Followers

Monday, November 23, 2015

You Can Have Fun


Bliss cannot be understood and it is extremely difficult to achieve. After many lifetimes, you finally achieve bliss, but once achieved, it is even more difficult to lose. All that you seek in your life is bliss, that divine union with your source, and everything else in the world distracts you from that goal.The mind is kept alive by cravings and aversions. Only when the mind dies does bliss dawn.Bliss is the abode of all divinity . Cravings and aversions make your heart hard. There is no use being polite outwardly if you are rough in your heart. The world does not care how you are inside. It will only see your behaviour. The Divine does not care how you are outside -He only looks within.Never let even a small amount of dislike or craving reside in your heart. Let it be fresh, soft and fragrant like a rose.
Nothing in this material world can give you contentment.An outer-looking mind seeking contentment gets more discontented and the discontentment grows, and complaints and negativity start hardening the brain, clouding awareness with negative energy .
When negativity reaches its peak, like an overinflated balloon, it bursts and comes back to the Divinity . You can never escape the Divine, whether through the long route of negativity , or the instantaneous positive approach. When Divinity dawns, in no time, the shift happens from untruth to truth, from darkness to light, from dull inert matter to sparkling spirit. When the heart is hard, there is no fun. You cannot experience fun.
A Four-Letter Word That Can Save Our Souls


Love is the sweetest word in the language of all cultures. It inspires, impassions, moves and delights. It is also the highest, noblest, most stirring emotion that one can experience. Philosophers and poets have dwelt lovingly and at great length on this subject, which holds eternal fascination for each one of us. And why not? It is the substratum of existence; it is life itself.From love, creation came forth and by love it is sustained. Indic scriptures declare that it was the desire to experience His own love that made the Formless Divine multiply into multifarious forms ... To love you need `the other' and so God created the maya of duality , wherein love could find a platform for expression.
Sri Sathya Sai Baba says, “I must tell you about the paramount importance of love. Love is God, live in love. God is the embodiment of perfect love. He can be known and realised, reached and won, only through love. You can see the moon only through moonlight. You can see God only through the rays of love.“
To know and reach God, all we have to do is love. Isn't it wonderful? It is not about religion, rituals, penance, nor even knowledge of scriptural texts. It is about opening our hearts to the truth and beauty of love which is always yearning for expression. Half of all the frustration and misery in life is the result of this vital channel getting blocked.
Love redeems everything.That pure moment when love is expressed is the `God moment' of everyone's life. Even the wicked have this spark, only it lies buried under layers of darkness. It is just a question of bringing it forth and giving it expression.
The lotus raises its head and blooms forth even through slush. Love is the lotus bloom of everyone's life. Rather than meeting hate with hate, let's meet hate with love. Love dissolves differences and unites. Love creates bonding and harmony; hate separates. Only love can work miracles of transformation.
It is important to understand the true nature of love. It is not about a passing infatuation or attraction for certain individuals only . It is the truth of your nature. It is the truth of your heart. We tend to limit love to family members and friends, because we feel kinship with them. We have to extend this kinship to humani ty as a whole, because we are all one. We are all interconnected.
Every religion of the world recognises this truth and enjoins followers to love all and serve all. Yet there are those who misinterpret these positive messages and instead, take a negative perspective that leads to misunderstanding and distress.
How to access this treasure, love, which is so rich, expansive and all-embracing? We can get love through the conduit of divine love. Sweeter than the sweetest is this love of the Divine. It is so because it is the reflection of God in us, and it is the purest experience of bliss on earth. Also, when we turn our love to God it spontaneously expands to cover His creation too. By loving God we manifest our highest truth and feel harmonious with ourselves and all others. Our heart centre opens, and we recognise the common thread of divinity binding all hearts, irrespective of caste, colour, creed or nationality.
Baba says, “Embark on this path of love. Regard love as your very lifebreath and the sole purpose of your existence. In doing this, experience pure bliss, that is shoreless, indescribable and everlasting.“ 

Friday, November 20, 2015

World Toilet Day: India needs one toilet every two seconds to achieve target by 2019

