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Friday, August 12, 2022

Current Affairs-August 12, 2022

 INDIA

– J&K: 3 soldiers martyred & 2 terrorist gunned down in terror attack on army camp in Rajouri
– Gaganyaan project: ISRO successfully carries out test-firing of Low Altitude Escape Motor (LEM) of Crew Escape System, from Sriharikota, Andhra Pradesh
ECONOMY & CORPORATE
– Union Cabinet approves continuation of Pradhan Mantri Awas Yojana-Urban (PMAY-U) – Housing for All Mission up to 31st December 2024
– Income tax payers barred from enrolling in Atal Pension Yojana (APY) from October 1
– Subscribers of APY get a minimum guaranteed pension of Rs 1,000 to Rs 5,000 per month after attaining 60 years of age depending on their contributions
WORLD
– China and Nepal agree on building Trans-Himalayan Multi-Dimensional Connectivity Network
– China shields Pakistan based global terrorist – Abdul Rauf Azhar from UN sanctions
– Indian-American journalist, Fox News host Uma Pemmaraju dies at 64
– Mexican President Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador proposes 3 men commission for world peace including PM Modi, UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres, and Pope Francis

A fond birthday wish for a land that was once home

 ndia has some of the wealthiest people in the world and many beauty queens. Indian food, movies, sitar music and yoga practices are well accepted all over the world.


When I was a kid in elementary school, all students had to sing a song written by Atulprasad Sen on Independence day and other patriotic occasions: “Bolo bolo bolo sabe, shata beena benu robe, bharat abar jagat shabhay shreshtha asan lobe” (Let us all say with the music of hundreds of veena and flute that India will once again take the best seat on the stage of the world). It was an uplifting song for sure, but no one really believed it. As soon as we stepped outside school we were hit by pollution in the air, sights of extreme poverty, huge numbers of people crowding mass transits, smell from trash and open drains, old rundown buildings, inadequate protection from severe weather and lack of sanitary facilities. The list went on. Our country did not look like being on its way to the best seat. My pessimism for my country was so intense that I emigrated to a prosperous country, the USA, after my graduation from college and for many years I was certain that I made the right decision.

Things started to change in recent decades for the better. Two most significant positive events have been the opening of the Indian market to international trade (the socalled “Economic Liberalisation”) and the global dominance of Indian engineers in Information technology. Both these developments resulted in significant improvements in living standards of the middle class and reduction of poverty. Modernisation of infrastructure followed. High rise buildings with residential “flats”, air-conditioned shopping malls, flyovers at major intersections, new international airports, and fast bypass highways through the outskirts of big cities were built, not to mention metro trainlines. The skyline of my hometown, Kolkata, started to look more like that of Bangkok or Kuala Lumpur. I went back to visit India several times while my parents were alive, but the umbilical cord was cut after they passed away.

There was a thirtyyear gap between the time I attended the last rituals following my father’s death and a more recent trip. I returned with great anticipation to see all the improvements I had been hearing about for years; perhaps we were getting closer to that seat on the world stage, I thought. Yes, I was impressed to see the new Kolkata; things that I could not have even imagined while I lived there. I got glimpses of good life in Kolkata by visiting the “Vedic Village” complex, the South City Mall, the Calcutta Club, and some luxury modern flats belonging to friends. However, as I stayed longer, I realized that despite all these improvements, the attitudes and mindset of people had not changed much, especially as far as tolerance towards imperfection is concerned. Among all the signs of prosperity, three imperfections stood out. First was pollution/dirt.

As soon as I walked out of the airport terminal building upon my arrival in Kolkata that familiar smell from thirty years ago greeted me; a mixture of exhaust fumes from cars and buses, dust, and smoke from open flames. If I were taken blindfolded to all the cities in the world, I would be able to tell when I am in Kolkata just by that smell. When daylight broke the next morning, I could barely see distant buildings through a suffocating layer of smog. It did not bother anyone, but I felt that I would not be able to breathe for too long. Adding to pollution in the air was trash on the ground. Trash was everywhere in small piles, big piles, and scattered on the pavements; papers, left-over food, thrown away rags, miscellaneous small objects, plastic sheets, debris from unfinished construction projects and so on. Some had a strong stench. Then there was dust. Dust was on the streets, on the pavements, in the air. Dust enters homes through open windows and coats everything.

