Month: May 2022

  • Kriti Sanon on link-up rumors: I wish I had that interesting life

    Kriti Sanon on link-up rumors: I wish I had that interesting life

    Actor Kriti Sanon posts one video with her co-star Kartik Aaryan, and the rumor mill goes into overdrive speculating that they are dating. But for her, it is just another “petty” thing to ignore. And she feels it is an outcome of the growing popularity of social media. “It is (result of) people’s need for information. I don’t know if social media is a great thing to happen to us or a bad thing that happened to us. I have mixed feelings when it comes to that,” Sanon tells us when asked about the current speculation. “If you ask me about these petty things, they don’t bother me at all. It just makes you feel like ‘I wish my life was as interesting as it sounded it to be,” she quips. After spending eight years in the industry, Sanon is still learning to live with the constant scrutiny on personal and work life. “I know that this is a part and parcel of being a celebrity and a known face. But, I have to admit that there are things that annoy you and bother you,” says Sanon, adding, “Sometimes things are written about you or you get scrutinised for everything you say”.

              Source: HT

  • Madhuri Dixit joins Raja Kumari’s upcoming anthem ‘Made In India’

    Madhuri Dixit joins Raja Kumari’s upcoming anthem ‘Made In India’

    Twinkletoes Madhuri Dixit has teamed up with Indo-American rapper, songwriter and singer Raja Kumari as she pays tribute to her Indian heritage with her latest song ‘Made In India’ created in collaboration with Metro Shoes. Madhuri says, “Having lived in the USA for a few years, I completely resonate with the sentiments with which Raja Kumari created Made In India. It is an anthem for every Indian born in and outside of the country. It is truly exciting to have united with such a feisty artist for a song that envelopes the spirit of India.”

    The upcoming song stars both Raja Kumari and Madhuri in super glamourous looks that accentuate the narrative of aesthetics curated by homegrown labels.

    Sung and written by Raja Kumari as an interpolation of Alisha Chinai’s ‘Made in India’, the upcoming anthem is a homage to the original song that inspired her as a child. Through the song, the hip hop artiste claims her Indian heritage with pride and encourages Indians worldwide to do the same.

    Raja Kumari adds, “Madhuri is the ultimate queen of expression and a dance icon. I’ve admired her inspiring work and it feels surreal that we’ve collaborated for my dream project ‘Made In India’.

    “She’s one of the few Bollywood celebrities who owns her Indianness no matter where she goes. Our song also features young girls in different cultural attires. I believe we can show a more complete view of the Indian women of the new India. I’m excited that Madhuri powered this vision.”

              Source: IANS

  • Govt invokes emergency provision to step up power supply

    Govt invokes emergency provision to step up power supply

    New Delhi (TIP) – The Centre has invoked an emergency procedure under the Electricity Act to compel imported-coal-based plants to begin generating electricity. In return, power producers have been allowed to pass through their costs to the consumers, which is not allowed in the existing power purchase agreements (PPAs).

    The government hopes this will bring online 10,000 MW of power daily from imported coal plants which have a total capacity of 17,600 MW. Already, 7,600 MW of capacity has been revived after the government allowed a pass-through of higher costs. The entire 17,600 MW capacity has been shut as PPAs did not allow pass-through of higher cost of imported coal which has skyrocketed four times in the past one year.

    The higher costs will be worked out by a committee with representation from the Ministry of Power, Central Electricity Authority and Central Electricity Regulatory Commission. This panel will ensure that the benchmark rates of power worked out meet all the prudent cost of importing costlier coal, said an official release.

    The government is also putting a lot of onus on the states to tide over the power crisis after demand went up by 20 per cent due to hot weather conditions. The government has invoked Section 11 to compel imported coal-based plants to begin functioning because there is a mismatch in daily arrival of coal and declining stocks of coal at power plants. The imported coal for blending has also gone down because of the high costs. Imported coal for blending was at 37 million tonnes in 2015-16 which is down to negligible amounts currently. This aspect was reviewed by Power Minister RK Singh in a virtual meeting with states. He asked the states to place orders for import of coal for blending so that it reaches power plants this month itself. Singh also wanted the states to increase the output from captive mines and ensure off-take in the Rail-cum-Road (RCR) mode to meet the shortfall in coal requirement at their power plants.

    While Tamil Nadu and Maharashtra have placed import orders, Punjab and Gujarat are in the advanced stage. Rajasthan and MP are in the process of issuing the tenders. Haryana, UP, West Bengal, Odisha and Jharkhand have not yet issued tenders.

    India is also planning to reopen over 100 coal mines previously considered financially unsustainable. Source: TNS

  • India reports 3,805 new Covid cases, 22 deaths in 24 hours

    India reports 3,805 new Covid cases, 22 deaths in 24 hours

    New Delhi (TIP)- India reported 3,805 new Covid-19 infections on Saturday (May 7), 7.3 per cent higher than yesterday, according to data shared by the Union Health Ministry. This brings the country’s cumulative caseload to 4,30,98,743. India’s active caseload stands at 20,303. In the last 24 hours, active cases increased by 615.

    Total recoveries were at 4,25,54,416 across the country. A total of 3,168 patients recovered in the last 24 hours. The recovery rate is now at 98.74 per cent.

    Among all the states, Delhi reported the highest Covid-19 cases at 1,656 cases, followed by Haryana with 582 cases, Kerala with 400 cases, Uttar Pradesh with 320 cases and Maharashtra with 205 cases.

    These five states accounted for 83.13 per cent of the daily new cases reported on Sunday, with Delhi alone responsible for 43.52 per cent of the new cases.

    In the last 24 hours, 22 people succumbed to Covid-19, increasing the total reported death count to 5,24,024. India conducted 4,65,918 tests during the previous day, according to the Health Ministry data. A total of 17,49,063 vaccine doses were administered in the last 24 hours, which brings the total tally of doses administered to 1,90,00,94,982.

  • India in history this Week-May 6, 2022, to May 12, 2022

    06 MAY

    1944          Gandhiji released from Aga Khan Palace in Pune.

    1967          Zakir Hussain became the first Muslim President of India.

    2010          Ajmal Amir Kasab, convicted for the 26/11 attack in Mumbai, was sentenced to death.

    1861          Motilal Nehru was born.

    1964          Khajan Singh, one of the famous swimmers of India, was born.

    1589          The great musician Mian Tansen died.

    1946          Eminent jurist, prominent parliamentary leader and trusted aide of Mahatma Gandhi, Bhulabhai Desai died.

    07 MAY

    1861          Rabindranath Tagore was born into a prosperous family in Calcutta. Tagore is the first person in Asia to receive the Nobel Prize.

