Tuesday, March 2, 2010

Cancer

Photograph by Justin Guariglia


A young woman exhales cigarette smoke in Shanghai, China. The People's Republic of China is both the world's largest producer and largest consumer of tobacco, which has led to an impending cancer epidemic in the most populous country on Earth.


Cancer is a disease that begins as a renegade human cell over which the body has lost control. In order for the body and its organs to function properly, cell growth needs to be strictly regulated. Cancer cells, however, continue to divide and multiply at their own speed, forming abnormal lumps, or tumors. An estimated 6.7 million people currently die from cancer every year.

Not all cancers are natural-born killers. Some tumors are referred to as benign because they don't spread elsewhere in the body. But cells of malignant tumors do invade other tissues and will continue to spread if left untreated, often leading to secondary cancers.

Cancers can start in almost any body cell, due to damage or defects in genes involved in cell division. Mutations build up over time, which is why people tend to develop cancer later in life. What actually triggers these cell changes remains unclear, but diet, lifestyle, viral infections, exposure to radiation or harmful chemicals, and inherited genes are among factors thought to affect a person's risk of cancer.

Lung cancer is the world's most killing cancer. It claims about 1.2 million victims a year. Most of those victims are smokers, who inhale cancer-causing substances called carcinogens with every puff. Experts say around 90 percent of lung cancer cases are due to tobacco smoking.

Breast cancer now accounts for almost one in four cancers diagnosed in women. Studies suggest the genes you inherit can affect the chances of developing the illness. A woman with an affected mother or sister is about twice as likely to develop breast cancer as a woman with no family history of the disease. Lifestyle may also have an influence, particularly in Western countries where many women are having children later. Women who first give birth after the age of 30 are thought to have a three times greater risk of breast cancer than those who became mothers in their teens.

Geographical Distinctions

There are also stark geographic differences, with incidence rates varying by as much as thirtyfold between regions. In much of Asia and South and Central America, for example, cervix cancer is the most deadly in females. However, in North America and Europe another kind of gynecological cancer, ovarian cancer, is a more serious threat.

Among males, southern and eastern Africa record the second and third highest rates of oesophageal, or gullet, cancer after China, but western and central regions of Africa have the lowest incidence in the world. Differences in diet may explain this.

Nevertheless, the reasons why many cancers develop remain elusive. Brain cancer, leukemia (blood cancer), and lymphoma (cancer of the lymph glands) are among types that still mystify scientists.

Treatments

Yet ever more people are surviving diagnosis thanks to earlier detection, better screening, and improved treatments. The three main treatment options are surgery, radiotherapy and chemotherapy. Radiotherapy, also called radiation therapy, involves blasting tumors with high-energy x-rays to shrink them and destroy cancerous cells. Chemotherapy employs cancer-killing drugs.

Even so, future cancer cases are predicted to climb, since the world's population is aging. The proportion of people over age 60 is expected to more than double by 2050, rising from 10 percent to 22 percent. This will add an estimated 4.7 million to the cancer death toll by 2030.

Tuesday, February 16, 2010

Education Loans in India

Till some years back higher education and quality education was not affordable to some illustrious students because of the financial constraints. There was no any alternative but to jump in the job market prematurely. And this led to untimely end of budding talents and their forceful transformation into to the mediocrity.
Scholarshipswere there, but those were so less in numbers that only luckier few could avail them. But now the scene has changed drastically. The boom in the banking sector has led to release of large amount of funds for education loans. Now, education loans are easily available from various banks in India and this change is encouraging more and more students to take up higher education despite their financial shortcomings.
Many nationalized banks have come up with various educational loan schemes that students can benefit from.Even private banks are not lagging far behind. The wave of change could be well gauged from the amusing situation that immediately after the results announcements of CAT or PMT/ IIT JEE, the representatives of the banks queue up for giving education loans to the successful candidate even with very flexible conditions. This scenario is certainly helping the illustrious students to pursue higher education and realize their dreams. Here, we have tried to list the name of banks and the details about various educational loans provided by them.

