Ruchi Shah, Suhani Jalota On Glamour Magazine’s College Women Of The Year

Ruchi Shah and Suhani Jalota, two Indian-American women are among Glamour Magazine’s Top 10 College Women of the Year. Each of the go-getting women chosen for their leadership qualities and humanitarian work gets $20,000 in prize money.

Ruchi Shah, a biology major at Stony Brook University, was moved by problems she saw during her visit to India and  applied her expertise to create a solution for real-world problems. Shah is CEO of Mosquitoes Be Gone, an all-natural mosquito repellent which could combat disease in third world countries; she has also been recognized by the American Association for Cancer Research for her research on improving cervical cancer diagnoses.

The anti-mosquito product she developed was a result of her trip to India to see her uncle when she was 15. “He was suffering from dengue fever, a disease that is transmitted by mosquitoes. Yet right outside the clinic, people were getting dozens of mosquito bites! So I decided to develop my own bug repellent.”

Once back home, she began by collecting sweat samples from athletes at school — “that wasn’t awkward at all” she quips. She built a test chamber I built in the family garage with supplies from Home Depot, and studied exactly what most attracted the bugs. After hundreds of failed compounds and many bites later, she found the winner. “Mosquitoes Be Gone is the first repellent to neutralize nitrogen-based compounds in sweat. And it’s all-natural,” she is quoted saying in Glamour. She is now at the stage of finalizing safety testing and bottle design, and expects the product on shelves within a year. She currently has a team of nine interns working to bring the repellent to the market, according to a press release from Stony Brook University.

Shah has many other accomplishments to her name. Recognized by the Intel International Science and Engineering Fair, Forbes, and the AXA Achievement Award, she has worked in a cancer research lab with a team that discovered a protein that can predict cancer patient survival better than the tools doctors currently have. She was a science writing intern at the National Institutes of Health. The Ronkonkoma, NY resident is also minoring in journalism.

Twenty-one-year-old Suhani Jalota of Duke University and 22-year-old Stony Brook University student Ruchi Shah have found a place in Glamour magazine’s “Top 10 College Women of the Year” list for their leadership qualities and humanitarian work. Each Indian American undergraduate will receive a grand prize of $20,000.

Jalota, an economics and global health major, has been working to reform public health in India’s slums since she was 15. With her winnings she hopes to expand her start-up, Myna Mahila Foundation — which seeks to increase accessibility to menstrual hygiene products and public health infrastructure for economically disadvantaged women in India — to other countries.

She told Glamour magazine: “In India, where I grew up, menstruation is considered impure, and even saying the word period is taboo. It’s hard to imagine. I wanted to chip away at that stigma, but how do you change something people aren’t even willing to talk about?”

Nimisha Bhanot Featured on BuzzFeed

Indo-Canadian artist Nimisha Bhanot reached the height of Internet celebrity this week when her painting series, “Badass Indian Pinups,” went viral after being featured on BuzzFeed. In the feature piece, she explained that the idea for the series was conceived in 2012 when she learned of Jyoti Singh’s brutal rape and murder, the aftermath of which involved a great deal of victim blaming and affronts to female humanity. The series focuses on subjects of Indian women who are portrayed as both confident and sexually liberated. In the summer of 2012, Nimisha Bhanot discovered her fondness for portraits. The 27-year-old Canadian visual artist didn’t want to paint just any kind of portraiture—she wanted those representing totally badass, liberated, independent Indian women.

“I think all women are badass. What makes the women in my paintings exceptionally badass is that they are free to be whatever and whoever they want to be,” Bhanot told Quartz in an email.

The Toronto resident has begun a series of paintings called Badass Indian Pinups. As a woman originally from South Asia, her work “explores the perception of self and societal roles from a bi-cultural perspective,” she said.

Women in her work are shown breaking every possible patriarchal expectation—be it holding a glass of alcohol, dangling a cigarette, gazing seductively, or dressing in cleavage-showing attire. At the same time, her hands are covered in henna, she is fully adorned in ethnic jewellery, sports vermillion and a bindi—typically worn to denote a married woman.

Nisa Maruthur led study on Diabetes drug finds, metformin, lowers risk of heart disease deaths better than sulfonylureas

April 18, 2016: A new analysis of 204 studies involving more than 1.4 million people suggests that metformin, the most frequently prescribed stand-alone drug for type 2 diabetes, reduces the relative risk of a patient dying from heart disease by about 30 to 40 percent compared to its closest competitor drug, sulfonylurea.

The study, designed to assess the comparative—not absolute or individual—benefits and risks of more than a dozen FDA-approved drugs for lowering blood sugar in type 2 diabetes, is described in the April 19, 2016 issue of the Annals of Internal Medicine. Diabetes now affects almost 10 percent of the U.S. population and poses a growing public health threat, and most people will eventually need drug treatment, the researchers say.

“Metformin looks like a clear winner,” says Nisa Maruthur, M.D., M.H.S., assistant professor of medicine at the Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine. “This is likely the biggest bit of evidence to guide treatment of type 2 diabetes for the next two to three years.”

Maruthur, the lead author on the meta-analysis, notes that cardiovascular fatalities—heart attacks and strokes—are major risks for people with uncontrolled blood sugar, but it has never been clear if one diabetes drug is better than another at lowering these fatalities. Other diabetes-related complications include blindness, kidney failure and limb amputations.

This review, Maruthur says, provides a much-needed update to two previous analyses, the last one published in 2011. Since then, researchers have published more than 100 new studies comparing the effectiveness of various blood sugar-lowering drugs, and several new drugs have also come on the market since the last report.

Of the total 204 studies analyzed, 50 spanned several continents, while others were conducted across Europe, Asia and the United States. Most of the studies were short term, with only 22 mostly observational studies lasting more than two years. Participants in the studies were generally overweight with uncontrolled blood sugar levels. Many studies excluded the elderly and those with significant health problems. Just shy of half of the studies made no mention of race or ethnicity. When researchers did report that information, only 10 to 30 percent of participants were nonwhite.

Maruthur says the new analysis not only looked at cardiovascular disease but also other drug effects, including glucose control, and common side effects, such as weight gain, hypoglycemia and gastrointestinal problems. Because the majority of patients with type 2 diabetes end up using multiple blood sugar-lowering drugs, Maruthur and her team also evaluated how the drugs performed when used alone or in combination. While some of the various studies’ participants were on insulin, this injectable drug was only evaluated when used in combination with other drugs.

Among other findings, the new review revealed that DPP-4 inhibitors, a class of anti-diabetic drugs that were very new at the time of the 2011 review, were clearly less effective at lowering blood sugar levels compared to metformin and sulfonylureas.

In terms of side effects, a new class of drugs known as SGLT-2 inhibitors, which work by shuttling excess glucose out of the body through urine, caused yeast infections in 10 percent of users, a side effect unique to this drug, Maruthur says. However, SGLT-2 inhibitors, along with another drug class known as GLP-1 receptor agonists, helped patients lose weight. Sulfonylureas, on the other hand, caused weight gain and resulted in the highest rates of hypoglycemia, or too-low blood sugar, among the oral medications.

Cautioning that such meta-analyses can be limited because of differences in research protocols and measurements across studies, Maruthur and her colleagues took steps to ensure that only studies using similar methods were combined. Also, they excluded from their analysis any studies that included patients taking additional, nonstudy diabetes drugs.

Overall, Maruthur says, the results indicate that metformin, which has been around since the late 1990s, works just as well, if not better, than sulfonylureas, which have been on the market since the late 1950s/1960s, and diabetes drugs that have appeared on the market more recently. She says the new findings are in line with the current recommendation that metformin be used as a first-line therapy. The real question arises, Maruthur says, when patients and doctors must choose a second drug to be used in combination with the metformin.

“The medications all have different benefits and side effects, so the choice of second-line medications must be based on an individual patient’s preferences,” Maruthur says.

Maruthur and her team’s work will be published alongside the report they wrote for the Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality, the funding agency for the study, detailing the hundreds of studies included in Maruthur’s analysis and an exhaustive summary. Both the American College of Physicians and the Veterans Association plan to use these publications to update their guidelines.

The cost of diabetes drugs is a major consideration when prescribing. While metformin is available as a relatively cheap generic, many newer drugs carry a hefty price tag. In 2014, per-person spending was higher for diabetes drugs for any other class of traditional drugs, in part because over half the prescriptions filled for diabetes were for nongenerics.

Most U.S. Adults Say Today’s Children Have Worse Health Than in Past Generations

ANN ARBOR, Mich. — More than half of adults believe children today are more stressed, experience less quality family time and have worse mental and emotional health than children in past generations, according to the C.S. Mott Children’s Hospital National Poll on Children’s Health.

“We have seen major advances in medicine and public health over the last century that have greatly reduced children’s illness and death. On the other hand, conditions like childhood obesity, asthma and behavior problems have become more common,” said Matthew M. Davis, M.D., M.A.P.P., director of the poll and professor of pediatrics and internal medicine at the University of Michigan’s C.S. Mott Children’s Hospital.

“We wanted to know how the public perceives these trends, so we conducted this latest national poll to gain insights into adults’ perceptions of children’s health today. We found that adults in the U.S. broadly agree: children’s health today seems worse than for children over the past several decades.”

Among the key results, 55 percent of adults polled believe kids’ mental and emotional health is worse today than when they were children. Coping and personal friendships for children were also widely viewed as worse than for children in the past.

“The dominant view from this poll is that children’s health is worse today than it was for generations past, and we need to more urgently address these challenges,” said Mark Wietecha, CEO and president of Children’s Hospital Association, which collaborated on the poll.

In addition to the perception of diminished emotional and mental health, the poll found adults perceive children as having worse physical health as well. Forty-two percent of adults say kids today are in worse physical health compared to their own childhoods.

The poll also found generational differences in adults’ perceptions of children’s health: Pre-baby boomers ages 70 and older were most likely to perceive that children’s physical health today is better than when they were growing up. Baby boomers (ages 51-69), generation Xers (ages 35-50) and millennials in the 18-34 age group were less likely to perceive that children’s physical health is better now.

The poll of nearly 2,700 adults in a nationally representative sample asked respondents to assess key variables for children growing up today, compared to those in prior decades. The findings linked to behavioral health are consistent with previous Mott polls that cited bullying, stress, suicide, and depression as leading child health concerns identified by adults across the U.S.

Dr. Sunil Hingorani’s Study Finds Engineering T Cells to Treat Pancreatic Cancer

SEATTLE AND NEW ORLEANS – Dr. Sunil Hingorani, a member of the Clinical Research and Public Health Sciences divisions at Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center, will present recent groundbreaking developments in treating pancreas cancer with engineered T-cells at the American Association for Cancer Research Annual Meeting 2016 in New Orleans on April 16.

Hingorani, a pancreatic cancer specialist, teamed up with Fred Hutch immunotherapy experts Drs. Phil Greenberg and Ingunn Stromnes in successful efforts to breach the cancer’s physical and immunological walls using immunotherapy, a type of treatment that harnesses or refines the body’s own immune system with T-cells engineered to recognize and destroy cancer cells.

Specifically, Hingorani’s team created T cells with a high affinity to a “relatively” tumor-specific antigen. Why relatively? Notoriously difficult pancreatic tumor cells don’t produce many unique proteins that allow for completely tumor-specific T cells. Instead, the team had to look for proteins that are expressed in unusually large amounts in the tumor cells and minimally expressed elsewhere. The T cells then were engineered to attack those.

But there was a potential problem: That same targeted mesothelial protein also can be found in the linings of the heart and lungs. However, in tests on mice with pancreatic tumors and immune system responses nearly identical to those in humans, the engineered infused T cells parked only briefly in those linings (without harming them) and then moved along to attack the tumor cells. What’s more, they killed those cells over a 10-day period, as did subsequent infusions.

Additionally, Hingorani and his team have worked to develop an enzyme that can help defeat the tumor’s high interstitial pressures and potentially open the door for greater penetration and effectiveness of T cells and other types of agents. By the end of the year, Hingorani hopes to have the human version of the T cell in clinical trials.

This work was supported by a Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center/University of Washington Cancer Consortium Cancer Center Support Grant, the Giles W. and Elise Mead Foundation, the Safeway Foundation, a gift from Maryanne Tagney and David Jones, the National Cancer Institute, and grants from the Korean Research Institute of Bioscience and Biotechnology, Juno Therapeutics, the Irvington Institute Fellowship Program of the Cancer Research Institute and the Jack and Sylvia Paul Estate Fund to Support Collaborative Immunotherapy Research.

Editor’s note: For researcher bios, photos and more, please visit fredhutch.org/media.

Jagruti Panwala Named Secretary Of Asian American Hotel Owners Association (AAHOA) During Convention In Tennesse

Bruce Patel has been elected as the new chairman of AAHOANashville, TN: April 12, 2016:  Jagruti Panwala was elected as the first ever female Secretary of Asian American Hotel Owners Association (AAHOA) during the four-day annual convention held March 29-April 1 at the Gaylord Opryland Resort & Convention Center in Nashville, Tennessee. Bruce Patel has been elected as the new chairman of AAHOA, while Chip Rogers will continue to serve as the President of & CEO of the three decades long organization.

The election of the association’s first female officer, record turnout and the heightened fervor to play an active role in the nation’s political process with the aim to raise $1 million, were the highlights of the just concluded convention in Tennessee. The event drew a record turnout – 5,000 hoteliers, vendors and franchise CEOs and their cohorts.

“I am extremely honored and very humbled to be AAHOA’s new secretary,” said Panwala, soon after being elected as the first ever woman to raise to the ranks. All of AAHOA can benefit by electing its first female officer. The win is important, she said, for “women hoteliers, young hoteliers, independent hoteliers and small mom-and-pop owners.” Officers hold each post for one year after being elected secretary.

Jagruti Panwala will succeed to chair of AAHOA in 2019, a first for the 27-year-old organization founded by hoteliers to fight ethnic and racial discrimination in the U.S. hospitality industry. Begun by fewer than 100 hoteliers in 1989, AAHOA has more than 15,000 members and ended 2015 with $11.4 million in revenue.

AAHOA officially kicked off its 2016 convention and trade show in Nashville with a packed-house at the opening general session on March 29th. This year’s sold-out conference theme was “Success by Design.” The general session began with an all-star panel of industry CEOs, which included Steve Joyce, president and CEO of Choice Hotels, Geoff Ballotti, president and CEO of Wyndham Hotel Group, David Kong, president and CEO of Best Western, Elie Maalouf, CEO, the Americas, IHG, and Arne Sorenson, president and CEO of Marriott International.

The panel discussed the current state of lodging and hospchiprogers_1428641338_93itality, new technology, the importance of making hospitality visible on Capitol Hill, and disruption in the industry.

Following the panel, Tennessee governor Bill Haslam took to the stage to talk about the growth of travel and tourism in the state, and the opportunities that the hospitality industry presents for business-minded individuals in both Tennessee and all over the country. In closing, Haslam expressed his gratitude to AAHOA for choosing Nashville for its 2016 conference.

A hot topic of the morning general session was the importance of the hospitality industry to the overall U.S. economy. Chip Rogers spoke passionately about AAHOA’s role in lodging. “As the largest hotel owners’ association in the world, we, all of us, are in a unique position of leadership and responsibility. You see we made an industry that is thriving. And it is thriving in no small part because of the incredible efforts made every day by the very people in this room,” Rogers said. “However, we also share a responsibility. An obligation to serve millions of Americans every day in their home away from home. By every measure, we are meeting and exceeding our obligations.”

Citing the latest industry data—like the fact that the travel and tourism industry is responsible for over 8 million jobs in the United States—Rogers detailed how the lodging industry helps to prop up the country as a whole. “While these numbers are impressive, think about what it means in the lives of those who actually make our industry what it is,” he said. “You see the millions of jobs it helps create, and the billions of dollars of economic effect. It ultimately means that kids get to go to college, families get to take vacations, and the American Dream is realized in all corners of our country.”

Rogers also took an opportunity to introduce the inaugural issue of Today’s Hotelier magazine, AAHOA’s new official publication, as well as an upgrade to the AAHOA website. The magazine was completely redesigned from its last iteration. The morning general session closed with a keynote speech from recently retired NFL quarterback Peyton Manning.

Jimmy Patel ended his year as chairman, sharing with the audience what AAHOA had accomplished during the past 12 months. Membership increased by 1,000 to 15,175; Revenue grew by 20 percent, surpassing the $10 million budget by $1.4 million; The political action committee (PAC) fund grew to $450,000; and, Established a franchise department where members can directly take their concerns to attorney Rachel Humphrey.

Bruce Patel, chairman of AAHOA, in his address, informed the delegates that AAHOA will continue to charge full steam ahead on its mission as not only the largest hotel owner organization in the world, but the most powerful. Influencing elected officials in federal, state and local governments and educating them about the U.S. hospitality industry is crucial in warding off bad government laws and policies that will harm and eventually dismantle their businesses.

The 42-year-old hotelier from Dallas, Texas, joined the AAHOA officer ranks in 2013, when the membership (then around 11,000) elected him secretary. Over the next three years, the association expanded its office in Washington, D.C., and repositioned its strategy to become more than an Indian American social club – it intentionally morphed into a business organization intent on influencing change on behalf of its members, who own almost half of all the hotels in the U.S.; comprise more than $1.30 billion in real estate assets; and employ more than 600,000. Along the way, it found its voice as that of the hotel owner in America.

Patel told the Gala audience: “While it’s not always clear what this industry has in store for us, especially over the next few years with an uncertain global economy, bad laws and regulations, and even unconventional competitors in an ever-changing landscape; what is clear is that our voice in this industry and in this country has to be louder; our presence has to be stronger; and our influence has to be greater.”

Bruce Patel told the hoteliers that AAHOA must transform its financial power into political power.  The goal for 2016 is to increase the PAC fund to more than $1 million. The push is significant for the fall political season, which will see nearly 90 percent of congressional seats open for election. Two years ago, almost every candidate that AAHOA backed through PAC funds and public endorsement won the General Election. “You can see that voters across the country are upset with the political gridlock in D.C., and something has to change. We absolutely have to shake things up,” he said.

Panwala is a businesswoman in Ivyland, Pennsylvania, where she is part of a family hotel company and president and CEO of Wealth Protection Strategies, an investment management business she founded in 1999. She has been active in AAHOA for more than a decade, holding leadership positions since 2011 when first elected female director at large, eastern division. Re-elected in 2014, she has also co-chaired the Women’s Hotelier Committee for five years and served on the strategic planning committee for two years. She testified to Congress against proposed harmful labor laws. Her focus repeatedly has been getting more women, independent and young hoteliers involved. In 2011, she received the prestigious AAHOA Chairman’s Award of Excellence.

She is a second-generation hotelier who migrated from Surat, India, with her parents when she was a teenager. She lives in Pennsylvania with her husband and two children. Panwala said the message she wants to AAHOA members to hear is that getting involved in the association can make a difference in their lives and in their businesses. “I want all of our members to value their membership and to get meaningful benefits from AAHOA.  But to get more out of AAHOA, you must put more into AAHOA – not just by attending meetings, but by taking courses, by serving on committees, and by being an ambassador, for example. I learned that first-hand.

“It’s why I want more members to participate; it’s why I will continue to champion those things that make it worth both your time and your money to be an active member of AAHOA. My new position represents trust by the members that is special and sacred, so I intend to serve in a way that justifies this faith in me – serve in a way that makes all of us proud to be part of the hospitality industry and to be members of AAHOA.”

Chip Rogers, former Georgia State Senate majority leader, has been serving as the President of the Asian American Hotel Owners Association (AAHOA) for over one year. Rogers was named interim president of AAHOA last year and has been with the organization nearly five years after having previously served as the association’s VP, government affairs and public relations. Rogers took over from Fred Schwartz, who stepped aside as president in December 2014 after 18 years with AAHOA. Rogers previously served in the Georgia General Assembly, and was elected to six terms, serving two as Senate majority leader.

AAHOA in recent years has leveraged its power and influence on Capitol Hill and is expanding its legislative advocacy to state and local levels. Rogers is well versed in government affairs, having served as a lawmaker in the Georgia State Legislature from 2003 to 2012. He was first elected to the House of Representatives, and in 2004 was elected to the Senate. A Republican, Rogers also elected as the Senate Majority Leader in 2008 and 2010. He resigned from the Senate in 2012.

Rogers, began working with AAHOA in 2009 and previously served as the association’s Vice President of government affairs and public relations. As a lawmaker Rogers earned more than two dozen Legislator of the Year awards, including twice from the Georgia Chamber of Commerce, and was a three-time winner of the Golden Peach award given to the lawmaker most dedicated to digital learning in Georgia.

In the private sector Rogers has been a long-time small business owner with interests in broadcasting, marketing and real estate. He founded and led Rogers Communications for two decades. He earned his undergraduate degree from Georgia Tech and an MBA from Georgia State. He and his wife Amy have four children and live in metro Atlanta.

Rogers said, his vision is, when it comes to Congressional influence in the case of laws and policies that impact the lodging industry, that AAHOA be the most powerful lobbying group on Capitol Hill, in state capitols and on the municipal level.

Social media is making us depressed: Survey

Do Facebook and Twitter make us happier? The answer it would seem is: no. A recent survey found as many as one in five people say they feel depressed as a result of using social media. That might come as a surprise to the generation under 30; social media is part of their DNA and teenagers are rapidly losing the ability to communicate if not through their smartphones. But the stress of constantly monitoring our statuses and endlessly documenting every aspect of our lives via networks like Facebook, Snapchat and Instagram is taking its toll.

Employers claim many school leavers are unprepared for the world of work, where they will have to interact with people outside their peer group and actually speak face-to-face with total strangers.

Meanwhile, there have been countless academic studies since 2015 on the negative impacts of social media, showing that its regular use leads to feelings of anxiety, isolation and low self-esteem, not to mention poor sleep. We use these outlets to present a false picture of our lives to the online community; with flattering selfies and faux-glamorous images of holidays, parties and meals. It’s as if we’re starring in a movie of the life we’d like to lead, not the humdrum one we actually inhabit. An underwhelming number lack of shares or ‘likes’ can lead to debilitating feelings of inadequacy.

We post intimate fragments of our lives to total strangers, falsely believing that a ‘friend’ online is a real friend whose opinions matter. As for Twitter, it is a vehicle for screaming, nothing more and nothing less. Best not to read tweets if you are of a vulnerable disposition.

Recently, I dared to write that cycling was being prioritised over walking in London. Cyclists, like Scottish Nationalists, are the thugs of the new era. Immediately, my words were distorted, and amplified via Twitter. I was accused of hate crimes against cycling even though I carefully said that I actually enjoyed it. I received 1,000 vile and abusive messages – and they’re still coming. Twitter has an effect on one’s disposition; augmenting anger and upset. Many of the women I know have come off Twitter because of the constant abuse that waits every time they pick up their phone or log in to their computer.

The latest fashion among hipsters is to have a ‘digital-free’ home. That could be a good move. Arianna Huffington has just written a book (The Sleep Revolution) citing experts who say there should be no screens in the bedroom and we shouldn’t use social media in the hour before lights-out. How many times have we read a message on our phones and then spent hours in turmoil? Social media never switches off: someone, somewhere, is posting pictures, comments or messages, asking you to join a chat or wade in with an opinion. No wonder many teenagers suffer from what shrinks call “decision paralysis”. The options are simply too enormous for any human brain to deal with.

For many people (not just teenagers), it seems the only way we can validate ourselves is though a screen, a habit which is just as bad for our health as over-indulging in drink or drugs. And just as addictive.

Muslims welcome a man who drunkenly shot at their mosque in Connecticut

Ted Hakey, a former Marine, knelt in prayer, his forehead on the floor, beside his Muslim neighbours inside their Connecticut mosque on Saturday, April 2. The enormity of that gesture was lost on no one. It was only several months earlier, on the night of the terror attacks in Paris, when Hakey, 48, went to a local bar and downed 10 drinks. In the early morning, he went home, drank some more and loaded his 9mm handgun and an M14 rifle. He went into his yard and fired rounds at the side of the mosque next door.

His Facebook page was laden with vile anti-Muslim hate speech. Text messages with friends, obtained by law enforcement, showed the same. In one post, he noted living next to a mosque and keeping watch on them with “binos” (presumably, binoculars). In another, he wrote, “Is Muslim season open yet? I’m in a target rich environment.”

But rather than hate him back, Dr. Mohammed Qureshi, president of the Baitul Aman “House of Peace” Mosque, wished he had been a better neighbor by making an effort to get to know Hakey and his wife. Perhaps then, he reasoned, Hakey would not have harbored so much anger.

Qureshi’s mosque practices a type of Islam called Ahmadiyya, a reform sect that believes the Messiah has already come. That man, Mirza Ghulam Ahmad, taught that “jihad by the sword” is not Islam and advocated for the end of religious wars and bloodshed. Ahmadiyya believers have launched a “True Islam” campaign to distinguish the religion from extremism. It highlights 11 principles that if all Muslims endorsed there would be no terrorism, Qureshi said. They include belief in nonviolent Jihad, human rights, and the understanding that “no religion can monopolize salvation.”

Hakey had asked his lawyer for the chance to apologise, so Dr. Qureshi and a few others had met with Hakey privately a week earlier on Good Friday. Dr Qureshi, before even hearing the apology, brought Hakey chocolate Easter eggs as a gift. “I’ve never had anything like this,” Dr Qureshi said of that first meeting.

“It was very emotional. He came in in tears, he was quivering. I could feel it in his heart and his eyes that he meant what he said. I felt like he was saying it from his heart. It’s a rare moment when you see someone with so much hate for you come and apologise.” But some members of the congregation remained wary knowing a man lived next door who had wished them harm. Dr Qureshi invited Hakey to come visit the mosque so he could show them he was sorry.

“As a neighbour, I did have fears, but fear is always when you don’t know something. The unknown is what you are always afraid of,” Hakey told them, according to the Hartford Courant, which covered the April 2 event. “Going forward I want to help you bridge that gap and help someone else not make the same mistake I did.”

Mr Hakey, in an interview, said he was “so overwhelmed” by how graciously he was treated after what he had done. He said he’s now hearing from Muslims all over the world thanking him for coming forward to apologise. “The forgiveness was so genuine,” he said. “I realised they were really good people and the whole way they handled it was above and beyond.”

Prominent social worker and well-known author in the South Asian community, Jay Gajjar Passes Away

Jay Gajjar, one of the first members of the Gujarati community to receive Canada’s highest honor, the Order of Canada, passed away on march 31st, 2016. Gajjar was well-known for his community service and involvement in various organizations like Friends of India Association, Hospital Foundation and the Atlantic Provinces Chamber of Commerce to name a few.

Gajjar, a prolific writer of more than four hundred short stories, was published in several well known dailies and magazines in India such as Kumar, Aarasi, Shrirang and Gruhshobha while some of his work was also broadcast on

CBC Television in Canada. His novel “Paththar Thar Thar Dhruje” was published in a Sunday supplement of “Gujarat Samachar”. Several of his novels have been serialized are in Toronto’s weekly newspapers like ‘Gujarat Express’, ‘Gujarat Abroad’ and in ‘Gujarat Darpan’ a monthly out of New Jersey, USA.

He was also invited to read a chapter from his new novel ‘Kachi Matinu Ghar’ in 2004 and ‘Timirna Tej’ in 2005 by the ‘Word on the Street Festival’ in Toronto, Canada.