India still has a long way to go to achieve the open defecation-free status. Since the promise made by the Centre headed by Prime Minister Narendra Modi to build toilets in rural areas in 2014, nothing much has changed on the ground.
The target of constructing a toilet every two seconds to reach the figure of 113 million toilets in four years still persists. On the occasion of World Toilet Day, Down To Earth has analysed the current dismal situation.
According to calculation, (see table 1) till 2014 the country needed to construct 35 toilets in one minute whereas now the figure has increased to 41 toilets per minute. If the pace remains like this, the final target would be met in 2035 instead of 2019 (see table 2).
  • Number of rural households without toilets (according to the 2011 census)-113 million
  • Toilets constructed from 2011-12 to 2014-15 (till October)-19.4 million
  • Toilets constructed from 2011-12 to 2015-16 (till October)-28.3 million
  • Number of toilets to be constructed in the next four years-84.7 million
  • Number of toilets to be constructed in one year–21.2 million
  • Number of toilets to be constructed in a day–58,082
  • Number of toilets to be constructed in an hour-2,420
  • Number of toilets to be constructed in a second-0.68
This year, the government claimed to have constructed around 8.9 million toilets. The number is more than when compared to previous years, but it is still way behind the target of constructing 18.8 million toilets by 2019. The Modi government has already missed the 100-day target of constructing one toilet per second.
In comparison to last year, the pace of construction has increased, but it is not encouraging. Last year, the target was to construct 18.8 million toilets by 2019. This year, the target has increased to 21.2 million per year. 
See infographic on the state of toilets
The UPA government had targeted to make India open defecation-free by 2022. After coming to power, the Modi government renamed the scheme (to Swachh Bharat Abhiyan from Nirmal Bharat Abhiyan), reduced the target time by 2019 and cut the budget by 40 per cent.
In the 2015-16 budget, the total allocation announced was Rs 2,850 crore. The budget was reduced from last year's allocation of Rs 4,620 crore.
Earlier, funds were shared between the Centre and the states on a 75:25 ratio, but now stated have to bear more cost (around 50:50). Experts feel that this may lead to states not doing their part citing funds crisis.
Moreover, the government has decided to impose sanitation cess on public which has invited a lot of criticism. 
  • In last 2011-12 to 2015-16 (till october) -28.3 million
  • In last five  years, the number of toilets constructed -28.3 million
  • The rate of construction of toilets in one year stood at-5.66 million
  • 5.66 million toilets were constructed in a year
  • 113 millions toilets would be constructed in 19.96 years to 20 years
  • The target to make India open defecation-free will be by 2035

Holding power to account

Ten years of implementation of the Right to Information Act has spawned a new breed of activism and citizenship

The Right to Information (RTI) Act has completed 10 years of implementation. According to a conservative estimate based on the Information Commission’s annual reports, there are at least 50 lakh RTI applications filed in India every year. The Commonwealth Human Rights Initiative used the data to estimate that just under 1 per cent of the electorate uses the RTI every year. Over the last decade, at least 2 per cent of the Indian population has used the law. For a law that requires proactive initiative, those are extraordinarily high numbers.
Aruna Roy, Nikhil Dey
Despite all our justified complaining about poor implementation, bureaucratic resistance, interference, absence of political and administrative support, threats against users, and attempts at dilution, people have fiercely owned the law like no other. They have defended it against every attack and put it to sustained use.
Popularity of RTI

Many people have tried to understand why the RTI has become so popular in India. Why does use of the law continue to spread despite the odds stacked against the users and applicants? What converts individuals into users and users into activists? In the unequal battle of trying to hold power to account, perhaps it is the real empowerment and sense of hope that the RTI offers to every citizen.
People need to hope. About two decades ago, writer Arundhati Roy made a passing comment on why peddlers of salvation, despite their unattainable promises, attract so many people. They actually peddle hope. We want to be reassured that we can do something to set things right. Bollywood films with happy endings, where the single and determined fighter takes on all that is evil, are not only three-hour escapades but indicators of our need to hope. The human desire for dignity, equality, public ethics, and the capacity to enforce these even to some extent needs an outlet. RTI, in many ways, offers that measure of hope.
In the world of democratic politics, people face the bleak scenario of political, economic and social promises being twisted to serve personal profit. Occasionally an election re-infuses great hope. But political leadership apart, the long march of attempting to make constitutional promises of equality and liberty is part of the daily survival of millions of Indians. People struggle every day to establish some reason in dealings in public life with assertions of citizenship, entitlements, and ethics. Discussions and deliberations within such groups and collectives gave birth to the process and principles of the RTI movement. The genesis of the RTI addressed issues of constitutional rights: empowering individuals and collectives to demand answers from a corrupt government.
In 1996, a lawyer, who casually dropped in to talk at the first large RTI dharna in Beawar in central Rajasthan, said, “This is a great cause and issue, but let’s forget about ever getting the law. No corrupt system is going to expose its rotten core.” Let us imagine for a moment that he was proved right, that India had not passed a strong RTI law a decade ago. How different would things be?
The RTI is a law that has spawned a new breed of activism and citizenship. RTI enthusiasts do not only file RTI applications; they also spend countless hours debating sections, cases, applications, and answers. These are ordinary people who have suddenly become obsessed and even possessive about their particular connection to this law. They are RTI’s foot soldiers and, at the same time, its generals, who have used the law to shake India’s officialdom by its roots.
Questioning authority