Rain during monsoon seasons does not wash away the dust from the roads into the river because of lack of proper drainage. The second imperfection was blatant corruption. I was told that it was an accepted part of living. Nothing gets done unless officials are bribed. We had corruption when I was living in India, but it has become more open and widespread. Typically, a financial transaction is involved, but it could be non-financial favour as well or some form of nepotism. If you need a good job, a house in a decent area, admission into a good school or treatment at a good hospital, you must know someone with influence there. “Corruption is everywhere” was the comment from one of my friends. The current WBSSC recruitment scandal is the latest example of such mega corruption. My third observation was that although lives of poor and lowerincome families had improved through a “trickle-down” economic principle, the improvements were not in the same proportion as those of rich and middle-class people.

The percentage of poor people compared to the total population seemed to have increased. Part of it is related to corruption; poor people cannot even pay bribes nor have the right connections to advance in life. I asked my cousin’s driver one day. “Did you finish high school? What motivated you to become a driver?”. He said with an embarrassed smile, “I went up to the ninth grade. I wanted to join the military which needed drivers. I learned how to drive, completed all the requirements and the training, but then I was asked to pay Rs. 40,000 in bribe before I could enroll. I did not have that kind of money. At least, I can now earn some money by driving for private people.” He was making about $12 per day even if he worked all day. He was married and his wife was expecting a baby. This was the snapshot of “have-nots” in Kolkata. India became a free country in 1947 and we are about to celebrate the 75th anniversary of Independence Day. My sincere birthday wish for mother India is that people who take care of her – the current and future governments – make it the highest priority to fix pollution and corruption and make her clean, literally and figuratively.

I further wish that India indeed does take that best seat on the world stage before she turns 100. It certainly sounds plausible, unlike the time when I was a kid. India is already projected to be the third largest economy in the world within the next two decades. There will soon be more Indians than any other nationality on this earth. India is the largest democracy with nuclear capabilities. Indians are highly successful in almost all aspects of society in many foreign countries. India has some of the wealthiest people in the world and many beauty queens. Indian food, movies, sitar music and yoga practices are well accepted all over the world.

Indians are thought to be smart, philosophical, peace-loving people with friendly personality and humility. India, with the dominating presence of three of the four largest religions in the world, is considered the place for any spiritual journey. When I was leaving India on my way back to the USA, many of my relatives and friends asked if I would ever consider returning for good. My answer to them was a sincere yes. “But if I come back, it would be to go to the Himalayas for my ultimate quest. I would be wandering the foothills with just a cane in search for that supreme power.” I indeed wish that I will reunite with my mother and complete my own spiritual journey. I can hear that song in my ears: “A ab laut chalen…tujhko pukare desh tera”.

BASAB DASGUPTA 

Source: The Statesman, 11/08/22

Fine Arts Career in India: Institutes, Job Opportunities, and Top Skills to Develop

 Do you enjoy being creative - painting, sketching, singing, sculpture, or performing on stage or on screen? But have you always been discouraged because it's not viewed as a good enough professional option? Well, we are about to give you all the details you need to make a viable career out of it - where you can study, what you can study, what jobs you should look at and what skills to hold on to, practice and nurture. Read on for all the details…

Institutes for Fine Arts degrees

While creativity is the spark that will take you far, a certificate, diploma, or degree can be the stepping stone you need to further refine your skills and sensitivity, which will eventually make you more successful. In addition to the above, a number of postgraduate and PhD programmes in Fine Arts are also available for those wishing to specialise. These courses usually range in duration from 1 to 5 years. Here is a list of the top colleges across the country that offer UG, PG & Doctorate degrees in Fine Arts:

Bachelor of Fine Arts & other undergraduate programmes

  • College of Fine Arts, Thiruvananthapuram
  • Amity University, Mumbai
  • Jawaharlal Nehru Architecture & Fine Arts University, Hyderabad
  • Jamia Milia University, Delhi

Master of Fine Arts & other postgraduate programmes

  • Visva Bharati University, West Bengal
  • Amity School of Fine Arts, Noida
  • College of Arts, Delhi University
  • Sir JJ Institute of Fine Arts, Mumbai

PhD in Fine Arts

  • Aligarh Muslim University, Aligarh
  • NIU, Greater Noida
  • Royal Global University, Guwahati
  • Savitribai Phule Pune University, Pune

Career Opportunities in Fine Arts

Having a degree in the arts widens your perspective and also gives you deeper insight into what career you would like to pursue. These professions range from entrepreneurship to self-employment. However, to give you an idea of the kind of options you should consider while pursuing a degree, we bring you a list of professions one can pursue with a degree in Fine Arts below:

  • Artist: An artist could be working with any medium - painting, sketching, sculpting or even the performing arts. Their main vocation is to create art that their audiences like to see and own(in the case of creative arts) or observe or listen to (in the case of performing arts).
  • Illustrator: Professional artists who draw and sketch for a living are called illustrators. For print and digital media, they could be creating digital art or clicking photographs. For more mainstream media, they could be commissioned to create specific illustrations or murals following certain guidelines or styles.
  • Fine Art Consultant: A fine art consultant is an expert in their chosen field of art. They work with customers, helping them find and buy art for their homes, workspaces or galleries. In addition to having the sensibility to identify good art from the rest, they also conduct research, build relationships with artists and collectors, and evaluate the wants and needs of their customers to deliver the best results.
  • Art Therapist: An art therapist is a certified and trained professional. They offer clinical therapy and counselling using art as a medium of expression.
  • Art Teacher: An art teacher, as the name suggests, uses their artistic abilities to encourage others' creative development. They can teach students of various ages and will usually cover the basics, the use of various mediums, and the theories behind the art form.
  • Gallery Manager: A manager of an art gallery is someone who is in charge of the day-to-day running of the gallery, but more importantly of selecting artwork and artists to exhibit. They also hire art experts to be employed by the gallery and communicate with suppliers, artists, historians, and vendors to plan the transfer, journey, or acquisition of display artworks.
  • Art Framer: A custom wall hanging expert is an art framer. They work with clients to maintain and display artwork, and their everyday responsibilities include creating beautiful frames with their hands, sourcing supplies and interacting with customers.

Skills Required in Fine Arts

Fine artists create works of art for aesthetic, commercial, and ornamental consumption. Some of the most fundamental skills that a fine artist must have are perseverance, dedication and creativity. But beyond these, particularly for visual artists, there are a few other skills that they must possess:

  • Realistic Drawing: The capacity to create art that accurately depicts actual life is a key skill that artists should possess. By mastering this ability, one can produce lifelike portraits, landscapes, and object-based art.
  • Constructive Drawing: Fine artists practise constructive drawing as a means of representing their intent using simple lines and shapes on paper. Creating a rough outline of what the artist would sculpt, paint or draw later is one such example.
  • Knowledge of art materials: When you become an artist, you first select one or a few mediums that you enjoy working with. To maintain your own distinctive style, it is essential that you learn how to work with the materials of your chosen medium. This is a skill that comes from learning and constant practice.
  • Imagination: Whether you work on commissions or create art for exhibitions, having the imagination to create something out of nothing - and to be able to depict something in a style that is uniquely your own, imagination is an absolute must. Particularly for artists working in the surrealism or fantasy school, this skill is a basic building block.
  • Understanding of Perspective: A viewer's perspective describes how they might view a work of art. To bring variety to their work, artists should be aware of numerous points of view and be able to create artwork from them. Other significant elements, such as shading and sizing details, are also affected by the artist's understanding of perspective.

Strong emotional convictions and an urge to create, along with a connection to canvas, pencil, or colours, are the usual traits on associates with someone wishing to pursue fine arts. A person's love of art can inspire and urge him to use that love to paint his environment. Fine art education is a tool to encourage, nurture, and lead young, passionate art aspirants in the right direction. With the right set of skills, a place to study and employment in hand, one can definitely achieve success in fine arts.

Source: The Telegraph, 10/08/22

Storm shelter: The battle for the Ideas of India

 Sometimes, when I think of India on the day it was born, August 15, 1947, I have the image of people starting to erect a huge,open-sided tent over a large mass of suffering human beings. The tent is made of patchwork, from whatever material is available, with all sorts of colour, all kinds of texture, being sown together. To stretch over so many people,this covering material needs supports,both at its edges and in the middle, and these supports too are made from diverse material and are of different heights.The people who have volunteered for the job of erecting the tent have no choice but to work together, work in concert as well as attentively in sequence: Section B needing to wait for Section A to complete its task before it can begin its own, with Section C and D waiting their turn and so on.