Education Loans [education loans provided by them]-

Allahabad Bank
Bank of Baroda
Punjab National Bank
Indian Bank
State Bank of Mysore
Andhra Bank
Bank of India
State Bank of Indore
Karnataka Bank
Bank of Maharashtra
Bank of Rajasthan
Canara Bank
Catholic Syrian Bank
Central Bank
Dena Bank
Development Credit Bank
Federal Bank
HDFC Bank
IDBI
Mysore Bank
Oriental Bank of Commerce
Indian Overseas Bank
Punjab and Sind Bank
State Bank of Hyderabad
State Bank of India
Syndicate Bank
UCO Bank
United Western Bank
Vijaya Bank
Vysya Bank
United Bank Of India
State Bank of Saurashtra

Saturday, February 13, 2010

Mohandas Karamchand Gandhi



Born into a modest Gujarati family, Mohandas Karamchand Gandhi
was the fifth child of Karamchand and Putliba. He was born on October 2, 1869, in Porbandar, where his father was Dewan. As the youngest child, he was mischievous. As a youth, he was an average student who was very shy and unable to speak. He says he ran home from school to avoid befriending and talking to other students
During his childhood, Mohan became a victim of peer pressure. He experimented with smoking with his older brother. Both would collect the stubs after their uncle had extinguished his cigarette, remove the tobacco from them and roll a cigarettes for themselves. This did not last long because Mohan found it discomforting and distasteful. Then he experimented with meat-eating with a Muslim friend who convinced Mohan that the only reason why the English were so tall and powerful and able to rule over India was because they ate meat. Unless Indians became meat-eaters, India would never become free was his argument. For almost a year, meat-eating became a clandestine affair which entailed lies, deception and even stealing. He had to find the money to pay for the food-which meant stealing from home; he had to make excuses for not eating at home-which meant lying and deception. Soon, this became intolerable, and Mohan made a confession to his father.
Karamchand was unwell and, therefore, resting in bed. Mohan did not have the courage to tell him about his clandestine escapades, so he wrote a confession and handed it over to his father to read. Tears welled up in his father's eyes; he embraced Mohan, and both of them cried. Mohan writes in his autobiography that it felt as though their tears washed away the sin of deception that he had committed. He decided never again to indulge in such acts.
Mohan was married at the age of 13, since child marriages were prevalent then. His bride was Kastur, the daughter of Gokuldas Makanji, the Mayor of Porbandar. She was also 13 years old, and she taught Mohan his first lesson in non-violence. Mohan had no idea what the role of a husband should be, so he bought some pamphlets, which were written by male chauvinists and suggested that an Indian husband must lay down the rules for the wife to follow. Thus, Mohan laid down the first rule when he told Kastur,
"Henceforth, you will not go out of this house without my permission."
Kastur heard him quietly. She did not retort or say anything. A few days later, Mohan realized that she still flouted his rule and went out of the house to the temple and to the market and sometimes visiting friends and relatives. He confronted her that evening.
"How dare you disobey my orders?" he barked at her.
Once again, very calmly and without loosing her cool, Kastur asked: "Who is senior in this house? Are you superior to your mother? Should I tell her that I will not go out with her until you give me permission? If that is what you want let me know." She was so calm and collected that Gandhi had no answer. He never questioned her again. It is a lesson for all of us to learn. When we face such situations we retort and react angrily making the situation worse and sometimes leading to the breaking of the relationship. But calmly, with common sense, one can achieve the same results.
In May 1883, at the age of 13, Gandhi was married through his parents' arrangements to Kasturba Makhanji (also spelled "Kasturbai" or known as "Ba"). They had four sons: Harilal Gandhi..., born in 1888; Manilal Gandhi..., born in 1892; Ramdas Gandhi..., born in 1897; and Devdas Gandhi..., born in 1900.
Harilal Mohandas Gandhi (1888- 18th June 1948) was the first son of Mahatma Gandhi. Mahatma would not allow his son to study law as a show of rebellion against a Western education and Harilal eventually grew weary of this, and rebelled. Harilal converted to Islam and adopted the name "Abdullah Gandhi", but later again converted to Hinduism. In Early years Harilal helped his father in revolution against British Government for their attitude about racism. He had always wanted to go for higher studies and wanted to become a barrister like his father, but because of his weakness in studies, he could not complete his high-school education.lost his wife and son. Failure in life made him a depressed alcoholic. He died because of a liver disease on June 18th, 1948 in a municipal hospital in Mumbai, known at the time as Bombay.
Although a Dewan, his father was a very generous person, and his income was spent on helping the poor and the needy. The family lived reasonably well, but there were no savings. When his father died, the family found itself in financial difficulties. By then, the British had entrenched themselves in India and controlled the affairs of the states making it difficult for a person to inherit his father's job. In the old days in India, a son usually took over when the father retired or died. The British, however, wanted people who were "qualified" for the job, so none of the sons could become Dewan of Porbandar after Karamchand's death.
The family faced severe economic problems after Karamchand's death in 1885. The brothers-Laxmidas and Karsandas-did not have jobs, and there was no hope of any of them inheriting the title of Dewan. The older brothers learned to write legal briefs and earned a little to sustain the large family. None of them were educated beyond elementary school, so the burden of resurrecting the family fortunes fell on Mohan. Although his mother and other family elders could not contemplate his going abroad for further studies, the advice of more liberal counselors was that Mohan must go to England and study law. With the British entrenched in India, they were going to demand academic qualifications for all jobs.