    1907          The first electric tram car operated in Bombay.

    1973          The foundation stone of the new capital of Arunachal Pradesh was laid at Itanagar.

    1989          Diplomatic contact between Britain and Iran broke in 1989 after an Iranian fatwa against Indian-origin writer Salman Rushdie.

    2002          The International Religious Freedom Commission expressed serious concern over the violence in Gujarat.

    1889          Renowned freedom fighter and founder of ‘Hindustani Sevadal’ N. s. Hardiker was born.

    1880          The great Indian Sanskritist and scholar Pandit Pandurang Vaman Kane was born.

    08 MAY

    1933          Mahatma Gandhi kept 21 days fast against British rule.

    1929          Birth of India’s famous Thumri singer Girija Devi.

    1963          The centenary celebrations of the Indian Red Cross Society were celebrated.

    1954          The central government included Chandranagar in the state of West Bengal.

    2000          69-year-old Lord Swarajpal of Indian origin was appointed the vice-chancellor of Britain’s fourth-largest university in Britain.

    1895          Famous revolutionary and Gandhian activist of Orissa Gopabandhu Chaudhary was born.

    1916          Swami Chinmayananda, the famous spiritual thinker of India and world-renowned scholar of Vedanta philosophy was born.

    1915          India’s freedom fighter Amir Chand passed away.

    1915          One of the revolutionaries who fought for India’s independence, Bhai Balmukund, died on that day.

    1926          Famous historian Tapan Rai Chaudhary was born.

    09 MAY

    1540          King of Shishodia dynasty Maharana Pratap was born in Udaipur, Mewar, who struggled with Mughal Emperor Akbar for many years.

    1866          Freedom fighter, philanthropist, thinker and reformer Gopal Krishna Gokhale was also born on this day.

    2010          India’s Vandana Shiva was selected for the Sydney Peace Prize for women’s empowerment and environmental protection in developing countries.

    1653          The world-famous historical building and the Taj Mahal, one of the world’s wonders, was completed after 22 years of continuous work.

    1874          The first horse-drawn tram car started in Bombay (now Mumbai).

    1946          The first Satyagraha movement against the Portuguese rule started in Goa under the leadership of Dr. Ram Manohar Lohia.

    1986          The first person to reach Mount Everest, Himalaya, Tenzing Norgay died in 1986.

    1998          Famous Indian Ghazal singer and actor Talat Mehmood died in 1998.

    10 MAY

    1526          After victory in the first battle of Panipat, Babur entered Akbarabad (Agra), the capital of erstwhile India.

    2002          India’s famous poet Kaifi Azmi passed away.

    1993          Santosh Yadav became the first female climber to reach Everest, the world’s highest mountain peak twice.

    1857          The first battle of freedom struggle started from the cantonment of Meerut.

    1857          Indian fighters started a revolt in Delhi from the British East India Company.

    1946          Jawaharlal Nehru was elected the leader of the Congress party in India.

    11 MAY

    1784          Treaty between the British and Tipu Sultan, the ruler of Mysore.

    1951          President Rajendra Prasad inaugurated the newly constructed Somnath Temple.

    1962          Sarvepalli Radhakrishnan was elected the President of India. He succeeded Dr. Rajendra Prasad.

    1998          India announced three nuclear tests at Pokaran in Rajasthan.

    2000          According to the population clock, India’s population reached one billion.

    2007          The Bahujan Samaj Party secured a majority in the Uttar Pradesh assembly elections and party leader Mayawati took over as the chief minister.

    1960          The first contraceptive pill market was made available in 1960.

    2005          In 2005, the World Bank appointed a neutral expert on the Baglihar project to settle Indo-Pak differences.

    2011          India and Pakistan agreed to start a bus service between Lahore and Amritsar.

    1918          India’s famous classical dancer Mrinalini Sarabhai was born in 1918.

    2002          Princess of Bhopal politics and India’s first female pilot Abida Sultan died in 2002.

    12 MAY

    1459          Rao Jodha founded Jodhpur.

    1666          Under the treaty of Purandar, Chhatrapati Shivaji Maharaj reached Agra to meet Aurangzeb.

    1915          The revolutionary Rasbihari Bose left India aboard the Japanese yacht Sanuki Maru.

    1993          Famous Hindi poet Shamsher Bahadur Singh passed away.

    1921          The first National Hospital Day was celebrated.

    1926          Airship Norgay became the first vessel to fly to the North Pole.

    1949          Vijayalakshmi Pandit became the first foreign woman ambassador of independent India.

  • WhatsApp finally rolling out emoji reactions for messages

    WhatsApp finally rolling out emoji reactions for messages

    WhatsApp is finally getting an emoji reaction feature that will let users react to messages with emoji. Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg announced the same on Facebook earlier this week. The emoji reactions feature is already seen on popular communication platforms like Instagram, Telegram and even iMessage, but now WhatsApp users will be able to make use of it too. The implementation in WhatsApp will include 6 emoji reactions that users can choose from. These are fixed and cannot be changed for now. However, Zuckerberg did announce that we will get more options later. The six emoji include like, love, surprise, laugh, sad and thanks.

    Using the reactions feature will be super simple for users.Similar to how it works on other apps, all users need to do is enter a chat window and long-press on a message to bring up the six reaction emoji. You will be able to long-press on text messages as well as images and videos.

    Once you have long-pressed on a message and the reaction options have popped up below it, simply tap on the reaction you want. As per reports, WhatsApp could also bring sticker reactions and GIF reactions to the platform.

  • Apple, Google, Microsoft expand support for passwordless sign-ins

    Apple, Google, Microsoft expand support for passwordless sign-ins

    In a bid to make the web more secure, Apple, Google and Microsoft on Thursday announced plans to expand support for a common passwordless sign-in standard created by the FIDO Alliance and the World Wide Web Consortium. The new capability will allow websites and apps to offer consistent, secure, and easy passwordless sign-ins to consumers across devices and platforms.

    “This new capability stands to usher in a new wave of low-friction FIDO implementations alongside the ongoing and growing utilization of security keys — giving service providers a full range of options for deploying modern, phishing-resistant authentication,” said Andrew Shikiar, executive director and CMO of the FIDO Alliance.

    While password managers and legacy forms of two-factor authentication offer incremental improvements, there has been industry-wide collaboration to create sign-in technology that is more convenient and more secure. The expanded standards-based capabilities will give websites and apps the ability to offer an end-to-end passwordless option.

    “Working with the industry to establish new, more secure sign-in methods that offer better protection and eliminate the vulnerabilities of passwords is central to our commitment to building products that offer maximum security and a transparent user experience,” said Kurt Knight, Apple’s Senior Director of Platform Product Marketing.

    Users will sign in through the same action that they take multiple times each day to unlock their devices, such as a simple verification of their fingerprint or face, or a device PIN.