A professor and successful businessman, Gajjar is survived by his wife, Kavita and his son, Neil Gajjar’s family. An afternoon of bhajans and devotional songs to honour his memory will be held at the Mississauga Hindu Heritage Mandir, 6300 Mississauga Rd, Mississauga ON L5N 1A7, on Sunday, April 10, 2016 from 2pm-4pm.​ For more details, please contact: Dr. Neil J. Gajjar, DDS at 905.564.2021 or Prakash Moody at: 4prakash@gmail.com

OHMKara’s Musical Journey In New Jersey On May 29, 2016

Trenton, NJ: After last two years of OHMKara’s musical journey, the third year of sugam, lok, bhakti sangeet and dayro program with famous poet Ankit Trivedi and renowned singers like Nayan Pancholi, Gargi Vora, Bhumik Shah, Aanal Vasavda and Praher Vora along with talented musicians from India in May 2016, in 10 cities in the U.S.  The musical show of Mor Bani Thangaat Kare in NJ will be held on Sunday, May 29, 2016, from 5:30 p.m. at Woodbridge High School, New jersey.

According to Dr. Tushar B. Patel/Pinakin Pathak, the organizers of the event, the cultural extravaganza is being organized to “promote our language, music, literature and culture in the U.S.”  They are looking forward to have the support of the community “to make our event successful, so we can continue to bring this high quality Gujarati shows in the U.S.”

“The Man Who Knew Infinity” At New York Indian Film Festival

New York, NY: The Man Who Knew Infinity, a new movie depicting the improbable true story of a unique genius, Srinavasa Ramanujan, whose pivotal theories propelled him from obscurity into a world in the midst of war, and how he fought tirelessly to show the world the genius of his mind, will be shown during the New York Indian Film Festival planned for next month here in the New York City.

The New York Indian Film Festival was the first festival in the United States devoted to Indian films and has grown to be the largest and most influential, helping to set up several other Indian Film festivals in the US. Claus Mueller speaks with the New York Film Festival Executive Director Aroon Shivdasani on the progress story and the problems encountered.

There will be a post-screening discussion with Director Matt Brown, Executive Producer Annie Pressman, Executive Producer Swati Bhise, Lead Actor Devika Bhise, Nobel Laureate Manjul Bhargava immediately following the screening. The screening of this film has been made possible by Executive Producer Swati Bhise.

Colonial India, 1913. Srinavasa Ramanujan (Dev Patel) is a 25-year-old shipping clerk and self-taught genius, who failed out of college due to his near-obsessive, solitary study of mathematics. Determined to pursue his passion despite rejection and derision from his peers, Ramanujan writes a letter to G. H. Hardy (Jeremy Irons), an eminent British mathematics professor at Trinity College, Cambridge. Hardy recognizes the originality and brilliance of Ramanujan’s raw talent and despite the skepticism of his colleagues, undertakes bringing him to Cambridge so that his theories can be explored.

Ramanujan leaves his family, his community, and his beloved young bride, Janaki (Devika Bhisé), to travel across the world to England. There, he finds understanding and a deep connection with his sophisticated and eccentric mentor(Jeremy Irons). Under Hardy’s guidance, Ramanujan’s work evolves in ways that will revolutionize mathematics and transform how scientists explain the world. Hardy fights tirelessly to get Ramanujan the recognition and respect that he deserves but in reality he is as much an outcast in the traditional culture of Cambridge as he was among his peers in India. But Ramanujan fights illness and intense homesickness to formally prove his theorems so that his work will finally be seen and believed by a mathematical establishment that is not prepared for his unconventional methods.
As other specialty or niche festivals, the NYIFF has a unique programming profile devoted to features, documentaries and shorts made in the Indian Diaspora, or by Indian independent film makers. Its goal is to foster an understanding of India and its culture and to contribute to improving US Indian relations. The festival is attracting a growing number of Americans. Individuals of Indian ancestry account for 60%of the audience. That group encompasses about 700.000 persons in the tristate area.  53 films were screened in 2015, and this year’s edition will show 79 films and added two more screening days.

Aroon Shivdasani, the festival’s driving spirit and its executive director, says, “We started this film festival in 2001 because we wanted to showcase Indian Independent and Diaspora films in the US -something that had not been done before. Less than two decades ago, nobody knew about real Indian Cinema in North America. We are the oldest Indian film festival in the US – older than any of the other Indian film festivals that have now cropped up all over the country, like those in Los Angeles, Chicago, Atlanta, Seattle, and many others. We started as an Indian Diaspora film festival screening films made by Indians living all over the world – outside India.”

Celebrating its 16th anniversary from May 7-14, 2016, the New York Indian Film Festival was the first festival in the United States devoted to Indian films and has grown to be the largest and most influential, helping to set up several other Indian Film festivals in the US. It is part of a comprehensive program in the arts offered by the New York based Indo-American Arts Council.

Delegation From GOPIO Discusses Consular Issues With Consul General In New York

New York, NY: GOPIO officers, chapter delegates and a selected group of GOPIO Life Members from the New York Tri-State region met India’s new Consul General in New York Ambassador Riva Ganguly Das and other Consuls on March 30th at the Indian Consulate and had a fruitful interactive session on community issues and how the Indian American community can effectively be involved in India’s development.

According to a press release issued by GOIPIO, Consul General Das welcomed the GOPIO delegation and said that GOPIO is an important organization to interact since GOPIO reaches out all sections of our community. Dr. Mohapatra explained on the current consular services provided from the Consulate and steps taken to improve and make it easier for the community.

Apart from Ambassador Riva Ganguly Das, other officials present from the Consulate at the meeting were Deputy Consul General Dr. Manoj Kumar Mohapatra, Consul Sandeep Kumar (Passport and Visa), Vice Consul Sandeep Grover (OCI) and Passport Officers Devvrat Chakravarthy and Suman Bala.

The meeting was organized by GOPIO’s Tristate New York Coordinator Lal Motwani and was attended by the newly elected International Coordinator for North America Dr. Rajeev Mehta and delegates from GOPIO-New York, GOPIO-Upper New York, GOPIO-Connecticut and GOPIO-Central Jersey and many Life Members who have served in various capacities in the past. Dr. Thomas Abraham, GOPIO Founder President and Executive Trustee of GOPIO Foundation brought some of the community issues and many avenues where the community and the Consulate could cooperate for mutual benefits. These included the following:

Increased cooperation with the Consulate and Indian Community (Consulate celebrations of national events and festivals, consulate representation at Indian community meetings, participation in Consulate’s lecture/seminar series, Meeting with Indian delegation, etc.); Utilizing community contacts with elected officials for promoting Indian’s causes; Reaching out next generation Indian Americans and involving them for India’s causes; Issuance of Visa and Passport in emergencies; Improving consular services and shortening delay in OCI card issuance; Improving services by Cox and Kings and BLS International; Emergency help for Indian citizens in time of distress, death, etc.; Reaching out and interacting with the PIO communities in the New York area (large Indo-Caribbean community); and Promoting India to general American public.

Ambassador Riva Ganguly Das reinforced the importance of the community reaching out the elected officials and interacting with the new generations of Indian Americans. Dr. Mohapatra told that the passport services from BLS International will be taken over Cox and Kings and he would make sure the transition is smooth. He also suggested the community to write to helpline@indiacgny.org for any visa, passport and OCI issues.

Giving an example, she said that there were unclaimed OCI documents in the Consulate. “With the help of newspapers we would like to reach out to those applicants who never turned up to pick up their documents”, she said, “Such documents can be stored at the Consulate for a limited period of time, after which they would be destroyed.”

Ambassador Ganguly Das said that her office was proud to ensure that most emergency visa applications were processed within 15 minutes provided paper work was completed as per application guidelines.

“The application process for passport and visa is going through a transitional phase as a new outsourcing company was selected to take over the responsibilities”, informed Dr. Manoj Kumar Mohapatra, Deputy Consul General of India in New York.

According to Dr Mohapatra, a new service was launched to expedite the process of new passports. He claimed that ‘Tatkal’ service was aimed at facilitating the completion of passports within two hours of submitting applications. “Any delay caused might be due to noncompliance of guidelines or lack of supporting documents needed to process the applications”, he added.

The Consul General spelled out a number of initiatives to strengthen public diplomacy efforts some of which were continuation of efforts initiated by the former Consul General Ambassador Dnyaneshwar Mulay. She said that community outreach program initiated by her immediate predecessor has proved to be effective in connecting with the Indian American communities in far flung States, such as Ohio and Massachusetts. “We will soon organize outreach events in cities like Cincinnati and Boston.”

Ambassador Ganguly Das underscored the importance of increasing trade and commerce between India and the United States. “In order to strengthen these ties I plan to work with chambers and organizations dedicated to trade and commerce.”

For more information on GOPIO, contact Lal K. Motwani, GOPIO Coordinator for New York Tri-State Area. Tel: Tel: 516-581-3332, lmotwani@verizon.net

Mosquitoes Are Ungrateful: Dalai Lama Says At American Embassy School

Dalai Lama, the Spiritual Head of the Tibetan Buddhists, said when he is in a good mood and he knows he is not sick, he will allow mosquitoes to feed on his blood (since he is the Dalai Lama) and said “their whole body becomes red” and then they fly, “but there is no indication of appreciation,” a feeling that so provoked him that he had approached scientists to inquire whether insects are even capable of gratitude.

The students of the American Embassy School in New Delhi filed into the school’s auditorium on Friday last week to greet the 14th Dalai Lama, who will celebrate his 81st birthday this summer. They arranged themselves on the floor and gazed up at the Buddhist leader, who spoke for an hour and 40 minutes without notes.

Discussing the English, he described a man coming up to him in London to praise the way he answered, simply, “I don’t know,” when he did not know the answer, and said “I thought, ‘Oh, Englishmen feel difficult to say ‘I don’t know.’ ” When fifth graders asked their guest about whether he had pets (he does, dogs and cats), he went on a really hilarious riff about mosquitoes, who, he said, “don’t have any sense of appreciation.”

According to a report filed by the New York Times Bureau Chief in New Delhi, The Dalai Lama’s s speech was at times very funny — he said Japanese food “sometimes looks like decoration, not real food,” and that he occasionally felt, after finishing a Japanese meal, people might understandably feel inclined to go out and find a restaurant.

At some point, it seemed like he happily might go on talking for three or four hours. He was in the middle of telling a parable about a Jain monk from the sixth century B.C. when an administrator interrupted him and he guffawed. (His laugh is alternately a snicker, a chuckle or a fully liberated guffaw.) He said, “I am always telling my audience that once this person’s mouth opens, then he will blah blah blah continuously, that is my weakness.” Then he just kept barreling on very cheerfully for another quarter of an hour.

He said China is modernizing and many Chinese support the Middle Way, a policy that softened Tibetan demands, calling for self-governance within China. He criticized Chinese hard-liners, saying they are missing that part of the brain that controls common sense. And he said it was sad that people are able to “simply remain indifferent” to the suffering of other people, while “even animals, in a small herd, one animal is sick and another animal is licking.”

He said, that the institution of the Dalai Lama is outdated, and emerged from the feudal system, and that he is proud to have “ended” it. He criticized Sharia law, which he said was created for a nomadic civilization. He said the same thing about the Hindu caste system — that it was a remnant of a different age that must be abandoned, left behind. He said the next Dalai Lama could be a woman (and that physical attractiveness serves dharma, which in Buddhism means “cosmic law and order”).

Yoga for Health, Peace and Amity

By Dr Ravi P Bhatia – Educationist and Peace Researcher, and a retired Professor, Delhi University. ravipbhatia@gmail.com

The Indian practice of Yoga is an ancient one that has come to us from prehistoric times from generation to generation. It has now spread to most parts of the world through the efforts of yoga gurus called yogis. It is accepted primarily for its health benefits although practitioners of yoga also enjoy other benefits such as meditation, well-being and a sense of peace and harmony.

People generally do yoga in the company of other people, which gives each person a sense of togetherness and amity. In today’s world where a sense of individuality has become so dominant, where there is an acute sense of competitiveness for getting a job or promotion or whatever, where people are busy with their smart phones and laptops, Yoga gives a simple, healthy opportunity of coming together and learning and sharing each others’ joys and sorrows.

One important yoga asana (exercise) is pranayam or taking a deep breath and holding it for as long as one can. Pran literally means life of which breath is its most crucial aspect. Pranayam thus signifies improving your health by breathing properly. This asana also helps in meditation that all Buddhists practice and which is one of the objectives of yoga.

There is another asana that is called laughter yoga. Here people come together, laugh loudly, boisterously and for as long as possible. The asana appears ludicrous to an outsider who may be observing this for the first time, but it has therapeutic benefits. When we laugh loudly, we are exercising our lungs and heart, with blood flowing into various arteries and parts of the body. This is obviously a simple, easy and healthy manner of staying fit without the use of any medicines.

Why has yoga spread to so many parts of the world? Partly because its asanas or exercises are simple to carry out, and partly since no gymnasium or special equipment is required. All that is needed is a hall or open space where people can sit, lie down on their mats and carry out the variousasanas. When a person starts learning he or she requires the help of a yoga guru but once the basic exercises are learnt one can carry out these individually without the aid or presence of any guru.

Seeing its spiritual and mental benefits and its acceptance in many parts of the world, the United Nations General Assembly declared 21 June as the international day for Yoga, in its meeting held on Dec 11, 2014. This acceptance followed a fervent appeal by the Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi in his address to the UN on September 27, 2014. Mr Modi among other things, stated that

Yoga is an invaluable gift of India’s ancient tradition. It embodies unity of mind and body; thought and action; restraint and fulfillment; harmony between human and nature; a holistic approach to health and well-being…

Despite its international currency some countries do not accept Yoga because it is considered to be a Hindu practice which has religious overtones. One cannot and should not force Yoga upon any person or community that has some doubts or misgivings about it. That is not only politically undesirable; it goes against the very nature and essence of the practice. Yoga is beneficial physically and mentally but this should be accepted by the individual and not be forced upon in any manner.

On a personal level, I have been doing Yoga for the last about two decades. I enjoy it physically, mentally and have a sense of well-being, togetherness and harmony. I hope other people may also try it out and enjoy its many benefits.

Vegetarian Diet Could Help Save the Planet And save trillions of dollars

Evangelists of vegetarian and vegan diets are quick to cite growing evidence that reducing meat consumption improves human health in attempt to win over converts. Likewise, climate change activists often cite the strain that animal products place on the environment to advocate for changed practices.

Now, new research published in the journal PNAScombines the two perspectives to show that the widespread adoption of vegetarian and vegan diets could save millions of lives and trillion of dollars. “There is huge potential,” says study author Marco Springmann, a researcher at Oxford University, “from a health perspective, an environmental perspective and an economic perspective, really.”

Researchers assessed four different scenarios with humans consuming varying levels of meat to evaluate the links between diet, health and the environment. The lowest level of meat consumption—widespread adoption of the vegan diet—could help avoid more than 8 million deaths by 2050, according to the study. A vegetarian diet would save 7.3 million lives.

The environmental impacts of a dietary shift could be just as dramatic, according to the researchers. Livestock alone account for more than 14% of global greenhouse gas emissions, and by 2050 the food sector could account for half if cuts are implemented in other sectors along the lines that countries have committed to doing. A vegan or vegetarian diet could cut those emissions by 70% and 63%, respectively.

Changing dietary patterns could save $1 trillion annually by preventing health care costs and lost productivity. That figure balloons to as much as $30 trillion annually when also considering the economic value of lost life. And that doesn’t even include the economic benefits of avoiding devastating extreme weather events that could result from climate change.

Placing a dollar value on the benefits of the vegetarian diet could play a significant role in public policy on these issues, according Springmann. Policymakers often conduct cost-benefit analyses before implementing new rules and the new research could provide them with a starting point for accounting for the economic benefits of policies to wean the world off meat.

The study also illustrates how the benefits of changing dietary patterns vary from region to region. Some areas—namely, East Asia, Latin America and Western high-income countries—benefited from reduced red meat consumption. Others in South Asia and Sub-Saharan Africa will benefit the most from increased fruit and vegetable intake. Those details could help policymakers create narrowly targeted policies, researchers say.

India Has Largest Youth Population 356 million10-24 year-olds in India

United Nations: With 356 million 10-24 year-olds, India has the world’s largest youth population despite having a smaller population than China, a recent report by the United Nations has stated. The report titled ‘The power of 1.8 billion’, said 28 per cent of India’s population is 10 to 24 year-olds, adding that the youth population is growing fastest in the poorest nations. Global number of youths is highest ever.
China is second with 269 million young people, followed by Indonesia (67 million), the US (65 million) and Pakistan (59 million), Nigeria with 57 million, Brazil with 51 million, and Bangladesh with 48 million, the United Nations Population Fund’s (UNFPA) State of the World’s Population report said.

It said that developing countries with large youth populations could see their economies soar, provided they invest heavily in young people’s education and health and protect their rights. Within this generation are 600 million adolescent girls with specific needs, challenges and aspirations for the future, the report said.
As the world is home to 1.8 billion young people between the ages of 10 and 24 year, 9 in 10 of the world’s young population live in less developed countries. “Young people are the innovators, creators, builders and leaders of the future. But they can transform the future only if they have skills, health, decision-making, and real choices in life.
“Today’s record 1.8 billion young people present an enormous opportunity to transform the future,” UNFPA Executive Director Babatunde Osotimehim said. The potential economic gains would be realised through a “demographic dividend”, which can occur when a county’s working age population is larger than the population that is dependent.
“Never before have there been so many young people. Never again is there likely to be such potential for economic and social progress. How we meet the needs and aspirations of young people will define our common future,” the report said.
In order to maximise the dividend, countries must ensure their young working-age populations are equipped to seize opportunities for jobs and other income-earning possibilities, the UN agency said.

Pope Francis Pushes Church to be More Open to the Divorced

The Eucharist is not a prize for the perfect, but a powerful medicine and nourishment for the weak’

In his first major teaching on family issues, Pope Francis advances the power of local bishops to include divorced and remarried Catholics in church life, perhaps even letting them celebrate the Eucharist, while largely sidestepping hot-button social issues like gay marriage and married clergy.

The drama around this document—titled “Amoris Laetitia,” Latin for “The Joy of Love”—has been building for more than two years, ever since Pope Francis first announced he would call Catholic bishops together to examine modern family crises around the world.

The document is Pope Francis’ official response to the two major meetings of bishops he hosted at the Vatican to discuss marriage and family issues—the Extraordinary Synod on the Family in 2014 and Synod of the Bishops in 2015.

Per Vatican custom, Pope Francis considered the bishops’ insights from these events, added his own, and wrote a formal teaching to guide the church on the issues. The result is this 270-page formal letter, called an apostolic exhortation, addressed to bishops, priests, married couples, and lay people about “love in the family.”

The letter is more about pastoral method than doctrine about the marriage itself. Pope Francis seeks to encourage families with practical guidance amid the myriad of challenges they face around the world, including unemployment, migration, poverty, gambling, alcoholism, polygamy and societal pressures that ignore the longstanding Catholic teaching of marriage. The document notes that what seems normal for a bishop on one continent is considered “strange and almost scandalous” for another, and he wants local bishops to seek local solutions.

“I understand those who prefer a more rigorous pastoral care which leaves no room for confusion,” Pope Francis says. “But I sincerely believe that Jesus wants a Church attentive to the goodness which the Holy Spirit sows in the midst of human weakness, a Mother who, while clearly expressing her objective teaching, ‘always does what good she can, even if in the process, her shoes get soiled by the mud on the street.’”

This openness can at times seem to give vague answers. Pope Francis says that divorced and remarried people are “not excommunicated” and should not feel “discriminated against”—he stops short of directly saying they are welcome to take the bread and wine at Eucharist, but then adds in a footnote: “I would also point out that the Eucharist ‘is not a prize for the perfect, but a powerful medicine and nourishment for the weak.’”

On Wednesday, two days before the letter’s release, he met with a support group for divorced and remarried couples. In September, he made it easier for couples to obtain an annulment, which is not a divorce but a finding by Catholic officials that a marriage between a man and a woman was not a real marriage—a necessary step to return to celebrating Eucharist in the church now.

Several others of his most interesting lines are also the least clear. “The experience of the broad oriental tradition of a married clergy could also be drawn upon,” he writes, without specificying what that means in the context of the debate over married clergy in non-Eastern traditions. As expected, Pope Francis reminds Catholics that gay marriage is not marriage and that couples that cohabit are still in “irregular” unions. He only mentions gay marriage twice, but he also suggests that unions that are not marriages in the Church’s eyes can offer limited wisdom: “The Synod Fathers stated that the Church does not disregard the constructive elements in those situations which do not yet or no longer correspond to her teaching on marriage.”

Pope Francis does name a few specific policies he wants churches to implement. Local churches, he says, need to develop and deepen programs for marriage preparation—engagement periods are often too short, and couples need more training before they walk down the aisle. There should also be specialized regional counseling centers for families going through crises, he says, especially separation and divorce. He also asks for pastoral programs for migrant families and the relatives they’ve left behind.

Much of his teaching on marriage for spouses is fairly simple, similar to what one would expect from a local parish pastor. Don’t be arrogant, especially to non-believing family members. Forgive and trust each other. Show affection. Don’t keep secrets from each another. Be open-minded. Care for the elderly. Don’t fall asleep with your electronic device because it might mean you are ignoring your spouse. For churches, he also offers some practical suggesions: train ministers to better help families, mentor young couples, and encourage couples especially when they have young children or are empty-nesters.

To look at this document simply for a definitive Francis answer on a controversial topic misses the bigger picture. Pope Francis is trying to create a new culture of how bishops lead, and he wants them to think first of the person and her circumstances, instead of doctrine in the abstract. He sets the example and references teaching of bishops conferences frequently in the letter, including those in Spain, Korea, Mexico, Columbia and Kenya. It is important to remember that this teaching is for the world’s 1.2 billion Catholics, not just a subset in a specific country.

One of the most important parts of this teaching may not actually the letter itself, but the conversation it has provoked for the past two years. The synod gatherings themselves were particularly heated, but brought dialogue about issues that can get ignored. At the three-week meeting in 2014, one of the bishops’ working documents sparked a media firestorm when it included a section called “Welcoming homosexual persons.”Interpreters looking for revolution quickly learned they’d overreached. The section was later struck down, but a point had been made: Catholics across the world were deeply discussing issues, which is the Francis way.

Mercy, in the end, remains his constant theme. “No one can be condemned for ever, because that is not the logic of the Gospel!” he writes. “Here I am not speaking only of the divorced and remarried, but of everyone, in whatever situation they find themselves.”

Global Tax Avoidance Huge Problem: Obama

In his first reaction to the leaked ‘Panama Papers’ that revealed names of thousands of world leaders and celebrities who have stashed money in tax havens, President Barack Obama has said that global tax avoidance may be running into trillions of dollars worldwide. “There is no doubt that the problem of global tax avoidance, generally, is a huge problem,” Obama said adding the issue has been brought up in G7 and G20 meetings.

“There has been some progress made in coordinating between tax authorities of different countries so that we can make sure that we’re catching some of the most egregious examples,” he said. “But as I said before, one of the big problems that we have is that a lot of this stuff is not illegal. Unless the United States and other countries lead by example in closing some of these loopholes and provisions, then in many cases you can trace what’s taking place, but you can’t stop it. There is always going to be some illicit movement of funds around the world. But we shouldn’t make it easy. We shouldn’t make it legal to engage in transactions just to avoid taxes,” he asserted.

“That’s why I think it is important that the Treasury acted on something that’s different from what happened in Panama. The corporate inversions issue is a financial transaction that is brokered among major Fortune 500 companies to avoid paying taxes,” he said.

“But the basic principle is making sure that everybody is paying their fair share, and that they don’t just have a few people who are able to take advantage of tax provisions, that’s something that they really have to pay attention to.

“This is all net outflows of money that could be spent on the pressing needs here in the United States. The volume that you start seeing when you combine legal tax avoidance with illicit tax avoidance, or some of the activities that we’re seeing, this is not just billions of dollars. It’s not even just hundreds of billions of dollars. Estimates are this may be trillions of dollars worldwide, and it could make a big difference in terms of what we can do here,” Obama said.

Obama urged the Republican-controlled Congress to close legal loopholes so as to prevent American companies from evading taxes and shipping jobs overseas. “We should keep building an economy where everybody has a fair shot, and everybody plays by the same rules,” Obama said a day after the US Treasury Department issued new set of rules making it more difficult for US companies to save taxes by shipping jobs abroad.

Americans, he stressed, should be able to know that big corporations aren’t playing by a different set of rules. “In the news over the last couple of days, we’ve had another reminder in this big dump of data coming out of Panama that tax avoidance is a big, global problem. Its not unique to other countries because, frankly, there are folks here in America who are taking advantage of the same stuff. A lot of it is legal, but that’s exactly the problem,” Obama said.

U.S.-India Technology Partnership: Using Scale and Speed to Bridge the Divide

U.S.-India Technology Partnership: Using Scale and Speed to Bridge the Divide will be topic for a panel discussion in Menlo Park, California on April 25th, 2016, featuring Amitabh Kant, CEO, NITI Aayog;  John Chambers, Executive Chairman, Cisco Systems  &  USIBC Chairman; Shantanu Narayen, CEO, Adobe Systems; and  Joseph M. DeSimone, CEO, Carbon3D.
This half-day summit in the Silicon Valley will explore the challenges and opportunities that businesses face while scaling up technologies in emerging markets and how the US-India business corridor is uniquely poised to build the digital future of the global economy. Against this backdrop, Amitabh Kant, the newly appointed CEO of National Institution of Transforming India (NITI) Aayog will present his plans on how technology and policy-making, the government and industry can coordinate efforts to ensure the success of programs such as Digital India, Start Up India, Skill India, Financial Inclusion (Jan Dhan Yojana) and Make in India.

The National Institution for Transforming India Aayog is a Government of India policy think-tank established by Prime Minister Narendra Modi to replace the Planning Commission. The stated aim for NITI Aayog’s creation is to foster involvement and participation in the economic policy-making process by the State Governments of India. One of the important mandates of NITI Aayog is to bring cooperative competitive federalism. The Prime Minister is Ex-Officio Chairperson for NITI Aayog.

7 in 10, including half of Republican voters unfavorable to Trump

(WASHINGTON) — For Americans of nearly every race, gender, political persuasion and location, disdain for Donald Trump runs deep, saddling the Republican front-runner with unprecedented unpopularity as he tries to overcome recent campaign setbacks.

Seven in 10 people, including close to half of Republican voters, have an unfavorable view of Trump, according to a new Associated Press-GfK poll. It’s an opinion shared by majorities of men and women; young and old; conservatives, moderates and liberals; and whites, Hispanics and blacks — a devastatingly broad indictment of the billionaire businessman.

Even in the South, a region where Trump has won GOP primaries decisively, close to 70 percent view him unfavorably. And among whites without a college education, one of Trump’s most loyal voting blocs, 55 percent have a negative opinion.

Trump still leads the Republican field in delegates and has built a loyal following with a steady share of the Republican primary electorate. But the breadth of his unpopularity raises significant questions about how he could stitch together enough support in the general election to win the White House.

It also underscores the trouble he may still face in the Republican race, which appears headed to a contested convention where party insiders would have their say about who will represent the GOP in the fall campaign.

“He’s at risk of having the nomination denied to him because grass-roots party activists fear he’s so widely disliked that he can’t possible win,” said Ari Fleischer, a former adviser to President George W. Bush.