Reluctantly, and after many promises, Mohan was allowed to go to England. He not only studied law but came in close touch with many eminent philosophers and thinkers and spent many hours a day in discussions. He was able to absorb a great deal from them and it was this group which contained George Bernard Shaw and others who one day asked Mohan to read with them the Bhagwad Gita and explain it to them. Mohan was ashamed that he had never read the scripture himself and did not know Sanskrit to be able to read the original. Instead, he read with them Edwin Arnold's English translation of the Gita-The Song Celestial-which revealed to him the richness of Hindu scriptures.
Mohan was impressed not only by the reading of the Gita but by the "friendly" study that this group of Englishmen were trying to make of other scriptures. Mohan's motto in life, "A friendly study of all scriptures is the sacred duty of every individual." was born in England during this educational tour. He studied all the religions of the world and found there was a great deal in each one of them for all of us to absorb in our own lives. His respect for different religions and willingness to study them with an open mind is what broadened his perspective and enriched his mind.

He returned from England in 1891 very much a "brown sahib." He tried to introduce his western habits in his traditional home in Porbandar and, indeed, spent so much time and energy in this pursuit that he forgot that he had to set up a legal practice and start earning to support the family. Weeks passed and once again it was Kastur who opened his eyes to his responsibilities when she gently chided him for his futile attempts to westernize the family rather than earning money to support it.
For someone as shy and timid as Mohan, setting up a legal practice was not easy. He was not successful in Porbandar, so he went to Bombay and met with no success there either. He tried to get a job as a school teacher to teach English but was astounded to learn that he did not have the requisite qualifications to teach English, only to practice law in English. After struggling for several months, he decided to go back to Porbandar and do what his brothers were doing- write legal briefs. His brothers were very disappointed, especially since the family had taken enormous loans to send Mohan to England to study. How would they repay the loans if Mohan was going to end up writing briefs?
Laxmidas had a Muslim friend, Dada Abdullah, who had gone to South Africa and made a lot of money as a trader. He now had a legal case with another Muslim trader which had been going on for a long time without resolution. Both traders had white, English-speaking lawyers, and since neither of them could speak English, communication was very poor. Dada Abdullah heard about Mohan through his brother and invited Mohan to come to South Africa on a one-year contract to work as an interpreter for him.
Mohan once again left India in 1893 to go to another new part of the world to try his luck. The urgency of finding a job and making money was impressed upon him, and he was conscious of his responsibilities, but he was also conscious of his "status" in life as an England-trained Barrister-at-Law. Consequently, a week after his arrival, when it was time for Mohan to go to Pretoria to attend the case in the Supreme Court, Mohan decided he must travel by first class. Anything lower than that would be undignified. He ordered his ticket by mail
Gandhiji was unfamiliar with South Africa and the conditions and the language of the native Africans. He was also equally unfamiliar with the philosophy of non-violence which was being evolved one campaign at a time. It was hard enough for him to convince his own people about this philosophy without having to translate it for the native Africans who were known for their militancy.
Much later, in 1939, when he was much wiser and more confident about his philosophy of satyagraha, he told a delegation of African American leaders led by Dr. Howard Thurman that he had to prove the success of his philosophy to his own people in India before bringing it to the United States. This was in response to Dr. Thurman's invitation to Gandhiji to lead the civil rights movement in the United States.
If he was so reluctant to enlarge the scope of his philosophy in 1939, how could he consider getting the native Africans involved thirty years earlier? I think it was more his sense of prudence than his prejudice that kept him away from dealing with the native African problems. In 1906 he witnessed the "Zulu War" closely as a Red Cross volunteer caring for the injured and the dead, mostly Zulus. He writes about this experience with total disgust. He had witnessed what was conventional war at the time and knew that there were certain rules that the soldiers observed. In the Zulu war he saw the British flouting all decency and decorum and massacring the Zulus mercilessly. They were hunted down like animals and butchered by the British. Until this event he was an admirer of western civilization. Now a crack had been formed, and this widened into a gulf after his visit to England in 1909 to plead the case of the Indians in South Africa. When he found the British politicians dismissing everything he had to say with contempt, he was filled with a total revulsion for western civilization
On his journey back from London to Cape Town-about 15 days by ship--he was overcome by a desire to write his first book "Hind Swaraj" formulating a plan for independent India. The obsession was so great that he began writing on the ship stationary with a pencil. The thoughts were coming so furiously that he could not stop writing. When his right hand began to ache, he switched to writing with his left. The book was completed before he reached Cape Town and became distinguished for its anti-western civilization message. He asked India to reject western civilization completely because it had nothing worthwhile to offer. He entered a period of exclusivism.
In 1915, Gandhiji decided he would gain nothing for Indians outside India as long as Indians within India remained subjects of British Imperialism. They must be liberated first for Indians elsewhere to gain any respect or equality. Thus, he decided to move to India and explore ways in which he could participate in the freedom struggle.