    This new approach protects against phishing and sign-in will be radically more secure when compared to passwords and legacy multi-factor technologies such as one-time passcodes sent over SMS.

    Apple, Google, and Microsoft have led development of this expanded set of capabilities and are now building support into their respective platforms.

    The move allows users to automatically access their FIDO sign-in credentials (referred to by some as a “passkey”) on many of their devices, even new ones, without having to reenroll every account. It will also enable users to use FIDO authentication on their mobile device to sign in to an app or website on a nearby device, regardless of the OS platform or browser they are running.

    “This milestone is a testament to the collaborative work being done across the industry to increase protection and eliminate outdated password-based authentication,” said Mark Risher, Senior Director of Product Management, Google.     Source: IANS

  • This is how Twitter’s Edit button will finally work

    This is how Twitter’s Edit button will finally work

    As Twitter plans to give its users an Edit button, after a push by its soon-to-be boss Elon Musk, to help them correct errors in their tweets, app researcher and reverse engineer Jane Manchun Wong on Tuesday revealed the first glimpse of the new tool. She tweeted a video with the steps needed to edit a tweet. A user has to press a button called “Edit Tweet” in the drop-down context menu, and then he or she can edit the post.

    “The current unreleased version of Edit Tweet reuploads media (images, videos, GIFs, etc) instead of reusing them. An inefficient use of the bandwidth and media processing power… plus it turns my video into an image (mishandling media type),” she said in a tweet.

    At the moment, it looks like a user will get 30 minutes after publishing a tweet to hit the Edit button.

    One may even replace the entire media (photo/video file) embedded with the tweet.

    The Edit button will show the user the entire original content, and the user can then either delete the whole post or start over, as the tool appears not just for grammatical errors.

    Earlier reports suggest that the micro-blogging platform is also going to keep a digital trace of your earlier tweets.

    Wong said the edit button may have an “immutable” quality.

    “Looks like Twitter’s approach to Edit Tweet is immutable, as in, instead of mutating the Tweet text within the same Tweet (same ID), it re-creates a new Tweet with the amended content, along with the list of the old Tweets prior of that edit,” Wong posted last month. Initially, the edit button will be available to Twitter Blue users and will be extended to all at a later stage.

    Source: IANS

  • NASA scientists crack 60-year-old mystery of explosions on Sun

    Scientists at NASA have developed a theory that explains how explosions occur on the Sun, and help better predict geomagnetic storms and solar flares that can impact Earth. An explosive process called magnetic reconnection triggers solar flares, which can, in just minutes, release enough energy to power the whole world for 20,000 years. Scientists have spent the last half-century trying to understand how this process happens. The team at NASA’s Magnetospheric Multiscale Mission (MMS) has a new theory that explains how the most explosive type of magnetic reconnection – called fast reconnection – occurs and why it happens at a consistent speed. Magnetic reconnection is a process that occurs in plasma – energetic, fluid-like material that is exquisitely sensitive to magnetic fields. From flares on the Sun, to near Earth space, to black holes, plasmas throughout the universe undergo magnetic reconnection, which rapidly converts magnetic energy into heat and acceleration. While there are several types of magnetic reconnection, one particularly puzzling variant is known as fast reconnection, which occurs at a predictable rate.

    “We have known for a while that fast reconnection happens at a certain rate that seems to be pretty constant,” said Barbara Giles, project scientist for MMS and research scientist at NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Maryland. “But what really drives that rate has been a mystery, until now.” The new research, published in a paper in Nature’s Communications Physics journal, explained how fast reconnection occurs specifically in collisionless plasmas – a type of plasma whose particles are spread out enough that the individual particles don’t collide with one another. Where reconnection happens in space, most plasma is in this collisionless state, including the plasma in solar flares and the space around Earth.

  • India’s top health experts question WHO report on excess Covid deaths

    India’s top health experts question WHO report on excess Covid deaths

    New Delhi (TIP)- Questioning the modelling methodology used by WHO to estimate 4.7 million deaths in India due to Covid or its impact, top health experts have expressed disappointment over the global health body’s “one-size-fits-all” approach to arrive at the figure. ICMR Director General Balram Bhargava, NITI Aayog Member (Health) V K Paul, AIIMS Director Randeep Guleria and NTAGI’s Covid-19 Working Group Chairman Dr N K Arora on Thursday rejected the WHO report as “untenable and unfortunate”.

    In its report released on Thursday, WHO estimated that nearly 15 million people were killed either by the coronavirus or by its impact on the overwhelmed health systems in the past two years, more than double the official death toll of six million. Most of the fatalities were in Southeast Asia, Europe and the Americas.

    According to the report, there were 4.7 million Covid deaths in India — 10 times the official figures and almost a third of Covid deaths globally.

    Rejecting it, Dr V K Paul said India has been telling WHO with all humility through diplomatic channels along with data and rational reasoning that it does not agree with the methodology that has been followed for the country.

    They have used a methodology for several nations which is based on a systematic collection of data on deaths.

    “We have a similar system, a robust Civil Registration System (CRS). We released that report yesterday (Wednesday) and we have an actual count of deaths for 2020… the 2021 numbers will also come up,” he said.

    The Civil Registration System of India provides accurate estimates emanating from the ground, certified and validated by the district and the state administration.

    “We want them to have used these numbers. Unfortunately, despite our emphatic writing and communication at the ministerial level, they have chosen to use the numbers that are based on modelling and assumptions,” Paul said.

    “Modelling is a one-size-fits-all kind of assumption and you may apply it where the systems are poor. But to apply assumptions based on a subset of states and on reports that come from websites and media, and then you come out with an exorbitant number is not tenable. We are disappointed with what WHO has done,” he stated.

    These kinds of assumptions used for a nation of India’s size “to put us in poor light is not desirable,” Paul added.

    Assuring the country that the government has nothing to hide, Paul said there is still an active process by which Covid deaths are being reconciled. “Our numbers are there and we have a robust system from the ground. We, therefore, do not accept these numbers, we reject them,” he said.

    On what would be India’s next step, Paul said, “We will communicate our stance systematically. We have a rebuttal by way of educating people and the public at large through our press release. “We will go back to WHO to explain this and at the same time we would like to make sure that our stand is put forth around the world.”           Source: PTI

  • Hizbul commander among 3 terrorists killed in J&K

    Hizbul commander among 3 terrorists killed in J&K

    Srinagar (TIP)- Top Hizbul Mujahideen commander Ashraf Molvi and his two associates have been killed in an encounter with security forces near the route of the annual Amarnath Yatra, in Jammu & Kashmir’s Anantnag district on Friday,  May 6, police said. Molvi (50), who was on the list of top 10 most-wanted terrorists, was among the oldest surviving terrorists in Kashmir and has been active in south Kashmir since 2013, said an official.