A decade gives us an opportunity to see what RTI is doing to the much larger processes of change. These are matters not of law, but of culture, of equations of power, and of unquestioned norms. It is very rare that one gets an opportunity to not just ask a question but change the basis of questioning. Without specifically attempting to change relationships in society, the RTI has begun to do just that. Without debating the hierarchies of who can ask questions and who must provide answers, the Act has begun to encourage a culture of asking questions. We are far from being an open society, but the RTI is opening our minds to what such a society might be.
It’s not often that one can see the impact of a law in terms of its social and philosophical implications. The RTI is a process of dismantling illegitimate concentrations of power. We can expose the lies and the cheating, not merely in monetary terms, but unravel the promotion of conflict and exploitation of the poor.
The RTI is messy, untidy, incomplete, and, of course, imperfect. But that is its strength: it acknowledges contention and builds its own theory of relativity. There are many perspectives on each issue. The RTI provides a platform for each view to engage with the other on the basis of a shared logic. It can help us escape from policy paralysis, and build a more informed, equitable and robust decision-making process.
A bureaucrat friend, not particularly enamoured by the RTI, reluctantly conceded to us, “There is one thing I must acknowledge — when any government servant picks up a pen to write on a file, he or she has RTI on their mind. This is one of the best forms of deterrence against wrongdoing we can have.” That was an acknowledgment of incredible universal impact covering everyone at all times. If we want to usher in a paradigm of transparency, it is clear that bureaucrats must have the friendly ghost of the RTI implanted in their psyche. And that is how cultural change begins. As RTI users, we often say that the RTI helps change the mindsets of those asking the questions as well, because the same standards must obviously apply. More importantly, it is very likely that anyone posing a challenge will invite one to themselves — and just a willingness to be prepared for such a situation means that an ethos of questioning is taking birth.
It is widely acknowledged that we are becoming a consumer-oriented, competitive society. In fact our capitalist framework seems to encourage it. Should we not also acknowledge other forces in society that are encouraging us to demand answers of the powerful, use truth as a basis of demand for change, and provide tools that strengthen the weak and make the strong accountable?
Let’s imagine for a moment that India had not passed the RTI a decade ago. What would it be like today? Not just a less accountable, more corrupt, opaque government, but also a far more discouraging and despairing country. Despite what the sceptic said in Beawar 20 years ago, India has passed a strong RTI law. The people of Beawar held a meeting to celebrate ten years of the RTI, and said they had not dreamt how far this would go in 20 years. Subsequently, the Municipal Corporation of Beawar passed a unanimous resolution to build a memorial at the spot at Chang Gate where the 40-day dharna took place in 1996, launching the RTI movement in India. Its foundation stone was laid on October 13 this year. To have a city celebrate a law and identify itself with it is a sign of strong and sustained citizen activism. To have that sense of ownership spread across the country should give the Indian citizen some hope of what the next ten years might bring.
(Aruna Roy and Nikhil Dey are social activists and members of the Mazdoor Kisan Shakti Sangathan and the National Campaign for People’s Right to Information.)