He entrusted his work in South Africa and the Phoenix Settlement Ashram that he started in 1903 to the care of Mr. Albert West and Mr. Henry Polak, two British friends who had worked with him closely in South Africa. The whole family left South Africa in 1914 with Gandhiji, Kasturba and Hermann Kallenbach, and another Jewish South African friend going to England and the rest of the family sailing for India. Gandhiji wanted to help with the war effort in England, but soon after his arrival, he was struck by pneumonia and almost bed-ridden. For a while Kasturba nursed him and participated in sewing uniforms for English soldiers, but when the doctors realized the British winter was not going to help Gandhiji overcome his ailment, they suggested he leave for India
Kallenbach wanted to accompany them to India, but as a German Jew he was not given a visa by the British and so he had to return to South Africa. Gandhiji and Kasturba arrived in India and were given a welcome they had not anticipated. Gandhiji was not aware that his reputation had preceded him. He became a national leader on arrival. Gopalkrishna Gokhale, Gandhiji's political mentor in India, advised Gandhiji to spend a year traveling around India learning about the problems and making contact with the people. After his travels, he started an ashram at Bochraj in Gujarat and later was induced to visit Champaran in Bihar. The emissary of the poor and exploited peasants of Champaran was so persistent that Gandhiji could not refuse him. When Gandhiji went there and saw the conditions, he was shocked beyond belief and launched a legal campaign that forced the British farmers to abandon their exploitation and give relief to the peasants. It was his first significant and major victory in India achieved through non-violence. This incidence catapulted Gandhiji to the national scene.
In 1919 he launched a national campaign against the Rowlatt Act which was designed by the British to oppress and suppress the Indians and their desire for independence. The movement generated some violence in parts of the country, especially in the north. In Punjab some misguided youth attacked a British school teacher and pushed her around. The British government appointed General Dyer as the military governor of the State of Punjab with the authority to ruthlessly curb all defiance of authority. He imposed martial law, prohibiting the assembly of more than five people and suspending all civil liberties in the state.
On April 13, 1919, more than ten thousand men, women and children assembled in the Jallianwala bagh in the heart of the city of Amritsar to non-violently protest against the martial law. General Dyer was unwilling to tolerate such an act of defiance. He brought in his troops, blocked off the only exit from the walled ground and ordered the troops to shoot into the crowd. Within an hour 386 men, women and children lay dead and 1605 were critically injured. These were the British figures of casualties while the India figures are very different. The Indians place the number of dead beyond 1,000. However, General Dyer followed with more draconian laws like commanding all Indians to crawl on their bellies when passing the street where the English school teacher was assaulted. Anyone who refused would be flogged to death. He also ordered that the injured in the firing should not be attended to by anyone for the next 72 hours, even if they died. This incident raised so much anger in India that a violent revolution could very easily have resulted, but Gandhiji stepped in to calm the people. He said we can not be to the British as they have been to us. It will not make us any different from them. The civilized thing to do is not to ever stoop down to the level of the oppressor, but to try at all times to raise the oppressors to new heights of awareness. This is the point at which Gandhiji reverted back to inclusivity. He urged Indians to remember that we must not only liberate ourselves politically but also liberate ourselves spiritually. Swaraj, he said, is not just external freedom; it is also internal freedom. Aldous Huxley, the eminent British historian, is perhaps the only one who has recognized the fact that in liberating India non-violently, Gandhiji also liberated the British from their own imperialism. In other words, the non-violent campaign in India elevated the British to a new awareness of themselves.
However, after the 1919 campaign, the next major campaign was the Salt March in 1930. There were many smaller campaigns in between. The Salt March once again focused the attention of the world on India's struggle for freedom. Instead of arousing derision or indifference as most violent freedom struggles around the world do, the Indian struggle evoked world sympathy. Suffering has a tendency to do that. The British were lacksadasical about this campaign. They did not think that the defiance of the tax on salt would arouse such emotions all over India and the world. They were not prepared for the consequences. The whole nation stood up in defiance of the British, and as some historians put it, another nail was hammered into the British coffin. Again what followed was smaller campaigns at regional levels until 1942, when the Congress passed the "Quit India" resolution. This campaign again roused national consciousness and the jails were filled to the brim. Gandhiji and his party were imprisoned in Aga Khan Palace near Pune. It was not a palace in the accepted sense, and only a part of it was cordoned off and used as a jail. Kasturba died in prison in 1944. This was a great blow for Gandhiji.
Throughout his campaign for freedom, Gandhiji was concerned about the divisions in India which were exacerbated by the British who followed the "Divide and Rule" policy. There was the serious division between Hindus and Muslims and within the Hindus between the various castes. Short of leading a major revolution to bring about unity, Gandhiji did everything he could to break down the barriers and build bridges. He realized that political freedom from the British would be meaningless so long as we hated each other and were willing to kill because of our prejudices. Through fasts, through education, through example, through preaching he tried his best to teach the people to respect and appreciate each other