    According to the police, a cordon and search operation was launched in the Srichand Top forest area in Pahalgam, on Friday morning following specific inputs about the presence of terrorists in the area. The official said the search operation turned into an encounter after the hiding terrorists fired at the security forces and three terrorists were killed in retaliatory fire. “Ashraf Molvi (one of oldest surviving terrorists of HM terror outfit) along with two other terrorists were killed. Successful operation on the yatra route is a major success for us,” Inspector General of Police (Kashmir) Vijay Kumar tweeted. Pahalgam serves as one of the base camps for the Amarnath yatra, scheduled to start on June 30 after a gap of two years. It is scheduled to go on till August 11.

  • ‘43 seats in Jammu & 47 in Kashmir’: Delimitation process complete in J&K

    ‘43 seats in Jammu & 47 in Kashmir’: Delimitation process complete in J&K

    New Delhi (TIP)-The delimitation commission to redraw the electoral map of Jammu and Kashmir on May 5 notified and submitted its much-awaited final report. The completion of the controversial delimitation process will pave the way for holding assembly elections in Jammu and Kashmir. The former state is without an elected government since June 2018.

    All five parliamentary constituencies will have an equal number of assembly constituencies for the first time. Nine seats have been reserved for Scheduled Tribes (ST), another first for the erstwhile state.

    Of the 90 assembly constituencies, 43 will be part of the Jammu region and 47 for Kashmir. Jammu and Kashmir have been treated as a single entity for the purposes of delimitation. The number of total assembly seats in Jammu has risen from 37 to 43 assembly seats. All assembly constituencies shall remain within the boundary of the concerned district, according to the delimitation order.

    The Patwar circle is the lowest administrative unit which has not been broken.

    The commission has recommended additional seats in the assembly for Kashmiri migrants and displaced persons from Pakistan occupied J&K.

    According to the Jammu and Kashmir Reorganisation Act, the census of 2011 had to be the basis of delimitation, but the commission eventually said that it would also take into account the political aspirations of various sections of society and factor in accessibility, topography and proximity to the border as part of the consideration to allot seats

    The draft report of the commission that was made public a few months ago has caused a huge controversy after the opposition alleged gerrymandering to help BJP and turning the demographic majority into a political minority in several areas.

    Home Minister Amit Shah recently said elections would be held in Jammu and Kashmir after the completion of the delimitation process.

    Political parties have pointed out serious flaws in the delimitation process, which may have long-term and serious repercussions for democracy in the region.

    For example, while redrawing parliament seats, the commission has merged the Poonch and Rajouri districts, which were part of the Jammu parliament constituency with the Anantnag Parliament constituency in south Kashmir.

    There is no geographical connectivity and the distance between the two regions is more than 500 km via Jammu. An alternate route – Mughal road via Shopian district – remains closed during winter and opens only in the summer months.

    Regional political parties have rejected the delimitation proposal and alleged that the boundaries of seats were redrawn only to help BJP achieve its political objectives.

  • Sedition Law Pleas: Centre Asks for More Time, SC to Take Call on Larger Bench on May 10

    The Supreme Court will hear a batch of petitions against the sedition law, Section 124 A of the Indian Penal Code, on May 10. The top court said it will take a call on whether the matter should be sent to a larger constitutional bench of seven judges.

    A three-judge bench, led by Chief Justice N.V. Ramana, on Thursday granted time until Monday, May 9, to the Union government to file a counter-affidavit. The petitioners in the case have been given time until Saturday, May 7, to file their response.

    The issue of the size of the bench assumes significance given that the top court will now review its own ruling in the Kedar Nath Singh case of 1962 which had upheld the sedition law by a five-judge bench. In the landmark case, the top court had also attempted to restrict its misuse.

    Currently, the court is considering a batch of writ petitions filed by army veteran Major-General S.G. Vombatkere (Retired); Editors Guild of India; former Union minister Arun Shourie; Trinamool Congress MP Mahua Moitra; journalists Anil Chamadia, Patricia Mukhim, Anuradha Bhasin; People’s Union for Civil Liberties (PUCL); and the Journalist Union of Assam.

  • Hindu man in Hyderabad killed after marrying Muslim

    Hindu man in Hyderabad killed after marrying Muslim

    Hyderabad (TIP)- A young man lay bleeding by a busy road in Hyderabad, his face smashed to pulp with iron rods, while his wife valiantly fought off his attackers, in a horrific killing in public caught on camera Wednesday, May 4  evening. The 25-year-old car salesman was beaten and stabbed to death by his Muslim wife’s brother and relatives, the police say. B Nagaraju and Syed Ashrin Sulthana, described in reports as “childhood sweethearts”, had married three months ago, defying her family.

    Around 8.45 pm on Wednesday, the couple had just left home on their bike when two men stopped them, dragged Nagaraju off and attacked him with iron rods and knives. Security footage showed a crowd rapidly collecting at the spot but no one trying to stop the attack. Many had their mobile phones out, recording the crime.

    On camera, Nagaraju soon appeared lifeless, his head a bloodied mass, as his wife screamed for help. In one video, Sulthana was seen lunging at one of the attackers, trying to stop another strike at Nagaraju. Witnesses rushed at the attacker then, hitting him and chasing him off. She later identified the attacker as her brother.

    It was all over within seconds. Nagaraju died by a road buzzing with traffic and people but nothing could save him. “They killed my husband in the middle of the street. Five people attacked. My brother and others. There was nobody to help us. I begged everyone. They killed him in front of my eyes,” Sulthana, dazed with grief, told reporters today.

    “Why did people come if they couldn’t do anything? They only watched. It happens before their eyes, someone being killed, can’t people see? I fell on him so I could save him. But they pushed me away. They hit him with iron rods and broke his head.”

    The attackers fled but they were caught on security cameras and the mobile phone videos recorded by witnesses. The police have formed teams to arrest the killers seen on camera.

    Nagaraju and Sulthana had an Arya Samaj wedding on January 31. They had known each other since Class 10 but her family was dead opposed to her marrying outside her faith.

    Sulthana said she had tried to stay away from Nagaraju earlier. “I told him if I don’t marry you, I won’t marry anyone else. I told him life or death is with you only. I will die. Before our marriage, I didn’t speak to him for two months, so I could just die,” she shared with reporters, weeping.

    Sulthana had changed her name to Pallavi after the wedding. Her family had allegedly threatened Nagaraju and had told him to stay away from her.

    “We filed a complaint with the police on the life threats from the girl’s family. Due to police negligence, today I lost my brother. He was the sole bread earner of the family,” Nagaraju’s sister Ramadevi told news agency ANI.