Beyond their generally negative perception of Trump, large majorities also said they would not describe him as civil, compassionate or likable. On nearly all of these measures, Trump fared worse than his remaining Democratic or Republican rivals.

Not that voters have all that much love for those rivals. But their negative perceptions don’t match the depth of the distaste for Trump. Texas Sen. Ted Cruz, who is seeking to catch Trump in the Republican delegate count, is viewed unfavorably by 59 percent, while 55 percent have negative views of Democratic front-runner Hillary Clinton.

Another problem for Trump is that his public perception seems to be getting worse. The number of Americans who view him unfavorably has risen more than 10 percentage points since mid-February, a two-month stretch that has included some of his biggest primary victories but also an array of stumbles that suggested difficulties with his campaign organization and a lack of policy depth.

A survey conducted by Gallup in January found Trump’s unfavorable rating, then at 60 percent in the their polling, was already at a record high level for any major party nominee in their organization’s polling since the 1990’s.

Clinton’s campaign believes Trump’s sky-high unfavorable ratings could offset some questions voters have about her own character, and perhaps even give her a chance to peel off some Republicans who can’t stomach a vote for the real estate mogul.

More than 60 percent of all registered voters and 31 percent of Republicans said they definitely would not vote for Trump in the general election. One group that is still with him includes those who describe themselves as both Republicans and supporters of the tea party movement. Sixty-eight percent of them have a favorable view.

‘US has much bigger global agenda with India than Pakistan’

New York, NY: United States has a much bigger global agenda with India in contrast to Pakistan, and Washington has moved far beyond looking at its relations with the South Asian neighbors as linked, according to US Defence Secretary Ash Carter.

“We have much more to do with India today than has to do with Pakistan.” Carter said Friday. “There’s important business with respect to Pakistan, but we have much more – a whole global agenda with India, an agenda that covers all kinds of issues.” He was answering a question from the audience during a speech at the Council on Foreign Relations about how the growing US ties with India will impact Washington’s relations with Islamabad.

In his address on the eve of leaving on a visit to India, Carter said US relations with India was “destined to be one of the most significant partnerships of the 21st century.” He said there would be “exciting new projects” and a “strategic handshake” with India encompassing military cooperation and defence co-production.

“The days are gone when we only deal with India as the other side of the Pakistan coin, or Pakistan as the other side of the India coin,” he said. “I know that there are those in India and Pakistan who are still glued to that dyad way of thinking. But the United States put that behind us some time ago.” While describing Pakistan as “an important security partner,” he said, “We have a big set of issues having to do with the border with Afghanistan, where we continue to operate; with terrorism, both on the territory of Pakistan and also obviously cross-border into Afghanistan, including affecting US service members there.” He added, “I’m sure I’ll be asked about it in India. It’s long past – we’re long past the point in US policymaking where we look at the India-Pakistan dyad as the whole story for either one of them,” he said.

America is strongest when we recognize our many traditions, says First Lady Michelle Obama

 

WASHINGTON: “We think America is strongest when we recognize our many traditions, when we celebrate our diversity, and when we lift each other up,” First Lady Michelle Obama said during Nowruz celebrations at the White House on April 6th.  “And in times like these, when we think all — that’s more important than ever before, right now and today with what’s going on.  Right now, when we’re hearing so much disturbing and hateful rhetoric, it is so important to remember that our diversity has been -– and will always be -– our greatest source of strength and pride here in the United States,” Obama said.

Criticising the “disturbing and hateful” poll rhetoric, First Lady Michelle Obama has asserted that America is a “nation of immigrants” and diversity will always be its greatest strength. “In times like these, when we think all– that’s more important than ever before, right now and today with what’s going on. Right now, when we’re hearing so much disturbing and hateful rhetoric, it is so important to remember that our diversity has been — and will always be — our greatest source of strength and pride here in the United States,” she said. “We are a nation of immigrants. And we should cherish the talent and energy and the beautiful traditions and cultures that come with that heritage, not just today but every day,” she said.

In her remarks, she underscored the number of festivals of various cultures now White House has been celebrating. “I’m proud that here at the White House, we host special events to mark the holidays but we celebrate St Patrick’s Day, Diwali, Cinco de Mayo. And with your help, today, we’re celebrating Nowruz, which is one of our newest White House traditions,” Michelle said.

Nowruz, she said, is a time to visit loved ones. It’s a time to reflect on the past year, and to renew hopes for the New Year to come.  Nowruz is a traditional Iranian festival of spring and considered as the beginning of the New Year among Iranians.

The Most and Least Popular US Presidents

President Obama’s public approval rating has been around 44%, down significantly from his starting approval of 62%. To be fair, Obama still has about seven months left in office, so his approval rating is far from final. But few presidents leave the White House more popular than when they entered. So how does Obama stack up to the modern presidents when it comes to popularity?

Using data from Real Clear Politics and the Roper CenterInsideGov found the average approval ratings for the modern U.S. presidents (FDR onward). Barack Obama stands at #10, with his average Approval Rating hovering around 47.46%. President Obama assumed office under challenging circumstances. The U.S. had troops deployed in Iraq and Afghanistan, and the economy was in a full-on recession. Obama’s approval ratings recovered slightly after his re-election, but fell to a new low following the 2013 government shutdown. His highest approval rating was 63%, in Feb. 2009, and his lowest approval rating was 39%, in Nov. 2013.

John F. Kennedy has been ranked as #1 with an average Approval Rating of 70.53%. Kennedy served in office for 2.8 years. His approval rating never fell below 55% during that time. Although he assumed office during a period of racial unrest and international instability, the young president from Massachusetts used his charisma and idealism to win over the public.

Following Kennedy is Dwight D. Eisenhower at #2 with an average Approval Rating of 64.9%. Eisenhower’s approval ratings remained fairly strong during his first term, never dipping below 50%. Although his popularity took a hit during his second term, Eisenhower still left office with the majority of Americans supporting him.

Franklin D. Roosevelt came a close #3 with his average Approval Ratings at 64.49%. Approval ratings were only polled for the last seven years of Roosevelt’s presidency. During this time, FDR’s approval rating never fell below 50%, as he navigated the end of the Great Depression and World War II.

George H. W. Bush comes as 4th most popular president with his average Approval Ratings hovering around 60.1%. Bush gained popularity for his focus on foreign policy. The American public largely supported the end of the Cold War and Bush’s approval ratings spiked to a new high following the Persian Gulf War. By the end of his presidency, Bush struggled to deal with a slow economy and lost re-election to Bill Clinton.

Harry Truman is the least popular of all the recent Presidents in history ranking at #13, and having an average Approval Rating of 42.6%. Truman’s popularity mostly fell due to the Korean War and high inflation. Interestingly, history has been kinder to Truman, with polls consistently ranking him as one of the 10 best presidents.

Gerald Ford stands at #12 with his ratings of 45.78%. Public support for Ford dissipated when he pardoned Richard Nixon a month into his presidency. Although he left office with a climbing approval rate, Ford was still unable to win re-election.

Jimmy Carter with his average Approval Rating of 45.78% comes at #11. Remarkably, Jimmy Carter ties with Ford, with an average approval rating of 45.78%. Carter entered the White House on a wave of popularity, promising to steer Washington away from the scandal-filled presidencies of Ford and Nixon. However, Carter was soon overwhelmed by high inflation, an energy crisis, war in Afghanistan and a hostage situation in Iran.

Obama’s predecessor George W. Bush is slightly above him at  #9 with his average Approval Rating of 47.48%. Bush’s approval rating jumped after the 9/11 terrorist attacks, but quickly plummeted in the following months. Wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, as well as the onset of the Great Recession, prevented Bush’s popularity from rising again.

Richard Nixon stands at #8 with his average Approval Rating being 49.89%. Nixon’s approval ratings were fairly high for the majority of his presidency. That changed after the Watergate Scandal broke. Nixon currently has the lowest exit approval rating of any U.S. president at 24%.

Ronald Reagan is #7 with his average Approval Rating of 52.84%. Although Reagan ranks as the seventh most popular president in terms of approval ratings, his presidency has been more favorably viewed in history. In fact, in a 2013 Gallup poll, Reagan scored as the second best modern U.S. president, only behind JFK. Reagan’s lowest approval rating occurred in the midst of an economic recession in the early 80s.

Lyndon B. Johnson is ranked at #6, with an average Approval Rating of 54.75%. Following JFK’s assassination, Johnson was abruptly thrust into the presidency. Johnson’s popularity remained above 50% during his first two years in the White House, but then declined more sharply with the beginning of the Vietnam War and civil unrest in the U.S.

Bill Clinton is #5 with his average Approval Rating of 54.8%. Unlike most presidents, Clinton’s approval ratings actually increased over his presidency. Although his popularity took a hit after the Monica Lewinsky scandal broke in 1998, Clinton still left office with a higher approval rating than when he started.

India In Talks To Purchase US Predator Drones

India is in talks with the United States to purchase 40 Predator surveillance drones. “We are aware of Predator interest from the Indian Navy. However, it is a government-to-government discussion,” Vivek Lall, chief executive of U.S. and International Strategic Development at San Diego-based General Atomics, told the media.

The push for the drones comes as U.S. Defense Secretary Ash Carter heads to India this weekend for talks to cement military collaboration in the final months of the Obama administration. Indian military officials said they expected the request for the armed aircraft to figure in Carter’s talks with his Indian counterpart, Manohar Parrikar.

As defence ties deepen with the United States, which sees India as a counterweight to China in the region, New Delhi has asked Washington for the Predator series of unmanned planes built by privately-held General Atomics, military officials said.

According to reports, India is trying to equip the military with more unmanned technologies to gather intelligence as well as boost its firepower along the vast land borders with Pakistan and China. It also wants a closer eye on the Indian Ocean. New Delhi has already acquired surveillance drones from Israel to monitor the mountains of Kashmir, a region disputed by the nuclear-armed South Asian rivals and the cause of two of their three wars.

The U.S. government late last year cleared General Atomics’ proposal to market the unarmed Predator XP in India. It was not clear when the delivery of the drones would take place. The navy wants them for surveillance in the Indian Ocean, where the pilotless aircraft can remain airborne for 35 hours at a stretch, at a time when the Chinese navy is expanding ship and submarine patrols in the region.

India’s air force has also asked Washington about acquiring around 100 armed Predator C Avenger aircraft, which the United States has used to carry out strikes against Islamist militants in Pakistan’s northwest and neighbouring Afghanistan. But it would need clearance from the Missile Technology Control Regime group of 34 nations as well as approval from U.S. Congress before any transfer of lethal Predators could happen, officials said.

Washington wants India to sign a set of agreements including on the use of each other’s military bases that would help them operate together. Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s government has signalled its willingness to move forward with the proposed pacts after the previous administration did not act for more than a decade.

Pakistan’s Minorities Seek Protection At U.N. Protest Event

New York, April 6: Pakistani Christians and their supporters demonstrated outside the United Nations headquarters here Tuesday asking for the protection of minorities in Pakistan and help for hundreds of Christian asylum-seekers from that country detained in Thailand.

At the protest that comes in the wake of the Easter bombing by the Pakistani Taliban directed against Christians in Lahore, an organiser, Tariq Javed, said that the community was under constant threat in Pakistan, both from the government through measures like the anti-blasphemy laws and from terrorist organisations and extremist politicians. The Lahore bombing was only the latest in a series of attacks on Christians and their places of worship, he said.

Javed, who is the president of the International Community Care Foundation, said the UN and the United States should work to end the persecution of Christians in Pakistan. Islamabad should be made to “take measures to provide security and protection to Christians in the light of recent terrorist attacks and continual religious persecution,” he said.

He said that of about 4,000 Pakistani Christians who fled to Thailand, about 500 have been put in detention centers with illegal immigrants under harrowing conditions and not treated as asylum-seekers. Eleven of them have died so far in detention, he added.

Pakistani Christians are unable to get asylum in Thailand because that nation has not signed the Refugee Convention and has no formal framework for asylum. Javed appealed to the UN and its High Commissioner for Refugees to intervene to have those in detention released and arrange for their resettlement elsewhere.

Wilson Chowdhury, the chairperson of the British Pakistani Christian Association, said that if Thailand returned the asylum-seekers to Pakistan they would face persecution from the government and violent retribution from extremists. The anti-blasphemy were being used as a legal guise to attack Christians and to even settle private scores.

A problem the Pakistani Christians fleeing persecution in their homeland faced was that Britain defined their status as facing “severe discrimination” rather than “persecution” and this made it difficult for them to get asylum, Chowdhury said. Many European countries deferred to Britain on this and his organization was working to change this, he added.

About 50 people, including non-Pakistani Americans, were at the protest. Hubert George, the chairman of Hope for Persecuted Christians, said that they were also appealing to Washington to provide asylum to the Pakistani Christians stranded in Thailand.

Rajat Patra, Carnegie Mellon Student Found Dead Off Campus

Rajat Patra, an Indian American student who came from Bangalore to join prestigious Carnegie Mellon University in Pittsburgh’s prestigious Carnegie Mellon University, was found dead in his off-campus apartment March 30. He was the second student enrolled in the university to have died within days of each other. The cause of death has not yet been released, but the university said the two deaths were not related and that there was no threat to the university community.

Rajat Patra, a student in the Heinz College Master of Information Systems Management program, joined Carnegie Mellon last August. “He was a passionate student who had earned a prestigious internship for the summer and was planning to create his own IT consultancy after graduation,” Subra Suresh, president of the university said in a statement. Patra was also an avid guitar player, and his Facebook shows him in white face, wearing a Pink Floyd t-shirt.

“We have no reason to believe that these deaths are connected, and want to reassure you that there is no threat to other members of our community,” Suresh wrote. “As we share in your sorrow, we want to acknowledge how deeply upsetting these losses are to those who knew Elliott and Rajat, and to the entire Carnegie Mellon community. The team of housefellows, college liaisons, advisors, and others are always available for student support. We would urge any member of our community to engage our Counseling and Psychological Services, either for yourself or as a point of referral for a friend. You may reach a counselor at any time, day or night, at 412-268-2922. Finally, members of the Carnegie Mellon community have a history of looking out for one another. Let us all commit to being especially vigilant and caring for one another at this difficult time.On April 1, the university held a memorial to remember the two students.:

Indian Students Face Deportation Over US Student Visa Fraud

Washington, DC:  Over 300 Indian students, reported to have come to the United States as part of a fake student visa scheme, are now expecting deportation. As per reports, these students were unaware of the nature of the visa, and came to the US as part of the fake visa scheme.

Mostly Indian and Chinese students are among over 1,000 people facing deportation from sting that saw 21 suspects being arrested on Tuesday, April 5th, on felony charges that include conspiracy to commit visa fraud; they could face multiple years in prison. “Foreigners who used the services will likely not be prosecuted, but will have their visas revoked,” New Jersey US Attorney Paul Fishman told reporters on April 5.

It is learnt that a large number of students who received necessary visa and permits to work in the US as a result of the sting operation for which they reportedly paid huge sums of money are from India. These people arrested for their involvement in an alleged scheme to enroll foreign nationals as students in the University of Northern New Jersey, a purported for-profit college located in Cranford, New Jersey (UNNJ).
Meanwhile, reports state, 10 Indian-Americans are among 21 people arrested as part of a sting operation in which a fake university was created by US authorities to expose a visa scam that allowed more than 1,000 foreigners to maintain student and work visas. In the US, F-1 student visas allow foreign students to enter or remain in the country as they study.

The arrested people were brokers, recruiters and employers who unlawfully and fraudulently obtained or attempted to obtain student visas and foreign worker visas for approximately 1,000 foreign nationals from 26 countries. A sting operation conducted by law enforcement agencies has exposed the visa scam. “The 306 individuals from India who were purported students at the University of Northern New Jersey have been identified, located and placed in the immigration process for removal in accordance to proper due process,” Alvin Phillips, spokesman USICE Homeland Security Investigations told the media.

The 10 Indians arrested included Tajesh Kodalim, 44; Jyoti Patel, 34; Sanjeev Sukhija,35; Harpreet Sachdeva, 26; Shahjadi M. Parvin aka Sarah Patel, 54; Narendra Singh Plaha, 44 and Govardhan Dyavarashetty aka Vardhan Shetty, 35, all from New Jersey, as well as Avinash Shankar, 35, from Illinois; Karthik Nimmala, 32, from Georgia and Syed Qasim Abbas aka Qasim Reza aka Nayyer, 41, from New York.

The arrested includes brokers, recruiters and employers, who have been charged with conspiracy to commit visa fraud. The middlemen under arrest paid the undercover agents running the school thousands of dollars to produce paperwork that made it look as if the foreigners were enrolled at UNNJ, federal prosecutors said. This enabled the “students” to maintain their visa status without having to go to class.

The charges of conspiracy to commit visa fraud and making a false statement each carry a maximum potential penalty of five years in prison and a $250,000 fine. The charges of conspiracy to harbor aliens for profit and H1-B Visa fraud each carry a maximum penalty of 10 years in prison and $250,000 fine.

The people arrested were brokers who recruited foreign students mainly from China and India to the university that they knew would not have real classes. The brokers, working with investigators posing as university officials then charged the students in what was described as ‘Pay to Stay’ scheme that allowed them to maintain their student visas and stay in the country.

The sting operation was a way to understand, according to the prosecutor’s office, the extent of the criminal network behind visa fraud, including how students are recruited, how fake universities work and what happens after the students are enrolled.

“While the United States fully supports international education, we will vigorously investigate those who seek to exploit the U.S. immigration system,” said ICE Director Sarah R. Saldana. “As a result of this operation, HSI special agents have successfully identified and closed a gap in the student visa system and have arrested 21 individuals alleged to be amongst the system’s most egregious violators.”

As per the official sources, the Indian Embassy is in constant contact with the US government for seeking fair decision for the Indian students. The embassy has also appealed the US officials not to arrest and deport the Indian students.

10 Credit Hours of CME Offered to Participants During 34th Annual AAPI convention in New

(New York, NY: April 6, 2016) The American Association of Physicians of Indian Origin (AAPI) that represents more than 100,000  Indian American Physicians, reflects the range of physician specialties seen in the physician community at large with 61% in Primary Care, 33% in Medical sub-specialties and 6% in surgical sub-specialties. Medical specialty representation includes pediatrics, psychiatry, anesthesiology/pain management, cardiology, family medicine, obstetrics and gynecology, oncology, gastroenterology pathology, endocrinology, nephrology, rheumatology along with many other fields.

The 34th Annual AAPI Convention & Scientific Assembly will be held at Marriott Marquis in New York, NY from June 30 to July 4, 2016.  The multidisciplinary CME conference during the convention allows specialists and primary care physicians to interact in an academic forum. World-renowned speakers will discuss gaps between current and best practice of wide-ranging topics of CME sessions.

It’s a well known fact that physicians of Indian origin excel in their respective areas of work and continue to play key roles in patient care, administration, academics and medical research. In order to cater to its diversity of medical specialties, AAPI continues to use a multi-disciplinary conference format. “The essence of AAPI is educational,” Dr. Seema Jain, president of AAPI, while describing the purpose of CME said.

According to Dr. Seema Jain, “That translates into numerous Continuing Medical Education and non-CME seminars by experts in their fields. CME will provide comprehensive and current reviews and guidelines for the diagnosis and treatment of various disease states to reduce morbidity and mortality and achieve cost effective quality care outcomes. At the end of the activity, it is expected that attendees will gain an understanding of the causation, diagnosis and the best clinical practices for the management of the diverse group of diseases discussed during this program.”

On Friday, July 1st, Dr. Donald Lloyd Jones, Writer of AHA and ACC Guidelines & Chairman of PSM at North Western University, Chicago IL will present CME on New Cholesterol Guidelines and Implication. Dr. Jeffrry Mackanick, Director of Clinical Diabetes MSSM will discuss with the delegates on Guidelines in management of Metabolic Syndrome and Diabetes. Dr. Clive Rosendoeff will present on Recent trends in Management of Hypertension.

Management of Prostate related disease and Cancer of Prostate will be the topic discussed by Dr. Ashutosh Tiwari, Chair Of Urology at Mt. Sinai Medical Center, while Modern Trends in Management of Multiple Myeloma will be presented by Dr. Sunder Jaggannath, Director Of Multiple Myeloma Center, NY. New Imaging Guidelines for smokers and Contemporary Management will be addressed in his presentation by Dr. Manjit Bains at Sloan Kattering Memorial Hospital, NYC. Dr. Sanjeev Gupta will address the delegates on New Development Inflammatory Liver Disease.

On Saturday, Dr. Valentine Fuster, Editor in Chief of JACC, will deliver his address on ways to “Promoting Cardio Vascular Health Globally From Heart to Head.” Dr. Robert Banow, Editor in Chief of JAMA Cardiology, will discuss with participants about the “Timing Of Surgical intervention for Mitral/Aortic Valve regurgitation.” Dr. Javed Butler, Chief of Cardiology at State of New York University, Stony Brook, will focus his lecture on Advances in Heart Failure, while Dr. Devendra Mehta,

Director of EP Services at St. Luke Hospital, NYC will present on Advances in Treatment of Arrhythmias. The lecture by Dr. John Puskus, Chairman of Cardio Thoracic Surgery at Beth Israel Medical Center, NY will be on Complete Arterial Vascularization, and, Dr. Samin Sharma, Chair Of Cardiology at Mt Sinai Medical Center, NYC will address the audience on Advances in Interventional Cardiology.

On Sunday, July 3, 2016, the focus will be mental health issues. Depression and Mood Disorder of Moods in Women will be topic addressed by Dr. A. Patkar and Association, while Dr. Samuel Gandy will address on Mild Cognitive Dysfunction to Alzheimer Disease is Prevention or Option. Dr. Sharmila Makhija, Chair of OB/GYN at Albert Einstein Medical Center’s theme will be on Recent Advances in Management of Cancer of Ovary, Dr. James Abraham from the Cleveland Clinic will address on New Advances in Management of Cancer of Breast, and the final presentation will be on Women Health and Advances.

The 34th annual AAPI Convention in New York from June 30th through July 1st, 2016, while providing physicians of Indian origin an opportunity to come together in an atmosphere of collegiality, it will enable them to retrace and appreciate their common roots, culture and the bond that unites them as members of this large professional community.

Giving them a platform to celebrate their accomplishments, the annual convention to be attended by nearly 2,000 physicians of Indian origin, it will also provide a forum to renew their professional commitment through continuing medical educations activities.

The annual convention this year is being organized by AAPI’s New Jersey Chapter, headed by Dr. Rita Ahuja, who said, “The 2016 AAPI Annual Convention & Scientific Assembly offers an exciting venue to interact with leading physicians, health professionals, academicians, and scientists of Indian origin. Physicians and healthcare professionals from across the country will convene and participate in the scholarly exchange of medical advances, to develop health policy agendas, and to encourage legislative priorities in the coming year.”

“Many of the physicians who will attend this convention have excelled in different specialties and subspecialties and occupy high positions as faculty members of medical schools, heads of departments, and executives of hospital staff. The AAPI Convention offers an opportunity to meet directly with these physicians who are leaders in their fields and play an integral part in the decision-making process regarding new products and services,” Dr. Seema Jain added.

AAPI is an umbrella organization which has nearly 160 local chapters, specialty societies and alumni organizations. For over 30 years, Indian physicians have made significant contributions to health care in this country, not only practicing in inner cities, rural areas and peripheral communities but also at the top medical schools and other academic centers. Almost 10%-12% of medical students entering US schools are of Indian origin. Headquartered in Oak Brook, Illinois, AAPI represents the interests of over nearly 100,000 physicians, medical students and residents of Indian heritage in the United States. It is the largest ethnic medical organization in the nation. For more details and registration for the convention, please visit: www.aapiconvention.org and www.aapiusa.org

Indian American Christians Welcome Vatican’s Invitation To Address Pontifical Academy of Social Sciences

“Among the candidates running for president this year, there is only one true “Christian” and he happens to be a Jew,” described Dr. Paul Veliyathil, Hospice Chaplain with Vitas Hospice, on the invitation being extended to Se. Bernie Sanders to attend a conference hosted by the Pontifical Academy of Social Sciences, a scholarly association in Vatican City . “I am delighted that Bernie Sanders will be attending this conference at the Vatican. He is the most compassionate politician–which by the way is an oxymoron–I have seen in a long time. His compassion for the poor and the dispossesed is comparable to that of the Pope and indeed commendable coming from a politician. With much in common with Francis, with a white robe and a mitre, Bernie could be indistinguishable from the Pope,” said the Kerala-born, Florida-based Indian American.

Dr. Veliyathil was responding to the announcement by the campaign office of Senator Bernie Sanders that the Democratic Party nominee would travel to Rome this month to give a high-profile speech at the Vatican. The Sanders campaign made the announcement on Friday, April 8th that Sanders, a Democratic presidential candidate, said he would take a break from campaigning in New York, just days before the April 19 primary there, to attend a conference hosted by the Pontifical Academy of Social Sciences, a scholarly association in Vatican City that was established by Pope John Paul II in 1994.

Another prominent Indian American, Dr. Thomas Alapatt, President of the New Jersey Chapter of American Association of Physicians of Indian Origin (AAPI) had a different take on the invitation by the Vatican to Sen. Sanders.  “Pope Francis is newly elected and his views are valuable in the religious matter,” says Dr. Alapatt. While acknowledging that Pope is the most respected person in the Catholic Church, Dr. Alapatt, says, “Pope is liberal in social aspects but very conservative in family matters. Perhaps he was brought up with liberal views in social aspects. Personally speaking, the Religious Congretation, to which the Pope belongs, is known to be very modern with liberal views. The general view among Catholics here is that the Pope should stay out of American politics.” On the invitation to Sen. Sanders, the Indian American physician says, Catholics in US will not go with the idea of Bernie Sanders such as liberalization of everything is not going to be good for the nation. “Traditionally Catholics are for educating all, helping the poor, needy, the sick and helpless. I am not seeing Sanders with all these ideas.”

 

Monsignor Marcelo Sanchez Sorondo, a senior papal official and the academy’s chancellor, told Reuters that it was his idea to invite the US Senator. Sanders in an interview had said, Pope Francis had played a “profound role in raising consciousness throughout the world, not just within the Catholic community but within all communities. To me, this a source of real pride and excitement that I have been invited to speak to a major conference at the Vatican on how we can create a world economy that is moral and how we address the massive levels of wealth and income inequality that exist around the world, how we deal with unemployment, how we deal with poverty and how we create an economy that works for all people rather than the few,” Sanders said.

Sanders said in an interview that he admired the pope for speaking about income inequality and the need for people to help one another. “He has played an unbelievable role, an unbelievable role of injecting a moral consequence into the economy,” said Sanders, who would become the first Jewish president in the United States if elected. “He is talking about the idolatry of money, the worship of money, the greed that’s out there, how our whole culture is based on: ‘I need more and more and more.’”

Indian American Christians Welcome Vatican’s Invitation To Address Pontifical Academy of Social Sciences

“Among the candidates running for president this year, there is only one true “Christian” and he happens to be a Jew,” described Dr. Paul Veliyathil, Hospice Chaplain with Vitas Hospice, on the invitation being extended to Se. Bernie Sanders to attend a conference hosted by the Pontifical Academy of Social Sciences, a scholarly association in Vatican City . “I am delighted that Bernie Sanders will be attending this conference at the Vatican. He is the most compassionate politician–which by the way is an oxymoron–I have seen in a long time. His compassion for the poor and the dispossesed is comparable to that of the Pope and indeed commendable coming from a politician. With much in common with Francis, with a white robe and a mitre, Bernie could be indistinguishable from the Pope,” said the Kerala-born, Florida-based Indian American.

