Saturday, December 24, 2022

SANE GURUJI

 He taught us humanism


Pandurang Sadashiv Sane was born on 24 Dec 1899 in Palgad village near Dapoli, Maharashtra. During his childhood his family's financial condition deteriorated and their house was confiscated by government authorities. He was sent to maternal uncle in Pune.

He returned and stayed in missionary school in Dapoli and was recognised as an intelligent student with good command over Marathi and Sanskrit.

He enrolled at Aundh Institution, which provided free education and food to poor students. He suffered many hardships but continued his education. An epidemic of bubonic plague led to students being sent home.

Back in Palgad, he overheard his parents expressing concern over his dedication to education. He traveled to Pune and enrolled as a student at Nutan Marathi Vidyalaya.

Living on limited meals, he continued to excel in academics. At New Poona College, he obtained BA and MA degrees in Marathi and Sanskrit literature.

He worked as a teacher in Pratap High School in Amalner town. He chose to teach in rural schools, foregoing a potentially larger salary he could have earned. He worked as a hostel warden.

He was a gifted orator, captivating audiences with his impassioned speeches on civil rights and justice. He inculcated moral values through magazine Vidyarthi, popular among students. His teaching profession continued for 6 years till he dedicated his life for the independence struggle.

He joined Gandhi in Dandi March in 1930 and was imprisoned by British in Dhule Jail for over 15 months for work in Civil Disobedience Movement. In 1932, Vinoba Bhave was in same jail and delivered a series of lectures on Bhagavad Gita each Sunday morning. Gita Pravachane was an outcome of the notes Sane made.

From 1930-47, he was arrested on 8 occasions and imprisoned in various jails for a total duration of over 6 years. He observed fast on 7 occasions. In Trichnapalli Jail, he learned Tamil and Bengali. He translated ancient Tamil moral work of the Kural into Marathi.

He recognised importance of learning Indian languages, for national integration and started Antar Bharati movement.

He helped spread of Indian National Congress in rural Maharashtra, particularly in Khandesh. He was active in organisation of Faizpur Session. He participated in Election Campaign of Bombay Provincial Elections of 1936.

In 1942 Quit India Movement, he was imprisoned for 15 months and became closely associated with socialists like Madhu Limaye.

In late 1930s, he organised textile labour and peasants in East Khandesh District. During this period he associated with communists like S. M. Dange. However Communist position to support Second World War made him dissociate himself. After independence he joined Socialist party and was close to Limaye, N G Gore and S M Joshi.

He took up the cause of Gandhi's promise to Ambedkar during Poona Pact that he will spend the rest of his life campaigning for removal of untouchability. He travelled across Maharashtra for 4 months in 1947.

The culmination of this tour was his fast at Pandharpur to open Vitthal Temple for Dalits. The fast lasted 11 days from 1 May to 11 May 1947 and doors of the temple were ultimately opened for all.

Post independence, he became increasingly disillusioned over possibilities of eliminating inequality from Indian society. Assassination of Gandhi deeply affected him and he fasted for 21 days. He committed suicide by taking an overdose of sleeping pills

He wrote 135 books and 73 books have been published. Almost all these books can be considered literature for children. His most well-known work in Marathi literature Shyamachi Aaee has been translated in almost all Indian languages, Japanese and English.

Others include Bharatiya Saskti and Patri- a collection of various songs and poems. Teen Muley is a story of 3 children and is regarded as a classic in Marathi. He started weekly journal Sadhana on 15 August 1948 and it has been regularly published since.

He died on 11 Jun 1950.

 


MOHAMMED RAFI

 


The amazingly versatile singer, Mohammed Rafi was born on 24 December 1924.

He was born in Kotla Sultan Singh village, Punjab. His nickname was Pheeko began singing by imitating chants of a fakir who roamed the streets. His father moved to Lahore in 1935, where he ran a men's barbershop.

He learnt classical music from Ustad Abdul Wahid Khan, Pandit Jiwan Lal Mattoo and Firoze Nizami. His first public performance came at age of 13.

In 1941, he made debut as playback singer in duet 'Soniye Nee, Heeriye Nee' with Zeenat Begum in Punjabi film Gul Baloch under music director Shyam Sunder. In that same year, he was invited by All India Radio Lahore station to sing. He made Hindi film debut in Gaon Ki Gori in 1945.

He was known for his ability to mould voice to persona and style of the actor lip-syncing the song on screen. He recorded over 7,000 songs in a career, in Hindi, Punjabi, Konkani, Assamese, Bhojpuri, Odia, Bengali, Marathi, Sindhi, Kannada, Gujarati, Tamil, Telugu, Magahi, Maithili and more. He also sang in English, Farsi, Arabic, Sinhala, Mauritian Creole and Dutch.

He was of a gentle calm demeanour and a humble, selfless, God-fearing and family loving gentleman. He was noted to never send anyone back empty-handed and generously helped many. He made an early exit at 55 years.

His recognitions include four Filmfare Awards, a National Film Award, Padma Shri and the list goes on.

Books on him include Sujata Dev's Mohammed Rafi – Golden Voice of the Silver Screen and Mohammed Rafi Voice of a Nation, a book authorised by his son Shahid.

Award winning documentary Dastaan-E-Rafi directed by Rajni Acharya and Vinay Patel featured over 60 interviews of various Bollywood personas.

He died on 31 Jul 1980.


Friday, December 23, 2022

23 DECEMBER

 National Farmer’s Day / Kisan Divas

 The National Farmers Day in India is also known as Kisan Divas in Hindi. Kisan Divas is celebrated every year on 23 December on the birthday of 5th Prime Minister of IndiaChoudhary Charan Singh, also a farmer's leader, who introduced many policies to improve the lives of the Indian farmers. It is celebrated by organising various programs, debates, seminars, quiz competitions, discussions, workshops, exhibitions, essays writing competitions and functions.