    The gruesome killing has sparked tension in the Saroornagar area of Hyderabad. Local BJP activists have launched protests demanding tough action.

    “A person was killed by two persons. The deceased was traveling on a bike with his wife. They got married recently and both belonged to different communities. Brothers of the deceased’s wife today assaulted Nagaraju and then attacked him with a rod and killed him on the spot,” said Sreedhar Reddy, a police officer.

  • Mother’s Day Around the World

    Mother’s Day Around the World

    Costa Rica

    Mother’s Day, or “Dia de la Madre” as it’s locally known, is a big deal in Costa Rica, where the importance of family bonds is prevalent in every aspect of daily life. It is a national holiday in Costa Rica, held on August 15 every year. This date was selected because it coincides with the Catholic feast of the Assumption of the Blessed Virgin Mary. While the majority of Costa Ricans are Catholic, the day is usually spent at home and not at mass. Extended family members are invited around to share in a huge feast and gift mom with flowers and presents.

    Ethiopia

    In Ethiopia, Mother’s Day is celebrated a bit differently. Once the rainy season is over, families will gather for the Antrosht festival. During the span of three days, there will be dancing, singing, and lots of food. It’s customary for daughters to supply vegetables and cheese, while sons bring the meat.

    Ireland

    In Ireland, Mother’s Day is observed on the fourth Sunday during Lent, or three weeks before Easter Sunday. Historically, families would start the day by attending a special mass in honor of Mary, Mother of Christ. The holiday’s roots in Ireland can be traced back centuries. In medieval times, Irish children from impoverished backgrounds were sent to rich family homes to work as domestic servants. Their work was given a reprieve on the Fourth Sunday of Lent, when the children were permitted to return home for some time with their families.

    Sweden

    Swedes celebrate Mother’s Day, or “Mors Dag” on the last Sunday of every May. According to tradition, the holiday is characterized by local customs including a morning greeting, sung by young children in the house. Families will also hoist the Swedish flag outside the home, and ensure mom has a relaxing morning with good coffee and bread, accompanied by flowers and small gifts.

    Thailand

    Mother’s Day in Thailand is observed on August 12 to commemorate the birthday of Queen Sirikit. Festivities for the holiday include parades and gifting jasmine to mothers.

    Russia

    When Russia was still known as the Soviet Union, mothers were honored on March 8, International Women’s Day. In 1998, Mother’s Day was officially established as the last Sunday of November. However, many people still celebrate in March.

    Gifts to Send for Mother’s Day

    Now that we’ve covered the origins of Mother’s Day celebrations, how do you show your gratitude and love toward your mom? It’s not easy to express your feelings, especially when actions speak louder than words. This Mother’s Day, share a gift that’s just as unique as she is and that she’ll cherish forever.

    While popular gifts include Mother’s Day chocolate and jewelry, there are a variety of options you can choose from if you’ve simply hit a dead end. No matter what her interests and hobbies are, we can help you find a gift that she’ll absolutely love. Below, you’ll find a few amazing Mother’s Day gifts to send.

    For mothers who need a day to unwind and relax, send her a spa day gift basket with all the essentials she needs to make her DIY spa day a success. From lotion to body butter and cozy slippers, she’ll have a perfect day of relaxation while at home.

    Is she a wine enthusiast? Send your mom her favorite wine along with a quality cutting board and a meat and cheese gift. Our meat and cheese gift baskets include a cutting board and delicious pairings to make your own charcuterie board at home. Who doesn’t love a good wine night?

    What better way to show your mom you love her than with a floral arrangement? Mother’s Day flowers are a classic gift for a reason, and we can help you deliver fresh blooms straight to her door. If you’re looking for traditional flowers this May 8, opt for these top sellers: carnations, daisies and roses. Our Mother’s Day lilies and Mother’s Day tulips are also great selections since both types of blossoms symbolize motherhood.

    Fun Facts About Mother’s Day

    This is the busiest day of the year for phone calls in the United States. More than 122 million calls are made to moms around the country on the second Sunday of May each year.

    It’s also busy for restaurants. Families everywhere love to take mom out and spoil her with a delicious meal. According to recent statistics, some 87 million people make restaurant reservations for Mother’s Day.

    After Christmas and Easter, Mother’s Day is the most popular day for churchgoing, since it always falls on a Sunday.

    Mother’s Day was declared an official holiday in the U.S. in 1914

    Billions of dollars are collectively spent on Mother’s Day gifts, mostly on flower arrangements, cards, jewelry and chocolates.

  • Mother’s Day

    Mother’s Day

    Mother’s Day is a time to honor motherhood and show our appreciation to moms of all kinds, including wives, sisters, and grandmas, for all their hard work and sacrifice. In the United States, Mother’s Day is celebrated on the second Sunday of May. This year, the holiday falls on Sunday, May 8, 2022. It’s customary to shower mothers with gifts, such as flowers and jewelry, on this special day. But what exactly are the origins of Mother’s Day? As with many holidays, the history behind Mother’s Day is based on both ancient and modern traditions from around the world.

    History of Mother’s Day

    Historically, mothers have always held essential roles in society. From Marie Curie, the first woman to ever win a Nobel Prize, to former Supreme Court Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg, moms have changed the world. For this reason, numerous individuals gather to celebrate all forms of motherhood on Mother’s Day, and we have a few extraordinary women to thank for that.

    Ann Reeves Jarvis

    In 1858, Ann Reeves Jarvis, an Appalachian homemaker, established Mothers’ Work Days during the Civil War in an effort to improve sanitation for soldiers and children. She also helped start a club to teach women how to take care of children.  You see, as a mother, she had lost eight out of her twelve children due to poor sanitation conditions.

    When the Civil War broke out in the United States, she asked various members of the clubs she helped organize to pledge that the war wouldn’t interfere with their work. They vowed to provide medical care and assist those with illnesses regardless of which side they were fighting on.  She then started Mother’s Friendship Day as a day to promote the reconciliation between Union and Confederate soldiers.

    Julia Ward Howe

    Around this time, Julia Ward Howe, an abolitionist, writer, and suffragette, wrote a Mother’s Day Proclamation to ask mothers to join her in promoting world peace. In 1873, she campaigned to establish a Mother’s Day of Peace in order to achieve world peace and resolve the conflicts between human beings. She was greatly inspired by the work of Ann Reeves Jarvis.

    Anna Jarvis

    It wasn’t until Ann Reeves Jarvis’ daughter, Anna, came along that Mother’s Day became the widely recognized holiday we know and love today. After the death of Anna’s mother in 1905, she wanted to create a memorial day to honor mothers who had passed away and acknowledge the sacrifices mothers endure for their children.

