to have wasted their lives," says Akhila, a mother of three children.
Daulat, a child worker, feels his debt will never be repaid and he will have to toil for the rest of his life. He said that when cocoon supplies fell, his parents took petty loans again and thereby increased the principal debt amount. Meanwhile, they also o send him to work at mango orchards until the silk units reopen.

Children in these areas spend their entire childhood in silk factories and find themselves uneducated, unskilled and unemployed as they enter adulthood. "I want to go to school... what is the use of this work? At least if I go to school, I can do something on my own instead of having to struggle like this," said Noor, a child worker. His friends Amjad, Rafiq and Zabi also said that they wished they could go to school one day.
According to the 1991 Census, there are 9.76 lakh working children in the State of which 49 per cent are girls. The participation rate of children in the age group of five to 14 years as full-time workers is 8.2 for boys and 6.5 for girls. For reeling and twisting, the ratio of child workers to adult workers in the industry is 2:1. In weaving, the employment of children is limited. The State's Human Development Report, 1999, argues that if every child who is not going to school is counted as a potential working child, then there are over three million working children in Karnataka.
The Department of Sericulture and other associated government bodies view their role as being limited to the technical aspects of the industry and research on the silk variety. When MAYA representatives met the technical service wing officer at Ramanagaram, he denied the existence of the child labour in the sericulture industry. He said that his office did not account for children in their lists.
The World Bank has actively promoted the silk industry over the last decade and a half, although in doing so it has largely ignored the firm foundation that child labour provides to the industry. From 1980 to 1989, the Bank loaned $54 million to support the sericulture industry in Karnataka. In 1989, the Bank gave two more loans totalling $177 million for the National Sericulture Project in Karnataka and Uttar Pradesh. In 1994 and 1995, the World Bank loaned another $3 million to modernise the silk industry and helped back a $157 million project to upgrade the production facilities and quality of silk. Prior to the intervention of the World Bank, a study conducted by the Institute for Socio-Economic Change, Bangalore, a premier social science research institute, alarmed by the incidence of child labour in the sericulture industry, recommended that this aspect be included in the National Sericulture Project. However, subsequent intervention by the World Bank, the Swiss Development Corporation and other s has been restricted to conducting studies, analyses and reports on the issue. In reality, little has been done by them to improve the conditions of the children and the families toiling in the industry.


Till then dis rishi 
blogging of on a sad note...
wake up India!!!!

Wednesday, April 7, 2010

!ncredible !ndi@

"I LOVE MY NATION"
Bcoz we live in a nation where pizza reaches
 Home faster than
 Ambulance Police

Where u get car loan @5% but
 Education loan @12%
                                    
Where rice IS 40 RS/ KG. but
 Simcard is  free !

 Where a millionaire can Buy a cricket team
 Instead to donate money in any charity.

Where everybody wants TO be FAMOUS, but nobody wants TO follow the
 Path to  be FAMOUS.

Where people STANDING at tea STALL reading an article about child labøur from newspaper and SAY "yaar bachcho se kaam karwane walo ko to fansi par chada dena chahiye''

And then they SHOUT.. ''Oye chhotu 2 chai la..''
 Incredible india
Have A NICE DAY..!

Courtesy: saakshi

Dis is it for now...
Bloggin off....Directly Dilse...
Rishi Doshi

Saturday, March 20, 2010

When a sport unites a nation...

Out of the night that covers me,
Black as the Pit from pole to pole,
I thank whatever gods may be
For my unconquerable soul.



This is the most interesting thing that I have noticed in recent times. 


It matters not how strait the gate,
How charged with punishments the scroll.
I am the master of my fate:
I am the captain of my soul. 



This superb poetry "Invictus" by William Ernest Henley ,one of my all time favourite has just reminded that its not the strength but the intentions that matter.


Last night I saw the oscar nominated movie the Invictus. A remarkable movie for me which just kept me thinking that How to get people to be better than what they think they can be? How do we inspire ourselves to greatness when nothing else will do? 

My daily living is inspired from that poem. It gets me motivated, boosts my mind, and helps me to stand still whatever obstacle i face or go through...


It was then ,that I cracked that sport after which the nation goes crazy is the real intention to make a country unconquerable.
Nelson Mandela , after he came as the leader of the new Republic of South Africa was under many dilemma on how will the country react after his freedom. During his jail period he observed that Rugby the national game of SA was only played by the AFRICANAS(the whites who lived in SA) . But he made those whites develop interest of it into Black and just break the barriers and years of apartheid by a game ...
It was he who inspired the captain to play for the 43 million of SA ...It just ignited the spark to achieve and attain to stretch your limits beyond your own imagination...
A total inspiration to feel and this INVICTUS feeling has just ignited in me too...
people do watch the movie if you felt my words felt short to explain you as a picture is worth a thousand words...


Dis is it for now...
Bloggin off....Directly Dilse...
Rishi Doshi