Chaudhary Charan Singh is credited with inventing and implementing the well-known Zamindari Abolition Act. He united all peasants against landlords and moneylenders. He was a very efficient writer and expressed his feelings about farmers and their problems and solutions.

 

Thursday, December 22, 2022

22nd December

 National Mathematics Day



December 22nd is National Mathematics Day, the birth anniversary of India’s famous Mathematician Srinivasa Ramanujan.

Ramanujan’s genius has been considered by mathematicians since the 18th and 19th centuries to be on par with Euler and Jacobi.

His work in number theory is considered special.

Since 2012, India’s National Day has been marked every year on December 22 with numerous educational programmes organised in schools and universities across the country.

In 2017, the significance of the day increased with the inauguration of the Ramanujan Math Udyan at Kuppam in Chittoor, Andhra Pradesh.

Ramanujan was born in 1887 in Erode, Tamil Nadu.

At the age of 12, despite no formal education, he mastered trigonometry and developed several theorems for himself.

Living in extreme poverty, Ramanujan did independent research in Mathematics.

In 1912, Ramaswamy Iyer, the founder of the Indian Mathematical Society, helped him get a clerkship in the Madras Port Trust.

His breakthrough came in 1913 when Ramanujan’s theorems were impressed by Cambridge-based GH Hardy and invited him to London. He died in 1920 at the age of 32.

However his achievements in the field of Mathematics are still regarded worldwide.

In 2012, former Prime Minister of India Manmohan Singh announced that December 22, Ramanujan’s birthday would be celebrated as National Mathematics Day across the country.


The mathematical genius

 Srinivasa Ramanujan


22 Dec 1887 ~ 26 Apr 1920

He was born in Erode, Madras Presidency. By age 11, he exhausted mathematical knowledge of two college students who were lodgers at his home. By age 13, he mastered book written by S. L. Loney on advanced trigonometry and discovered sophisticated theorems on his own.

At 16, he studied A Synopsis of Elementary Results in Pure & Applied Mathematics, G. S. Carr's collection of 5,000 theorems. The book is acknowledged as a key element in awakening his genius.

He developed and investigated Bernoulli numbers & calculated Euler–Mascheroni constant up to 15 decimal places. He received a scholarship to study but lost it as he neglected other subjects

After marrying in 1909 he began a search for employment & met Ramachandra Rao who supported his research for a time, but Ramanujan, unwilling to exist on charity, obtained a clerical post with Madras Port Trust

In 1911 he published papers in Journal of Indian Mathematical Society. In 1913 he began a correspondence with British mathematician Godfrey H. Hardy that led to a grant from Trinity College, Cambridge

Overcoming religious objections, he traveled to England in 1914, where Hardy tutored him & collaborated with him in research.

He worked out Riemann series, elliptic integrals, hypergeometric series, functional equations of zeta function and his theory of divergent series, in which he found a value for the sum of such series using a technique that came to be called Ramanujan summation

He made advances in partition of numbers (the number of ways that a positive integer can be expressed as the sum of positive integers). His papers were published in English & European journals and in 1918 he was elected to Royal Society of London. In 1917 he had contracted tuberculosis & returned to India in 1919

He died leaving behind 3 notebooks and a sheaf of pages containing many unpublished results that mathematicians continued to verify long after his death.

Wednesday, December 21, 2022

21 DECEMBER

 National Crossword Puzzle Day, U.S.



The first crossword puzzle was created by Arthur Wynne and published on December 21, 1913 in the New York World Newspaper. Wynne’s puzzle was diamond shaped and contained no internal black squares.





However, it was so popular with readers that within a decade crossword puzzles were featured in almost all American newspapers. Crossword lovers get the newspaper for the sole purpose of doing the crossword. So on December 21 let’s celebrate National Crossword Puzzle Day the best way we know how … find one you like and start filling in those squares!

 


Tuesday, December 20, 2022

20 DECEMBER

 

INTERNATIONAL HUMAN SOLIDARITY DAY


Every year on December 20th, International Human Solidarity Day seeks to celebrate the world’s unity in diversity. It’s also a day to raise awareness about the importance of solidarity.
Solidarity is defined as an awareness of shared interests and objectives that create a psychological sense of unity. Solidarity also refers to the ties in a society that bind people together as one.

According to the United Nations Millennium Declaration, solidarity is among the fundamental values that are essential to international relations. The Declaration also states that global challenges must be managed so that costs and burdens are distributed fairly. This is in accordance with the basic principles of equity and social justice. Additionally, those who suffer the least should help those who suffer the most.

The UN is convinced that solidarity creates a spirit of sharing, which is essential for eradicating poverty.

 

INTERNATIONAL HUMAN SOLIDARITY DAY HISTORY

On December 20, 2002, the UN General Assembly established the World Solidarity Fund. The Fund was set up in February 2003 as a trust fund of the United Nations Development Programme. Its objective is to eradicate poverty. It’s also to be used to promote human and social development in developing countries, especially among the poorest segments of their populations.

On December 22, 2005, the UN General Assembly identified solidarity as a universal value. This solidarity should underlie relations between peoples in the twenty-first century. In that regard, the UN proclaimed December 20th of each year International Human Solidarity Day. The date commemorates the establishment of the World Solidarity Fund.

 

Musical instrument

XYLOPHONE  The xylophone is a colourful and fun instrument that makes happy sounds! It consists of wooden or metal bars of different sizes. ...