    The first official Mother’s Day celebration was held in Grafton, West Virginia at a local church on May 10, 1908. Thanks to the financial backing of John Wanamaker, a Philadelphia business owner, this Mother’s Day was an enormous success. On this day, thousands of people also showed up to a simultaneous Mother’s Day event occurring at one of Wanamaker’s stores. If you go to this church today, you can find the International Mother’s Day Shrine.

    Seeing how successful this first Mother’s Day event was, Anna vowed to make it a national holiday. She tirelessly wrote to politicians and newspapers from around the country, asking them to adopt the day and celebrate motherhood. Soon, the tradition caught on and spread to 45 other states, and several of them even declared it an official holiday in 1912 and after.

    Finally, in 1914, former President Woodrow Wilson announced the first national celebration of Mother’s Day. Now, Mother’s Day is celebrated every second Sunday in May.

    What is the Meaning of Mothering Sunday?

    In the UK and certain parts of Europe, one of the clearest traditions of Mother’s Day stems from Mothering Sunday. Originally, it was a religious holiday that was observed on the fourth Sunday of Lent. This day was meant for individuals to find their way back to their “mother church,” which was the church nearest to them, for a special service. Churchgoers would also take this as an opportunity to reunite with family after being away due to work.

    Historians have many theories on the Mothering Sunday origins, including that the tradition developed from children picking up flowers as they walked to church or that the holiday name refers to a reading found in the bible. Mothering Sunday has now shifted into less of a religious holiday and is a day that everyone can celebrate. People in the UK take the time to honor mothers, such as birthmothers, grandmothers, stepmothers, and mothers-in-law.

    Before the switch happened, people would celebrate with a Simnel cake, a fruit cake made with almond paste and 11 marzipan balls to represent the 11 disciples. Since the tradition changed to a more secular one, children now often give their moms flowers, presents, and homemade cards. People may also invite their mothers out to a nice brunch, lunch, or dinner. This year, Mothering Sunday falls on Sunday, March 27, 2022.

    Where did the tradition of Mother’s Day come from?

    Although Mother’s Day as we know it has more recent roots, early Mother’s Day celebrations can be traced back to festivals held by ancient Greeks and Romans. In ancient Greece, people would honor Rhea, the wife of Cronus and mother of the gods. People from all over Greece would offer Rhea food, drinks, and flowers.

    The Romans also celebrated a different mother of the gods named Cybele, or Magna Mater, which means Great Mother. The Romans even went as far as to dedicate a temple to her, and in March they would participate in the Festival of Hilaria and provide gifts for the goddess.

    Today, most people celebrate their moms by purchasing or making gifts and giving them a much-needed day off. Chocolates, flowers, and cards remain the most popular Mother’s Day gifts. In fact, the National Retail Federation (NRF) estimates that Americans spent approximately $2.67 billion on holiday purchases, including the ever-popularMother’s Day roses.

    How is Mother’s Day Celebrated?

    Although Mother’s Day is traditionally a western concept, the holiday has become incredibly popular worldwide.  Mothers everywhere are honored on certain days, sometimes even with grand festivals or parades. We’ll explore the ways in which people in the U.S. and abroad honor their mothers and celebrate the occasion.

    United States

    In the U.S., Mother’s Day is a time to shower your mom with gifts. Whether you’re looking to go all out or stay within your budget, there are many ways to celebrate Mother’s Day in the U.S. Here are a few of our favorite Mother’s Day activities:

    Kick-off Mother’s Day morning by surprising her with her favorite breakfast foods. If she likes to start her day with coffee, include a gourmet coffee gift basket as an extra special touch.

    Enjoy the holiday by spending the day together. If you have a family of your own, chances are you don’t see your mom as often as you’d like. Make the day memorable by doing activities she’s always wanted to do.

    If you live far away, call your mom and invite her to a virtual brunch date. DIY some tasty mimosas, dress up for the occasion (or stay in pajamas), and chat the afternoon away while enjoying each other’s company. You can also send your mom a sweet greeting card with Mother’s Day quotes she loves.

    Ceremonial tree planting is a becoming a popular tradition among families on this important holiday. Mother’s Day plants are an excellent gift option, even for moms that lack green thumbs. There are low-maintenance succulents, bromeliads, and other potted beauties that make great table centerpieces and can live on for months.

    Whatever you decide, your mom will appreciate all the effort you put into making Mother’s Day unforgettable.

  • Two Indian-Americans among top 50 IT leaders

    Two Indian-Americans among top 50 IT leaders

    WASHINGTON, D.C. (TIP):  Two Indian-American technocrats, Krishna Kumar Edathil from Texas and Nikhil Deshpande from Georgia, have made it to the coveted StateScoop Top 50 2022 list.

  • Indian American student entrepreneurs  honored by University of Texas

    Indian American student entrepreneurs honored by University of Texas

    DALLAS (TIP): Kashish Dhal, an Indian Engineering Graduate Student, won the University of Texas at Arlington (UTA) Maverick Entrepreneur Program Award for his business proposal to develop autopilot software for drones. The software will leverage artificial intelligence to assist industry inspectors and first responders by increasing their working efficiency and keeping them out of dangerous environments.

    The Award Fund was established to reward UTA students who explore and express their business ideas in a competitive environment. At an annual event, all UTA students are invited to submit a video of their competitive ideas, and winners are asked to present their ideas to the judges in phase one. Winners of phase one are awarded up to $15K in cash prize money and invited to participate in phase two, where they can be awarded an additional $25K, totaling $40K in cash prize money.

    In 2021 winners, Kashish Dhal and Mahinder Singh won $15000 (first prize) and $10,000 (second prize), respectively. They were among five student teams winning the awards university-wide. Before winning this award, Kashish Dhal and his team also won NSF I-Corps Award ($50,000) in April 2021 and the campus-level Blackstone LaunchPad Ideas Competition ($1,000) in November 2021. Dr. Harbans Lal, a community leader, attended the Award Ceremony and congratulated the winning students on behalf of the Indian community. He also invited all the Indian students competing for the award to dinner in appreciation of their so well in their education.

  • Indians apprehended on sinking boat in failed smuggling attempt to enter US from Canada

    Indians apprehended on sinking boat in failed smuggling attempt to enter US from Canada

    NEW YORK (TIP): Six Indian nationals, aged 19-21 years, were arrested by the US border authorities after they were apprehended on a sinking boat during a failed attempt to be smuggled into America from Canada.

    The US Customs and Border Protection said in a statement Thursday, May 5,  that with assistance from the Saint Regis Mohawk Tribal Police Department, the Akwesasne Mohawk Police Service, and the Hogansburg-Akwesasne Volunteer Fire Department (HAVFD), U.S. Border Patrol agents from the Massena Border Patrol Station apprehended seven individuals in connection with a failed smuggling attempt early Thursday morning.

