** RIP Lata Mangeshkar: 12 lesser-known facts about the Melody Queen, from running into a Beatle to her refuted world record

She was named Hema at birth and was later renamed Lata, after a character in her father’s play ‘BhaawBandhan’ called Latika. Her family name Mangeshkar was derived from the Mangeshi village in Goa.

Lata Mangeshkar was the first female singer who demanded better pay and royalties in Bollywood.

In 1979, she was the first Indian to perform with the Wren Orchestra at the Royal Albert Hall in London.

** Queen of Tabla’s journey with Rhythm and Reason

These days, ‘Queen of Tabla’ Anuradha Pal is playing a different taal. Her instrumental composition, ‘Bharat Vandan’, released on the occasion of Republic Day, is an ode to India’s rich heritage, spirituality and other cultural practices. In it, the first female tabla player of India combines the piano, sarod, and the tabla to present the diversity that makes the country special. Available on her YouTube channel and music streaming platforms, this acclaimed percussion artiste’s robust bols are played to the Vande Mataram tune.

Mumbai

** In restoring an heirloom, gentleness and respect for a minority religion

EYE ON ENGLAND: Why Tariq Ali’s book on Winston Churchill won’t be a hagiography; and in Britain, no one objects when Tagore’s poem, ‘Farewell my friends’ is routinely read at Christian funerals.

reasured heirloom

The Repair Shop is a programme on BBC that restores family heirlooms. It has done just that with a painting of the Jain preacher, Rishabhadeva. The artwork had belonged to Mukta Shah, who had brought it from Uganda rolled in her sari when Idi Amin expelled Indians in 1972. The painting, which had been removed from its frame, was badly creased in the process. It had been bought for Mukta by her father during a pilgrimage to Palitana in Gujarat in 1959 and gave her great comfort over the years.

Mukta died in 2015 but the painting was delivered to the BBC by her schoolteacher daughter, Jaishmin, who was very emotional when she saw how lovingly it had been restored by Louise Drover, a paper conservator. Drover emphasized: “I quite often use a gelatine to consolidate gold. But to respect Jainism, no animal products should be near it. So I’m actually going to use a seaweed product… All these pigments I’m using are plant based just to respect the philosophy of Jainism.”

Such gentleness and respect shown for minority religions make me think that Britain, for all its faults, is the fairest and most civilized country in the world. “I feel like my Mum’s here,” said Jaishmin through her tears.

Chequered past

Tariq Ali’s forthcoming book on Winston Churchill clearly isn’t going to be a hagiography. The publisher, Verso, which is bringing out Winston Churchill: His Times, His Crimes in May, says that “Tariq Ali challenges Churchill’s vaulted record.” The book will say that “throughout his life, Churchill never bothered to conceal his White supremacist views or his passionate defence of the British Empire.” According to the author, who was once a fiery student leader, “Churchill’s crimes abroad include the brutal assault on the Greek Resistance during the last years of the war (‘Treat Athens as a colonial city’), the Bengal Famine that cost over three million Indian lives, the insistence on using nuclear weapons in Hiroshima and Nagasaki (for which he was subjected to a mock war crimes trial in the Truman White House) and his staunch support in 1953 for the CIA/MI6 coup that toppled the democratic Mossadegh government in Iran.”

Churchill is understandably worshipped in Britain as a great wartime leader. But his statue was dubbed “racist” during the Black Lives Matter protests in London in 2020, after which Churchill College, Cambridge, held “[a] year-long programme of events to engage with the facts surrounding Sir Winston Churchill’s words, views and actions relating to empire and race”. And last year, the British journalist, Geoffrey Wheatcroft, also questioned the British prime minister’s legacy in his book, Churchill’s Shadow: An Astonishing Life and a Dangerous Legacy.

Old ties

Dinesh Dhamija, a well-known Indian entrepreneur in Britain, has just gifted £1 million to his alma mater — Fitzwilliam College, Cambridge, where he was an undergraduate student from 1971-74 — for computer sciences research. Dinesh set up ebookers, one of Europe’s first online travel firms, in 1999, and sold it for $471m in 2004. I asked him whether, during his Cambridge days, he knew that Subhas Chandra Bose had also been a student at Fitzwilliam. He had not.

Dinesh, who is due to be installed as a ‘Benefactor Fellow’ of Fitzwilliam on March 2, tells me: “The Indian government should fund a chair in Netaji’s name at Fitzwilliam.” He adds that in the college archives there exists a signature of Netaji from when he first joined as a student. The future freedom fighter was at Cambridge from 1919 to 1921 and studied Mental and Moral Sciences Tripos. He appears to have had a happy time on the whole at university.