Dr. Veliyathil was responding to the announcement by the campaign office of Senator Bernie Sanders that the Democratic Party nominee would travel to Rome this month to give a high-profile speech at the Vatican. The Sanders campaign made the announcement on Friday, April 8th that Sanders, a Democratic presidential candidate, said he would take a break from campaigning in New York, just days before the April 19 primary there, to attend a conference hosted by the Pontifical Academy of Social Sciences, a scholarly association in Vatican City that was established by Pope John Paul II in 1994.

Another prominent Indian American, Dr. Thomas Alapatt, President of the New Jersey Chapter of American Association of Physicians of Indian Origin (AAPI) had a different take on the invitation by the Vatican to Sen. Sanders.  “Pope Francis is newly elected and his views are valuable in the religious matter,” says Dr. Alapatt. While acknowledging that Pope is the most respected person in the Catholic Church, Dr. Alapatt, says, “Pope is liberal in social aspects but very conservative in family matters. Perhaps he was brought up with liberal views in social aspects. Personally speaking, the Religious Congretation, to which the Pope belongs, is known to be very modern with liberal views. The general view among Catholics here is that the Pope should stay out of American politics.” On the invitation to Sen. Sanders, the Indian American physician says, Catholics in US will not go with the idea of Bernie Sanders such as liberalization of everything is not going to be good for the nation. “Traditionally Catholics are for educating all, helping the poor, needy, the sick and helpless. I am not seeing Sanders with all these ideas.”

 

Monsignor Marcelo Sanchez Sorondo, a senior papal official and the academy’s chancellor, told Reuters that it was his idea to invite the US Senator. Sanders in an interview had said, Pope Francis had played a “profound role in raising consciousness throughout the world, not just within the Catholic community but within all communities. To me, this a source of real pride and excitement that I have been invited to speak to a major conference at the Vatican on how we can create a world economy that is moral and how we address the massive levels of wealth and income inequality that exist around the world, how we deal with unemployment, how we deal with poverty and how we create an economy that works for all people rather than the few,” Sanders said.

Sanders said in an interview that he admired the pope for speaking about income inequality and the need for people to help one another. “He has played an unbelievable role, an unbelievable role of injecting a moral consequence into the economy,” said Sanders, who would become the first Jewish president in the United States if elected. “He is talking about the idolatry of money, the worship of money, the greed that’s out there, how our whole culture is based on: ‘I need more and more and more.’”

Indian American Republicans In New York Support Trump In Crucial Primary Set For April 19th

Not withstanding that Donald Trump, the Republican Party’s leading contender in the Primaries had said that Mexicans are rapists and drug dealers, suggested a temporary ban on Muslims entering the United States and called for the deportation of the more than 11 million undocumented immigrants in the country, there are some immigrants supporting him for reasons that are “intensely personal and, not surprisingly, are often aligned with their politics back home.”

As the entire nation is looking upto New York for the upcoming crucial Primaries on April 19th,  The New York Times reports that “some small groups of immigrants have come forward to support him.” A group of Latino Republicans in Rockland County is planning to endorse him, and some older Indian-American professionals and young Hindus in the region already have.

Quoting a recent informal poll conducted by a Russian-language radio station in New York City, the Times wrote that more than 80 percent of 5,000 callers preferred Trump, the Republican front-runner, to Hillary Clinton, the Democratic Party’s likely nominee.

Anand Ahuja, a lawyer in his mid-60s on Long Island, who was a founder of Indian-Americans for Trump 2016, a political action committee, has his own reasons to support Trump. Ahuja visited the United States in his 20s on a tourist visa from India, is reported to have said that  “friends were marrying for green cards. They stayed and prospered, but he returned to India and waited nine years to immigrate legally.”

Ahuja is said to have praised Trump for wanting to stop immigrants from entering the country illegally. “You should not reward people who have broken the law,” he said. “You follow the law, you get punished. That’s why I like Donald Trump when he says, ‘Let’s build a wall.” He added, “I believe anybody who came in this country illegally should be deported.” Ahuja, however, added that showing support for Trump also invites backlash and criticism. “You become a subject of mockery and fun and criticism,” Ahuja said, adding that he faced a lot of flak on social media for supporting Trump.

Adity Sharma, 30, a law student, and one of about 20 members of Hindus for Trump, a Facebook group that occasionally meets in cafes in Brooklyn, was quoted in the report that her Indian-American family supported Hillary Clinton. “To each his own,” she said, adding of Trump: “He’s a strong candidate, he’s different than the others. By him not being so politically correct, it does make people sit up and listen.” She and the group’s other members believe that current American policy is too friendly toward Pakistan and that Trump could change that to benefit India. They also approve of Trump’s proposed ban on Muslim refugees.

Raju Bathija, 56, another member of the group, said she no longer trusted Mrs. Clinton or her foreign policy in India. But more than 15 years ago she said she attended a fund-raiser for Mrs. Clinton’s Senate race, as a member of the Indo-American Democratic Party. Now, she supports Trump, because, “You go where your bread is buttered,” Ms. Bathija said.

However, these are individuals and their personal views. It looks to be seen if the larger community will go behind the billionaire turned politician. Devesh Kapur, director of the Center for the Advanced Study of India at the University of Pennsylvania, was quoted in the report in The Times as saying that Ahuja’s group was an outlier in an Indian diaspora that had overwhelmingly voted for Democrats. “It has no reflection of representativeness by a long, long shot,” said Mr. Kapur, who is an author of a coming book about Indian immigrants’ success in the United States. “Whether it’s Sikhs for Trump, Hindus for Trump, in each of them you would say: ‘Really? How can that be?’ It’s a really tiny fraction. They represent themselves, not all Sikhs.”

Yugeshwar Rajkumar Sentenced For Fraud In New York

Yugeshwar Rajkumar, a music business booking agent, has been sentenced to 3¼ -to-6½ years in state prison last week after his guilty plea in March in New York State Supreme Court to grand larceny in the second and third degrees as well as scheme to defraud in the first degree.

Manhattan District Attorney Cyrus R. Vance, Jr., announced on April 4th that Rajkumar, who also went by the names “Mateo Rajkumar” and “Matthew Rajkumar,” as well as several entities that he owned and operated in Manhattan, including American Talent Agency, Inc. and Kayvana Entertainment LLC., has been arrested and prosecuted for stealing more than $2 million from clients and promoters by falsely promising to book famous recording artists, including, Akon, Chris Brown, T-Pain, and MC Hammer, for events. In addition to prison terms, he was ordered to pay $1,744,900 in restitution.

Yugeshwar Rajkumar, 45, according to prosecutors, took payments of between $45,000 and $300,000 from clients for the supposed concert bookings for acts including Akon and MC Hammer. He actually just kept the money for himself. The New Jersey-born Rajkumar falsely promised his clients that he would book popular recording artists for overseas concerts, and in exchange for the supposed booking, he charged his clients between $45,000 and $300,000, and directed them to wire payments to bank accounts held by entities based in New York and controlled by Rajkumar.

However, instead of using the money to book the promised artists, the defendant made cash withdrawals and spent the money on rent, car payments, legal fees, and personal debts. In many cases, victims were forced to pay additional fees to secure performances by desired artists who were never booked by Rajkumar.

“The defendant took advantage of his reputation in the music industry to convince his victims to pay him tens of thousands of dollars to secure supposed performances by world-famous recording artists,” said Vance said. “In reality, the defendant never booked the promised artists, resulting in losses to the tune of more than $ 2 million.” Rajkumar pleaded guilty to grand larceny and scheming to defraud in Manhattan Supreme Court on March 4th.

Contact Lenses Help In Delivery, Disease Monitoring and More

Washington, DC: March 31, 2016 – Imagine contact lenses that can deliver medicines directly to the eye, slow progression of nearsightedness in children, or monitor glucose levels in patients with diabetes. Those are some of the emerging advances in contact lens technology reported in the April special issue of Optometry and Vision Science, official journal of the American Academy of Optometry. The journal is published by Wolters Kluwer.

The special issue on “Revolutionary Future Uses of Contact Lenses” presents original research and reviews on proposed new uses for contact lenses. Taking advantage of new materials and technologies, these ideas go far beyond the traditional use of contact lenses for vision correction, offering potential new treatments for eye diseases, along with new approaches to monitoring of medical conditions.

The special issue was assembled by an international expert panel, led by Lyndon Jones, PhD, FCOptom, of University of Waterloo, Ont., Canada. It features 13 papers on new and emerging applications—some still under development, some already available—for contact lens technology: Slowing progression of myopia. With rising rates of nearsightedness (myopia) in children worldwide, there is growing interest in the use of contact lenses to prevent or slow progression of this vision defect. Two original research studies suggest that lasting reductions in myopia progression may be possible even with some currently available contact lenses. In the future, lens designs developed specifically for this purpose may be even more effective.

Drug and stem cell delivery. New technologies such as “molecular imprinting” have renewed interest in the possibility of using contact lenses to deliver medications directly to the eye over a period of days to weeks. While many challenges remain, this approach could lead to improved treatments for ocular diseases, achieving higher drug levels in the eye itself. Contact lenses are even being evaluated a new approach to stem cell therapy for patients with ocular surface diseases.
Contact lens ‘biosensors.’ New technologies may enable the development of contact lenses containing biosensors to monitor patient health. For example, a device to monitor changes in intraocular pressure in patients with or at risk of glaucoma is commercially available now. The special issue also includes a report on biosensing contact lenses that can measure glucose levels in the tear film of the eye, which may one day provide a new approach to continuous monitoring in patients with diabetes.
New approaches to vision correction. Meanwhile, researchers are still working on new designs to further improve vision correction with contact lenses. Studies in the special issue report promising results with new approaches to extending depth of vision for patients with aging-related vision loss (presbyopia) and benefits of “centrally red-tinted contact lenses” for patients with degenerative retinal diseases or extreme light sensitivity (photophobia).

Other technologies in earlier stages of development include accommodating contact lenses capable of changing change focus, “wearable displays” using contact lenses, and lenses with “photonic modulation” for treatment of seasonal affective disorder. “The advances in contact lens technology, especially imaging and new biocompatible materials, has made such possibilities a reality,” comments Anthony Adams, OD, PhD, Associate Editor of Optometry and Vision Science. “Researchers are already proposing solutions to the clinical and research challenges posed by these revolutionary new uses of contact lenses, going well beyond vision correction.”
Optometry and Vision Science, official journal of the American Academy of Optometry, is the most authoritative source for current developments in optometry, physiological optics, and vision science. This frequently cited monthly scientific journal has served primary eye care practitioners for more than 75 years, promoting vital interdisciplinary exchange among optometrists and vision scientists worldwide.

Founded in 1922, the American Academy of Optometry is committed to promoting the art and science of vision care through lifelong learning. All members of the Academy are dedicated to the highest standards of optometric practice through clinical care, education or research.

Study By Nina Vyas Says, Bubbles Are Key To Cleaning Teeth

The formation of tiny bubbles around the head of ultrasonic scalers, used by dentists to remove built-up plaque, is key to the cleaning process, researchers including an Indian-origin scientist have revealed. “Putting the pieces together, we can say that altering the shape and power of these commonly used tools make them more effective, and hopefully, pain-free,” added lead study author Nina Vyas.

The bubble formation, or cavitation of water around the head of the scaler, was observed using high-speed cameras. The findings are the first to prove that cavitation takes place around the free end of ultrasonic scalers.

Removing dental plaque and calculus that is the build-up of what we know as tartar or hard plaque, is a big part of maintaining oral health and a regular occurrence in dental check-ups.

“These findings will help us to understand how to make the tools as effective as possible,” said Damien Walmsley from University of Birmingham in Britain. For the study published in the journal PLOS ONE, scalers of differing power and head shape were used and compared to quantify the patterns of cavitation.

A Satelec ultrasonic scaler was studied at medium and high operating power using high speed imaging at 15,000, 90,000 and 250,000 frames per second, and the tip displacement was recorded using scanning laser vibrometry.

Researchers were not only able to show that cavitation occurred at the free end of the tip, but that it increases with power and the area and width of the cavitation cloud varies for different shaped tips. The methods developed will help test new instrument designs to maximise cavitation, with the aim of designing ultrasonic scalers that operate without touching the tooth surface, the authors noted. With this, the process of teeth cleaning will become both less painful and more effective

Neem Tree Extract Shows Activity Against Pancreatic Cancer

Nimbolide, a compound found in neem leaves, was recently tested against pancreatic cancer in cell lines and mice. These tests, conducted by biomedical scientists at Texas Tech University Health Sciences Center El Paso, found that nimbolide stopped the growth and metastasis of pancreatic cancer, yet did not harm normal, healthy cells.

“The promise nimbolide has shown is amazing, and the specificity of the treatment toward cancer cells over normal cells is very intriguing,”Dr. Rajkumar Lakshmanaswamy, an Indian American associate professor in the TTUHSC El Paso Center of Emphasis in Cancer, said in a press release.

Currently, pancreatic cancer is fatal for 94 percent of patients who develop the disease within five years of diagnosis. No effective treatments are available, and so it has the highest mortality rate of all cancers.

The compound reduced the capacity of pancreatic cancer cells to migrate and invade by 70 percent, so the cancerous cells did not become aggressive and spread. Metastasis is the chief cause of mortality from the disease.

Furthermore, cancer cell death was induced by nimbolide treatments, as the size and number of pancreatic cancer cell colonies decreased by 80 percent.

“Nimbolide seems to attack pancreatic cancer from all angles,” Lakshmanaswamy said. The study found that nimbolide increases the generation of reactive oxygen species, which induces apoptotic cell death mediated by the mitochondria of the cells.

“Many people in India actually eat neem and it doesn’t have harmful side effects, which suggests that using nimbolide for pancreatic cancer will not cause adverse effects like chemotherapy and radiation typically do,” said Dr. Ramadevi Subramani, postdoctoral researcher and lead author of the study.

The researchers emphasized that healthy cells were unharmed by nimbolide in both the in vitro and in vivo experiments. Next, the research team plans to pursue both preclinical and clinical investigations.

Human Activity Makes Terrestrial Biosphere Contribute to Climate Change

Methane and nitrous oxide emissions that result from human activity make the terrestrial biosphere a net contributor of greenhouse gas emissions, according to a new study published in Nature.

The findings reverse the commonly held view among climate scientists that the terrestrial biosphere, a term used to refer to all land-based ecosystems on the planet, slows climate change by acting as a carbon dioxide sink, or a reservoir that absorbs carbon dioxide and temporarily takes it out of circulation.

Instead, the methane and nitrous oxide released from the terrestrial biosphere is roughly two times larger than the cooling effect of the biospheric carbon dioxide sink, said Chaoqun Lu, an ISU assistant professor of ecology, evolution and organismal biology and co-author of the study.

“Without human activity, the terrestrial biosphere would be neutral,” Lu said. “But we found that the terrestrial biosphere emits enough greenhouse gases to become a net contributor to global climate change.”

Put another way, what was once thought to be a helpful pit stop for carbon dioxide to accumulate harmlessly without contributing to global warming actually isn’t as helpful as scientists had hoped. On balance, the climate warming capacity of the terrestrial biosphere’s emissions surpasses its ability to slow climate change by sequestering carbon.

Lu said human activity connected to agriculture, waste management and other practices has transformed the terrestrial biosphere. Those changes lead to emissions of greenhouse gases such as methane and nitrous oxide.

Lu said human-caused fluxes of greenhouse gases in southern Asia, a region including China and India, led to larger net climate warming effects compared to other regions of the globe. Rice cultivation and livestock production likely drove much of those emissions, she said. Fertilizers account for another manmade contributor, according to the paper.

The study, published in the journal Nature this week, is the first to look at the net human-induced balance of carbon dioxide, methane and nitrous oxide from the terrestrial biosphere on a global scale. Lu was one of 23 scientists at 16 institutions to contribute to the international project. Hanqin Tian, director of Auburn University’s International Center for Climate and Global Change Research, is the lead author of the paper.

India’s Fastest Train Gatiman Express Begins Service On April 5th

Gatiman Express, the country’s fastest train, started plying between Agra and Delhi from April 5 opening a new chapter in the history of the Indian Railways. The state-of-the-art train takes one hour and forty minutes to complete the journey. Ironically, on the same route runs a passenger train which takes around eight hours to cover the 195-km distance. Railway officials have made all the required arrangements to start the most awaited train between the two heritage cities.

The service was flagged by railway minister Suresh Prabhu on April 5 from Nizamuddin railway station in Delhi. On the inaugural day, the train started its journey at 10am and reached Agra Cantt station at 11.40am. The Delhi-Agra Gatiman Express, the first train in India to run at a speed of 160 kmph, is expected to cover the 200-km distance in 100 minutes and will have train hostess.

The fare for chair car in fully air-conditioned Gatiman Express has been fixed at Rs 690, while a passenger will be required to spend Rs 1,365 for travelling Executive Class. In Delhi-Agra Shatabadi Express, the chair car fare is Rs 540 and Rs 1,040 for Executive Class. On the other hand, there is New Delhi-Agra Cantt passenger train, which takes seven hours and 34 minutes to cover 195 km at a meager speed of 25 kmph. However, it never reaches the destination on time and take one-two hours extra. The fare is kept at Rs 45 and it has 27 halts in comparison of not a single stoppage between Agra and Delhi in Gatiman express.

Additional divisional railway manager Sheelendra Pratap Singh said, “It is not that it runs on a slower engine. Its maximum speed is 110kmph. The train since its inception has been running on this decided schedule and there is no plan to change it. It takes so much time because it stops at each and every station. Moreover, it is stalled for other premium train to give passage.”

2016 Festival Circuit Favorite “Miss India America” Available to Stream Online

By Jitin Hingorani

(Los Angeles, CA – April 1, 2016) After a week-long theatrical run in Washington, D.C., Chicago and San Jose, 23 sold-out screenings at mainstream and South Asian film festivals around North America and multiple audience and jury awards under its belt, the smart, witty, coming-of-age comedy feature, “Miss India America,” will be available on the following broadband platforms starting Tuesday, April 5th: Amazon, GooglePlay, iTunes, Vimeo, Vudu, AT&T, Vubiquity (General, Charter & Verizon), inDemand General, Comcast, Xfinity, Cox, Time Warner Cable, Dish, Direct TV – IPVOD and Sling.

The brainchild of husband/wife creative team Ravi Kapoor (director/co-writer) and Meera Simhan (actor/co-writer), the cross-cultural comedy is set against the backdrop of the Indian beauty pageant world in Los Angeles. Inspired by Simhan’s one-woman-show of the same title, “Miss India America” starsTiya Sircar (The Internship, 17 Again, Vampire Diaries) and Hannah Simone(of Fox television series New Girl fame), along with a supporting cast of talented actors, including Kosha Patel, Satya Bhabha, Cas Anwar, Rizwan Manji, Anjali Bhimani and Bernard White. Produced by Megha Kadakia andSaurabh Kikani and distributed by MarVista Entertainment, the feature film “establishes an authentic tone that pays respect to Indian cultural norms, while poking gentle fun at these traditions,” raves The Hollywood Reporter.

“We feel like our child is finally going out into the world,” said co-producers Kadakia and Kikani. “This journey has been so fulfilling for all of us involved, and we really hope our online audiences support the film and share it with their friends and family members.”

23-Year-Old Riti Lomesh On Hunger Strike Protesting Lax Treatment Of Her Brother’s Alleged Killer

Newark, CA: Riti Lomesh, a young Indian American woman began a 21-day hunger strike on Mar. 23 in the lobby of the Alameda County District Attorney’s Office in the state of California  to protest the lenient treatment accorded to the driver of a pickup truck which killed her brother last year when it overturned in Niles Canyon, near Fremont, Calif. “The district attorney has been very sympathetic to the driver. There has been a lot of victim-blaming for my brother,” Riti Lomesh told the media on the seventh day of her hunger strike. “I find it very disheartening,” said the 23-year-old native of Newark, Calif.

According to reports, on the evening of Apr. 20, 2015, Karan Lomesh, 19 at the time of his death, and another minor who is not being named, got into the open flatbed of Austin Daniel Strong’s Mazda 1994 pick-up truck. The California Highway Patrol reported that Strong was driving about 50 miles per hour on Palomares Road, which leads up to the canyon. Strong, 19 at the time, was unable to negotiate a curve, according to CHP reports, and his truck flew off the roadway and landed in a trench about 30 feet below.

Karan Lomesh and the other rider were ejected from the flatbed. Riti Lomesh said the truck landed on top of her brother, crushing him to death. Karan Lomesh was pronounced dead at the scene. Two other riders were taken into emergency care; one – the other flatbed rider – was treated for moderate injuries, while the other was treated for minor injuries. Strong declined medical treatment.

Riti Lomesh claimed that Strong ignored speed limit signs of 25 mph and was driving erratically. The CHP reported that drugs or alcohol were not involved in the incident. Teresa Drenick, a spokeswoman for the Alameda County District Attorney’s office, told the media that Strong pleaded no contest to one felony count of vehicular manslaughter with gross negligence. He will be sentenced Apr. 12, said Drenick, who declined to comment on the length of sentence Strong will receive.

In California, felony vehicular manslaughter charge carries a sentence of four to six years in state prison, plus a $10,000 fine. Riti Lomesh is reported to have told the media that she was concerned that Strong might receive less than one year for an incident that caused the death of her brother. She expressed concern that Strong’s driver’s license had not been suspended following the deadly accident and alleged that the DA’s office has been treating the case in a “boys will be boys” manner.

In the week that she has been protesting in the lobby, Lomesh said no one from the DA’s office has reached out to her. Riti Lomesh described her brother as “a very kind, compassionate human being,” who was passionate about science, and volunteered with a science-learning program for younger children. “My family and I are utterly dismayed by the lack of justice for my brother,” said Lomesh.

Replacing ‘India With South Asia’ In Textbooks Leads To Protests In California

Replacing ‘ancient India’ with ‘South Asia’ in school textbooks has led to protests and public awareness campaigns that included letters from professors of religion and history in the sgtate of California. Over 100 “Hindu Americans” converged on Sacramento March 25 to voice their concerns about the California Department of Education Instructional Quality Commission’s plans to accept problematic edits made by a small group of South Asian studies faculty. These proposed edits, according to reports, would have largely removed references to India and Hinduism, and replaced them with the terms “South Asia” and “ancient Indian religion,” respectively.

During the public comment period, the Hindu American Foundation and community members as well as non-Hindus, testified before the commission about both the inaccuracies in the proposed edits and the last-minute process by which they were initially uniformly accepted.

Some of the proposed edits included removing mention of Hinduism’s acceptance of religious diversity, re-linking Hinduism with caste, and removing mention of the contributions of Hindu sages of different backgrounds such as Valmiki and Vyasa. They argued that edits would erase their religious and cultural histories and urged the commission to reject the changes. Moreover, they asked the commissioners to adopt a more inclusive and culturally competent frameworks document.

The community’s efforts was also supported by a coalition of 20 government leaders and elected officials, including Congresswoman Tulsi Gabbard (D-HI), CA State Senator Steven M. Glazer (District 7), and several local leaders.

Academics such as Barbara A. McGraw of St. Mary’s College of California, an award-winning scholar and former American Academy of Religion president, and Sofia University philosophy professor Kundan Singh also testified.

While HAF and other groups believe progress has been made, concerns remain about the way in which the edits were accepted. “Our concerns remain with how many of these edits were accepted, particularly in the commission’s apparent privileging of one group of scholars over the views of many others,” said Murali Balaji, HAF’s Director of Education and Curriculum Reform. The IQC will publish its revised set of recommendations two weeks before the May 11 State Board of Education hearing.

Archna Becker Receives National Restaurant Association Award

Archna Becker, owner and founder of Bhojanic, an Atlanta, Georgia-based eatery, was recently given the National Restaurant Association award. Becker, who was one of the eight winners honored nationwide, arrived in the U.S. from India at the age of 11.

She began her career three years later in the restaurant industry as a drive-thru worker at a quick service restaurant. She continued to work various industry jobs for another decade before pursuing a career as a business executive.

Becker soon realized her passion was in cooking, opening a catering business in the early 90s and a full-service restaurant a few years later. Today, Becker continues to give back to her community, by serving on the Georgia Restaurant Association Board.

She has employed more than two dozen Bhutanese refugees and has an intense training program to help them learn English and facilitate their transition to the U.S. Becker received the PepsiCo Foodservice’s Faces of Diversity Award, which honors diverse members of the industry who have achieved success in the face of adversity, and who embody the American Dream.

According to a report in The Atlanta Journal-Constitution, Becker opened her second Bhojanic location in the Shops Around Lenox a little more than a month ago. The first thing that distinguished Bhojanic when it opened some eight years ago, with a selection of small plate “Indian tapas” designed for sampling and sharing.

“The main thing I hated was that you had to buy a lot of large portions,” Becker was quoted as saying of more typical Indian restaurants of the time. “You either ate at a nasty buffet or you ended up buying $200 worth of food and eating it all week.”

Bhojanic’s mostly Northern Indian, Punjabi-style cuisine comes from Becker’s homeland and is cooked homestyle, without butter or cream. The kitchen sources local and seasonal ingredients, and freshly roasted spices are ground daily.

Hindu temple with 22’ Hanuman opening in affluent Chicago suburb

An about 39,000 square foot white-marble Hanuman Mandir of Greater Chicago is reportedly opening in Glenview, an affluent northern Chicago suburb, on April 17. Also known as Shri Hanuman Mandir and Spiritual Community Center, it would unveil an over 22 feet high and weighing over 46,000 pounds Lord Hanuman statue during its grand-opening ceremonies including elaborate ancient rituals from April 15-17, which are expected to draw over 5,000 devotees from Illinois and beyond, reports suggest.

Many priests will participate in reciting prayers, performing rituals and installing various India-carved Hindu deities on altars during the opening ceremonies. Meanwhile, Hindu statesman Rajan Zed, in a statement in Nevada today, commended efforts of temple leaders and area community for realizing this Hindu temple complex.

Rajan Zed, who is President of Universal Society of Hinduism, further said that it was important to pass on Hindu spirituality, concepts and traditions to coming generations amidst so many distractions in the consumerist society and hoped that this new temple would help in this direction. Zed stressed that instead of running after materialism; we should focus on inner search and realization of Self and work towards achieving moksh (liberation), which was the goal of Hinduism.

According to reports, it took over two years to build this marble exterior and interior two-story temple on a 4.1 acres plot, which includes the main sanctuary on the upper-floor and a multi-use community center below for various cultural, educational, social and spiritual programs. In December 2013, land sanctification ceremony of this land was organized and a ground breaking ceremony was held here in April 2014.

It has announced various Sunday school programs, including Indian languages, Bhagavad-Gita, yoga, religion and culture, etc. It has also launched a “adopt a tree” campaign. Savi Ram is one of the temple leaders. Lord Hanuman, greatly revered and worshipped in Hinduism, is known for incredible strength and was a perfect grammarian. Hinduism, oldest and third largest religion of the world, has about one billion adherents. There are about three million Hindus in USA.

