Monthly Archives: March 2015

A pushcart to promote poetry

Hyderabad :

Imagine poetry being ‘sold’ off the streets. Yes, you heard that right! With a noble mission to revive Telugu poetry in the two states, 50-year-old Sheik Sadiq Ali is seen pushing around his cart which doesn’t sell vegetables, but poetry!

“The declining state of Telugu poetry has always bothered me. So I decided to take it to the masses and what better way to do it than a pushcart,” Sadiq explains. While most people lecture on the need for reviving the Telugu poetry from air-conditioned auditoriums, he decided to do stay connected with lovers of literature. Though he doesn’t have shortage of resources to hold book exhibitions

, the 50-year-old decided to use a push-cart for his mission. To buttress his argument for adopting this unconventional method to promote Telugu poetry, he says: “Pusharts are something that people feel comfortable with. They have been a part of our culture for ages. It will be inappropriate for a non-traditional object to promote traditional poetry”.

Sadiq now takes his pushcart around town, one area at a time, holding forth on poetry and inviting people to read books. With over 135 titles on his pushcart, Sadiq literally carries a mobile bookstore to your doorstep. “What surprises me is the kind of response I receive from people of all age groups. Those who are new to Telugu poetry spend some time reading a book and end up buying it. These are small steps towards the bigger mission,” says an earnest Sadiq.

A native of Kalluru in Khammam distruct and a postgraduate in Telugu literature from Osmania University, Sadiq has books by various Telugu poets on his cart. The cart – ‘Thopudu Bandi’ – adorns pictures of famous Telugu poets like Sri Sri, Arudra and Maqdoom Mohinuddin. “People on Facebook started seeing what I am doing and sent in their books. So if someone buys the book, the poet gets the money, which in a way encouraging poetry,” he elaborates.

Sadiq, who was a journalist with a Telugu daily, Udayam, which was shut down long ago – embarked on his his ‘literary’ journey on February 22 when he travelled from Ramnagar to People’s Plaza in the city. Ever since, he has been travelling to one part of the city everyday promoting Telugu literature in his own unique way. And he does not intend to stop until he covers all the districts in Telangana and Andhra Pradesh. “There is a lot to be done and there is not much time. All I want is to bring back the golden era of Telugu poetry,” he says with an air of determination. His initiative has reached many through social networking sites and people like Chukka Ramaiah, a well-known educationist, have heaped praise on him for this unique initiative.

But Sadiq, who left his marriage bureau business, isn’t pushing around the 200-kilo cart full of poetry for fame or money. “I have enough to make ends meet. What I am doing isn’t for a living. It is out of passion. It is for the love of Telugu poetry,” he says with a broad smile and a sense of pride.

A fifty-year-old man pushes his cart on the roads of Hyderabad. He isn’t selling vegetables or trying to earn a living with the cart, but he is a man on a mission to revive Telugu poetry in the two Telugu speaking states.

Meet Sheik Sadiq Ali, who gave up his business to revive the art of Telugu poetry in Andhra Pradesh and Telangana.

While most people talk about reviving Telugu poetry from air-conditioned auditoriums with an ‘intellectual’ audience, Sadiq decided to do exactly the opposite. “The declining state of Telugu poetry has always bothered me. So I decided to take it to the masses and what better way to do it than a pushcart,” he explains.

Despite the availability of funds, the 50-year-old decided to use a cart over an exhibition or a display truck. And the reason: “Carts are something that people feel comfortable with. Carts have been a part of our culture for ages. It will be incorrect to a non-traditional object to promote traditional poetry,” elaborates Sadiq.s

source: http://www.timesofindia.indiatimes.com / The Times of India / Home> City> Hyderabad / by Bhavneet Singh, TNN / March 03rd, 2015

SRL Diagnostics Honour Five Outstanding Women From Hyderabad

SRLDiagnosticsTELANGANA04mar2015

Hyderabad :

With International Women’s Day fast approaching, SRL Diagnostics, a diagnostics chain, on Monday honoured and felicitated five exceptionally spirited women from the city, who despite all odds in their lives emerged winners became role models for many.

They were provided high end cervical cancer screening and a lifetime offer of SRLs premium health screening package.

Among the women felicitated during the event were Sonia Choudhary (29) an acid attack survivor. Anjina Rajagopalan (61) who runs a home, Sai Kripa, for abandoned and orphaned children, on the outskirts of the Capital in Noida. Anjina takes care of the children, educates them and even marries them off.