Memorable walk

Corinne Fowler, a professor of postcolonial literature at Leicester University, has come up with a simple but very clever idea. She is walking and talking with experts who know about an area and writing a book, The Countryside: Ten Walks Through Colonial Britain. This is a major work which will be published by Penguin in the UK and across the Commonwealth and in America by Scribner, now part of Simon & Schuster.

She will learn about the politics of cotton by walking in Lancashire with the artist, Bharti Parmar, who reminds me that Gandhi visited millworkers in the area in 1931. Gandhi was invited by mill owners who hoped he would end his boycott of cotton fabric exports from the UK after witnessing how it was punishing ordinary British workers. Instead, the workers cheered Gandhi once he had explained that Indian poverty was a great deal worse than theirs. To the Lancashire millworkers, said Corinne, “Gandhi became a hero.” She is walking in Berkshire with Sathnam Sanghera, author of Empireland: How Imperialism Has Shaped Modern Britain. She has already done so in the Cotswolds with the historian and curator, Raj Pal. Corinne, who has discovered Indian connections everywhere, explains: “This book continues my mission to connect colonial experience with British rural life.”

Footnote

In reporting the dropping of “Abide with me”, the BBC quoted Kanchan Gupta, senior adviser to the information and broadcasting ministry: “There is really no reason why… we should still have our military bands playing tunes… introduced by the British.” In Britain, though, no one objects when Tagore’s poem, “Farewell my friends”, is routinely read at Christian funerals — as it was when Mark Shand, brother of Camilla, Duchess of Cornwall, was laid to rest.

** Gaddam Meghana, a Telugu girl in New Zealand’s Youth Parliament

Accustomed to the Telugu cutlure, Meghana participates in most of the cultural and traditional celebrations with utmost love and respect. 

: Gaddam Meghana (18), a Non-Resident Indian teenager became the first Indian-Telugu origin youth to get elected as New Zealand’s Youth Parliament member representing Waikato Parliament segment in the country. With the prestigious achievement, she became one of the youth icons of the country. 

Around 21 years ago, Gaddam Ravikumar, Meghana’s father, went to New Zealand along with his wife and got settled in Waikato as a real estate businessman.

Meghana was born and brought up in New Zealand, and she has recently completed her ‘International Baccalaureate Diploma Programme’ (IBDP) from St Peter’s, Cambridge, in New Zealand. Since her childhood Meghana was a clever student and was a successful class head too. 

** From Bow Bazar to Jerusalem: an Indian tour guide In Israel

For three decades, Rolley Horowitz has introduced visiting Indians to Israel.

During that visit, she surprised him by revealing that her original name is actually Savitri Mehta.

Preaching gospel of Jesus

The journey of Ms. Savitri from Kolkata’s Alipore to Israel began way back in the early 1960s when, at the age of 12, Savitri, daughter of the Military Attache in Indian Embassy in Tokyo rebelled against her parents Brigadier C.S. Mehta and her mother Sunita Roy.Ms. Savitriarrived from her Japanese lessons and declaredthat she would embrace Christianity .

She began as a volunteer in a Christian organisation but after studying in depth about ancient Christianity, she chose to become Jewish in 1989. 

Months before Israel and India were to establish ties on January 29, 1992, Ms. Roley married Michael Arthur Horowitz, a barrister who was noted for fighting war crimes. Soon after the establishment of India-Israel ties, she and academic Shalva Weil and Indian conductor Zubin Mehta set up an organisation to foster India-Israel relations.

Kolkata / Goa /Israel

** Vridhi Kumari punching her way to success

Chennai’s Vridhi Kumari is the only Indian woman to win a medal at the recently concluded IMMAF 2021, in Abu Dhabi

In the cage, as she braced for the fight, Vridhi Kumari could only think of her mother’s words ‘Don’t give up.’

The 21-year-old from Chennai threw her best punches and kicks to win a bronze medal in the Atomweight Category (Seniors) at the recently concluded IMMAF (International Mixed Martial Art Federation) World Championship 2021 at Palms Sports Arena, Abu Dhabi. With this, she became the first Indian woman to win a medal for the country in this category at IMMAF.

** Tasnim Mir becomes first Indian to claim world no. 1 status in u-19 girls singles

The 16-year-old from Gujarat was rewarded for last year’s stellar run when she had secured titles in three junior international tournaments to jump three places to grab the top position in the junior world rankings.