In 1935, Gandhiji realized the Indian National Congress had no intentions of pursuing his policy of non-violence after independence. He resigned his membership. The Congress, however, was unwilling to let go of his leadership of the freedom struggle. In the forties when independence became a possibility, the British opposed partition of the country to create Pakistan. Gandhiji was against this, but the Congress was inclined to accept it. When Gandhiji proposed allowing the Muslim League to form the interim government to placate its fears of Hindu domination, the Congress Party leadership threatened a civil war.
The Congress leadership claimed the people would not accept this plan and there would be civil war. The question is were the leaders right in presuming how the people would react or could they have supported Gandhi in explaining to the people the wisdom of remaining one country and giving the plan a fair opportunity to prove its efficacy? There is the underlying feeling that the leadership was not willing to accept the plan so why take it to the people at all. At this point Gandhi gave up discussing the partition of the country and left it to the leaders and the British to do what they felt was right. The rest is history. The country was partitioned; there was a civil war which left both countries with a legacy of hate that will take centuries to heal. Was the price worth it? Could we have paid the same price for a unified country? Would the long-term results have been different? These are questions that can not be answered.

Bapu lost his desire to live. Until this point whenever anyone asked him how long he would like to live, he would say with a smile: I would like to live for 125 years because there is so much I need to accomplish. He had a zest for life and a mission that he wanted to see fulfilled. By 1946, this came to a sad end and he began speaking of death. Yet, he never showed outwardly the despondency that he must have felt within. He still continued to work, and he continued to guide people in their work for social and economic resurgence of India. He even went to Noakhali in Bengal that became East Pakistan, where rioting was at its worst on the eve of partition. Hindus and Muslims were literally butchering each other and some of the worst acts of inhumanity took place in this area. He went with a handful of helpers and brought about peace and sanity in the area. An accomplishment that was recognized by Lord Mountbatten when he wrote his biography was that Gandhi brought peace all by himself in East Pakistan while the Indian Army had to kill and crush many thousands in West Pakistan before peace was accomplished.
The assassination of Gandhiji was ironically engineered by the Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh (RSS) because it felt Gandhiji had agreed to the creation of Pakistan. It had made an avowed and ambitious program to reunite its country. Yet, had it not been for its militancy during the 1946/47 negotiations, India may have been one country. The RSS is to shoulder the entire blame for creating an atmosphere of violence and revenge in the country that made it impossible for sanity to prevail.

Having accepted partition, the Congress leadership tacitly accepted the consequences of partition. The bloodshed, the loss of lives and property on both sides were to be expected. No one was going to be uprooted from places where he/she had lived for generations with a smile and move to another place. For the Congress leadership to then succumb to militant Hindu demand that the cash assets due to Pakistan be confiscated to compensate the Hindus who lost their lives and property was unethical to say the least. They were playing populist politics without considering the long term consequences of their action. Gandhiji said if my country is to embark on its new and independent life on a blatantly immoral act then I would prefer death. He fasted and forced the government to release the money to Pakistan. Had the government kept the money as the RSS demanded, there would have been a worse civil war than the country had witnessed and India would have had no moral grounds to stand on when the international community judged the situation. We had lost our senses then but had we held onto the money, we would have lost our souls also.
Within the country, in the bureaucracy and in the government, there was not much enthusiasm for Gandhiji's life. Secretly, everyone was interested in making him a martyr. A martyred Gandhi was more beneficial to the rulers than a living Gandhi. The bureaucracy had already experienced and enjoyed a princely lifestyle under the British which they were unwilling to give up. The politicians were eager to be participants in such a life. Gandhiji opposed this wholeheartedly, and had he lived long enough, he would most certainly have pressured the government to adopt a more simple lifestyle. He often said the government of independent India must reflect the poverty of the nation. The politicians and the bureaucrats, on the other hand, were eager to replace the British and maintain the oppressive and opulent structure created by the British.


