Category Archives: Arts,Culture & Entertainment

DEMU service to Harbour Terminus from tomorrow

The three-coach DEMU will conduct four services a day from Monday to Friday on an experimental basis for a month.

Test run to be held today; services to be regularised on the basis of passenger patronage

The much-awaited Diesel Electric Multiple Unit (DEMU) service between Ernakulam Junction railway station and Cochin Harbour Terminus (CHTS) station in Willingdon Island will be launched on Wednesday.

The three-coach DEMU will conduct two services in the morning and two in the evening from Monday to Friday on an experimental basis for a month.

The train will have a stop at the Mattancherry Halt station in between, and the ticket rate will be ₹10. The train will be regularised based on passenger patronage.

A test run will be held along the eight-km line on Tuesday, to ensure coordination of signalling and telecommunication systems.

DEMU will start from CHTS at 8 a.m. on weekdays beginning Wednesday and reach Mattancherry Halt at 8.10 a.m. It will reach Ernakulam Junction at 8.40 a.m. In the return direction, the train will depart from Ernakulam Junction at 9 a.m., reach Mattancherry Halt at 9.14 a.m. and CHTS by 9.40 a.m.

In the evening, it will start from CHTS at 5 p.m., reach Mattancherry Halt at 5.10 p.m. and Ernakulam Junction by 5.40 p.m.

In the return direction, the train will leave Ernakulam Junction at 6.20 p.m., reach Mattancherry Halt at 6.34 p.m. and CHTS by 7 p.m.

The Harbour Terminus station was renovated over a year ago, while laying of new tracks and upgradation of signals and telecommunication systems were taken up later.

The demand for stoppage of the train at Perumanoor station in Thevara will be considered on the basis of a letter which is expected to be submitted by peoples representatives, a railway official said. For the record, a team led by Hibi Eden, MLA, had visited the station a week ago to inspect the amenities there. He also promised to allot money from his MLA fund to upgrade infrastructure at the station.

The 8-km journey takes 40 minutes since there are two level-crossings at Atlantis and Vathuruthy. There are also speed curbs all along the route.

DEMU will have to commute at 15 kmph speed on the Mattancherry Halt-CHTS stretch since it is a railway yard, a senior railway official said. A decision is awaited on the arrival of a steam locomotive to operate a heritage-train service from Harbour Terminus, he added.

Traffic snarl

In the meantime, there is concern about a possible traffic snarl on either side of Vathuruthy the level-crossing when the railway gate is closed four times during peak hours each weekday. While Roads and Bridges Development Corporation of Kerala (RBDCK) has readied a proposal for an overbridge, the Navy is yet to accord sanction for the plan since its airport is located close by. This has given impetus to the demand for a subway.

Train services from the city to CHTS was halted in 2004 after a dredger deployed by the Cochin Port Trust rammed the Venduruthy bridge built by the British. Both rail and road overbridges were rebuilt after the incident.

source: http://www.thehindu.com / The Hindu / Home> News> Cities> Kochi / by Special Correspondent / Kochi – September 25th, 2018

Edakkal caves all ready to welcome tourists

Tourists trekking to the Edakkal cave though the secondary pathway on Saturday.

The entry of tourists to the Edakkal caves on the Ambukuthi hills, known for the neolithic-age petroglyphs (rock engravings) on the walls of the cave, was resumed on Saturday after an interval of 23 days.

The caves, a major tourism destination in the district, were closed to tourists on August 23 after a huge stone collapsed in the first cave and a crack was formed near the old ticket counter of the first cave after heavy rain.

The entry to the first cave was banned but tourists could now reach the second cave through the secondary pathway constructed for the purpose, Archaeology and Archives Minister Kadannappally Ramachandran said. The entry was restricted to 1,930 tourists a day and only a group of 30 people at a time would be allowed to enter the cave, the Minister added.

The first cave would be opened to tourists only after a study by a team of experts, consisting of scientists of the National Centre for Earth Science Studies and experts of the Archaeology Department. The team for the purpose would be constituted soon and they would study the situation of the caves, the Minister said.

As many as 250 visitors, including 10 children, visited the cave on Saturday, District Tourism Promotion Council sources said.

source: http://www.thehindu.com / The Hindu / Home> News> States> Kerala / by Staff Reporter / Kalpeta – September 15th, 2018

Infopark adopts Chekutty

Minister A.C. Moideen (centre) and MLAs P.T. Thomas and Hibi Eden with Chekutty dolls in the city on Friday.