** President approves conferment of Jeevan Raksha Padak Series of Awards-2021

The President of India has approved the conferment of Jeevan Raksha Padak Series of Awards – 2021 on 51 persons which includes Sarvottam Jeevan Raksha Padak to 06, Uttam Jeevan Raksha Padak to 16 and Jeevan Raksha Padak to 29 persons. Five awardees are  posthumous.  The details are as under:-

Sarvottam Jeevan Raksha Padak

  1. Shri   Sarath R. R.  (Posthumous), Kerala                                   
  2. Shri JatinKumar(Posthumous), Uttar Pradesh                                  
  3. Shri RamavtarGodara (Posthumous), Rajasthan                                   
  4. Shri Gyan Chand (Posthumous), Ministry of  Railways
  5. Shri Amit Kumar Bhowal (Posthumous), West Bengal
  6. Shri Anil Kumar, Ministry of  Railways

Uttam Jeevan Raksha Padak

  1. Shri JagdishbhaiDanabhaiMakavana, Gujrat
  2. Shri Deepak Kumar Yadav, Indian Coast Guard, Ministry of Defence
  3. Shri Dharmender, Indian Coast Guard,Ministry of Defence
  4. Shri Monu Kumar, Indian Coast Guard,Ministry of Defence
  5. Master Alfas Bavu, Kerala
  6. Shri Krishnan Kundathil, Kerala
  7. Kumari Mayookha V., Kerala
  8. Master Muhammed AdnanMohiyudheen, Kerala
  9. Shri KurmiDurganandIndrabhushan, Indian Air Force, Ministry of Defence
  10. Shri Dinker Tiwari, Ministry of  Railways
  11. Shri  Tridip Paul, Ministry of  Railways
  12. Shri Rajbir Singh, Ministry of  Railways
  13. Shri Sanjeet Kumar Ram, Ministry of  Railways
  14. Shri Jahir Ahamed, ITBP
  15. Shri Mohd. Hussain, ITBP
  16. Shri Shoukat Ali, ITBP

Jeevan Raksha Padak

  1. Shri G. Sanjay Kumar, Andhra Pradesh
  2. Shri T. Venkata Subbaiah, Andhra Pradesh
  3. Shri Nirjogi Ganesh Kumar, Andhra Pradesh
  4. Shri Banti Kumar Bharti, Indian Coast Guard, Ministry of Defence
  5. Shri Bongu Narasimha Rao, Ministry of  Railways
  6. Shri Ajay Kumar, BSF
  7. Shri B. Lal Chhuanawma, BSF
  8. Shri Abhilash K., CISF
  9. Shri Ajeesh S, CISF
  10. Shri AlekhaPujhari, CISF
  11. Shri Jitendar Kumar, CISF
  12. Shri Joshy Joseph, CISF
  13. Shri Kumar Byalyal, CISF
  14. Shri Muralidharan P., CISF
  15. Shri Nitin Shah, CISF
  16. Shri PinkuOraon, CISF
  17. Shri Rijinraj K., CISF
  18. Shri Sambath A., CISF
  19. Shri Sandeep Yadav, CISF
  20. Shri Sanjay S.P., CISF
  21. Shri Shinoj C., CISF
  22. Shri Shubhendu Vikram Singh, CISF
  23. Shri Praveen Ashok Pawar, CISF
  24. Shri Ashfaq Mohd, CISF
  25. Shri Pradeep Singh, ITBP
  26. Shri Satvir Singh, ITBP
  27. Shri Vijay Singh, ITBP
  28. Shri Vimal Chand Shah,  ITBP
  29. Shri Vinod Lal, ITBP

The Jeevan Raksha Padak series of awards are given to a person for meritorious act of human nature in saving the life of a person.  The award is given in three categories, namely, Sarvottam Jeevan Raksha Padak, Uttam Jeevan Raksha Padak and Jeevan Raksha Padak.  Persons of all walks of life are eligible for these awards.  The award can also be conferred posthumously.

The decoration of the award (medal, certificate signed by the Union Home Minister and lump sum monetary allowance) is presented to the awardee in due course by the respective Union Ministries/Organizations/State Government to which the awardee belongs.

** This Kerala woman sets a new world record for her collection of Disney toys

A 33-year-old Kerala businesswoman in Dubai has an unending passion for collecting Disney plush toys and holds a Limca book of records for her hobby.

Rizwana Ghori, who hails from Thrissur and has been living in Dubai for 28 years with her parents, Razack Khan Ghori and Shahida Bhanu, and eight-year-old daughter, Daanya, said that there is nothing that interests her more than her growing collection of Disney toys.

** 14 among women daredevils joined BSF after death of kin

This Republic Day, at age 38, Sunita was live on television from Rajpath, performing acrobatics on a motorcycle as a member of the BSF’s Seema Bhawani team which mesmerised the audience that included the President and the Prime Minister.