Canadian Hindus Join Others To Welcome Refugees

Hindus and Catholics in Canada are reiterating their commitment to receive strangers and welcome refugees. Following its last meeting in Toronto in February, the Hindu-Catholic Dialogue of Canada released a joint statement to reaffirm the importance of hospitality. “Hospitality is among the most sacred values in many religious traditions, including Hinduism and Christianity,” stated the members of the dialogue commission.

The statement concluded with an appeal to all peoples in Canada “to offer our prayers to those reeling in response to war, terror, and hate…” and urging “all Canadians to respond with openness, care and generosity to those refugees who find their ways to our shores, and indeed to all strangers in our midst. Dialogue and encounter are among our most important resources for meeting the demands of the present refugee crisis.”

The theme of the last meeting of the Hindu-Catholic Dialogue was on the Theology of Incarnation in both Catholic and Hindu traditions. The Canadian Conference of Catholic Bishops (CCCB) has eight appointees on this national dialogue board, with the Most Reverend Daniel Miehm, Auxiliary Bishop of Hamilton, serving as the Catholic Co-Chair. Dr. Tinu Ruparell, Professor of Religious Studies at the University of Calgary, is the Hindu Co-Chair.

The Catholic-Hindu Dialogue meets twice annually, and is scheduled to meet again in August 2016. The CCCB, through its Episcopal Commission for Christian Unity, Religious Relations with the Jews, and Interfaith Dialogue, sponsors ten national dialogues and co-sponsors one North American dialogue. Eight of these are ecumenical and involve other Christian Churches and ecclesial communities; three are interreligious dialogues.

Bollywood Duo Vishal-Shekhar and Neeti Mohan Dazzle Music Lovers

BY Asian Media USA ©

Chicago IL: Nik Joshi of Shy Entertainment and Manish Pandya of AV Masti Inc, with National Promoters Prria Haider and PurooKaul, presented a high-voltage musical concert with Bollywood’s music composers and singers, Vishal Dadlani and Shekhar Ravjiani, and songstress Neeti Mohan, as the star attraction on Sunday-March 27th, 2016, at Copernicus Theater, 5216 West Lawrence Avenue, Chicago, IL 60630. The high profile event was attended by over 2,000 music lovers from different walks of life.

The Bollywood dynamic duo, Vishal-Shekhar, with several big hit under their belt, captured the hearts of the young generation by singing the most contemporary and popular songs, which included “Bachna ai haseeno”, Ek mai aur ek tu”, “Aa milja haste haste salaam namaste”, “Meri umar ke nowjawano”, etc. The audience was literally blown away with their gifted versatility as natural performers. They garnered huge admiration of the audience for their electrifying performance.

This was followed by a wave of soulful and most haunting melodies of the yesteryears by Vishal and Shehkar, which included “Lag ja gale ke phir a haseen raat ho na ho”, “Choudween ka chand ho ya aaftab ho”, “Pyar huwa ikraar hua hai”, “Mera juta hai japani”, “Kisi ki muskurahaton pe ho nisaar”, “Chura liya hai tumne jo dil ko”, “Roop tera mastana pyar mera deewane”, etc. These all time hits not only uplifted the mood of the audience but also ignited the air with the magic of intense romance.

Neeti Mohan did a fabulous job by rendering the hit tracks of Bollywood and made the evening an occasion to remember forever.  She sang such chartbusters as “Jeeya jeeya re”, “ban ke titli ura hai kai door”, Tu hogai one to two”, etc. After a huge round of applause, she moved on to such saccharine-sweet romantic composition as “Jata kaha hai deewane sab kuch yaha hai sanam”, “Sapna jaha dastak na de”, “Manwa lage lage re”, “Har kisi ko nahi milta yaha pyar zindagi main”, “Agi bari bersi khatak gaya se”. etc.

Vishal and Neeti stole the thunder by singing- “Tang Tang”. Vishal picked up his guitar and played it while singing the song and mesmerized the audience. Visha, Shekhar, and Neeti established a live contact with the audience. They took selfies and shook hands with as many members of the audience as possible.

The glittering lights and thundering sound system provided foot-tapping experience to the audience. The magic of the electrifying music, both the timeless classics and the contemporary hits, was so powerful that many members of the audience, irrespective of age and gender, danced endlessly matching the beats of the captivating songs. The sizzling evening started with a tremendous opening performance by a team of dancers from Shingari’s School of Rhythm showcasing various themes of Indian dance forms. The event concluded with a standing ovation by the audience for Vishal, Shekhar, and Neeti. The event Emcee was none other than the gorgeous Ms. India-America, Priya Patel, who added great value to the event by her professional compeering.

“Pakistan is committed to Eliminate this Menace:” Faisal Niaz Tirmizi, Consul General of Pakistan

 

Chicago IL: “Pakistan, which is the biggest victim of terrorism, has been courageously fighting this menace, and in the process making huge sacrifices, including losing innocent lives”, said Faisal Niaz Tirmizi, Consul General of Pakistan at the Vigil Organized by the Lahore Chapter of Chicago Sister City International, in collaboration with Consulate General of Pakistan and Pakistani-American community, at Devon Avenue in Chicago, in the memory of victims of the heinous terror attack that took place on March 27th, 2016 in Lahore’s crowded Gulshan-I-Iqbal Park resulting in killing 75 and injuring 340 innocent people.

“Pakistan, which is a resilient nation, has been ever ready to counter such acts of the forces of evil and bigotry. These dark forces of terrorism would soon be defeated by Pakistani nation’s resolve to eliminate terrorism and extremism from the country. The people of Pakistan are extremely brave and they would never waver or be deterred insofar as protecting the strategic interest of their homeland is concerned”, said Timizi with a sense of confidence and pride.

Tirmizi added that the security forces of Pakistan have successfully destroyed all the sanctuaries and infrastructure of the terrorists in the north-west and the operation Zarb-e-Azb is on the threshold of fully achieving its cherished goals. Tirmizi thanked the people and the US officials for their gesture of sympathy, solidarity, and support for the people of Pakistan. “Pakistan needs and deserves the international community’s support and understanding in its fight against terrorism, which is aimed at making not only Pakistan but the entire world a safer place. The international community must be together in this fight against terrorism as we belong to one human family”, added Tirmizi.

Dr Tariq Butt, Chair of Lahore Chapter of Chicago Sister City International said that Pakistani-Americans stand firmly with the people of Lahore at this challenging time. “We pray for their fast recovery from this terrible tragedy”, he added. The vigil was attended by scores of people from all walks of life. In addition to Pakistani and American community, significant number of US officials, including Mr. Jesse White, Secretary of State showed up at the event. Messages of the Governor Rauce Bruner, Mayor Rahm Emanuel and Attorney General Lisa Madigan were read by their special representatives. Dennis Jung, Lisa Kohnke, and Nettie Lasko represented Governor Bruce Rauner, Mayor Rahm Emanuel, and Attorney General Lisa Madigan, respectively.

The participants at the vigil unanimously expressed their strong support for the people and Government of Pakistan in their fight against terrorism. They said that the terrorists, who have no faith and religion, are defaming Islam, which is a peaceful religion. “We condemn the Lahore terror attack and express sympathy and solidarity with the people of Pakistan”, said the participant.

US Army Captain Simratpal Singh Granted Accommodation to Serve With Turban, Beard

In a landmark decision, the U.S. Army granted religious accommodation to US Army Captain Simratpal Singh, a Sikh American soldier, allowing him to serve on active duty with his articles of faith intact. Singh, who has served in the U.S. Armed Forces since 2010, after graduating from West Point – had served for five years without his turban and beard. The Bronze Star recipient filed for religious accommodation in October 2015 after attending a Baisakhi celebration at the Pentagon, where he met turbaned and bearded soldiers. Singh said he felt pressurized by military recruiters when joining the Army to remove his articles of faith.

Until 1981, Sikhs were allowed to serve in the U.S. Armed Forces with turbans and beards, but a policy change disallowed visible articles of faith. The Defense Department has granted accommodation over the past six years to Sikh American soldiers on a case-by-case basis. Only three have been granted accommodation: Army Corporal Simran Preet Lamba, Army Major Tejdeep Rattan, and Army Major Kamaljeet Kalsi.

Simratpal Singh – who serves as battalion operations staff at Ft. Belvoir, Virginia – is the first Sikh soldier to be granted religious accommodation while on active duty. Lamba, Rattan and Kalsi were granted accommodation before they began to serve.

Simratpal Singh was initially granted temporary accommodation in December 2015, which was extended until the end of March. However, on Feb. 26, Singh received a memo from Debra S. Wada, Assistant Army Secretary, saying that he had to report for helmet testing on Mar. 1, and then would have to undergo three days of safety mask fitting.

The Sikh Coalition filed a lawsuit on behalf of Singh, saying he was being subjected to discriminatory testing. The suit stated that Wada required the testing to determine whether Singh’s helmet would be able to withstand “ballistic and blunt forces” and the mask’s ability “to provide protection from toxic chemical and biological agents.”

“No other soldiers in the Army have been treated in this manner or subjected to similar tests as a condition for remaining in the Army,” stated the lawsuit, adding: “This discriminatory treatment is unfounded.”

U.S. District Court Judge Beryl Howell issued a ruling Mar. 3 summating that the extra testing was costly and unnecessary in determining whether Singh was suited to serve in the Army. “Thousands of other soldiers are permitted to wear long hair and beards for medical or other reasons, without being subjected to such specialized and costly expert testing of their helmets and gas masks,” wrote Howell. “Singling out the plaintiff for specialized testing due only to his Sikh articles of faith is, in this context, unfair and discriminatory,” she wrote.

In her Mar. 31 letter to Singh, Wada wrote that the Army captain would be permitted to wear a turban and beard while performing non-hazardous duties, as long as it fits under an Army combat helmet. If Singh must perform hazardous duty, his accommodation will require additional evaluation by his chain of command.

The accommodation will be re-evaluated by Wada after a year. In a press statement, Singh said he had finally realized his “dream of becoming spiritually whole.”

“My military service continues to fulfill a lifelong dream,” said Captain Singh. “My faith, like many of the soldiers I work with, is an integral part of who I am. I am thankful that I no longer have to make the choice between faith and service to our nation.”

In an earlier story, Gurjot Kaur, senior staff attorney with the Sikh Coalition, told India-West that the organization is ultimately hoping for a full-scale policy change, without the need to request religious accommodation on a case-by-case basis.

In a briefing at the Harvard Institute of Politics, U.S. Defense Secretary Ash Carter said he supported Sikh Americans in the Armed Forces being allowed to serve with their turbans and beards. He noted that the new Canadian Minister of National Defense – Harjit Sajjan – wears a turban and beard and worked with the Defense Department there to figure out how to add his headwear under a helmet.

“Mission effectiveness depends on us having access to the largest pool of Americans,” said Carter, noting that service was voluntary. “Everyone who can meet our high standards…we need them and must avail of their talent,” he said.

Arun Agarwal Appointed as CEO to Small Business Development Board By Texas Governor

Houston, TX: Arun Agarwal, Nextt chief executive officer, has been named to the Product Development and Small Business Incubator board by Texas Gov. Greg Abbott on March 30th. With his appointment, which has a term that expires Feb. 1, 2019, Agarwal became the first Indian American given the position in the state’s history.

Nextt is a Dallas-based home textiles company that supplies to retailers such as Walmart, Target and Kohl’s. It also has a portfolio of celebrity brands, including Beautyrest, Ellen Tracy, Jessica McClintock and Royal Sateen. The company was recently awarded a patent for “alpha cotton,” a fabric that will make sheets 30 to 40 percent cheaper than 100 percent cotton.

Agarwal, who also serves as the director of the company, which also has an art design studio and showroom in Manhattan, New York, was honored for his contributions to HIV/AIDS organizations last year (I-W Sept. 2, 2015http://bit.ly/1NObWiX).

“It is such a huge honor for me to serve on one of the governor’s boards,” said Agarwal in a statement. “As global business owners, it is our responsibility and civic duty to help other local small businesses survive and thrive in this global economy, and I am excited to do my part.”

PDSBI is a revolving loan program, administered by the office of the governor, and overseen by a nine-member board appointed by the governor. The incubator’s fund provides financial aid for the development, production and commercialization of new or improved products, and to foster the growth of small businesses in Texas.

Agarwal, a graduate of IMT in Ghaziabad, the University of New Hampshire and Harvard University, was named 2013 Entrepreneur of the Year by the Greater Dallas Indo-American Chamber of Commerce. He also received the minority business leader award by the Dallas Business Journal in 2013; the 2014 Outstanding Entrepreneur award by the Indian American Friendship Council; “NRI of the Year” by TIMES NOW and ICICI Bank in 2015; and was named the king of home textiles by D Magazine.

Punjabi Cultural Society Hosts Consulate Outreach

Chicago, IL: The Punjabi Cultural Society of Chicago (PCS) coordinated a luncheon interactive session with the Consul General of India in Chicago, Dr. Ausaf Sayeed and his Consular officers on Saturday, April 2, 2016 at Viceroy of India Restaurant and Banquets in Lombard Illinois. Nearly 100 persons attended the luncheon, which was hosted by Mohina Ahluwalia, a well-known Chicago entrepreneur and past chairperson of PCS Chicago, who also welcomed the guests and the special guests of honor.

The purpose of this event was to provide a forum to Punjabi and Sikh community to receive information on the services provided by the Indian Consulate in Chicago, and provide an opportunity to the community members to ask questions directly to the staff in a cordial environment, and to introduce face to face the Consul General and his staff to the community they serve.

Prominent among the attendees were PCS officials, sponsors, supporters, community members and leaders of several Punjabi Sports and Cultural organizations, Sikh Religious Society and Illinois Sikh Community Center, Wheaton IL, Shiromani Akali Dal USA Midwest youth wing, and members of the Indian-American Diaspora representing different socio-cultural organizations.

Rajinder Singh Mago, the convener of the event briefed the audience on the mission statement of the PCS Chicago organization and its upcoming social and cultural programs like “Rangla Punjab 2016” on April 23, “Graduation& Scholarship Award Night” on June 12, “PCS Sports Festival” in July, “International Bhangra & Giddha Competition” in November, Thanksgiving Day parade also in late November and so on. Mago also introduced the Consul General Dr. Ausaf Sayeed to speak to the audience.

Dr. Sayeed addressed the gathering untiringly for nearly two hours to a pin drop silence audience and expounded on the various Consular services being provided by his office in Chicago. Dr. Sayeed introduced O.P. Meena, Consul (Community Welfare), Rajeshwari Chandrasekaran, Consul (CG Office), Anuradha Negi, Vice-Consul (Visa) and other members of the staff who participated in the event.

Dr. Sayeed spoke about the Passport & Visa processes, E-Visa, Passport Surrender certificate, P.I.O., O.C.I., and many other miscellaneous day-to-day consular services that his office provides to the Indian nationals, the Indian American community, and others in his jurisdiction in the Midwest of U.S.A. from his office in Chicago.

“I and my staff are delighted to make this outreach to the Punjabi and Sikh community to make them aware of the services our office provides, and assure them that our staff is available to help the community and they are an email or a phone call away,” said Dr. Ausaf Sayeed.  He added that people can also contact the Consulate through Twitter and Facebook.

There was a Q&A session where several passports, visa and OCI related issues were discussed and some constructive suggestions were also given. He patiently listened to any grievances or suggestions, answered all questions and gave solutions where possible.

Amarpal Singh Matharu presented a book “Lost Heritage – The Sikh Legacy in Pakistan” by Amardeep Singh of Singapore to Dr. Ausaf Sayeed. The author of the book is scheduled to visit Chicago June 9 – 11, 2016, to promote the book, speak and create awareness about the issues of maintenance of Sikh historical sites and Gurudwaras in Pakistan.

The Punjabi Cultural Society of Chicago is an all-volunteer not-for-profit community service organization devoted to promoting Punjabi culture, language, performing arts, education, good citizenship, healthy life style, and sports in the metropolitan Chicago area.

Suvrath Mahadevan Assigned to Build NASA’s Planet Hunter

Suvrath Mahadevan, a professor of astrophysics, space science and nuclear physics has been assigned by the National Aeronautics and Space Administration to lead its team that will build a new, cutting-edge instrument that will detect planets outside the solar system. Prof. Suvrath Mahadevan at Penn State, is NASA’s “Next-Gen Planet Hunter.”

Mahadevan, a 37-year-old IIT Bombay graduate, is engaged with his team of 15-plus specialists, including his graduate student Arpita Roy, to build the highly precise instrument, to detect “exoplanets” as they are called, and expects to complete it by Spring of 2019, when it will be installed on the powerful telescope at the Kitt Peak National Observatory in Arizona, he told News India Times.

Mahadevan’s instrument, titled NEID (pronounced “nee-id”), is derived from a word meaning “to discover/visualize” in the native language of the Tohono O’odham, on whose land Kitt Peak National Observatory is located. It is also short for NN-EXPLORE – Exoplanet Investigations with Doppler Spectroscopy.

The NEID will measure the tiny back-and-forth wobble of a star caused by the gravitational tug of a planet in orbit around it. The wobble tells scientists there is a planet orbiting the star, and the size of the wobble indicates how massive the planet is. NEID was one of two concepts for an extreme precision Doppler spectrometer that were selected for a detailed six-month study by NASA in June 2015. Mahadevan’s team won out.

“These instruments have a very hard job,” said Mahadevan. “Everything matters – from what happens in the earth’s atmosphere to who is walking around the instrument, could affect the result.” The instrument is built in vacuum chambers where temperatures are kept stable to one-thousandths of one degree. “If the room temperature changes by 1 percent, the instruments feels only one-thousandths of the change,” Mahadevan explained.

The instrument will be the centerpiece of a new partnership with the National Science Foundation (NSF) called the NASA-NSF Exoplanet Observational Research program, or NN-EXPLORE.
According to NASA, using NEID as a facility observatory instrument, astronomers will be able to search out and study new planets and planetary systems, as well as follow-up the discoveries of NASA’s planet-hunting missions Kepler/K2 and the in-development Transiting Exoplanet Survey Satellite (TESS). NEID will also help identify promising targets for future observations with the James Webb Space Telescope and the Wide-Field Infrared Survey Telescope.

Born in Ahmedabad, Mahadevan is the son of Malayalee parents, industrial engineer N.S. Mahadevan, and English teacher Vijaya Mahadevan. He credits some of his achievements to the “very solid and thorough” grounding at IIT Bombay, where he graduated in engineering and physics. “It was very, very valuable to me,” Mahadevan said, “An IIT education really helps you think out things, find innovative ways to solve problems and a solid core for attacking challenges.”

Mahadevan came to the U.S. in 2000. After starting out as a student at Penn State, he moved to the University of Florida to complete his studies. He returned in 2009 to join the Penn State faculty. He says India’s work in space science is impressive.

He collaborates with India’s Physical Research Lab in Ahmedabad and has collaborated with it to build an instrument dedicated to finding planets. India is already doing a lot on space research, he says, chalking up missions to the moon, a planned mission to Mars, as well as work on exoplanets which has been going on for several years, he said.

The search for “exoplanets” he says, attracts people from all backgrounds. “People flock to this because they are passionate about the subject, regardless of their ethnicity or origin,” he said, adding, “It belongs to all humanity.”

Aakash Shah Honored as White House ‘Champion of Change’

Aakash Shah, a 28-year-old Indian American, has been honored as a Champion of Change by the White House for founding Be Jersey Strong, helping people sign up for health insurance under the Affordable Care Act.

The Champions of Change program was created as an opportunity for the White House to feature individuals doing extraordinary things to empower and inspire members of their communities, according to a statement from the White House. Ten ACA “Champions of Change” — selected from community nominations — were honored last week.

Health care coverage in the state is inexpensive, said Shah, noting that almost 75 percent of residents will qualify for some form of subsidized health insurance, with premiums as low as $75 per month, prompting the young Shah, a third-year medical student at Harvard Medical School and doing his rotations at Massachusetts General Hospital when he conceived of the idea for Be Jersey Strong, a volunteer-driven organization that helps people sign up for health insurance under the Affordable Care Act.

“It is very frustrating for a provider to see this,” Shah, who was honored Mar. 26 by the White House as a “Champion of Change,” told India-West. He noted that there are a large number of people who qualify for subsidized, low-cost healthcare coverage under the ACA, but have not enrolled for various reasons, including language barriers, the complexity of the enrollment process, and lack of knowledge about the various options for coverage.

“My patients were saying ‘it’s not as easy as it sounds,’ to enroll,” said the New Jersey native. “So many of us are having trouble enrolling; it’s no surprise that my patients were also having trouble. We don’t need slick Web sites. We need one-on-one conversations to guide us through the process,” explained Shah.

Shah, who did an away rotation in the emergency room at Rutgers-Robert Wood Johnson Hospital — saw many patients come through the doors in need of medical care but lacking health insurance coverage.

In 2015, Shah founded Be Jersey Strong, a non-profit organization which recruits student volunteers to sign up people for health care coverage. Since last summer, Be Jersey Strong has recruited more than 500 volunteers from 20 local universities and provided services to more than 12,000 people. The organization has set an ambitious target of recruiting 1,000 college students to have over 100,000 one-on-one conversations with uninsured people about their health care options.

Students are natural cheerleaders for the ACA, said Shah, noting that many of them come from the same backgrounds as the community they are attempting to serve. Moreover, they understand the pathos of being uninsured or having to insure themselves for the first time, he said.

Students enrolling other students benefit from the peer-to-peer contact, said Shah. Newer immigrants — most states require immigrants to legally reside in the U.S. before receiving federal benefits — often face language barriers when attempting to enroll. Be Jersey Strong’s student volunteers speak 15 different languages, including several South Asian languages. Many volunteers first sign up their own families.

New Jersey has more than 525,000 undocumented residents, who are ineligible for coverage under the mandates of the ACA. Shah said many legal residents are afraid to enroll for health care coverage for fear of exposing their undocumented family members. Student volunteers — many who are in mixed immigration families — are able to allay such fears, he said, and also to provide undocumented residents with information about health care resources they can avail of, such as Federally Qualified Health Centers, which are mandated to provide health care to all, regardless of immigration status.

Shah related the story of a volunteer who had been with the organization for three weeks and enrolling people at his church after Sunday services. The volunteer came across a 48-year-old woman whose family had a strong history of breast cancer. “She told our volunteer, ‘it is a virtual certainty that I’m going to develop breast cancer.’ She was absolutely right.”

The woman had gone to a local ER, but could not be tested, because she lacked insurance. “She was sent away with a brochure for healthcare.gov. She went away worse than when she went in, because now there was a bill in the mail for the consultation,” Shah told India-West.

The volunteer worked with her over three Sundays and got her enrolled. “The student realized he had saved this woman’s life. He loved that feeling,” said Shah, noting that the volunteer subsequently decided to go to medical school.

The health care activist hopes to build a network in which volunteers can interact with their enrollees to ensure they are getting adequate care. Be Jersey Strong is supported by grants from the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation and the United Way, along with private donations.

Shah said he was “excited and quite humbled” to be named a “Champion of Change” by the White House. “I was filled with a sense of gratitude that they acknowledged all the hard work of our volunteers,” he said.

Obama Asks India, Pakistan To Stop Moving In Wrong Direction Over Nuclear Doctrines

President Barack Obama on Friday last week counselled India and Pakistan not to pursue aggressive military doctrines and nuclear arsenals as he wrapped up the fourth Nuclear Security Summit, his signature international effort to curtail the spread of nuclear weapons and source material.

During a press conference at the end of the summit that attracted leaders from all major powers, Obama sought to “see progress in Pakistan and India, that subcontinent, making sure that as they develop military doctrines, that they are not continually moving in the wrong direction.” He also expressed concern about “nuclear arsenals” expanding in some countries, “especially those with small tactical nuclear weapons that could be at greater risk of theft.”

The reference clearly was to Pakistan’s expanding nuclear arsenal with the addition of mini-nukes, but the US President also drew India into the picture with his reference to military doctrines, seen in some quarters as an allusion to New Delhi’s much-discussed but never implemented Cold Start Doctrine, a military manoeuvre that purportedly seeks to launch punitive armored strikes deep into Pakistan in a quick reaction response to egregious acts of terrorism by Pakistan inside India.

New Delhi has repeatedly said it has not implemented the Cold Start doctrine, and that Pakistan has historically been the aggressor with a military doctrine of terrorism and “death by thousand cuts” aimed at changing the status quo between the two countries. Still, there was a degree of surprise in Indian quarters that the US President’s lecture came despite the restraint exercised by the Modi government in what has been an extension of the UPA government’s Pakistan policy.

The Cold Start doctrine, a largely theoretical construct that has been debated in Indian strategic circles but not implemented, has rattled Pakistan to such an extent that it has developed and deployed battlefield nuclear weapons or tactical mini-nukes for use against an invading armored corps, even if it means nuking its own territory.

President Obama and other leaders have expressed fears that these mini-nukes dispersed to field commanders could be easy picking for terrorist groups that all too frequently infiltrate Pakistani military establishments, as evident in several attacks on military cantonments and garrisons. The concern was widely discussed by world leaders and their aides at the summit, both in the main session and on the margins.

Fearing a public dressing down, the Pakistani leadership bailed out from attending the Nuclear Security Summit, citing the Lahore terrorist attack as an excuse, thus forcing Obama to publicly voice the international concern.

Pakistan has repeatedly maintained that its nuclear weapons are safe and well-protected, but the assertion carries little credibility in the international community that has seen its blueprints and technology in the hands of countries such as Libya and Iran, and witnessed its nuclear scientists supping with al-Qaida leaders Osama bin Laden and Ayman al-Zawahiri.

Will Raising Minimum Wages & Raising Taxes On The Rich Solve Income Inequality?

There is an increasing anger among the majority of the people in the country towards the American establishment, the mainstream American politicians and both the political parties. The rise and growing popularity of unconventional politicians with varied ideologies and outlook to the future of the United States in both the Republican and the Democratic Parties may be explained, to some extent, due to this growing frustration among the middle class and the poor in the country.

Income inequality is one of the major global issues talked about today. It is the bane of the working class’s existence. It’s more evident in the United States today than ever before. In the US, income inequality increased the most among all the developed nations – the richest 1% growing by 275%, while wages of the poor grew by only 20% in 30 years. The Forbes 400 list of the richest Americans, states that the total net worth of those on the list in 1982, the first year the list was compiled, was $93 billion. In 2014, that number was $2.3 trillion, up 2,400%. At the same time, median household income in the United States rose only about 180%.

The American middle class has been shrinking relative to upper- and lower-income groups, both of which represent bigger shares of the population than at any time since at least 1971, a new Pew Research Center report finds. The increased income inequality since the 1980s is due to a decreasing real minimum wage, which means, the real wages were growing slower than inflation, contributing to increase in the inequality.

Shawn Donnan of the Financial Times says, “We’re seeing a real divergence in American society. What’s interesting about these numbers that have come out from the Pew Research Center and that we’ve built our series around is that, really, this is the broadest measure in terms of income of the American middle class out there.”

In inflation-adjusted terms, the real value of the minimum wage is lower today than it was at its late-1960s peak. This decline in the real value of the minimum wage, coupled with the decline in unionization and the rise of automation, accounted for much of the growth in income inequality in the 1980s.

While there is a push to increase the minimum wages, there is also a demand to increasing income taxes on top earners, and in turn giving those funds to those on the bottom. Both income inequality and the minimum wage have become hot-button political issues in recent years, particularly since the rise of the Fight for $15 campaign. Democratic presidential hopefuls Hillary Clinton and Bernie Sanders talk about income inequality as a major economic problem and advocate for raising the minimum wage as one possible solution for the issue.