To help flood-affected weavers of Chendamangalam

Infopark will adopt the Chekutty doll movement launched here to help the Chendamangalam handloom weavers, who have lost a lot of stock in the recent floods.

The techies will adopt the dolls as part of their commitment to build a new Kerala in the aftermath of the floods.

Those who adopt over a hundred Chekuttys (short for Chendamangalam Kuttydolls will be honoured by the Chief Minister.

As part of adopting the movement, Rishikesh Nair, CEO of Inforpark, handed over a Chekutty doll to Minister A.C. Moideen at a function here on Friday.

₹6 crore collected

According to Mr. Nair, besides donating relief material for the flood-affected, the techies and the companies at Inforpark had collected ₹6 crore towards the Chief Minister’s Distress Relief Fund. Employees at Infopark have also taken up the Chief Minister’s one-month salary challenge.

source: http://www.thehindu.com / The Hindu / Home> News> Cities> Kochi / by Special Correspondent / Kochi – September 15th, 2018

‘Chekutty’ to help weave together flood-ravaged Chendamangalam

Chekutty, the doll made from soiled fabric of Chendamangalam handlooms.

Designers create dolls from soiled handloom cloth

Born out of the love for Chendamangalam handloom are dolls made of the soiled textile from the flood-ravaged looms. ‘Chekutty’, as the designers have named it, is ‘Chendamangalam Kutty’ and stands for all that the floods have left behind.

“Chekutty has scars, Chekutty has stains. But Chekuty is each one of us who survived the floods,” goes the appeal from the designers who took up the task of helping rebuild the lives of the flood-hit Chendamangalam weavers, for whom 80% of revenue comes from Onam sales.

The only option left for the weavers was to burn the severely damaged and soiled stock, which could not be fixed through cleaning, says designer Lakshmi Menon of Pure Living, who has been promoting a green lifestyle along with ideas of making value-added products from waste materials.

Out of the debris of the soiled saris has emerged Chekutty – a mascot for rebuilding Kerala from despair.

Gopinath Parayil of Blue Beyond is partnering with Ms. Menon in the endeavour of ‘Weaving together Kerala’ – the slogan given for Chekutty dolls.

“We saw that there were many takers for the stock that was not damaged. It was the amount of damaged stock that got me thinking. And we needed to do something fast too,” says Ms. Menon.

“We have upcycled the fabric to help raise funds for the weavers that will help them till the next season,” says Mr. Parayil. The festival of Vishu next April is the next season for the weavers.

350 dolls per sari

The average cost of a sari is ₹1,300. Up to 350 dolls can be made from a sari, with the minimum price of a doll at ₹25. Hence, the cost retrieved from a sari will be nearly ₹9,000, says Ms. Menon.

Each piece of textile is chlorinated and boiled in water to disinfect it and is made safe to be used, she adds. The dolls may be hung on shoulder bags, suitcases or inside cars.

A demonstration of doll-making was organised at Panampilly Nagar on Sunday to help people take up the task.

Website

A website, www.chekutty.in, is in the process of being set up to invite people to participate in creating dolls or buying them.

Remaining stock

Ajith Kumar, secretary of the Handloom Weavers’ Co-operative Society, Karimpadam, Chendamangalam, says stock worth ₹21 lakh remains damaged. Fortunately, there was stock worth ₹10 lakh, set aside for Kozhikode and Ernakulam markets, which remains to be sold, he adds. (Mr. Kumar may be contacted at 9446927345.)

source: http://www.thehindu.com / The Hindu / Home> News> Cities> Kochi / by Shyama Rajagopal / Kochi – September 10th, 2018

Floodwaters swallow a piece of Alangad’s illustrious history

Precious loss: Several palm-leaf manuscripts (left) were damaged when floodwaters entered the Chembola Kalari at Alangad, near Paravur. | Photo Credit: H_Vibhu

The waters that surged into the historic Chembola Kalari in the heart of Alangad town on the night of August 15 has swallowed a piece of history in the form of a collection of palm-leaf manuscripts.

Legend has it that Lord Ayappan took lessons in the traditional martial art form at the Chembola Kalari.

It is also strongly linked to festivities at the Sabarimala temple. A member of the Chembola family said there were nearly 80 manuscripts in the collection, and around 20 to 25 of them have been damaged in the floods. The manuscripts mostly dealt with Sanskrit grammar and literature, he said.

It is believed that the Chembola family settled in Alangad from north Malabar at least 600 years ago.

The family member said the Chembola Kalari premises had escaped the great deluge in 1924 and it was a refuge for hundreds of people around the area.