Gandhi ji was assasinated on January 30, 1948 at Delhi, India.

Tuesday, February 2, 2010

Malaria



The disease chiefly affects lowland tropical regions, where conditions favor Anopheles mosquitoes, which carry the malaria parasite plasmodium. It's the blood-seeking females that inject these microscopic invaders, each bite acting like an infected hypodermic needle.

Of the four kinds of plasmodia, Plasmodium falciparum is by far the most dangerous, responsible for about half of all malaria cases and 95 percent of deaths.

The parasite has a complicated life cycle, which begins in the mosquito's gut before moving to the salivary glands, where it awaits transfer to the next host. Once in a human's bloodstream, the parasite lodges in the liver, burrowing into cells where it feasts and multiplies. After a week or two the plasmodia burst out—around 40,000 replications for each parasite that entered the body. Next they target red blood cells, this time repeatedly, until there are billions of parasites in circulation. If this cycle isn't checked, the body starts to fail, because with so many oxygen-carrying red cells being destroyed there are too few left to sustain vital organs. Meanwhile, all it takes for the parasite to pass on its grim legacy is for another mosquito to stop off for a meal.

No Vaccine

Almost two-thirds of humans infected live in sub-Saharan Africa, which also bears around 90 percent of the global malaria death toll. A child there dies from the disease about every 30 seconds. Elsewhere, countries worst affected are in southern Asia and Latin America.

Those most vulnerable are young children, who have yet to develop any resistance to the disease, and pregnant women who have reduced immunity. Signs of infection include flu-like symptoms such as fever, shivering, headache, and muscle ache. The P. falciparum parasite can lead to life-threatening conditions such as brain damage (cerebral malaria), severe anemia, and kidney failure. Survivors are often left with permanent neurological damage.

For centuries the only widely known malaria remedy was quinine, which came from the bark of the cinchona tree of Peru and Ecuador. Then, in the 1940s, a synthetic drug was created using the compound chloroquine. Around the same time, the insecticide known as DDT was developed. These twin weapons led to a worldwide assault on malaria, eradicating the disease in many areas, including the United States and southern Europe.

But malaria has made a major comeback since the 1970s, partly because DDT use was severely restricted after it was found to be harmful to certain wildlife, and because the plasmodium parasite started becoming resistant to anti-malaria drugs.

With more people now falling sick from malaria than ever before, the need to tackle it has never been so urgent. The top priority, health experts say, is finding a vaccine—seen as the only surefire way of beating the disease.

Sunday, January 31, 2010

CHHATRAPATI SHIVAJI MAHARAJ - THE LEGEND




He founded the Hindu kingdom in the Deccan against all odds , fighting against the mighty Mughals.He inspired and united the common man to fight against the tyranny of Mughal ruler Aurangjeb, by inculcating a sense of pride and nationality in them.

At the age of 16, he took a pledge to establish a sovereign Hindu state.He clearly outstands all the rulers and generals of India by the exemplary life he lived and is thus respected by the entire cross section of Indians. Shivaji's military skills could be compared to those of Napolean.

He raised a strong army and navy, constructed and repaired forts, used gureilla warfare tactics,developed a strong intelligence network,gave equal treatment to the people from all religions and castes based on merit, and functioned like a seasoned Statesman and General. He appointed ministers with specific functions such as Internal security,Foreign affairs,Finance,Law and Justice,Religious matters,Defence etc.

He introduced systems in revenue collection and warned the officials against harassment of subjects.He thought ahead of times and was a true visionary.In his private life, his moral virtues were exceptionally high.His thoughts and deeds were inspired by the teachings of his mother Jijabai, his teachers, great saints like Dnyaneshwar & Tukaram and the valiancy and ideals of the Lords Rama and Krishna.

The tiny kingdom established by Chhatrapati Shivaji known as "Hindavi Swaraja" (Sovereign Hindu state) grew and spread beyond Attock in Northwest India (now in Pakistan)and beyond Cuttack in East India in course of time, to become the strongest power in India. After the death of Chhatrapati Shivaji & his son Sambhaji, their prime ministers or ‘the Peshwas' became the defacto rulers. The Peshwas and the Maratha Sardars (Chieftans) like Shindes of Gwalior, Gaekwads of Baroda & Holkars of Indore contributed to the growth of the Maratha Confederacy.

The history of India is incomplete without the history of Marathas and Shivaji is the nucleus of Maratha history. Shivaji has been a source of inspiration and pride to the past generations and will continue to inspire generations in future. We salute this legend and humbly dedicate this website to him.