    Six of the subjects, all ranging from ages 19 to 21 years old, are citizens of India and have been charged with Improper Entry by Alien in violation of US law. The seventh subject, a United States citizen, was charged with Alien Smuggling, which is a felony and carries a penalty of a fine and up to 10 years in prison for each violation.

    Last week, suspicious activity was reported to the Akwesasne Mohawk Police Service, which notified the Saint Regis Mohawk Tribal Police Department about a boat containing multiple individuals travelling from Canada near Ontario toward the United States. The Saint Regis Mohawk Tribal Police Department responded and observed the vessel taking on water and sinking in the Saint Regis River in Akwesasne. Answering the call for assistance, Border Patrol agents and the HAVFD arrived on the scene to find the reported vessel almost entirely underwater.

    One of the subjects had managed to exit the sinking boat and made his way to the shoreline. The HAVFD deployed a boat and was able to recover the other six “distressed subjects”. Authorities said there were no life jackets or other safety equipment onboard the sinking boat.

    Due to the water temperature being just above freezing, all seven individuals on the boat were evaluated and treated for hypothermia by medical professionals. Upon their release, they were arrested by Border Patrol agents and transported to the Border Patrol Station for processing.

  • Indian American Richard Verma to be appointed to Biden’s Intelligence Advisory Board

    Indian American Richard Verma to be appointed to Biden’s Intelligence Advisory Board

    WASHINGTON, D.C.  (TIP): US President Joe Biden has announced his intent to appoint Indian-American lawyer diplomat Richard Verma, also a former US ambassador to India, as a member of his Intelligence Advisory Board. The President’s Intelligence Advisory Board is an independent element within his Executive Office. A White House statement said Biden has announced his intent to appoint Verma to his Intelligence Advisory Board. Verma, 53, is currently the general counsel and head of Global Public Policy for Mastercard. He oversees the company’s law and policy functions in the US and around the world.

  • Indian-origin British industrialist Lord Swraj Paul’s wife Aruna passes away in UK

    Indian-origin British industrialist Lord Swraj Paul’s wife Aruna passes away in UK

    LONDON (TIP): The wife of leading NRI industrialist Lord Swraj Paul, Lady Aruna Paul, passed away peacefully at her home in London on Tuesday, May 3  night. She was 86. “She was full of life and always trying to uplift people around her,” said a close family member, confirming the news of her death.

    Lady Paul is survived by her husband and three children – two sons Akash and Ambar and daughter Anjli.

    Swraj and Aruna Paul, who were married for over 65 years, were a familiar presence together at diaspora events in London. They celebrated their diamond wedding anniversary in December 2016, when Queen Elizabeth II sent her best wishes to mark the couple’s wedding milestone. Lord Paul, 91, is the founder of UK-based Caparo Group of industries, with operations in the US, India, Canada and the United Arab Emirates (UAE).

  • Indian Girl Single-Handedly gets Ambedkar in American Curriculum of a  San Jose College

    Indian Girl Single-Handedly gets Ambedkar in American Curriculum of a San Jose College

    Prabhjot Singh

    TORONTO (TIP): An Indian student in San Jose City College in California has taken upon herself the onerous task of spreading knowledge about Dr B.R. Ambedkar. Thanks to Aruna Masoorkar’s  efforts, life, history and works of Dr BR Ambedkar have been included in the American curriculum of the college.

    As the only Indian Buddhist student at her institution, Aruna Wasudeo Rao Masoorkar, who worked as an Air Hostess with Indian Airlines before emigrating to the United Arab Emirates and later went to the United States for studies, successfully organized the 131st birth anniversary of one of the main architects of Indian Constitution, Dr B.R. Ambedkar. Aruna comes from Nagpur.  It was the first of its kind major event sponsored by her college.

    As a Committee Ambassador for Student Equity & Achievement Program and the voice of students in her college, she was pleasantly surprised to find that hardly anyone in her college ever heard about Dr. Ambedkar.

    “They all became curious as I expressed my interest to celebrate the birth anniversary  of Dr Ambedkar. Initially they thought I may be wanting to talk  about Vaisakhi celebrations as most of them knew about various Indian festivals, including Diwali and Vaisakhi, besides a few Indian leaders like Mahatma Gandhi, but had no idea about Dr B.R. Ambedkar, a pioneer of  building a movement of empowering weaker and unprivileged classes of society.

    “The Dean of the college  immediately arranged a special meeting and offered US $1,700 for holding the  event. I requested all Professors to have their students write a one-page essay on Bodhisattva Dr. B R Ambedkar. They appreciated the idea, granting students extra grade credit of 3%-7% besides agreeing to  include the history of Dr. Ambedkar in the American curriculum at the college. They also advertised the in-person event in newspapers, emails and verbally encouraged students to attend.

    “The Director and Professor of Journalism invited me to her class to  make a presentation about Dr. B R Ambedkar. She assigned her students to create a special project on him for their final exam, advising them to interview me to know more about Dr Ambedkar’s life, struggles, achievements, and the current situation in India.

    “The students, Professors, administrative staff and all my friends assisted me in organizing this event  as the college radio station broadcasted Dr Ambedkar’s songs on air, and interviewed me live on  the day of celebrations,” said Aroona Masoorkar. The Mayor of San Jose  and the Congresswoman also sent their greetings for Bodhisattva Dr BR Ambedkar’s birthday. In her interview with the College Radio, she not only talked about  Dr Ambedkar but also about Buddhism and minorities in India.

    It took her almost two weeks to organize the first ever event commemorating the birth anniversary of a great Indian Humanitarian leader. She had also invited Ash Kalra, an elected member of the California State Assembly. Since he was away to Santa Clara to attend Assembly meetings, he sent his representative Tuan Nguyen to read his message. Ash Kalra, born in Toronto, represents Democrats in the State Assembly.

    Aruna presented a blue pen  with the words “ Bodhisattva Dr BR Ambedkar” printed on it and a big Buddha statue  each to all the guests , crew members  of radio station, and Professors and grey pen and a small Buddha statue each  to  all the students. They acknowledged it as  a  thoughtful souvenir that they would  cherish  for the rest of their lives  while remembering to practice humanity.It was just the beginning. Now many people in the San Jose area at least know about Babasaheb Ambedkar, said Aruna Masoorkar.