It sounds like simple math, and has an allure for many politicians and American families alike, but a new Brookings research suggests that this proposal would actually do little to reduce inequality.

This growing inequality has immense consequences for the nation’s future. As the children of the rich are getting better services, and in turn, a higher likelihood of social and cognitive development, which means that they are more likely to take up the high paying executive positions than the others, whose parents are perhaps not so lucky. Unequal starting points only mean that the finishing points will be unequal as well. The exact cause of income inequality is up for debate.

Kim Weeden, director of the Center for the Study of Inequality at Cornell University, says while raising the minimum wage will unlikely decrease the levels of income inequality, it would make a huge difference for those struggling to make ends meet.

However, there are those in the Republican Party and others, who think that increasing the minimum wages will not help in diminishing income inequality. According to Heritage Foundation expert James Sherk, labor economists have found no correlation between higher minimum wages and lower poverty. Raising the minimum wage simply would not reduce poverty.

Sherk says, raising the minimum wage will not affect many poor families. Higher minimum wages cost some workers their jobs. Raising the minimum wage makes these entry-level jobs harder to find. That makes it harder for less skilled workers to gain the skills necessary to get ahead. And finally, the raising wages will disqualify millions from receiving federal grants that are eligible to them now. As workers’ incomes rise they qualify for less and less aid—effectively an additional tax on their income.

Another suggestion put forth is to tax the rich more. It’s a popular idea on the 2016 campaign trail, but a new study says that won’t do much to dent inequality in America. Many of America’s uber rich, including billionaires Warren Buffett and Jamie Dimon, have said they would be willing to pay more in tax.

Bernie Sanders has proposed a “billionaire surtax” of 10% that he says would only impact the nation’s 530 billionaires. He also wants to increase the inheritance tax — what people pay when they transfer land or money to their kids — from 40% to a top rate of 55%. Donald Trump, Jeb Bush and Hillary Clinton have all proposed eliminating the “carried interest loophole” that allows many hedge fund managers to tax their investment income at a lower tax rate (20% versus 39.6%).

A new paper from Brookings Economics Studies found that raising the top income tax rate to 50 percent would mean an additional $6,464 in taxes owed for households in the 95-99th percentiles of income and an additional $110,968 for households in the top 1 percent. Extremely wealthy households in the very top 0.1 percent could expect to experience an average income tax increase of $568,617. As per the analysis, increasing the top marginal tax rates for those in the 95th percentile and up had a “trivial effect on overall income inequality.” only lowering the gap modestly.

Researchers looked at what would happen if all the extra money raised from the tax hike on the rich were given to America’s poorest. Lower-income families would receive about $2,650 a year, they found. That kind of redistribution would lessen inequality a little bit more, but the country would still remain far more unequal than it was in the 1970s.

The reality is that that tax hikes for top earners could raise critical revenue for the federal government, and redistribution policies would still provide substantial benefits to low-income households, if not economic mobility as a whole.

The need to close the gap between the rich and the poor and according the majority poor, lower middle class and the middle class their right to thrive is a basic necessity. They need to be able to meet their daily needs and offering them resources to grow and become productive citizens rather than become a burden on the nation, means, investing in the present by raising the minimum the income, redistributing the wealth of the nation to invest in the products and services that will enhance the quality of the lives every citizen.

 

Nuclear Weapons: Greatest Threat To Global Security

More than 50 world leaders attend Nuclear Security Summit 2016, commit to pledged to boost communal efforts to secure nuclear materials

“Of all the threats to global security and peace, the most dangerous is the proliferation and potential use of nuclear weapons,” wrote President Barack Obama in an article he wrote for The Washington Post. Obama inaugurated the first Nuclear Security Summit nearly six years ago, after a landmark speech in Prague in 2009 laying out the goal of a world free of nuclear weapons.

More than 50 world leaders along with international organizations like the United Nations and INTERPOL attended the fourth and final Nuclear Security Summit 2016 of Obama’s presidency, March 31st – April 1st in Washington, DC, focusing on efforts to lock down vulnerable atomic materials to prevent nuclear terrorism, which he had called “one of the greatest threats to global security” in the 21st century. In his address, Obama said, the world faced a persistent and evolving threat of nuclear terrorism despite progress in reducing such risks. But he insisted: “We cannot be complacent.

These biannual nuclear summits, aimed at locking down fissile material worldwide that could be used for doomsday weapons, were proposed by President Obama back in 2009, barely two months into his presidency. “We must insure that terrorists never acquire a nuclear weapon,” he declared, calling such a scenario “the most immediate and extreme threat to global security.” In that same April 2009 speech, Obama challenged the world’s keepers of some 2,000 tons of highly enriched uranium and plutonium to “secure all vulnerable nuclear material around the world within four years.”

Since the atomic bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki, proliferation of nuclear weapons has increased tremendously. During the Cold War, much of the debate centered on the U.S.-Soviet nuclear balance. Since the collapse of the Soviet Union, nuclear weapons have continued to be a major preoccupation of America, with more nations acquiring the nuclear weapons and many more trying to build nuclear arsenals. But, the most dangerous threat has been from the terrorist and rogue groups that have been stealing and making all out efforts to get hold of enriched uranium, a component that is used to build nuclear weapons.

Deadly bomb attacks in Brussels last month have fueled concern that Islamic State could eventually target nuclear plants, steal material and develop radioactive “dirty bombs”. Obama said the required 102 countries had now ratified an amendment to a nuclear security treaty that would tighten protections against nuclear theft and smuggling.

President Barack Obama urged world leaders on April 1st to do more to safeguard vulnerable nuclear facilities to prevent “madmen” from groups like Islamic State from getting their hands on a nuclear weapon or a radioactive “dirty bomb.” There is no doubt that if these madmen ever got their hands on a nuclear bomb or nuclear material, they would certainly use it to kill as many innocent people as possible,” he said. “It would change our world.”

Nine countries together possess more than 15,000 nuclear weapons. The United States and Russia maintain roughly 1,800 of their nuclear weapons on high-alert status – ready to be launched within minutes of a warning. Most are many times more powerful than the atomic bombs dropped on Japan in 1945. A single nuclear warhead, if detonated on a large city, could kill millions of people, with the effects persisting for decades

Southern Asia is home to three nuclear powers—China, India, and Pakistan—that continue to expand and modernize their arms programs. Such nuclear competition is dangerous given mounting mistrust and a dearth of diplomatic measures in place to reduce risk of confrontation.  China is seeking to soon achieve a nuclear triad (land, air, and sea-based nuclear delivery capabilities). Analysts estimate that China’s inventory is close to two hundred and fifty warheads. North Korea’s quest to acquire nuclear weapons has been never ending.

Experts estimate that Pakistan has 110 to 130 warheads and two types of delivery vehicles (PDF): aircraft and surface-to-surface missiles. Pakistan’s chronic political instability, spotty nonproliferation record, and ongoing threats posed by militant forces have focused special concern on the safety of its nuclear materials.

India possesses a developed strategic nuclear program and currently fields nuclear-capable aircraft and ballistic missiles controlled by a civilian command structure, theNuclear Command Authority. New Delhi has an estimated stockpile of 110 to 120 warheads and is expanding its military nuclear capabilities. In 2011, New Delhi spent approximately $4.9 billion (PDF) on nuclear weapons, up from $4.1 billion the previous year, according to Global Zero, a nongovernmental disarmament movement.

The United States and India negotiated a landmark civil nuclear deal beginning in 2005, which was later signed into U.S. law in 2008. Washington saw the deal as a practical way to overcome barriers to cooperation and also because it believed “it would be better to have India inside the international nonproliferation tent than outside,” says CFR’s Alyssa Ayres.

World leaders and international organizations pledged to boost communal efforts to secure nuclear materials. But there won’t be any more global summits on the issue in the near future. The leaders said in a joint communique at the summit’s close that the broad goal of the summit process has been to address the threat of nuclear terrorism by minimizing and securing weapons-usable nuclear materials, enhancing international cooperation to prevent the illicit acquisition of nuclear material by non-state actors such as terrorist groups and smugglers, and taking steps to strengthen the global nuclear security system.

The world leaders acknowledged that there’s more work to prevent nuclear terrorism and promote disarmament, which requires further international cooperation President Barack Obama says there’s a persistent and evolving threat of terrorists conducting a nuclear attack.

While addressing the Summit leaders, Prime Minister Narendra Modi of India pledged to accord a high national priority to nuclear security through strong institutional framework, independent regulatory agency and trained and specialized manpower, while developing and deploying technology to deter and defend against nuclear terrorism, by making efforts to stop nuclear smuggling and strengthen the national detection architecture for nuclear and radioactive material.

While gains have been made, arms-control advocates say the diplomatic process – which Obama conceived and championed – has lost momentum and could slow further once he leaves the White House in January, next year. Moscow, which holds the world’s largest nuclear weapons stockpiles, ended virtually all its nuclear cooperation with the U.S. more than two years ago as part of the political fallout from tensions over Ukraine.

The failure of the nuclear powers to disarm has heightened the risk that other countries will acquire nuclear weapons. The only guarantee against the spread and use of nuclear weapons is to eliminate them without delay. Although the leaders of some nuclear-armed nations have expressed their vision for a nuclear-weapon-free world, they have failed to develop any detailed plans to eliminate their arsenals and are modernizing them.

According to analysts, nuclear safeguards like those that have emerged from previous Nuclear Security Summits are playing an increasingly important role in protecting the world from security threats. White House Deputy National Security Advisor Benjamin Rhodes all but declares that goal accomplished, pointing to the achievements of the previous three summits. “Because of these efforts, it is harder than ever before for terrorists or bad actors to acquire nuclear materials,” Rhodes told reporters in a conference call prior to this week’s summit. “That, of course, makes all of our people more secure.”

According to Sharon Squassoni, a non-proliferation expert at the Center for Strategic and International Studies (CSIS), a Washington defense think tank, the job isn’t finished, warning that the political pressure to get it done is waning. “We know what to do,” she says. “The question is, do we have enough willpower and money and attention to do it.”

2 Million Dollar Car in New York Auto Show

At the New York Auto Show on Thursday (March 24, 2016), Koenigsegg showed its $2 million Regera “hypercar” for the first time ever in the United States. It’s a big deal because while the small Swedish company has never had much of a presence stateside, it is billing this futuristic coupe as the ultimate “Bugatti killer.”

“There is something very natural about it, very intuitive,” company founder Christian von Koenigsegg said during the unveiling. “And it’s attainable. We can reach 200 miles per hour in 0.6 miles. And that’s pretty much unheard of. So if you have a racetrack with that straight, you can go 200 miles per hour pretty easily. So it’s attainable speed, attainable power.”

Indeed, the 1,500-plus-horsepower Regera combines three electric motors with a traditional combustion engine: There is a 1,200-horsepower twin turbo 5-liter V8 (attached to one of the electric motors), plus two electric motors at the back wheels that help produce a combined 720e horsepower. Von Koenigsegg boasted that despite the 1,500-plus-hp official report, the true power rating may be closer to 1,800.

Regera also has a unique direct drive system that replaces the traditional transmission system. “This is the only combustion-engine sports car I know that doesn’t have a transmission,” von Koenigsegg said, adding that he had the idea for the car years ago but developed the necessary technology only recently. “The engine is also directly connected to the rear axle. That was possible because of the electrification.”

At 3,000 pounds, with carbon fiber construction and totally automatic doors and rear half, the Regera is still extremely light. “To keep the car light, we didn’t want to add things we don’t need,” von Koenigsegg said. Translation: While the car has Apple Car Play and Internet access inside, don’t expect to see a cup holder.

That devotion to shedding ounces helped give the car a seamless acceleration to its top speed of 248 mph, which it can hit in just under 20 seconds. Zero to 60 mph takes 2.8 seconds. Those specs aren’t quite as impressive as Bugatti’s new Chiron (288 mph top speed and 2-second-flat sprint time), but von Koenigsegg said it’s the nuance that makes the difference.

“No other car can go faster up to 230 mph—or in such a short distance,” he said. Look for the Regera to come on sale at the Manhattan Motorcars dealership later this year. The plan is to build 80 of them; half have already been sold.

16th Annual New York Indian Film Festival Announces Open Night Gala on May 7th

New York, NY (April 4, 2016) – The New York Indian Film Festival (NYIFF) announced the Opening Night Gala film: Bardroy Baretto’s Nachom-ia Kumpasar (Let’s Dance to the Rhythm).  LET’S DANCE TO THE RHYTHM is a Konkani feature film- a tribute to Goan music and her musicians. Narrated through the emotional rollercoaster of a love story destined to tragedy, it celebrates Goan music through the eyes of its eclectic’s generation of musicians in the 1960s and 70s.

“Lets Dance to the Rhythm is a beautiful representation of another era, where jazz music flourished outside of the realms of the popular Hindi cinema of Bombay. The film is a joyful celebration of the music, the energy and the musicians and it is a story that not many people know about, states Film Festival Director  Aseem Chhabra. “It is truly a happy film and a perfect way for us to launch the 16th edition of the New York Indian Film Festival.”

The festival is widely recognized as the oldest, most prestigious Indian film festival in the United States, showcasing some of the greatest talents working in the diaspora. Celebrating its 16th year, NYIFF will run May 7 to 14 at a variety of prestigious New York City venues, including the Skirball Center for Performing Arts, where the opening and closing films are set to take place.

In addition, the centerpiece and closing films were announced.  Renowned filmmaker Hansal Mehta will be closing the festival with his latest work, ALIGARH.  Director Mehta provides a look into the real life incident of Dr. Shrinivas Ramchandra Siras, who was suspended from his job because of his sexual orientation. Siras was the professor of Marathi at the Aligarh Muslim University. After successfully appealing his suspension, he died under suspicious circumstances.

HIGHWAY will be featured as the centerpiece film. Umesh Kulkarni’s HIGHWAY is a Marathi film set on the Bombay-Pune Highway and it examines diversity and soul searching. Aroon Shivdansani, Executive Director and Artistic Director of IAAC states “The excitement is growing as our festival approaches!  Our flagship event, NYIFF 2016 is proving to be even more exciting than last year!” She adds “The recently announced Indian National Awards included both our 2015 Opening & Closing Night films as well as five films from our current schedule.  This year our festival has grown in the number of days, the number of films screened, as well as the depth and variety of themes and languages.  Three theatres will screen films simultaneously all day for 8 days with films from all over India and the subcontinent representing myriad regional languages (with English subtitles) while the fourth theatre will entice audiences with fascinating panels on LGBT, Regional Language Cinema, Directors’ First Films, Animation, Industry Panels on Shooting in NYCity & NYState as well as Special Events such as the presentation of films from three generations of filmmakers in the Bimal Roy/Basu Bhattacharya family.  Guests to our Opening & Closing Night Galas will be welcomed by amazing local dancers, while filmmakers & celebrities walk off the red carpets to glamorous cocktail parties prior to the reality screenings.”

Celebrating its 16th year, NYIFF will run May 7 to May 14. Memberships may be purchased at: http://www.iaac.us/Contribution.htm. Festival Passes and Individual Tickets are on sale at the film festival website: http://www.iaac.us/NYIFF2016

The Indo-American Arts Council is a registered 501(c)3 not-for-profit, secular service and resource arts organization charged with the mission of promoting and building the awareness, creation, production, exhibition, publication and performance of Indian Sub-Continental and cross-cultural art forms in North America. The IAAC supports all artistic disciplines in the classical, fusion, folk and innovative forms influenced by the arts of India. We work cooperatively with colleagues around the United States to broaden our collective audiences and to create a network for shared information, resources and funding. Our focus is to work with artists and arts organizations in North America as well as to facilitate artists and arts organizations from the Indian Sub-Continent to exhibit, perform and produce their works here.

The New York Indian Film Festival is the oldest, most prestigious Indian film festival in the United States.  It is dedicated to showcasing, promoting and building an awareness of Independent, art house and diaspora films from/about/connected to the Indian subcontinent.  Our mission is to encourage filmmakers to tell their stories, to educate North America about them and their talent and to facilitate the making and distribution of these films. NYIFF boasts eight days of premiere screenings of feature, documentary & short films, industry panels, special events, retrospectives, red carpet galas, an award ceremony, packed audiences and amazing media coverage.

5th Annual Outstanding Women’s Gala On Long Island Held

By Indu Jaiswal

5th Annual Outstanding Women’s Gala On Long Island

Long Island, NY: The Indian American Forum (IAF) honored five women leaders for their leadership and contributions to the larger society and humanity during the 5th annual gala organized on Long Island, New York. As Town of North Hempstead Supervisor Judi Bosworth, Town of Hempstead Councilwoman Dorothy Goosby, Town of Hempstead Clerk Nasreen Ahmed (Among many other VIPs) walked into Antun’s of Hicksville on Thursday March 24, they all very well felt the pride and achievement in the air. The Grand ball room was full of so many accomplished and elite, who’s who of the society gathered for one singular purpose, to be the part of and celebrate 5th Outstanding Women’s Achievements Gala, part of Women’s History Month and International Women’s Day Celebrations.

IAF, led by Indu Jaiswal, known for her strong commitment and dedication to the community cause was the organizing force behind the gala.  This year well known business woman Vandana Govil was the Chairperson of the Gala. And of course the hall was beautifully decorated with spring flowers and theme.  Evening started with prayers led by Amita Karwal and Sunny Marerkar. Indu Jaiswal Chairperson of IAF in her remarks welcomed all the guests congratulated all the honorees and praised their efforts in achieving such success. Vandana Govil congratulated all the honorees and also thanked all the guests

American National Anthem was sung by Gurbani Kaur Sethi and Indian National Anthem sung by Amita Karwal… Master of Ceremonies Mr Anuj Rihal and Chanbir Kaur Sethi made the evening enjoyable. Chanbir Kaur coordinated a brief Q&A session with the honorees discussing and emphasizing their accomplishments

In addition to Judi Bosworth who was also presented with an award, 5 other distinguished women who had excelled in their profession and community services were presented with Outstanding Women’s achievements Awards

Dr Manjeet Chadha   for dedication in medicine and community Services. Dr Chadha is Professor of Radiation Oncology at the Icahn School of medicine at Mount Sinai , and the Director of the Department at mount Sinai Beth Isreal. She also served as the Director for Breast and Gynecologic cancer programs for Radiation Oncology at Continuum Cancer enter. Dr Chadha is a fellow of the American Society of Radiation Oncology, an honor bestowed on highly select oncologist

Jyoti Gupta for dedication in Music and cultural promotions. Jyoti is extremely involved in social and cultural activities, which include singing shabads, acting, dancing, comedy and helping others. Jyoti is in active member of India Association of Long Island and IDPUSA. As chair of Sangeet Forum of IALI Jyoti organizes monthly musical programs for seniors and adults.

Sunita Sadhnani for dedication in Business Development and Community Services. Sunita is the Founder of Bollywood Preforming Arts, long island’s first ever entertainment and dance studio to promote Indian traditional and Bollywood dance… Sunita also started and she founded Glamorous Event Planners for entertainment and special big events. Sunita is a member of most event and Planners associations, and stays on top of trends by regularly attending national Conferences, She is also a member of the Rotary of the Jericho Sunrise Rotary Club, and she is also an accomplished singer

Dr Runi Mukherji Ratnam for dedication in education and Social Services. Dr Ratnam is professor of Psychology in the department of Psychology, State University of New York Old Westbury. She has served as its chair for almost a decade. She has been actively involved for many years with the Center for the study of Asian American Health, Langone Medical Center, New York School of Medicine, Center for immigrant Health, the Montefiore Medical Center as well as the university Hospital at Einstein College of Medicine. Runi is the President of SACSS and Founder of Young Indian Culture Group.

Meera T Gandhi for dedication as Humanitarian and Social Promotions. Meera T Gandhi id the CEO of and founder of Giving Back Foundation. She is an international community leader committed humanitarian and philanthropist dedicated to solutions to human suffering and deprivation around the globe. The foundation is based in New York and has offices in India HK, and London. Transformational Education of the girl child is the primary mission of the giving back foundation.

Judi Bosworth was all in praises for the efforts of Indian American Forum and Indian American Community. She congratulated all honorees and stressed the importance of role women are playing in this world. Citations of behalf of Nassau County Executive Edward P Mangano were presented by Zahid Syed, Chairman of Human right Commission Nassau County to all honorees. Syed praised their efforts and congratulated them for their achievements. Citations were presented from the town of Hempstead Supervisor Anthony Santino by Councilwoman Goosby and town Clerk Nasrin Ahmed. New York State Senator Jack Martins also sent citations for the honorees

Among those present during the event were Bobby Kalotee Founder of IAF, Nassau County Human right Commissioner Sharanjit Singh Thind, Dr Ajay Lodha, Incoming President National AAPI,Beena Kothari, President of India Association of Long Island, Sher Madra , Shammi Singh and Peter Bheddah, Board of Directors of Nargis Dutt Foundation,  Shashi Anand well known business woman, Hassena Moopan from Domestic Harmony Foundation, Rizwan Qureshi from HAB Bank, Roopam Maini from Indus American Bank, Sudesh Mukhi from Arya Semaj of Long Island, Sangeeta Bahl, President of Rotary Club, and several other dignitaries were present

Vocal performances presented by Sunny Marerkar and Amita Karwal, Dance performances presented by Bollywood Performing Arts and  Shilpa Jhurani and her students from Arya Dance academy. Mr Mohinder Taneja and Animesh Goenka gave special thanks for all of our sponsors and media partners…

Board of Trustees Dr Bhupi Patel, Surinder Rametra, Bobby Kalotee, Dr Ved Kawatra, Animesh Goenka, Volunteers Nirmala Rametra, Jaya Bahadkar, Anu Gulati, Dr Meena Jaiswal, Vijay Goswamy, Tejal Kamath and Many other helped in making the event a grand success. It was indeed a very successful evening, showcasing and honoring outstanding women achievers, who are successful in business, cultural, professional, education, and medical. Community and social services.

Rahul Gupta’s Murder of Mark Waugh Was Focus of CBS Show ’48 Hours’

The gruesome murder of law school student Mark Waugh by his best friend Rahul Gupta, an aspiring Indian American biomedical engineer, who was sentenced to life in March 2015, was the subject of the CBS show, “48 Hours,” which was aired on April 2. In the episode, “What Happened in Apt. 1601?,” Richard Schlesinger and “48 Hours” investigate Waugh’s death and the police search for the truth.

Montgomery County, Maryland Circuit Court Judge Richard Jordan gave the maximum sentence to Gupta, then 25, noting that the killer showed no remorse for stabbing and slashing Waugh, 23, on Oct. 13, 2013 in Gupta’s apartment in Silver Springs, Maryland.

On the night of Oct. 13, 2013 – Gupta’s birthday – the two friends along with Gupta’s girlfriend Taylor Gould went out for an evening on the town, heavily drinking at various venues before returning to the apartment where Gupta and Gould lived together. The trio continued drinking there.

At 3:30 a.m., police were summoned to the apartment and found Waugh lying on a bed, covered with blood from multiple stab wounds. Gupta was near him, also covered with blood. The graduate student, who was raised in Virginia, told police he had killed Waugh because he believed his best friend and girlfriend were having an affair.

But in court, Gupta recanted his statement to police, saying he wanted to defend his girlfriend. “I remember thinking how the f*** did this happen. I couldn’t figure it out,” he said. Gupta told jurors that it was Gould who killed Waugh, and said he saw the two walking in from the kitchen with Waugh covered in blood.

“It’s like a horror movie,” said Montgomery County police officer Dean Skiba, according to a press release by CBS, describing the bloody scene in Apt. 1601. “You could see it was up all over the wall, all over the ground.”

CBS described the show this way: Waugh, 23, was stabbed to death in the apartment where his friends, Rahul Gupta, a graduate student, and Gupta’s girlfriend, Taylor Gould, a biomedical engineer, lived. Gupta and Gould, bloody and drunk, according to police, were interrogated immediately afterward. Police thought they would quickly solve the case, especially after Gupta seemingly confessed. “I caught my buddy and my girl cheating,” Gupta told police. “I killed my buddy.”

But then, as the alcohol wore off, everything changed. Gupta insisted he had no idea what transpired. Taylor had a similar story. “I don’t remember what happened,” she told police. “I told you everything I did remember.”

Police struggled to believe Gupta and Taylor completely forgot the events leading up to their friend ending up dead. “They could both remember up until a certain point, but the crucial 45 minutes nobody seems to remember anything,” Detective Paula Hamill says.

Investigators then tried something highly unusual in interrogations that may have changed the face of the case. They put Gupta and Taylor together alone, and monitored their conversations. This conversation ultimately would decide who went home, and who would be charged with murder.

So how does Waugh’s life end? And could anyone figure out who killed him? Schlesinger and “48 Hours” search for answers through interviews with police, investigators, friends and attorneys involved in the case.

Indian Americans condemn Saudi award for Prime Minister Modi

Award defies logic given Mr. Modi’s record before and after taking office as Prime Minister

New York, NY: The Indian American Muslim Council (IAMC – iamc.com), an advocacy group dedicated to safeguarding India’s pluralist and tolerant ethos has condemned the Saudi government’s decision to confer Indian Prime Minister Modi with the nation’s highest civilian award.

“It is expected that the Indian Prime Minister is accorded the respect befitting a head of state. However, conferring of the highest civilian award on Mr. Modi by those who claim to be the custodians of the two Holy Mosques is a slap in the face of survivors of the Gujarat pogroms of 2002. It is also a demonstration of indifference to the increased attacks and threats against the religious minorities and Dalits in India,” said Umar Malick, President of IAMC.

Modi and the Saudi monarchy have much in common. As Chief Minister of Gujarat, Modi presided over one of the worst episodes of sectarian violence in independent India, when over 2,000 people were massacred by mobs instigated by the Hindu-supremacist groups. The horrific killings were accompanied by rape and pillage, resulting in the displacement of over 150,000 Muslims from their homes, many of whom are still struggling to pick up the pieces of their lives. Modi continues to have a case pending against him in the Gujarat High Court and a tainted Special Investigation Team failed to initiate prosecution of Mr. Modi. The handful of convictions in the cases related to the pogroms in Gujarat have happened as a result of tireless and courageous work by activists and whistleblowers, whom the Modi government has harassed and intimidated.

Since coming to power, the Modi administration has worked steadily to erode religious freedom and India’s long-cherished traditions of tolerance among its diverse populace. Ranging from attacks on churches and mob violence against Muslims and Dalits, to felicitating the killer of Mahatma Gandhi, Mr. Modi’s administration and its supporters have relentlessly pursued a divisive agenda, that is antithetical to the country’s Constitution and its egalitarian ideals. The demonization of intellectuals, the vigilantism encouraged by the state, and the weakening of institutions are all indications of a besieged Indian democracy.

Saudi forces are conducting indiscriminate airstrikes in Yemen that are widely acknowledged to have caused huge loss of civilian lives, creating an ongoing humanitarian catastrophe. Incidentally, the monarchy had conferred the same award given to Mr. Modi, on Mr. Abdel Fattah Al-Sisi of Egypt.