Shivaji Maharaj was the son of Shahaji and Jijabai Bhonsale. Shivaji Maharaj’s birth date has been a matter of controversy but recently a consensus has been reached and is deemed to be 19 February 1627. He was born on Shivneri Fort, Junnar, 60 kilometres north of Pune and was named Shiva after Shivai, deity of the fort. Shivaji Maharaj was the fifth son born to Jijabai, 3 of whom had died as infants and only Sambhaji survived. While Shivaji Maharaj was accompanied mostly by his mother, Sambhaji lived with his father Shahaji at present day Bengaluru. During the period of Shivaji Maharaj’s birth, the power in Maharastra was shared by three Sultanates – Bijapur, Ahmednagar, and Golconda. Most of the then Marathas forces had pledged their loyalties to one of these Sultanates and were engaged in a continuous game of mutual alliances and aggression.

Shahaji Bhosle – Shivaji Maharaj’s father – was the elder son of Maloji Bhosale of Verul (present day Ellora, Maharastra). Legend has it that Maloji Bhosale was insulted by Lakhujirao Jadhav, a sardar in Nizamshahi, due his refusal to allow his daughter Jijabai’s (Shivaji Maharaj’s mother) marriage to his son- Shahaji. This led Maloji to greater conquests to obtain a higher stature and an important role under Nizamshahi, something that eventually led him to achieving the title of Mansabdar (military commander and an imperial administrator). Leveraging this new found recognition and power he was able to convince Jadhavrao to give his daughter in marriage to his son Shahaji.

Shivaji’s birthplace on Shivneri Fort
Shahaji following in the footsteps of his father, began service with the young Nizamshah of Ahmednagar and together with Malik Amber, Nizam’s minister, he won back most of the districts for the Nizamshah from the Mughals who had gained it during their attack of 1600. Thereafter, Lakhuji Jadhav, Shahaji’s father in law attacked Shahaji at the Mahuli fort and laid a siege. Shahaji was accompanied by Jijabai who was four months pregnant. After seeing no relief coming from Nizam, Shahaji decided to vacate the fort and planned his escape. He sent Jijabai off to the safety of Shivneri fort which was under his control. It was here at Shivneri that Shivaji Maharaj was born. In the meanwhile, suspecting his disloyalty, Lakhuji and his three sons were murdered by the Nizamshah in his court while they came to join his forces. Unsettled by this incident, Shahaji Raje decided to part ways with the Nizamshahi Sultanate and raise the banner of independence and establish an independent kingdom.

After this episode Ahmednagar fell to the Mughal emperor Shah Jahan, and shortly thereafter Shahaji responded by attacking the Mughal garrison there and regained control of this region again. In response the Mughals sent a much larger force in 1635 to recover the area back and forced Shahaji to retreat into Mahuli. The result of this was that Adilshah of Bijapur agreed to pay tribute to the Mughals in return for the authority to rule this region in 1636. Thereafter, Shahaji was inducted by Adilshah of Bijapur and was offered a distant jagir- land holdings, at present-day Bangalore, but he was allowed to keep his old land tenures and holdings in Pune.

Friday, January 29, 2010

Gautam Buddha Biography




Very little is known about Gautam Buddha. The biography of Gautam Buddha has come to know through ancient scriptures which were written after details related to him were passed by generations orally. It is stated that Gautama Siddartha was a North Indian Prince who lived between 563 and 479 BC and later on came to be known as Buddha or Enlightened One. It is stated that Queen Maya died seven days after giving birth to Gautama and Prince Siddhartha is said to have gone to Trayastrimsa Heaven and stayed there for three months to preach supreme knowledge to his mother.

Astrologers had stated that Prince Siddhartha would become a great sage on growing up if he came to know of the sufferings of mankind and in order to prevent this from happening his father King Suddhodana tried to prevent access of the outside world to Prince Siddartha and offered him all the worldly pleasures so that he could turn out to be a worthwhile king but its stated that nothing can change destiny but a visit to the kingdom changed all where he saw the sufferings of mankind and he left his kingdom to go on to become an ascetic.

Lord Buddha tried self mortification for six years but failed and traveled to Gaya and sat under a fig tree to gain enlightenment. Here he achieved what he wanted and became Buddha, a person who was released from consciousness of suffering.

It was at the age of thirty that Gautama Buddha left all his worldly belongings and devoted his life for self denial and spent the rest of his life teaching his disciples the Four Noble Truth and how they could achieve the state of Nirvana. The rest as they say is history and Buddhism spread throughout the world. This is the just of the biography of the great Gautam Buddha.