At minimum, the covering is meant to protect people from the heat and the rain. From the glare of exploitation, the long drought of scarcity, the drench of widespread disease. No matter what the apologists of the British Empire now tell us, let us never forget that a smallish country halfway across the planet made itself the most prosperous on earth on the backs of our labour and our resources for nearly two hundred years. Let’s remember that it then abandoned the million sit had squeezed dry to continuing poverty and the aftermath of the mass violence triggered by its precipitate withdrawal.In 1948, the year after the British left India, despite the great depletions of the Second World War and the loss of their largest colony, they could institute and fund the National Health Service,which provided health coverage to every Briton, no matter how rich or poor. The government could re-target tax money and deploy it to this end with conscious,educated mass support because of the education system that had been put in place over the previous century, a system which was, like everything else,funded by the spoils of Empire. After the shocks of the Depression and the War in the late 40s and 50s, the United States of America, Britain and western Europe delivered access to university education to a wider section of their populations than ever before. This meant that capitalists were paying taxes that funded the education of many youngsters who used that knowledge and chose to become some shade of liberal, socialist or communist,young people who would spend the rest of their lives fighting to instal some checks and balances against rampant,profit-making corporations.

In the meantime, in India, the problem in erecting the tent was the matter of sequencing: you could not have basic education without basic health but,equally, you could not have basic health without a modicum of education; you could not allow entrepreneurs a free-run towards profit in an obscenely unequal society but there was no way of creating a more equal society without giving private industry some opportunity to grow(the limitations of the Soviet Five-Year plans were evident even as we copied them to some extent); economically, you could not shut yourself off from the rest of the world, yet there was no question of pawning the country’s resources to the multinationals backed by the big Western powers (the examples of what was then happening in Iran, Congo and South America were vivid and bloody). Nehru, Patel, Azad, Rajaji and other leaders navigated the young, vulnerable Republic through these sharp, contradictory rocks but in this they were hardly alone — helping to erect and shore up different sections of the tent was a whole army of labourers, farmers, dedicated administrators, politicians, social activists,military servicemen, intellectuals and artists.

History continuously redacts itself.Most of the people who were alive in those first formative years of Independence have now passed on. The ones who were then kids — or just born— now rule over us, even as they themselves stand on the exit ramps of life. In the intervening years, one of the main struggles that has developed within the nation is the battle for memory, a war over what is to be forgotten and erased,over what is to be remembered and how it is to be remembered.

Even as this and other struggles have enlarged underneath it, the enormous and complex task of erecting that basic tent has never been completed. It has been ongoing, stopping at times, starting again, stalling again. At times, segments of the covering have been brought down by gales and storms from the outside;at other times, bits of the tent have collapsed when internal supports have broken down or have been deliberately removed; some areas have had firm covering for long periods, while others have remained exposed to the elements. After seventy-five years, this partly secure,partly ramshackle, leaky but colourful patchwork held up by an assortment of poles and supports is what we call India,Bharat, Hindustan, desh, watan, mulk. This trembling, uneven structure maybe kept together by a whole variety of jugaad, but it is also vast and has a sort of miraculous togetherness, which is different from any rigid ‘unity’.

In the warren of substructures that have come up below the larger covering,often people in one corner have no idea what others are doing in another pocket.From time to time, we’ve seen ‘leaders’,politicians who’ve managed to work themselves to the very centre, attempting to push other people to the margins and even out of the sheltering cover of the tent. In striving to do this, they can be seen hacking away at the strongest supports, tearing holes into the strongest covering. We can see that if these people continue, they will shortly bring the roof down on everybody and not just on the sections of the populace they have labelled the enemy.

After seventy-five years, it should be clear that there are not just one or two ‘Ideas of India’ but multiple competing ideas of what our country should be. We need to interrogate each of these with cold-eyed urgency. Within a few years, roughly 20 per cent of all the humans on this small, troubled planet will be looking to shelter under the tent we call India. As ethnicities and genetic groups increasingly mix with one another,our species is moving towards multiplying micro-diversities rather than any overarching homogeneity. The people we call Indians are centrally apart of this — in a hundred years, people will hopefully shun any ideas of purity,whether regional or religious or caste identities; there may not be any Bengalis or Gujaratis, any Hindus or Muslims,any upper or lower castes as we understand these categories today. Climate change, global warming, ecological crises, whatever your preferred codification,will need large masses of people living adjacently to work with rather than against each other. Therefore, we must ask: which idea of India provides succour and safety to the widest variety of people? Which idea is most accommodating of difference, whether ethnic,racial, religious, of sexual orientation,of differing practices of living? Which idea will ensure the fairest distribution of increasingly scarce resources? Which processes of completing, repairing and shoring up the loose tent that was begun 75 years ago will provide the best quality of life to the largest number of people?