He recounted an orally transmitted account of how people in the area used a big tamarind tree at the kalari premises to escape from the floods in 1924.

source: http://www.thehindu.com / The Hindu / Home> News> Cities> Kochi / by Special Correspondent / Kochi – August 31st, 2018

Helping hands restore classrooms, school park

(Left) The discoloured slide and broken benches at the Government S.N.V. Lower Primary School, Thuruthipuram, near North Paravur

Professionals from various fields, students of Cusat and teachers join the effort

Rincy and Ananthakrishna, both aged 8, had left their flood-battered homes in Thuruthipuram near North Paravur wondering how long it would take for them to swing and slide in their favourite school park again.

But, a surprise was in store for the children as they walked into the Government S.N.V. Lower Primary School, Thuruthipuram, on Monday morning. The slide, swings and the benches in the park, which had got discoloured in the rushing flood waters, were gleaming with a fresh coat of paint. New charts, scribblings and graffiti had replaced all that the waters had taken away.

Only later did they realise that their dream had been made real by some angels in the form of youngsters, teachers, professionals from IT and other fields, who had worked tirelessly to make it all happen. These unknown faces and hands represent the increasing tribe of Good Samaritans engaged in the re-building of flood-ravaged schools in Ernakulam.

“We had kept some money for conducting the Onam programmes in our university. We used that along with the funds given by our friends to re-build the school,” said Muhammed Shibin, a final-year student of B.Tech Information Technology at the Cochin University of Science and Technology. The youth was part of the 45-odd volunteers who had joined hands to restore the flood-hit government school to its original condition.

Sreepriya, an IT professional with a company in SmartCity Kochi, said that they were able to complete works so as to enable the teachers to resume the classes by Monday. “For the kitchen (where mid-day meals are prepared for the 65 children), we bought a new stove, utensils and other necessary items as everything here was either washed away or destroyed in the floods,” she said.

Mr. Shibin said that they had also spruced up the school park and given a fresh coat of paint for the damp walls and wet classrooms. “We wanted to bring back the school to its prior state as much as possible. However, much work seems left in other flood-hit schools and we hope our endeavour will inspire others to pursue it,” he said.

Praising the efforts made by the volunteers, Shelia A. Salam, headmistress of the school, said that the houses of all the 65 children in the school were affected in the floods. “Our school met with extensive damage. We had lost three desktops, two laptops, sound system, motor, compound wall, toilets, office registers, and documents,” she said.

P. S. Chandrika, geadmistress of P.S.M. Government Lower Primary School, Puthenvelikara, expressed hope that the school could come back with the growing support from a cross section of individuals, associations and organisations.

“We got help for clean-up work from policemen, education department officials, and residents’ associations. An IT major has assured us school kits having notebooks, tiffin-box and school bags. A social media group involving education department officials in Thiruvananthapuram has assured us t-shirts, shoes, umbrellas, notebooks for our 250-odd students. Teachers and students from Cusat helped us in cleaning up the wells on the campus,” she said.

However, Ms. Chandrika said that they had no idea how to replace the damaged laptops and desktops. “Most of the children belong to parents who are daily wage labourers. We cannot ask them to pay for these replacements. I have no idea how to bring them daily to the school, as the only bus used to transport them was also damaged in the floods,” she said.

C.S. Santosh, Deputy Director of Education, Ernakulam, said that a leading company had promised 2 lakh notebooks for the students in the flood-affected schools in Ernakulam. “School bags have been offered by a Kerala-based company while a public sector oil major has informed that they are considering a proposal to repair the flood-damaged buildings. We now need support for replacement of IT equipment. As per our preliminary estimates, over 200 laptops and 125 projectors were destroyed in the floods in government and aided schools in the district,” he said.

source: http://www.thehindu.com / The Hindu / Home> News> Cities> Kochi / by G. KrishnaKumar / Kochi – September 04th, 2018

Archives dept to restore damaged rare books

Books damaged in floodwaters lay strewn outside the Chendamangalam Library in Kochi. | Photo Credit: H_Vibhu

The State Archives Department has launched a mobile conservation clinic to restore historical documents damaged in floods in various districts.

The clinic will reach Chendamangalam on Saturday morning to undertake restoration of over-a-century-old rare books of the Nair Samajam Library there which were damaged by the surging waters.

V.D. Satheesan, MLA, will hand over the books for restoration.