“Coming from the Saudi monarchy, which is known for its repressive domestic policies and human rights violations, the award itself is of dubious value. It diminishes, rather than enhances the office of the Prime Minister of India,” added Malick. Indian-American Muslim Council is the largest advocacy organization of Indian Muslims in the United States with chapters across the nation. For more information, please visit our website at: http://www.iamc.com

Judge Allows Case Against Preet Bharara

After many years of bringing hundreds of lawbreakers to justice, it appears to be the turn of U.S. Attorney Preet Bharara now to face the court. A lawsuit filed by an ex-hedge fund founder who claimed his constitutional rights were violated during a sweeping 2010 insider-trading raid can proceed. A  federal court judge in New York has allowed a case against Preet Bharara to go to the discovery stage and denied the “Sheriff “of Wall Street’s motion to dismiss the civil rights claims of a former hedge fund manager targeted but never charged. The plaintiff in the case called the judge’s ruling a “first step’ in holding the government accountable for “troubling conduct.”

Legal experts say this is a rare and unusual case that may require the high profile, nationally recognized U.S. Attorney for Manhattan, some of his assistant attorneys, and the FBI, to submit hundreds of documents to do with the discovery process, in a case that may end up in a jury trial. “The Ganek case presents a relatively rare instance of a plaintiff’s claims prevailing over the defense of qualified immunity,” jdsupra.com, a legal news website, maintained.

On this March 10, federal Judge William H. Pauley permitted the civil rights case against Bharara et al to go forward. “The unusual decision on Thursday means the government must provide evidence about its work to Ganek and perhaps defend itself before a jury,” Bloomberg news reported. “Discovery is now appropriate to ascertain whether this case is about a simple misunderstanding or whether something more troubling was afoot,” Pauley wrote in the 35-page ruling.

David Ganek, a former hedge-fund manager at Level Global Investors LLC, a now defunct company, alleged his civil rights were violated in the course of an investigation; that in effect, as a law-enforcement officer, Bharara did not protect him from the violation; and despite knowing about it, did not clear up a misrepresentation about him, causing his company to fail.

Credited with securing more than 80 convictions after his pledge to crackdown on insider trading when he came into office in August 2009, Bharara, who supervises an office of more than 220 assistant U.S. attorneys, handling cases of domestic and international terrorism, narcotics and arms trafficking, white collar crime, public corruption, gang violence, organized crime, and civil rights violations, is being sued for violating the civil rights of a citizen, an irony not lost on critics of what they see as Bharara’s high-handed prosecutorial tactics.

According to media reports, including jdsupra.com, a November 2010 FBI raid of Ganek’s offices involved search of personal files and mobile phones, in the presence of journalists, causing investors anxiety, despite no resulting charges against Ganek.

The lawyer for Ganek informed Bharara the firm may have to close unless the U.S. Attorney publicly clarified that Ganek was not the target of investigation. Bharara did not make any clarification, the news report says, and the firm closed in February 2011.

Some of the 100 or so white collar cases brought by Bharara have been dismissed. Two years ago, a related case, U.S. v. Newman, was vacated by the Second Circuit on grounds that prosecutors were unable to prove that the two accused hedge fund managers knew that the corporate insider who gave them the information did it for “personal benefit.” Several other convictions were also reversed after this.

Ganek’s case which he filed in February 2015, rested on the affidavit used to get the search warrant for the FBI raid of Level Global offices. The affidavit Ganek claims, was partly fabricated as it related to him; that the research analyst who provided the affidavit, actually told the FBI that he never informed Ganek about the sources of the “inside information,” and that this was known from his testimony at the Newman trial. Which means, according to Ganek, that some parts of affidavit for the search warrant, were manufactured in a bid to get the warrant. This, he says, violated his Fourth and Fifth Amendment rights.

Judge Pauley ruled that Ganek had “adequately pled” that the affidavit in question “contained materially false statements and omissions” and therefore met the probable cause requirement regarding violation of his Fourth Amendment rights.

On his Fifth Amendment rights claim of “not to be deprived of liberty as a result of the fabrication of evidence by a government officer” Judge Pauley also ruled that Ganek had pled sufficiently. Furthermore, the judge also upheld Ganek’s “failure to intervene” claim that Bharara and others did not carry out their duty “to protect the constitutional rights of citizens from infringement by other law enforcement officers.” Bharara, the judge said, failed to clarify that Ganek was not the target of the investigation despite learning that the research analyst’s affidavit was incorrect.

Gokul Natesan, A Rising Star In Basketball Earns National Recognition

Gokul Natesan, an Indian-American basketball player has picked up his second all-region award of the postseason, this time from the National Association of Basketball Coaches (NABC). According to reports, Gokul Natesan landed on the NABC’s All-South Central Second Team after the Colorado School of Mines guard had a standout 2015-16 season to lead the Orediggers to the NCAA Tournament. The NABC awards are selected and voted on by the member coaches in National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) Division II.

Natesan was also a First-Team D2CCA All-Region pick earlier this month, according to a press release from the school. The D2CCA stands for the Division II Conference Commissioners Association. This is just the latest in a series of honors for the 6 ft 5 inch, 190 lb Natesan this season. His other recent honors include RMAC Defensive Player of the Year and First-Team All-RMAC (Rocky Mountain Athletics Conference). The junior averaged 20.7 points, 3.6 rebounds, 3.4 assists, and 2.1 steals per game to lead Mines (24-8) to the RMAC Tournament title game and an NCAA Tournament appearance. He was a member of the RMAC Shootout All-Tournament Team.

He’s an achiever off the court as well. Natesan’s classroom performance earned him First-Team Academic All-America and RMAC Academic Player of the Year and First-Team Academic All-RMAC honors.

Brought up in Santa Clara, California, Natesan attended Cupertino High School. He had chalked up many wins and honors while still in high school. Natesan’s detailed game performance on the Colorado School of Mines website tracks his achievements year by year since high school. He spent the 2012-13 season at La Jolla Prep Basketball Academy in San Diego, California, where he averaged 15.5 points per game and put in a stellar performance getting recognition as an MVP, earning selections to various teams. Natesan averaged 18.0 points, 5.7 rebounds and 2.2 steals per game while making 75 3-point baskets as a junior.

He kept up his grades, making it to the academic honor roll all four years, and was a member of the National Honor Society and French Honor Society and was named the 2012 Cal-Hi Sports CCS Winter Scholar-Athlete of the Year.

In 2013-2014, Natesan was named RMAC Freshman of the Year. In 2014-2015,  he scored a season-high 25 three times, and crossed 20 points seven times. In 2015-16, he was part of the team recognized as a CoSIDA First-Team Academic All-American, a prestigious recognition given to teams composed of most outstanding student-athletes, which is administered by College Sports Information Directors of America (CoSIDA).

Ekal Vidyalaya & Indian Consulate Hosts ‘Beti Bacho – Beti Padhao’ Event

By Nishu Aggarwal

New York, NY: “Ekal Vidyalaya Foundation” and “Indian Consulate, New York” jointly celebrated ‘International Women’s month’, focusing on, Women’s Empowerment through education on March 24. The event also provided the first opportunity for newly appointed Consulate General (CG), Riva Ganguly Deb to interact with the diverse Indian community for vibrant exchange of ideas. Dr. Anila Midha, a prominent Physician who took the helm for the evening explained to the capacity-gathering the main objective of the event and introduced various participants.

In her welcome address, Hon. CG Das, provided an overview of the Beti Bachao Beti Padhao as a flagship initiative of Prime Minister Narendra Modi, whereby a third of  ‘Village Panchayats’ have been decreed to have women in responsible positions. She acknowledged that, though great strides are being made to empower women, a lot yet to be done to change age-old attitudes and beliefs affecting women in our society, and especially in rural areas.  She expressed hope that the grass-root organizations like Ekal, with presence in 60,000-plus villages can play an important role in it.

Aroon Shivdasani, the President of the Indo American Arts Council gave the Key note address. She stressed the importance of educating men as much as women to create an environment in families where self-esteem of individuals is not compromised and women have equal opportunity in all walks of life.

ITV’s famous anchor woman, Renee Mehrra, moderated the panel discussion among three successful women of Indian origin from different backgrounds and family values. Ranjani Saigal, Executive Director of ‘Ekal Vidyalaya’, touched on the need to uphold the standards set by parents who precipitated her own academic success at IIT and MIT. She further elaborated a story how during a visit to a rural area a girl asked her, “what can I do in my village what you have done out there?” According to her, the question has dogged her ever since while she is working at Ekal. She informed that Ekal puts special emphasis on educating girls and making them self-reliant though various skills-training,  in rural-tribal areas.

Dr. Urmilesh Arya, C.O.O at Gastroenterology Associates in Brooklyn and a trustee of Hindu Center in Flushing, brought to fore a critical challenge for girls in accessing education – the fear that their daughter would get romantically entangled with a boy, which may bring shame to the family. She herself overcame this challenge and many others with self-conviction and courage.

Dr. Sunita Saini, and Director of South Shore Psychological Services and Long Island Psychology and Psychotherapy Services, highlighted the importance of having a supportive family who, regardless of gender, value building their children’s career more rather than acquiring material assets.

There was a resounding agreement that when a woman is educated, she educates her entire family. The ensuing discussion highlighted the relevance of good health for women as a strategy towards empowerment. The panel cautioned that overcoming the socio-cultural biases that promote female infanticide and the perception that a girl is a burden are major stumbling blocks in restoring dignity of women in our society.

Vinod Jhunjhunwalla the President of Ekal Foundation, USA and Prof Subash Midha, the main Ekal coordinator for the event thanked the Indian Consulate, for their support in hosting this event.

Indian Consulate In New York To Streamline Passport Services

Responding to numerous complaints from the public of poor and inefficient consular services at the Indian Consulate, New York Consul General Riva Ganguly Das, in her first interaction with the media on March 30th,  reached out to streamline and improve the quality of services rendered by the Consulate and its affiliate organizations in the New York region.

Ambassador Ganguly Das announced the decision by the Government of India to engage a new company, CKGS, to take over from the present BLS International company, against whom some complaints from the community, have been received, to take care of the passport services.

“We have to have a system which is responsible to the people. Our expectation is that they (the new company) will provide excellent services to the people and without any problem or harassment,” Ganguly Das said.

The new company will take over from May 7, but those who would have applied already through the current contractor before the term of the BLS expires, would get services from the consulate for emergency services.

During the interactive meeting, Ganguly Das opened the floor for reporters, asking them for suggestions as to what the consulate could do better for the community as well as for the press corps. In the next two hours after her introductory remarks around noon March 30, there were questions, including about better consular services, better media coordination by those in charge at the consulate, and more interaction with the vernacular media in the New York region. There were some three-dozen-odd media personnel at the event.

Ganguly Das said that first and foremost she wants to engage with the media and would like to reach out to the community through them in addition to the consulate’s own outreach efforts.
She wanted the media to carry important messages from the consulate for the community through their columns.

The new Consul General said that one of her targets is to engage with the young Indian-Americans. “The challenge is to bring young people to engage with us”, and asked for suggestions from journalists towards that goal. “We want to interact intensively and extensively with the community here and the consulate is open for messages and suggestions from the community.”

New Yorkers Raise Funds for Washington State Senator Pramila Jayapal for her Run for Congress

Indian Americans joined hands with the larger community in New York to raise funds for Washington State Senator Pramila Jayapal (37th District in Seattle, Washington) who is running for the seat being vacated by long term Congressman Jim McDermott in Washington state’s 7th Congressional District. The event was hosted by socialite Claire White in Manhattan. There was a good presence of Indian Americans for the fundraiser.

Jayapal moved from India to the United States as student when she was sixteen. Jayapal founded Hate Free Zone after the September 11 attacks in 2001 as an advocacy group for ArabMuslim, and South Asian Americans targeted in the wake of the attacks. The group went on to become a political force in the state of Washington, registering new American citizens to vote and lobbying lawmakers on immigration reform and related issues. It changed its name to OneAmerica in 2008.Jayapal stepped down from leadership in the group in May 2012. A year later, she was recognized by the White House as a “Champion of Change” for her work on behalf of the immigrant community.

Jayapal, a resident of Columbia City, Wash., near Seattle, was able to get her feet wet in politics with the Senate, but feels her voice is better served on a national level. “Many of the challenges working-class and middle-class Americans face, require a national solution,” the Chennai native said. “I believe our system of government is rigged to favor big corporations and the wealthiest 1 percent of Americans.”

Included in her accomplishments were passing two bills, helping fund a new Southeast Economic Opportunity Center that will bring higher education to the Rainier Valley for the first time, putting $5.25 million in pre-apprenticeship support for women and people of color, and fighting against payday lending. Additionally, she has fought for gun law reform, sponsoring two bills on the matter, and pushed a measure to increase minimum wage to $12 an hour.

Despite all her successes and efforts, the Democrat has faced a number of challenges in the Republican-dominated state Senate. “As a member of the minority (party), you are constantly being creative and strategic about how to get things done. Relationships and power are relative to your position in the minority,” she explained.

“I’m both the only woman of color and the first ever South Asian American member of the Legislature. That makes a big difference,” she added. “My background as an activist and a woman of color means I bring with me the perspective that race touches almost every single issue. There are, sadly, not nearly enough elected officials at any level of American government willing to acknowledge and respond to this simple truth.”

“I had long believed, as many advocates do, that it was only after a process of organizing and activism on the outside that we could demand change from our elected officials on the inside,” she told India-West, adding that the process proved frustrating as seat holders – Democrats and Republicans alike – were fearful of confronting uncomfortable social issues. I came to recognize that we don’t get a more representative government unless we run for office and create it from the inside,” Jayapal added.

The Indian American earned her bachelor’s in English language and literature/letters at Georgetown University and her M.B.A. from Northwestern University’s Kellogg School of Management. She moved to Seattle in 1991 and began working for an international public health nonprofit, PATH. Additionally, while working for an organization she founded called OneAmerica, she got to know the people of the district and understand their values – which she shares, also as a member of the community.

Among Jayapal’s challengers in the Democratic primary are state Rep. Brady Walkinshaw, King County councilman Joe McDermott, and Donovan Rivers Jayapal’s primary is on August 2nd. The fundraiser event in New York was supported by community veteran leader Dr. Thomas Abraham, Attorney Appen Menon, SaberCloud principal Saji George and Comedian Dan Nainan.

5th Outstanding Women’s Achievements Gala Held On Long Island

Long Island, New York: As Town of North Hempstead Supervisor Judi Bosworth, Town of Hempstead Councilwoman Dorothy Goosby, Town of Hempstead Clerk Nasreen Ahmed (Among many other VIPs) walked into Antun’s of Hicksville on Thursday March 24, they all very well felt the pride and achievement in the air. The Grand ball room was full of so many accomplished and elite, who’s who of the society gathered for one singular purpose, to be the part of and celebrate 5th Outstanding Women’s Achievements Gala, part of Women’s History Month and International Women’s Day Celebrations

IAF (Indian American Forum) led by Indu Jaiswal, known for her strong commitment and dedication to the community cause was the organizing force behind the gala.  This year well known business woman Vandana Govil was the Chairperson of the Gala. And of course the hall was beautifully decorated with spring flowers and theme.  Evening started with prayers led by Amita Karwal and Sunny Marerkar. Indu Jaiswal Chairperson of IAF in her remarks welcomed all the guests congratulated all the honorees and praised their efforts in achieving such success. Vandana Govil congratulated all the honorees and also thanked all the guests

American National Anthem was sung by Gurbani Kaur Sethi and Indian National Anthem sung by Amita Karwal… Master of Ceremonies Mr Anuj Rihal and Chanbir Kaur Sethi made the evening enjoyable. Chanbir Kaur coordinated a brief Q&A session with the honorees discussing and emphasizing their accomplishments. In addition to Judi Bosworth who was also presented with an award, 5 other distinguished women who had excelled in their profession and community services were presented with Outstanding Women’s achievements Awards

Dr. Manjeet Chadha   for dedication in medicine and community Services. Dr Chadha is Professor of Radiation Oncology at the Icahn School of medicine at Mount Sinai , and the Director of the Department at mount Sinai Beth Isreal. She also served as the Director for Breast and Gynecologic cancer programs for Radiation Oncology at Continuum Cancer enter. Dr Chadha is a fellow of the American Society of Radiation Oncology, an honor bestowed on highly select oncologist

Jyoti Gupta for dedication in Music and cultural promotions. Jyoti is extremely involved in social and cultural activities, which include singing shabads, acting, dancing, comedy and helping others. Jyoti is in active member of India Association of Long Island and IDPUSA

As chair of Sangeet Forum of IALI Jyoti organizes monthly musical programs for seniors and adults.

Sunita Sadhnani for dedication in Business Development and Community Services. Sunita is the Founder of Bollywood Preforming Arts, long island’s first ever entertainment and dance studio to promote Indian traditional and Bollywood dance… Sunita also started and she founded Glamorous Event Planners for entertainment and special big events. Sunita is a member of most event and Planners associations, and stays on top of trends by regularly attending national Conferences, She is also a member of the Rotary of the Jericho Sunrise Rotary Club, and she is also an accomplished singer

Dr Runi Mukherji Ratnam for dedication in education and Social Services

Dr Ratnam is professor of Psychology in the department of Psychology, State University of New York Old Westbury. She has served as its chair for almost a decade. She has been actively involved for many years with the Center for the study of Asian American Health, Langone Medical Center, New York School of Medicine, Center for immigrant Health, the Montefiore Medical Center as well as the university Hospital at Einstein College of Medicine. Runi is the President of SACSS and Founder of Young Indian Culture Group.

Meera T Gandhi for dedication as Humanitarian and Social Promotions. Meera T Gandhi id the CEO of and founder of Giving Back Foundation. She is an international community leader committed humanitarian and philanthropist dedicated to solutions to human suffering and deprivation around the globe. The foundation is based in New York and has offices in India HK, and London. Transformational Education of the girl child is the primary mission of the giving back foundation.

Judi Bosworth was all in praises for the efforts of Indian American Forum and Indian American Community. She congratulated all honorees and stressed the importance of role women are playing in this world. Citations of behalf of Nassau County Executive Edward P Mangano were presented by Zahid Syed, Chairman of Human right Commission Nassau County to all honorees. Syed praised their efforts and congratulated them for their achievements. Citations were presented from the town of Hempstead Supervisor Anthony Santino by Councilwoman Goosby and town Clerk Nasrin Ahmed. New York State Senator Jack Martins also sent citations for the honorees

Among those present during the event were Bobby Kalotee Founder of IAF, Nassau County Human right Commissioner Sharanjit Singh Thind, Dr Ajay Lodha, Incoming President National AAPI,Beena Kothari, President of India Association of Long Island, Sher Madra , Shammi Singh and Peter Bheddah, Board of Directors of Nargis Dutt Foundation,  Shashi Anand well known business woman, Hassena Moopan from Domestic Harmony Foundation, Rizwan Qureshi from HAB Bank, Roopam Maini from Indus American Bank, Sudesh Mukhi from Arya Semaj of Long Island, Sangeeta Bahl, President of Rotary Club, and several other dignitaries were present

Vocal performances presented by Sunny Marerkar and Amita Karwal, Dance performances presented by Bollywood Performing Arts and  Shilpa Jhurani and her students from Arya Dance academy. Mr Mohinder Taneja and Animesh Goenka gave special thanks for all of our sponsors and media partners…

Board of Trustees Dr Bhupi Patel, Surinder Rametra, Bobby Kalotee, Dr Ved Kawatra, Animesh Goenka, Volunteers Nirmala Rametra, Jaya Bahadkar, Anu Gulati, Dr Meena Jaiswal, Vijay Goswamy, Tejal Kamath and Many other helped in making the event a grand success. It was indeed a very successful evening, showcasing and honoring outstanding women achievers, who are successful in business, cultural, professional, education, and medical. Community and social services.

BAPS Hosts Tenth Annual Midwest Women’s Conference in Chicago

Chicago IL: In conjunction with International Women’s Day, BAPS hosted its 10th annual Women’s Conference at BAPS Shri Swaminarayan Mandir in Bartlett, Illinois on March 12th, 2016.  Attracting over 400 participants, this year’s conference explored the theme, “Life in Resonance” and discussed ideas for approaching three major aspects of one’s life: cultural identity, work-life balance, and emotional health.  In today’s world, everyone is constantly striving for balance and self-fulfillment, whether it be at school, work, or at home.  Along with self-help books and online forums as sources of inspiration, open discussions among peers can often have a greater impact in making a work-life balance a more achievable goal.

As women in the 21st Century, we often are faced with the question, “Can we have it all?”  Or how can we handle a work and life balance among various other roles that women have such as a mother, daughter, sister, or professional. In physics, resonance is defined by a phenomenon that follows when a powerful, vibrating system causes another system to oscillate with greater amplitude at a specific frequency.  In life, resonance is defined by innate beliefs and timeless principles which drive an individual’s actions as well as one’s physical being and mental state of mind.  In order to understand how one can skillfully maintain a steady mindset and strong physical health, one must find a harmony within their mind and body that resonates with their surroundings.

Keynote speaker, Dr. Hina Patel, an attending Physician at the Advocate Sherman Hospital and a trustee of Village of South Barrington, delivered an insightful message on finding harmony within our various roles.  She encouraged women to build pride in their identity through confidence in one’s intrinsic beliefs and practices.  She urged women to let go of perfectionism but rather to strive for excellence and create a plan for success and emotional happiness.   Additionally, Pharmacist Komal Patel, born and raised in America, also shared how a dual cultural identity was in fact an asset, rather than a limitation, in today’s diverse, multicultural society.  “We often believe we have to choose one identity over the other, forgetting that we have the opportunity to bring together the best of both worlds.”

Circling the ever-debatable topic of maintaining a work-life balance, Dr. Purvi Parikh explored various practical methods and solutions, including self-introspection, for seeking clarity and focusing on purposeful priorities in our chaotic lives. She also emphasized the importance of living a healthy lifestyle by highlighting wellness and meditation as ways to keep ourselves centered as we juggle a variety of commitments.

Sushma Patel, a medical testing professional at the Alexian Brothers Medical Center, reminded the attendees of the immense power that spirituality holds in our lives through the connection between the mind and the body.  Through spirituality, we develop resilience and the knowledge, that in the end, we leave everything behind in this temporary world.  This understanding allows us to remain grounded and unperturbed through the wavering highs and lows in our life and is quintessential for a content mind and a healthy body.

Spreading this message of science, practicality and spiritualty across the nation, the conference was held in 12 cities with attendees from various personal and professional backgrounds.  Panel discussions and Q&A sessions enabled the speakers to effectively communicate their experiences and thus, enrich the audience with practical applications to bring balance into their lives. The conference attendees were reminded not only of the necessity for maintaining stability, but also of their inherent strengths which allow them to pursue this very goal.

The BAPS Swaminarayan Sanstha (BAPS), a worldwide socio-spiritual organization in Consultative Status with the Economic and Social Council of the United Nations, is dedicated to community service, peace and harmony.

Motivated by Hindu principles, BAPS strives to care for the world by caring for societies, families and individuals. Through a number of social and spiritual activities, BAPS endeavors to produce better citizens of tomorrow who have a high esteem for their roots – their rich Hindu culture.  Its 3,300 international centers support these activities of character-building. Under the guidance and leadership of His Holiness Pramukh Swami Maharaj, BAPS aspires to build a community that is morally, ethically and spiritually pure, and free of addictions.

His Holiness Pramukh Swami Maharaj, the fifth spiritual successor of Bhagwan Swaminarayan, has inspired millions of people across the world to lead a God-centered, morally pure life. As the present leader of BAPS, Pramukh Swami Maharaj travels from village to village, continent to continent, emphasizing the importance of family harmony, community service and spiritual progress.  His compassion for humanity, universal wisdom and striking simplicity has touched many around the world.

Hari Om Mandir Celebrates Holi – The Festival of Colors

Chicago IL: Holi – the festival of colors – is undoubtedly the most fun-filled and boisterous of Hindu festivals. It’s an occasion that brings in unadulterated joy and mirth, fun and play, music and dance, and, of course, lots of bright colors! It is celebrated on the full moon day in the month of Phalgun, which usually falls in the last week of Feb. or the beginning of March. Holi is a time when man and nature alike throw off the gloom of winter and rejoice in the colors & liveliness of spring. This year Holi was on the 23rd of March, but the Hari Om Mandir celebrated the festival on Sunday, the 20th of March, 2016, with traditional joy and enthusiasm. Although the temperatures were a little nippy and on the cooler side, a large number of people (over 400) joined the celebrations.

Holi in the Hari Om Mandir is always SPECIAL and keenly awaited, because it is celebrated with flowers and the festive decorations in the Temple attract people from far and near. This year, the legend of Radha Ji’s Sakhiyan from Barsana, was brought live! As young girls beautifully dressed in the traditional Chania-Cholis, vibrant saris, arrived amidst chantings of “Aaj Biraj Mein Holi Re Rasiya”, all eyes were focused on them and people were eager to be blessed & get drenched in the colorful drizzle of flowers. Radha Ji’s Sakhis / Krishna Ji’s Gopiyan, performed Garba and showered flowers from their beautiful baskets on one & all in the congregation – a symbol of color and prosperity in life. The wonderful Holi folk songs describing the immortal enduring love of Radha and Krishna, sung by Rama Kapoor, Rekha & Kailash Mehta, Happy & Goldy, Madhu Salwan, accompanied by Ajay Ghai on the Dholak, created the perfect environment and Hari Om Mandir in Medinah seemed to be a replica of  Brij, Vrindavan and Mathura in India. The entire congregation echoed with clappings, applause & appreciation when two little girls Rashmi and Hita, age 7, gave a dance performance “Prem Ratan Dhan Payo”

Soon after, everyone was seen embracing each other and wishing Happy Holi!!! Jeetu Patel, Aarti Singla, Garima Bhagav, Nazneen and family had spent several hours the previous night to decorate the temple with colorful balloons – bright neon and water splash colors adorned the Mandir hall. Also, Rita Patel, Hiteshree and Latha made beautiful Rangolis – Swastik, Ganesha, Lotus etc on the floor and added to the colorful ambience. Bowls full of dry color powder – Red, Blue, Green, Yellow “Gulaal” were displayed at the feet of the deities. Keeping in mind the cleanliness of the temple, people were prohibited from playing with those colors, but every devotee was given a chance to get soaked in the natural colors of Mother Nature. Meera & Jayanthi greeted everybody at the entrance with a colorful flower garland, Happy Holi Wishes and a warm friendly smile.

Dvara Magazine Organized Fundraiser for India’s “Save the Girl Child Program” on the Occasion of Its First Anniversary

Chicago IL: Dvara Magazine, committed to promoting Indian-fusion, celebrated its first anniversary on March 13th, 2016 at Sunda Restaurant in Downtown Chicago. In order to make the celebrations more meaningful and socially-relevant, management of the Dvara Magazine hosted a grand fundraiser aimed at strengthening “Save the Girl Child Program” launched by the Dignity of the Girl Child Organization in Jaipur, India in order to achieve its cherished goals. The event was attended by hundreds of eminent people from different walks of life.

Dr. Meeta Singh, Director of Dignity of the Girl Child Organization, the keynote speaker at the event, said that educational empowerment of a girl brings in its wake a number of beneficial outcomes for her family as well as for the society at large. “A computer-literate girl, for example, can predict weather, advise farmers on the right price for their produce in the market, and thereby emerge as a leader at the grassroots level”, she opined and added that contributing to this process of bringing about a positive and healthy societal change would be the greatest achievement of her life.