Anna Marie Lopes (28), a victim of domestic violence and sexual harassment, presently works with an NGO that works for gender violence. Omkari (35) is strong and confident woman who entered the male dominated career as a commercial driver to support her family. Rajni Bhagat Arora (63) was diagnosed with malignant breast cancer almost 12 years back. But she fought back fearlessly and presently she is a volunteer for an NGO that supports people with cancer. In an endeavour to promote the message of preventive healthcare on the occasion, the diagnostic chain also released a report on ‘Importance of early diagnosis in women’. Some startling facts were reported.

findings

■ According to the National Family Health Survey, 55 per cent have anemia.

■ Cardiovascular diseases are the most important cause of death in women, as per Registrar General of India

■ 40 per cent of women constitute almost two million death caused by diseases of circulatory system

■ 2.1 million women die of diabetes each year in the world.

■ 60 per cent of around 40 million Indians who suffer from thyroid related disorders are women.

■ Osteoporosis is estimated to affect 200 million women worldwide.

source: http://www.newindianexpress.com / The New Indian Express / Home> Cities> Hyderabad / by Express News Service / March 04th, 2015

‘Stem Therapy can Save a Diabetic from Amputation’

Dr Kanaka Bhushanam
Dr Kanaka Bhushanam

As various advances are made in regenerative medicine, stem cell therapies are seen as the innovative solutions to treating diseases where standard treatments available at present are proving to be ineffective. Dr Kanaka Bhushanam, head of the stem cell therapy dept at KIMS Foundation and Research Centre, throws light on stem cell therapy and its merits in an interview with Express.

What is stem cell therapy?

A stem cell is an initial cell which multiplies into a number of cells which, in turn, form into different groups and each group develops into a specific organ. The whole of human body is developed from the embryo which, in turn, is developed from one single cell. Stem cell therapy is the process of treating diseases using the ability of a stem cell to multiply into different cells.

How is stem cell therapy better than others?

Stem cell therapy is useful to persons suffering from diabetic foot, scleroderma, systemic lupus erythematosus, paralysis, stroke, blindness, hearing loss, orthopedic problems, etc. It is effective for degenerative and autoimmune diseases. Though stem cell therapy can do wonders in the treatment of several diseases, right now it is widely used in treating diabetic foot, lupus and scleroderma. Stem cell therapy is still in clinical trials stage and once the trials succeed there will be revolutionary changes in treating several chronic diseases. It can even be an answer to organ transplantation as cells from the same person can be used to develop new organs in the body.

How is stem cell therapy given?

Stem cells are taken from the bone marrow of a patient, developed and cultured in a lab, and injected into the person again. For example, the diabetic foot problem occurs when blood vessels carrying blood to the limbs are blocked and the blood supply is stopped. In that case, a stem cell is taken from a diabetic whose foot is affected and injected into his blood vessels again to de-block them and restore the blood supply to the limbs. As result, new cells start forming in the limbs thus obviating the need for amputation of the leg.

How is patients’ response to this therapy?

Stem cell therapy is yet to become popular as only a few medical institutes in India offer it. There is a need for awareness about stem cell therapy because if debilitating conditions like diabetic foot are diagnosed early and stem therapy is given, patients can be saved from amputation.

What about the cost?

Unlike other advanced treatments, stem cell therapy is well within the reach of the common man. For instance, the treatment for and surgery on diabetic foot using stem cell therapy costs about Rs 1.50 lakh. The cost is not a barrier to popularising stem cell therapy in India but shortage of expertise is.

source: http://www.newindianexpress.com / The New Indian Express / Home> Cities> Hyderabad / by Express News Service / March 01st, 2015

Marathis of city very much part of TS: Nayani

Home Minister Nayani Narasimha Reddy on Friday told Maharashtrians in the twin cities that they were not ‘Marathis’ but ‘Tela-nganites’, recalling that they were steadfast in their support for a separate State.

Speaking at a function organised by the Vivek Vardhini Educational Society, marking the birth anniversary of its founder, Vishnu Vaman Shiwarkar, that was also part of the Jagatik Marathi Divas, and attended by Telangana Deputy Chief Minister Mohd. Mahmood Ali, he said that the Marathis were always ahead in the service of people.

Support promised

“When we organised the first meeting for a separate Telangana in 1969, no one gave us a venue and it was in these very grounds that we held it. When the Nizam welcomed you, why can’t we make you feel comfortable? Any problems you have, I will take it up with the Chief Minister,” he said amid applause.

source: http://www.thehindu.com / The Hindu / Home> News> Cities> Hyderabad / by Special Correspondent / Hyderabad – February 28th, 2015