The Archives Department has said that it intends to collect heritage documents, manuscripts or rare tomes damaged in the floods for restoration. They may be sent to P. Biju, director, Archives Directorate, Kowdiar, Thiruvananthapuram (Phone 0471-2313759, 2311547, 8304999478).

source: http://www.thehindu.com / The Hindu / Home> News> Cities> Kochi / by Special Correspondent / Kochi – September 01st, 2018

Remembering a legendary writer

‘Kuttipuzha Krishna Pillai became an atheist after studying Indian philosophy’

K.S. Ravikumar, critic and Pro-Vice Chancellor of Sree Sankaracharya University of Sanskrit in Kalady, on Thursday said Kuttipuzha Krishna Pillai became an atheist after he had learnt Indian philosophical texts in depth.

Speaking on the ‘Life and Times of Kuttipuzha Krishna Pillai’ at a lecture series titled, ‘Writer of the Land’ at U.C. College, Aluva, in the build-up to Krithi Litt and Authors Fest, 2019, Mr. Ravikumar said Kuttipuzha’s work titled Vicharaviplavam had brought a sea-change in the Malayali conscience.

He also tried to introduce various philosophical schools from across the world to Keralites from a materialistic point of view.

“Only when we realise that nobody did so before or after him do we gauge his greatness. Unlike the Ramayana, the epic Mahabharata did not directly imply a Brahminical agenda. But in his detailed reading, Kuttipuzha could also find out the hidden Brahminical ideological implications of the Mahabharata as well.

“Kuttipuzha’s brother’s diary entries say he had seen Kuttipuzha in tears only once when the news of Mahatma Gandhi’s death arrived. But we must remember that he had also criticised some of the views of Gandhiji. He was inclined to be a little worshipful only towards Sree Narayana Guru,” Dr. Ravikumar said.

In the lecture series on August 3, critic M. Leelavathy will speak on why G. Sankarakurup was criticised. The programme is from 2:30 p.m. to 3:30 p.m.

source: http://www.thehindu.com / The Hindu / Home> News> Cities> Kochi / by Special Correspondent / Kochi – August 03rd, 2018

Peace Mission Centre: Kerala’s palliative care that serves without charging you a penny

There is also a full-time ambulance facility that will take the patient to a hospital or anywhere they wish to go for treatment.

Sumitra (name changed), a cancer patient was breathing her last , surrounded by her daughter and five different nursing care staff, each of them standing apart so as not to create discomfort for the patient on bed or the grieving daughter. When five minuites later, the shrill cries of the daughter rocked the halls of Peace Mission Centre, the staff there was still present, with a comforting hand on her shoulder. The doctor was also present, knowing that the moment was then and there was nothing more to be done, yet content of having been able to give Sumitra a peaceful farewell.

A one-kilometre detour from the highway in Thuruthsherry near Mekkad in Nedumbassery will take you to Peace Mission Centre, an institution which does free palliative care for patients. Unbelievable, but true even during these times when everything is done with only profits in mind.

The Centre has the capacity to hold 40 inpatients and even does home care. Any patient admitted in the centre will have access to the best care with a visiting doctor and over 16 nurses employed here along with over five hospital care staff who keeps the place clean.

There is also a full-time ambulance facility that will take the patient to a hospital or anywhere they wish to go for treatment.

Rema (name changed) is the bystander with her mother-in-law who is now an inmate at Peace mission centre. Her husband is a carpenter and they were trying to give her the best possible help with the meagre income they have. However, her health state was so bad that she was not even able to have liquid food.

“She used to be in such a bad condition that we couldn’t bear her pain. Now, however, she is getting the best care here. She is even consuming some fluid now. They clean her and keep her in the best possible way,” she said.

“We have started this specifically to aid those with financial constraints and also to ensure that we help people have their dignity in death. A lot of people reach here when they are in the last few days of their life. Many have breathed their last here and we are happy to provide them with a very peaceful atmosphere here and also maximum care,” said Chinnan Pynadan, working with Peace Mission centre.

“The only financial funding we have is donations. Thankfully, we did not have to struggle to find it so far and firmly believe that this will be the case in future too. We take the patients in our ambulance for chemotherapy or any other treatment they want to go to,” said Father Sabu Palackal, who manages the centre.

“They come here for end of life care.We don’t have treatments here, only care. We provide some medicines and all the basic medical facilities. Everyone want painless moments once they start crumpling in the grip of cancer. We take in those people who have no hope for life or future, but the immediate day,” said Dr N Mohanan, the doctor working with Peace Mission.

The centre was launched last January here by the Guardian Angel Care Charitable Society, a Vengola based society led by Abraham Mar Severios Metropolitan.

source: http://www.newindianexpress.com / The New Indian Express / Home> Specials / by Gopika I S, Express News Service / July 16th, 2018