    (Prabhjot Singh is a veteran journalist with over three decades of experience covering a wide spectrum of subjects and stories)

  • Indian-origin Parag Agarwal takes up for Team Twitter, defying Elon Musk

    Indian-origin Parag Agarwal takes up for Team Twitter, defying Elon Musk

    NEW YORK (TIP): Ahead of Twitter’s imminent takeover by Elon Musk, the world’s richest man, its CEO Parag Agrawal replied to a quip by a parody account — @NotParagAgrawal — “I thought we were fired”, with a “nope! we are still here”. The reticent Agrawal also launched into what analysts interpret as a dare. The embattled CEO wrote, “I took this job to change Twitter for the better, course correct where we need to, and strengthen the service. Proud of our people who continue to do the work with focus and urgency despite the noise.” This comes when Musk has little doubt of incompetence going right up to the Twitter board. The battle lines have been drawn in his public tweets, as also gory annexes in the filings before the US Securities and Exchange Commission.

    If the incoming owner thinks Team Twitter is no good, Agrawal would be pushing back, lauding his folks for working constantly towards the betterment of the company.

    “Thank you but don’t feel for me. What matters most is the service and the people improving it,” he retorted in the face of a patronizing tweet which read, “I feel for the current ceo of Twitter (@paraga) – he had all these plans and now lives with the same uncertainty of his whole team.” Musk’s castigation Wednesday of Vijaya Gadde, Twitter’s legal eagle and the one responsible for deplatforming a sitting US President, has hardened premonition that firing squads are not too far away.

    The Politico reported that Gadde is distraught at Twitter selling out to Musk and when news came out, she sobbed. Musk hit back that the platform’s (read Gadde’s) decision regarding a news story in 2020 was “incredibly inappropriate”. He followed this up on Wednesday night with a meme that took fresh potshots at Gadde. Following his tweet, a number of Twitter trolls have hurled racist slurs and abuses at Gadde, 48, an immigrant at the age of three. Gadde found support in present employees, including Twitter spokesperson Trenton Kennedy. Likewise, CEO Dick Costolo. Attacking Musk for posting a meme of podcaster Joe Rogan and Vijaya Gadde, Costolo wondered what was going on. He asked Musk as a reply, “What’s going on? You’re making an executive at the company you just bought the target of harassment and threats.” In another tweet, Costolo put it bluntly, “Bullying is not leadership.” Never one to back off, when Tweeple pointed to “a video mocking Twitter employees for being too sensitive was flagged by Twitter for sensitive content”, Musk replied with two emojis of “ROFL!” He also batted for encryption at the level of Signal and plans to serve the 80 per cent who are neither far left nor extreme right.

    Twitter is due to report its first-quarter earnings on Thursday before trading opens on Wall Street.

  • May 6 New York & Dallas E – Edition

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    [/vc_column_text][/vc_column][/vc_row][vc_row][vc_column width=”2/3″][vc_custom_heading text=”Dual Edition” font_container=”tag:h2|text_align:center” google_fonts=”font_family:Istok%20Web%3Aregular%2Citalic%2C700%2C700italic|font_style:700%20bold%20regular%3A700%3Anormal” link=”url:https%3A%2F%2Fwww.theindianpanorama.news%2Fwp-content%2Fuploads%2F2022%2F05%2FTIP-May-6-Dual-Edition.pdf”][vc_single_image image=”123939″ img_size=”full” add_caption=”yes” alignment=”center” onclick=”custom_link” link=”https://www.theindianpanorama.news/wp-content/uploads/2022/05/TIP-May-6-Dual-Edition.pdf”][/vc_column][vc_column width=”1/3″][vc_single_image image=”82828″ img_size=”medium” alignment=”center” onclick=”custom_link” link=”https://www.theindianpanorama.news/advertising-media-kit-portal-indian-panorama/”][vc_single_image image=”82829″ img_size=”medium” alignment=”center” onclick=”custom_link” link=”https://www.theindianpanorama.news/advertising-media-kit-portal-indian-panorama/”][/vc_column][/vc_row][vc_row][vc_column][vc_custom_heading text=”Lead Stories This Week” font_container=”tag:h2|text_align:center” google_fonts=”font_family:Istok%20Web%3Aregular%2Citalic%2C700%2C700italic|font_style:700%20bold%20regular%3A700%3Anormal” link=”url:https%3A%2F%2Fwww.theindianpanorama.news%2F%20″][vc_wp_posts number=”8″ show_date=”1″][/vc_column][/vc_row]

  • Bollywood’s Vivek Anand Oberoi to Host CRY America Gala Series Benefiting Children in India

    Bollywood’s Vivek Anand Oberoi to Host CRY America Gala Series Benefiting Children in India

     “Heroes for Life” to Fete Donors, Project Partners for Steadfast Support Through Pandemic

    HOUSTON (TIP): Even as COVID-19’s Delta variant wrought havoc and tragedy through India last year, there was no shortage of stories about the heroes from near and far who rushed in to help.

    Bollywood star-power will illuminate some of those heroes this week, as actor and philanthropist Vivek Anand Oberoi (“Shootout at Lokhandwala,” “Yuva,” the forthcoming “Iti: Can You Solve Your Own Murder?” and Amazon’s Emmy-nominated “Inside Edge”) hosts CRY America’s “Heroes for Life” benefit Gala series. Oberoi invites fans and supporters to join him at one of the events across the U.S. by registering at:

    cryamerica.org/site/events/upcoming-dinners.html

    Child Rights and You (CRY) America is a nonprofit organization that supports 30 projects in India and the U.S. that ensure access to education and healthcare for underprivileged children, as well as protection from child labor, early marriage and trafficking.

    The galas will be held in the following cities: San Francisco Bay Area, 5:30 PM PST, Saturday, May 14, at the Crowne Plaza, 4290 El Camino Real, Palo Alto, CA; San Diego-Orange County: 5:00 PM PST, Sunday May 15, Royal India, 8900 Miramar Road, San Diego, CA; New York-New Jersey: 6:30 PM EDT, Friday May 20, The Taj Pierre Hotel, 2 East 61st St.; Seattle (VIRTUAL EVENT): 6:30 PM PST, Saturday, May 21, (cryamerica.org/site/microsite/Seattle-Gala-2022/index.html); Houston: 5:30 PM CST, Sunday May 22, Royal Sonesta Houston Galleria, 2222 West Loop South, Houston, TX.

    The events honor CRY America’s donors and project partners, who have maintained their support to underprivileged communities throughout the “silent crisis” spawned by the pandemic. Throughout India’s slums and villages, school closures and sudden loss of livelihoods caused a spike in child labor and child marriage, as already-vulnerable families scrambled to conserve resources. A true star of a different variety, Ms. J. Lalithamma, founder and director of CRY America-supported Project PORD, will be in attendance to share stories of her organization’s work to end child labor and child marriage in rural Andhra Pradesh, India.

    Rounding out the evening’s entertainment will be music, comedy and cultural performances, a pledge drive, dancing, and an auction of items by top Indian artists and fashion designers.

    For more information, contact Adam MacGregor at 617-910-7796 or adam.macgregor@cryamerica.org.