Ruchir Joshi

Source: The Telegraph, 9/08/22

Thursday, August 11, 2022

Quote of the Day August 10, 2022

 

“The tragedy of life doesn't lie in not reaching your goal. The tragedy lies in having no goal to reach.”
Benjamin Mays
“जीवन की त्रासदी इस बात में नहीं है कि आप अपने लक्ष्य तक नहीं पहुंचते हैं। त्रासदी तो इस बात की है कि आपके पास प्राप्त करने के लिए कोई लक्ष्य नहीं है।”
बेंजामिन मेअस

Study in UK: Application process begins for Chevening scholarships, fellowships; check details

 

The Chevening Fellowships on offer this year are: Chevening India Cyber Security Fellowship; Chevening Research, Science, and Innovation Leadership Fellowship; Chevening Gurukul Fellowship for Leadership and Excellence; South Asia Journalism Fellowship.

The application window for the UK government’s flagship Chevening scholarship and fellowship programme is open. The programme offers full financial support for a one-year master’s at any UK university and for 8-12 week professional development courses, respectively.

Chevening scholarships include tuition, living expenses and travel cost for a one-year master’s. The last date to apply is November 1, 2022 while for the Chevening fellowship programme, the deadline ends on October 12, 2022.

The Chevening programme in India, as per the British High Commission, is the largest in the world, benefiting over 3,500 scholars and fellows since 1983. The number of awards on offer in India has further increased with the Adani Group co-sponsoring 15 additional scholarships in artificial intelligence over three years.

The Chevening fellowships on offer this year are: Chevening India Cyber Security Fellowship; Chevening Research, Science, and Innovation Leadership Fellowship; Chevening Gurukul Fellowship for Leadership and Excellence; South Asia Journalism Fellowship.

Chevening alumni in India include Minister of Commerce and Industry Piyush Goyal, G20 Sherpa Amitabh Kant, Minister of State for Commerce and Industry Anupriya Patel, Global CEO for Tata Steel TV Narendran, and the former Chief Secretary of Tamil Nadu Girija Vaidyanathan.

Source: Indian Express, 11/08/22

InterGlobe Foundation introduces HERITAGE Fellowships

 New Delhi:  InterGlobe Foundation (IGF), the philanthropic arm of InterGlobe Enterprises, launched InterGlobe HERITAGE Fellowships today. Through these fellowships, the InterGlobe Foundation aspires to encourage a community of researchers, journalists, architects, and other individuals to bring previously undocumented aspects of Indian culture to light and help raise awareness of our heritage.

Since 2014, InterGlobe Foundation has impacted thousands of lives by partnering with the best NGOs. Some of the heritage restoration projects include the scoping, conservation and cultural revival of Abdur Rahim Khan-I-Khanan’s Mausoleum in Delhi; cultural mapping and documentation of ten Indian cities; the restoration of stepwell “Indra Kund” in Delwara; and research on Qutub Shah Mausoleum in Hyderabad and Lal Bagh Palace in Indore. The InterGlobe HERITAGE Fellowships are a step to further strengthen the foundation’s heritage conservation work.

These fellowships are available to students and faculty of liberal arts, researchers, journalists, architects, and freelancers. The work done during this program will help bring forth innovative ideas for the restoration of heritage landmarks and will be judged by an esteemed jury comprising of Swapna Liddle (Historian), Ratish Nanda (Conservation Architect, CEO (India), Aga Khan Trust for Culture), Vaibhav Chauhan (CEO, Cultre) and Rohini Bhatia (Chairperson, InterGlobe Foundation).

The Fellowships will focus on presenting a comprehensive vision for the preservation of lesser-known facets of Indian heritage, communities, and practices. It will encourage fresh perspectives on India’s heritage, amplify local voices and conditions to help understand heritage-driven development, and explain how community development initiatives and tangible and intangible heritage in a certain area are interconnected.

 

Rohini Bhatia, Chairperson, InterGlobe Foundation, said: “InterGlobe Foundation (IGF) is focused on preserving and promoting the culture and heritage of India. The foundation believes in joining hands for conserving India’s tangible and intangible heritage and in raising awareness in communities through multiple partnerships; the HERITAGE Fellowships are a step in this direction. IGF is committed to investing in our nation, its citizens and its heritage. Our vision is to build pride in communities by supporting sustainable livelihoods, conserving the environment and promoting heritage and culture.”

The application deadline for the fellowship is August 31, 2022. The jury will select four applicants for the program, and the fellowship will last for three months starting November 1, 2022. For more details on the fellowship program and to apply, please visit www.interglobe.com/the-interglobe-heritage-fellowships

Source: indiaeducationdiary, 4/08/22