Archive for the ‘Changing India’ Category

The inspiring journey of Captain Gopinath

Wednesday, July 22nd, 2009

By Xavier Augustin

The story of Captain Gopinath and Deccan Air is a story of endurance.  Imagine a soldier returning to his home town where he got some land rewarded by the government. Imagine the scene of this youth looking at his patch of barren earth that he dreams of converting into coconut grove. Imagine a man pitching a tent and starting to dig – all alone. Imagine a scene where his prospective bride comes to visit him in his tent in the field and actually loves it. Imagine spending 10 years tilling  the land and watering the trees with the help of donkeys. Imagine the glee when Rolex recognizes his contribution in organic farming and rewards him with a watch. Imagine him leaving the farm to Bangalore to start a new company offering corporate chartered flights with helicopters  and from there on to start India’ s first low cost airline, Air Deccan.

The moral of the story: What matters is not how much resources you have but how resourceful you are.

Robert Frost’s  ‘Birches’ comes to mind :

“I should prefer to have some boy bend them (branches)
As he went out and in to fetch the cows—
Some boy too far from town to learn baseball,
Whose only play was what he found himself,
Summer or winter, and could play alone.
One by one he subdued his father’s trees
By riding them down over and over again
Until he took the stiffness out of them”

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How a young India yearns for an Obama?

Friday, February 13th, 2009

Its newspapers ask why India can’t have its own Barack Obama, why a land so diverse can’t elect a Muslim or untouchable-caste prime minister.

Many Indians watched Obama’s Inaugural Address, fully rapt, even though a good number have never watched an Indian leader’s speech in entirety.

The idea of Obama is baffling to many Indians, who have come to define a “leader” as someone over 75, flagrantly corrupt, physically unbecoming, descended from other politicians and oblivious to the realities of their constituents’ beleaguered lives. An election looms this year in India, pitting the bookish septuagenarian prime minister, Manmohan Singh, against Lal Krishna Advani, an octogenarian campaigning as fresh blood.

Read the complete article by Anand Giridharadas