India has little to celebrate on World Toilet Day


For Sita, a 10-year-old girl from one of New Delhi’s slums, going to a toilet every morning is an ordeal. Without a toilet at home, her only resort is the community toilet. Since there is always a long queue, Sita prefers to use the school toilet instead — on a daily basis. The government school, till recently, had only two for 400 children. Facing a lack of water and cleaning staff, the school restricted the students from using the toilets.
India has little to celebrate on World Toilet Day, with the country accounting for more than half of the 1.1 billion people who defecate in the open globally. According to the 2011 Census, 18.6% households in cities do not have toilets. For the girls living in slums in our cities, the only toilet that they have access to without fear of sexual harassment is in their schools. The number of schools having separate toilet facilities for girls has increased from 0.4 million (37%) in 2005-06 to almost 1 million in 2013-14 (91%). However, only 31.5% of girls’ toilets and 27.4% of boys’ toilets have running water. Though there is an increase in coverage of toilets in schools, many are dysfunctional and unusable.
According to the WHO, India spent 0.2% of GDP on sanitation, paling in comparison to Pakistan’s 0.4% and Nepal’s 0.8% — a notably lower spend compared to our poorer and geographically smaller neighbours. This needs to be read against the backdrop of the World Bank’s recent assessment that the economic loss to India due to inadequate sanitation facilities is Rs 2,40,000 crore — around 6.4% of GDP.
The allocation for the ministry of drinking water and sanitation for 2015-16 (BE) was Rs 6,243.87 crore, with the Swachh Bharat Abhiyaan (Urban) being allotted Rs 1,000 crore. However, the recent move on the decentralisation of funding and operations to the states is one that could potentially dilute the focus of the initiative. It is now up to the states to increase the spending on the programme and the implementation of this depends on the respective state’s capacity to spend, which could vary for the worse.
The government launched the Swachh Vidyalaya initiative in 2014 for constructing toilets and repairing dysfunctional ones in schools. The Swachh Bharat Kosh was set up to attract funding for this initiative from PSUs and the corporate sector. But the commitment to support building toilets in schools has not yet been met. Unless this is achieved and the system awakens, the school toilet scenario will continue to suffer.
Reni Jacob is director-advocacy, World Vision India, Chennai
Source: Hindustan Times, 20-11-2015
Love is the Answer


True love does not lie in receiving but in giving. Love is the driving force and is the heart of all religions. Love is the energy that comes from the willingness to cooperate with God's plan of creation, says psychiatrist T B D'Netto. In his work titled Reaching Out in Love, D'Netto says that love is the force that motivates all people of good will, as it did Mother Teresa.Christian revelation emphasises that the most important aspect of God's nature is love.God's love is compassionate love. Jesus preached this basic message and invited all his followers to be like him, “This is my commandment that you love one another as I have loved you.“ Thus, D'Netto sees the life of Jesus on earth as a life motivated by compassionate love. In asking his followers to love one another in this way , Jesus invited them to be compassionate like him and to forgive one another.
In many schools of thought, self-love and love for others are considered mutually exclusive and even incompatible. Calvin spoke of self-love as a `pest' because it signified selfishness.For Freud, self-love was the same as narcissism and, hence, an immature love. To overcome this difficulty , Paul Tillich, the Christian theologist, suggested the term `self-love' be replaced with `self-affirmation' or `self-acceptance'.
If love inspires both individuals and the world, it will lead to the opening of a new dimension altogether in human existence. That is why D'Netto advocates the practice of loving others and reaching out to them in love.
ATTEMPT TO FREE INSTITUTE OF UGC RESTRICTIONS - Declare TIFR as Institute of Natl Importance: DAE
New Delhi:


Department of Atomic Energy moves Cabinet note in this regard
Hemmed in by regulatory red tape, the prestigious Tata Institute of Fundamental Research (TIFR) is looking for a way out to expand more independently , even as its ambitious new campus in Hyderabad has come under the UGC scanner.The Department of Atomic Energy -under whose aegis TIFR falls -has moved a Cabinet note seeking to declare TIFR an Institute of National Importance.A status of Institute of National Importance will effectively take TIFR -one of the country's premier research institutions -out of the purview of the arguably restrictive deemed-to-be university regulations of the UGC.
TIFR is currently a deemed-to-be university as declared by the University Grants Commission (UGC), the apex higher education regulator. The institute recently got into a tangle with the UGC which shot a notice to 10 deemedto-be universities, including TIFR, ordering they immediately close down their off-centre campus. TIFR's new campus at Hyderabad has been termed `unauthorised' and ordered for closure immediately by the UGC in a notice dated November 9, 2015.
The Smriti Irani-led Human Resource Development (HRD) ministry lists over 70 Institutions of National Importance. These include the IITs, NITs, AIIMS and Indian Institute of Science Education & Research (IISER) and they are governed by their own Act of parliament instead of the UGC regulations and also have degree granting powers.
The DAE Cabinet note in this regard is currently going through the process of inter-ministerial consultations. TIFR authorities confirmed that there is a move to seek such a status for the institute.
TIFR director Sandip Trivedi, confirmed to ET that such an effort is on. “We are trying to seek the status of an Institute of National Importance for a range of reasons. We hope such a status will help sort out some potential problems related to other centres.The issue, however, is being discussed at the government level,“ Trivedi told ET over phone. “The topic of getting the Institute of National Importance status was discussed briefly in TIFR. The main reason is that we believe that we are such an institute and deserve the status.Another was the vague idea that it may bring some tangibleintangible benefits. At this point, we are not sure that the time and effort involved in going for this status is worth the benefits it may bring,“ General Science dean at TIFR, Amol Dighe, told ET over email.

Source: Times of India, 20-11-2015