Sunday, January 17, 2010

Shahaji Raje -Maratha King



Shahaji was a Sardar in Nizamshah’s court at Ahmednagar. Nizamshah willingly sacrificed Lakhuji Jadhav for Shahaji. Yet, Shahaji went to Adilshah in 1624. Despite of valiantly fighting for Adilshah for two years, he returned to Nizamshah in 1626. He again changed his loyalties and became Mughal Sardar in 1630. Yet again, after valiantly fighting for Mughals, he returned to Nizamshah in 1632. In all these transitions, he maintained his Jagir in Pune at his discretion. He maintained an army that was loyal to him and him alone, irrespective of the power he was serving. He initiated the policy of uniting Deccan against North Indian Mughals. Many notable people like Khavaskhan, Kutubshah, Madanna and Akanna of Golconda, Murar Jagdev supported this united Deccan policy that Shahaji initiated. Shivaji repeatedly pronounced this policy. Sambhaji considered himself as a patron of Adilshah and Kutubshah.

Shahaji appointed Dadoji Kondadev, a his chief administrator of Pune Jagir. He himself was administrating his Jagir in Bangalore, Karnataka. It was his vision that he distributed his property between two sons in 1636. The Karnataka Jagir was for elder son Sambhaji and Pune Jagir for younger son Shivaji. He made Adilshah to appoint Dadoji Kondadev as Subhedar of Pune and gave him control of some army (about 5000 strong) 15-20 forts, and entire administrative personnel in the form of a Peshwa, an accountant and others. Shivaji took his oath on Rohireshwar of establishing a Hindavi Swarajya in presence of Dadoji. The first letter bearing the official seal of Shivaji is dated 28th January 1646. It is difficult to comprehend that young Shivaji who was a teenager of 15 years, had all this blueprint of establishing a Hindu Swaraj along with seals and official letterheads in his mind. One has to accept the vision and power of Shahaji that was guiding him, correcting him and shaping him.

Shahaji was carving a kingdom of his own in Karnataka. He was doing exactly the same thing through Shivaji in Maharashtra as well. At both places, the administrators, Shahaji in Bangalore and Shivaji in Pune were calling themselves as Raja, were holding courts, and issuing letters bearing official seals in Sanskrit. Adilshah was weary of this and in 1648; two independent projects were undertaken by Adilshah to eliminate these two growing kingdoms in its territory. Shivaji defeated Adilshah’s general Fateh Khan in Pune, Maharashtra. At the same time, his elder brother Sambhaji defeated Adilshahas other general Farhad Khan in Bangalore. The modus operandi of Maratha troops on both the frontiers is similar, again reinstating the guiding vision of Shahaji. The subsequent treaty that was signed between two Bhonsale brothers and Adilshah to rescue Shahaji, who was held captive by Adilshah, marks the first Mughal-Maratha contact. In 1648-49, Adilshah captured Shahaji in order to blackmail his two sons to cede the territory conquered by them and accept Adilshahas supremacy. Shivaji wrote a series of letters to Dara Shikoh (Subhedar of Deccan), pledging to be subservient to Mughals. Mughals recognized Shivaji as a Mughal Sardar and pressurized Adilshah to release Shahaji. In return, Shivaji ceded Simhagad, and Sambhaji ceded Bangalore city and Kandarpi fort in Karnataka.

We can see the coherency in actions of Shivaji and Sambhaji. The men assisting both the brothers were loyal to Shahaji and were trained under him. Even though Shivaji was administrative head of Pune Jagir, many people appealed to Shahaji against Shivaji’s decisions up to 1655. Up to this point, Shahaji’s word was considered final in all of the important matters. Until this point, Shivaji was not at all free to take all the decisions on his will. There was a higher power that was controlling his activities. Gradually after 1655, this interference went on diminishing, and Shivaji started emerging more and more independent.

Thus, if we see these three men in a link, Shahaji, Shivaji and his son Sambhaji, all the actions of Shivaji start making sense. In this way, we are better able to grasp the greatness of the man, Shivaji.

Shivaji had himself coronated as a Kshatriya King in 1674. Shahaji initiated this policy. The Ghorpade clan of Marathas considered themselves as descendents of Sisodiya Rajputs. Shahaji attested his claim on the share in Ghorpade’s property from Adilshah long before 1640. In reality, there is no connectio whatsoever between Sisodiya Rajputs and Bhonsale clan. Nevertheless, Maloji started calling himself as Srimant Maloji Raje after becoming a bargir. Shahaji legalized this claim of being a Rajput from Adilshah. This was of great help to Shivaji at the time of his coronation in 1674. It is interesting to see that even after coronating himself as a Hindu Emperor, Shivaji continued writing letters to Aurangzeb, referring him as Emperor of India, and stating that he was a mere servant of Great Aurangzeb. We can see the basic pragmatic mindset of Shivaji which was fueled by great dream of establishing Hindu Self ruling state.