Sujata, President and CEO of Chicago Foundation for Women, another key note speaker at the event, said that becoming rich and famous should not be the only goal of one’s life. “While a multitude of people believe in living a king-size life, which involves, among other things, buying a villa in an island, going for a fleet of the most fanciest sports cars, having billions of dollars in secret bank accounts in Switzerland, etc, I deliberately opted for working for a not-for-profit organization calledApna Ghar that is committed to improving the quality of life of immigrant battered women”, she added.

Karthika Gupta and Jayashree Rao, the Chicago-based co-founders of Dvara Magazine and members of its core editorial team, outlined the details of their visit to Khandar, a village near Ranthambore National Park in Jaipur in 2015 to document a story on “Women Empowerment in Rajasthan” for upcoming issue of the Magazine. They said that during the course of their visit, they met with several poor girls and women and were honored to be a part of their daily life.

“Being one among the loving and innocent girls and women gave me an opportunity not only to understand their lives, dreams, and aspirations but also to witness the struggle for their social, educational, and economic empowerment”, said Karthika.

Dvara Magazine, which had a fundraising goal of $2200, successfully raised almost double the amount through the fundraiser. Those who are interested in having more information about Dvara Magazine may visit its website: www.dvaramagazine.com.  They may visit www.dvaramagazine.com/fundraiser for relevant information about the fundraiser, the sponsors of this event, and donations.

Annapurna Sriram’s Star Is on the Rise

Rutgers, NJ: Between taking center stage in Jesse Eisenberg’s off-Broadway production The Spoils last spring and getting cast alongside Damian Lewis and Paul Giamatti this winter in Showtime’s Billions, it’s safe to say Annapurna Sriram’s star is on the rise.
But three years ago, the 2011 Mason Gross BFA’s career was in slumpsville. “I hadn’t had work. I’d had a bad break up and bad representation,” she said of the rough patch that lasted about six months. “When you’re as ambitious and impatient as I am, it felt like ‘I’m wasting precious time!’ ” Acting is the only vocation the Nashville native had ever envisioned for herself. “I decided I wanted to be an actor because I was so bad at school growing up,” said Sriram.
 
She chased her dream with gusto: hustling for gigs before she entered a performing arts high school, graduating from Rutgers’ Mason Gross School of the Arts with an agent and landing her first community theater gig – with Red Bank’s Two River Theatre – when the ink on her diploma was barely dry.
 
Yet there she was, paying rent on her Gowanus, Brooklyn, apartment with babysitting money. That’s when a friend with a small local record label asked her to do a web comedy series. Sriram was so hungry for the opportunity to get back to her craft that she not only worked for free she also footed the bill.
 
“I maxed out a credit card feeding everyone and buying all the props, and I edited it on a pirated version of Final Cut Pro,” the 26-year-old said of the project. She built a set in her apartment and clearly had fun creating an eccentric cast of musical characters for the “Gowanus Music Lab Presents” webisodes.
 
And then, the project was scrapped. “I thought the whole thing was for nothing,” said Sriram. But the experience – which showed off the half-Indian, half-white actress’s newfound comedic chops and her ability to inhabit a variety of racially diverse characters – was her ticket. 
 
“Those tapes booked me my first TV job on South of Hell, ” she said of the 2015 supernatural horror WEtv series starring Mena Suvari. “People kept telling me, ‘You have a way different range than we had assumed.’ ” The irony that her ethnically mixed background is an advantage in her field, while still a disadvantage in the real world for so many who look like her is not lost on Sriram.
 
“It’s a fad. We’re in a day and age where being ethnically ambiguous – which is what I am – is a commodity,” she said.  “My goal and my purpose in the industry is to reclaim what the face of America really looks like and show that being other is just as American as being white.”
 
Last year Eisenberg tapped Sriram to play the girlfriend of The Big Bang Theory’s Kunal Nayyar in his dark comedy The Spoils about an obnoxious trust fund millennial and his snarky circle of friends.
 
“He is so funny, so smart,” said Sriram of Eisenburg. “And Scott Elliot is one of the most amazing directors. He’s similar to (Mason Gross associate head of acting) Kevin Kittle in his style. He really wants simple, authentic work.”
 
For Sriram, The Spoils was a turning point: It was the moment when her Mason Gross training came full circle. “A lot of the stuff we learned at Rutgers was marinating. It was in me, but I didn’t know how to use it fully,” she said. “The Spoils was the first time that the pieces were starting to come together for me.”
 
Then it was back to the small screen for a meaty three-episode role on “Billions,” which airs 10 p.m. Sundays on Showtime. Sriram plays Tara Mohr, the hard-partying, blackmailed employee of Giamatti’s U.S. attorney character. “TV is definitely something I’m still figuring out. It requires this super high level of relaxation and trust in yourself,” she said. “Paul made the room safe. He’s incredibly funny and light and really a joy to work with.”
 
Though Sriram has developed relationships with other advocates and mentors in the industry, such as Giamatti, she said she is indebted to her first cheerleaders: Kittle and Barbara Marchant, head of acting at Mason Gross.
 
“Kevin and Barbara are so incredible in the way that they teach. They just pour their lives into it,” she said. “They come and see my work still. The relationship was beyond just having a professor because their job is basically to carry us into a career. They were kind of like shepherds in that way.”
 
These days, Sriram is happy to report that she is fully supporting herself through her acting career. (“I also have a roommate and one bedroom, which helps,” she said.). She is grateful for the success she’s experienced. “I’m aware of how lucky I’ve been. But there’s still a long way I want to go.”

KAPOOR & SONS SETS 2016 RECORD

(NEW YORK – March 20, 2016)  “Kapoor & Sons – Since 1921” starring Sidharth Malhotra, Alia Bhatt, Fawad Khan, and Rishi Kapoor, has generated the biggest Bollywood opening weekend of the year in North America grossing an estimated $965,000 over the March 18 – 20 period. The acclaimed Karan Johar production from Fox Star Studios and Dharma Productions beat out the $878,000 debut weekend of Akshay Kumar’s Airlift which previously held the record for 2016.

The Times of India gave “Kapoor & Sons” four stars stating “Wicked, witty and wise, Kapoor & Sons does Karan Johar proud!”  Bollywood Hungama also gave a four-star review remarking “Kapoor & Sons makes for an excellent movie that you must watch with your entire family!”

Filmfare exclaimed “there’s no way on earth you should miss this movie,” while Firstpost said “this endearing flick gives ‘Neerja’ competition for Best Hindi film of 2016.”

Shakun Batra‘s first film was an unusual romance – one in which the boy and girl didn’t end up together. Four years later, Batra is back with “Kapoor and Sons“, a family drama with Sidharth Malhotra, Alia Bhatt and Fawad Khan in lead roles.

KAPOOR & SONS SETS 2016 RECORDHandout still from “Kapoor and Sons” Batra spoke to Reuters about the film, the influence of Woody Allen and Wes Anderson on his film-making and why he cast Rishi Kapoor, 63, as a 90-year-old. In a nutshell, some family films are better off as either tele-films or (finite) TV serials. Especially when the writing team and director cannot decide how much to keep real and life-like, and how much to keep overtly melodramatic.

This mix of old-world family drama told in a new-age way with contemporary and young nuances does hit the right chords off and on, but overall, the script changes graph jerkily in the second half just when we feel things are trekking back to course slowly for the harangued characters.

Of course, there is justification shown for things the way they happen, and we liked the way tragedy is graphically shown in a very ‘60s to ‘80s way yet through the cell phone, but overall, the sudden shift from the humor to the serious and even maudlin could have been better written and handled, or changed smoothly like a “Dil Chahta Hai.”

Briefly, the film’s story is about old man Kapoor, Dadaji (Rishi Kapoor), now 90, and in a hospital bed from a heart ailment, who is stubborn, naughty, endearingly child-like and emotionally strong all at the same time. He has two sons, and the second, Harsh (Rajat Kapoor) with whom he lives in Ooty, is the head of a dysfunctional family, complete with wife Sarita (Ratna Pathak Shah), who suspects his affair with ex-colleague Anu (Anuradha Chandan); his two sons Arjun (Sidharth Malhotra) and Rahul (Fawad Khan), both aspiring authors working abroad, with Rahul doing well, and Arjun always considered the un-focused loser; and of course Harsh himself.

The outsider coming into their life is Tia (Alia Bhatt), who has lost her parents in an accident, and is a seemingly happy-go-lucky lass. Both brothers encounter her separately, and Arjun suspects Rahul of also being in love with her like he is.

A welcome home-cum-90th birthday party is held by the family for Dadaji when he returns home from the hospital, but, thanks to the family’s basic temperament, the celebrations go bust. Later, all that the old man wants before he dies is a family photograph with everyone, including the other son and his normal family, who soon visit him. But with each person from Harsh’s family having either a skeleton in their closet or a grudge, will that ever happen?

Though not too long, the film could have still been sharper, more concise and not so retro whenever it decides to suddenly veer towards melodrama, flip-flopping between real and ‘filmi,’ and being unnecessarily dark in its cinematography — Ooty never looked so unappetizing! The music, shoddily used and content-wise not up to the mark, fails to boost the movie. The background score is just about serviceable.

The dialogues do work most of the time. But when financial problems are given so much prominence in the beginning (as one of the root causes of conflict) and then suddenly disappear, and the family seems to be having a luxurious lifestyle, we wonder what the scriptwriter was (not) thinking. Also, Arjun buying property was something vague too, again disposed of at convenience.

Shakun Batra scores far better vis-à-vis his debut film “Ek Main Aur Ekk Tu” and handles the emotions well in most sequences, but, as we said, the totality does not add up. He extracts wonderful performances, in particular from Rishi Kapoor with his spontaneous one-liners, Fawad Khan and Ratna Pathak-Shah. Bhatt is good but scores over everyone else in the cast in her breakdown sequence — the build-up and her expressions are incredibly heart-tugging. The rest of the cast does a good job, though Malhotra has only a sketchy role.

Open Mosque Day at the Islamic Center of Naperville – a Celebration of Unity

Chicago IL: The Islamic Center of Naperville (ICN) organized an “Open Mosque Day” on March 13th, 2016 at their center on Ogden Avenue where they opened their doors to people of different faiths to visit and build friendships in an effort to promote harmony and better understanding. The event attracted a staggering 1,000 people representing various segments of the local community.

Steve Chirico, Mayor of Naperville, who delivered a heartwarming speech on the occasion, said that the Open Mosque Day is an important step in the direction of strengthening bonds among different communities. He stated that the event was a rich tribute to the diversity of Naperville. “The event, which involved my debut visit to a mosque, was a first-of-its-kind experience of my life”, he added.

Krishna Bansal, Chairman, Indian Community Outreach, the Office of the Naperville Mayor, said that an event like the Open Mosque Day should not be a one-shot affair. He called for a large number of similar events, on a regular basis, by people belonging to different religions.

Open Mosque Day at the Islamic Center of Naperville – a Celebration of UnityShoaib Khadri, President, ICN said that the event was greatly instrumental in fostering direct and open communication between individuals, opening opportunities for dialogue between faith leaders and their communities, and dispelling misinformation on Islam by explaining the true teachings of the faith.

Aadil Farid, Former President of the ICN said that the core values of the ICN are: Tolerance, Justice, Peace, and Progress for all. “The event was aimed at putting into practice these noble values”, he added. “The Open Mosque Day went a long way in strengthening unity among different communities living in the Naperville area. It was truly a celebration of unity among neighbors”, said Yousuf Siddiqui, Chair of ICN’s Outreach Committee.

The Religious Director, referred to as the Imam of ICN, Shaykh Rizwan Ali had a continuous flow of visitors at his “Meet the Imam” booth asking him questions on Islam’s position on terrorism, female oppression, Sharia law, interfaith marriage, dress code, halal practices and much more. The interesting deliberations on these issues helped convey an evidence-based and authentic message about Islam and its followers. “The conversation really made every one mighty enlightened”, he added. He was joined by Shaykh Omar Hedroug, the young and enthusiastic Youth Director of ICN who is also a trained religious scholar.

Open Mosque Day at the Islamic Center of Naperville – a Celebration of UnityThe female guests enjoyed getting beautiful designs of henna on their hands (a natural plant-based temporary tattoo) – very popular feature of the event. They had an opportunity to try on the hijab (the Islamic head covering scarf) and see how they looked in a mirror that was provided and took pictures. Everybody who tried the hijab got to take it home as a souvenir.

A feature that the guests found really interesting was watching the call for the afternoon congregational prayer. The guests observed the subsequent prayer in pin drop silence. Beautiful Qu’ran recitation and informative video clips added to the spiritual quotient of the event.

Various members of the ICN community welcomed the guests with the Registration booth managed by the young Girl Scouts of the Islamic Center. There were regular batches of tours of the facility where the guests were shown the prayer halls with the beautiful Turkish carpets and classrooms.

The booth for “Islam, Quran, and Science” was an amazing experience for the visitors as they learned about the cohesion and consistency in scientific knowledge and Islamic teachings. Some of the scientific facts which have been discovered recently, but were mentioned in the Qur’an 1400+ years ago, captured their imagination.

The booth for “Women’s Rights” was very popular with people asking many questions on the status and rights of women. The volunteers who managed the booth articulately explained that some of the rights accorded to women 1400 years ago, according to the teachings of Islam, were not established in various other civilizations until much later.

There was a booth dedicated to the Qur’an that explained the history and content of the book that Muslims believe was the divine revelation from God. There were many questions about the life of the Prophet Mohammed (PBUH) which were addressed in a separate booth dedicated to the last and final messenger of the Islamic faith.

The visitors found the booth on Islamic art and artifacts very interesting. It was a huge attraction as various cultural items were on display. Many guests were walking around with their names written in Arabic on tent cards which they got at “Islamic Calligraphy” booth. Mayor Chirico was truly amazed at the beauty of Arabic calligraphy and took home a name card with his name beautifully inscribed in Arabic as well.

The booth for “Islamophobia and Extremism” expectedly attracted a lot of visitors with a lot of recent media coverage on the topic. The volunteers explained the concepts of peace, justice and tolerance that are an integral part of the teachings of Islam and that any act of aggression against innocent people was clearly forbidden in Islam showing evidence from the Qur’an and the teachings of the Prophet Mohammed (PBUH). They went on to explain that an overwhelming majority of the 1.6 billion Muslims across the world, including the top Islamic scholars around the world, have strongly condemned all forms of terrorism and extremism.

The greatest attraction was the food – with a wide range of delicious items of ethnic cuisine from Mediterranean to South Asian.  The guests enjoyed the hospitality of the Islamic Center where the food trays were always kept filled for multiple helpings.

Dallas Philanthropists Host Fundraising Event to Provide Microloans for Female Entrepreneurs in India

(Dallas, Texas – March 17, 2016) Five Dallas-based women have joined forces to create an organization aimed at empowering and mobilizing less fortunate women entrepreneurs on the international level. Called “Mahila,” which is a Hindi word that means “woman,” the group consists of powerful female community leaders: attorney Bina Palnitkar Patel, architect Purva Jain, media and lifestyle guru Priya Bhola Rathod, cultural advocate Preeta Monga and social entrepreneur Ami Doshi.

“Mahila, at its core, is an organization formed by women for women,” said Bhola Rathod. “Our goal is to best share our strength with underprivileged women to bring about meaningful, lasting change. Empowering ONE woman means impacting her family, her society and, ultimately, her world.”

The organization is hosting its inaugural event on April 7th to raise funds for struggling, low-income women living and working in India by supporting Milaap USA’s microloan program. Milaap USA’s mission is to promote financial inclusion for individuals and families through access to low cost funds in the following sectors: enterprise development, clean energy, water and sanitation, education and vocational training and healthcare. One hundred percent of the proceeds raised from this event will go directly towards Milaap’s work in India, and every year Mahila will choose a different women’s organization to support through fundraising.

“We believe philanthropy is providing a ‘hand-up versus a hand-out,’” said Doshi, Founder of Milaap USA. “By empowering hundreds of thousands of India’s working poor to gain financial stability for themselves, we are able to tackle one of India’s most challenging causes of poverty – financial exclusion.”

WHO: Mahila, “Open Doors,” inaugural fundraising event for Milaap USA is scheduled for Thursday, April 7 at DEC on Dragon, 1414 Dragon Street, Dallas, TX 75207. Tickets to the event can be purchased at: http://www.mahiladallas.org/tickets

Maha Shivaratri – The Grand Festival of Lord Shiva at Hari OM Mandir

Chicago IL: On Monday, March 7th, 2016, devotees celebrated the festival of Maha Shivaratri, in the Hari Om Mandir, with great joy and enthusiasm. Monday, is the day of Lord Shiva, and every week, several devotees visit the temple to offer Water and Milk to the Shiva Lingam. However, this Monday, the auspicious 7th of March was SPECIAL!!! This was the Day of Lord Shiva’s wedding with Maa Gauri (Parvati), popularly called the Maha Shivaratri, when people observe fast and perform special Poojas.

As per the Hindu tradition, devotees bathe the Shiva Lingam with Holy Water, Milk, Honey and offer Chandan, Bel Patra amidst chanting of prayers, mantras and the resonating sound of Om Nama Shivaya….called the “Rudra Abhishek”. Living up to the tradition, thousands of devotees came to the Hari Om Mandir to perform the rituals and sing the glory of Lord Shiva.

For the convenience of the people, the Temple authorities had made special arrangements to perform these Poojas at two stations. The Mandir Priest, Pandit Dinesh Kumar recited the holy Mantras and helped devotees to perform the special “Rudrsabhishek Pooja” at the regular Shiv Darbar, which is also open every Monday. Another station was set up with a huge Brass Statue of Lord Shiva, the Shivling & Nandi raised on a tall pedestal, shining bright amidst lights, exhibiting HIS Glory, Charm and Might. The whole ambience of this set up reminded people of the Heavenly Abode of Shiva on the Kailash Parbat!!! The Snakes, the Rudraksh mala, the half Chandrama, the Ganga on Shiva’s forehead, the Trishul, the Damrus…all enhanced the Divine environment of the Mandir.

This year, was a record breaking attendance at the HOM on this occasion….almost 3000 people came to the temple to do the Pooja. People started coming in as early as 7.30am, and by the evening, long unending lines were seen at both the stations. Devotees waited patiently in que for their turn to do the Rudra Abhishek and seek blessings from their Lord Shiva. A special Bhajan Sandhya was organized in the evening, where two well-known singers of the Midwest region: Padmini and Uma Nath mesmerized the audiences with their soulful Bhajans. As the melodious “Satyam Shivam Sundaram” echoed in the hall, the entire congregation seemed to have transformed into a Trance! People were overwhelmed with joy and started dancing. Others who joined the musical group included Sukaran Atwal, Vijay Ghai, Subhash Sharma, Madhu Salwan, Sonia and Chawla on the drum/Dholak from the DJ Group Dhamaka.

The President of the Temple EB, Mr. Vipan Wadhera took a moment to thank ALL his team members and the Volunteers who had worked hard to make appropriate arrangements for this day. Jeetu Patel (Incharge Special Events) along with his team Garima, Jayanthi and Anita Rawal decorated the Mandir for the festival. Mr. Anil Saxena, Ramesh Bhardwaj and their team helped to manage the traffic and parking on this busy evening. Thanks to all: Manager Hardev & Pushpa Raj, Gopal & Sadhna Tiwari, Amar & Usha Singla, Shubh Sharma, Sham Taxali, Ram Verma, Ravi Kalia, Brij Sharma, Satpal Salwan & Ayodhia Salwan, who helped in managing the heavy inflow of devotees and provided their services in different areas. Last but not the least, a big thank you to the Priest, Pandit Dinesh Kumar, who recited the Shiv Mantras nonstop, all day, did Poojas and helped the Bhakt Jan who came to the temple, to seek solace and peace in the lap of their Lord Shiva on this pious day of Maha Shivaratri.

Maha Sivarathri Cultural Celebrations Held At Balaji Temple

Chicago IL: On the auspicious occasion of Maha Sivarathri, Sri Venkateswara Swami (Balaji) Temple in Aurora, IL, organized a devotion filled cultural program on Saturday, March 5th in the temple auditorium.  Maha Sivarathri is one of the most important religious festivals for those who follow Sanatana dharma.  This is the time that Lord Siva protected the world by drinking the poison that arose from the churning of the great sea by devas and asuras.  This is the time, in gratitude, Hindus fast, chant, pray, stay awake all night and perform abhishekams with great devotion.

“Om Namah Shivayah” was a unique program consisting of chanting of slokas, classical music and dance performances by featured artists, professional teachers of Chicagoland and their senior students. The classical Indian dance forms of Bharatanatyam, Kuchipudi and Odissi have been presented in the Veluchamy auditorium.

The event began with a fervent invocation – Lingashtakam, Ananda Natamaduvar and Siva Panchakshari Stotram by young students of Smt. Devaki Janakiraman of Noopura Dance Academy. Further setting the devotional mood, students of Smt. Rama Gurupalli of Rama Advanced Music Academy rendered Sambhomahadeva, Mamavasadajanani and Mahaganapatim and students of Smt. Maragatham Mani of Ganalahari School of Music and Culture rendered Bhajans on Lord Siva.

The first of four featured presentations was next, with an exquisite Bharatanatyam performance by Ms. Swetha Ravishankar from Portland, Oregon.   With grace and expertise, she explored the romantic love of mother Parvathi for Lord Siva through Shir Dandayudapani Pillai’s composition and Theruvil Vaarano.  She also presented the item Mallari.

Maha Sivarathri Cultural Celebrations Held At Balaji TempleSoorya Dance School under the artistic director Jinoo Varghese presented Ardhanareeswara, a beautiful ragamalika, depicting the union of Lord Siva and Mother Parvathi.  Mudra Dance Academy students, and artistic Director Kshama Shah gave an energetic and inspiring performance of Siva stuti and Natarja Natanam, with beautiful Siva costumes.  Students of Smt. Mahalakshmi Varadhan of Noopura Dance Academy presented Bho Shambho, Nataraja Anjali and Ardhanarishwara Stuthi, which was well received.

The second featured Performance was an enthralling presentation of Bharatanatyam by Ms. Madhavi Reddi of Washington DC.  With finesse and passion she presented beautifully choreographed pieces – Siddi Vinayakam, Adidum Arase and Shankara Shrigiri.

Sushmita Arunkumar of Nrithyanjali School of Dance gave a thrilling presentation of the thunderous descent of river Ganga from her celestial world on to the earth and how Lord Siva effortlessly contains her in his locks, in Thunga tarange gange.  Her students presented Natamadum Nadanadi with ease.

The third featured presentation was a vibrant Kuchipudi performace by Ms Aparna Satheesan, artistic director of Samyoga from Indiana.  With beautiful expression and precise foot work, she presented Ganesha Pravesha Daravu and Ganapathy Kauthuvam in praise of Lord Ganesha and Shiva stuthi where she explored the stories of Markandeya, and Tripurasura and the swallowing of halahala by Lord Siva.

Dr. Hemalatha Burra a Sanskrit scholar and a retired professor of Sri Satya Sai University, India, made a unique sloka presentation.  While her young students rendered Ardhanareeswara stortram and Sivatandava stotram with accurate pronunciation, amazing discipline and musical precision, a group of ladies chanted beautifully Adi Sankara’s Soundaryalahari with English commentary.

The fourth and final featured presentation was by Sri Pabitra Pradhan’s Odissi dance.  His grace of movement, energetic foot work, astounding sense of balance as he rendered Sivapanchaka and Pancha bhuta captivated the audience.

Students of Smt. Sowmya Kumaran of Nrithyasangeeth presented Kapalini beautifully and was well appreciated.  Guru Anupama Rajesh, artistic director of Nrithya Geethanjali Dance Academy, along with her students presented Deva Stuthi, and Idadu padam with great ease and beauty.  A special mention of the item Andanal Ini varumo by Pravalika Bhagavatula, a special needs child, was appreciated by one and all.  This was followed by the concluding presentation of Guru Poonam Mahesh of Nrityanant Performing Arts, and her students show casing Siva kirtanam and Sambho stuti. The beautifully coordinated costumes were pleasing to the eye and the dance was enthralling.

This Sivaratri 2016 event was coordinated by the Balaji temple cultural team.  The emcees – Janaki Madugula and Saroja Ravi were marvelous at their job and were successful in keeping the interest of the audience sustained.  Sri Azad Sunkavalli and Sri Kumar handled the audio. Welcome words and vote of thanks were given by Viji Susarla, co-chair of the cultural committee.

ATA Day Gala held as a grand precursor for ATA Convention

Chicago IL: American Telugu Association [ATA] hosted a grand ATA Day Gala pervaded by palpable excitement and soaring spirits permeating the evening  with overflowing guests packed to the capacity at the grand ballroom in Sheraton Hotel in Lisle, Illinois on Saturday, February 27, 2016. This ATA Day gala was held as a reaffirming precursor leading up to the magnificent milestone silver jubilee ATA Convention to be held in July 1-3, 2016 at Rosemont Convention Center in Chicago, IL.

The highlight of the ATA DAY gala was the huge haul of overflowing donations of over $812,000 from inspired donors touching a groundbreaking milestone to help host grand ATA Convention on an unparalleled scale and magnitude.  The glittering evening   was replete with music, dance, singing enhanced by the presence of prominent Tollywood/Bollywood actress Tapsee Pannu. The central objective of the evening gala was eloquently articulated to inspire Telugu families all across to converge for the milestone 25-years ATA Convention in Chicago and make it a runaway success.  The evening attracted the attendance of prominent ATA pioneering, intermediary and contemporary leaders from all across the country with Democratic front runner for the United States Congress Raja Krishnamoorthi stepping in as an honored guest and spelled out his robust support to the large growing constituency of Telugu people and complimented them for their soaring success in America.

ATA Day Gala held as a grand precursor for ATA ConventionAfter the lighting of the auspicious lamp by prominent ATA leaders, there was a presentation of an artistically choreographed invocation dance by young children which set the grand ATA Day gala in motion with series of inspiring remarks each convincingly motivating to host one of the most memorable conventions in the annals of the history of American Telugu Association.

ATA Silver Jubilee Convention Convener Chandrasekhar Reddy Palvai welcoming the guests earlier ardently thanked for their spirited pledge of participation in supporting ATA Convention with their resource and urged each Telugu family to be a valued partner in coming together to host the most memorable silver jubilee convention in ATA’s history. Chandrasekhar Reddy Palvai lasted on the podium passionately beseeching the potential donors to rise up to donate generously and identifying the donors and acknowledging them for their support.

Hanumanth Reddy, ATA Founder visibly excited at the unprecedented gathering and the groundswell support from all corners of the country thanked the guests for their proactive support.

ATA Day Gala held as a grand precursor for ATA ConventionPresiding over the fundraising facet, KK Reddy, Convention Director in his persuasive eloquence inspired the guests to step forward to donate.  KK Reddy appealed to the better angels of the spirit of altruism seeking support to help host magnificent ATA convention and the charitable causes ATA is so passionately espouses.  KK Reddy continued to emphasize on the significance of financial partnership from the individuals, organizations and corporations in building a sound financial foundations to unveil a spectacular ATA convention and, in addition, also to build enduring fiscal reserves for ATA’s humanitarian mission projects.

Kamala Chimata, Convention Coordinator spelled out the goals of the convention. Convention Co-Convener Krishna Mushyam conducted the program event with his interspersing introductions; while Jagan Bukkaraju, Convention Co-Convener, Radhakrishna Reddy, Dr. Meher Medavaram Venkat Tudi, Ramana Abbaraju, Uma Katki, Sujatha Appalaneni, Karumuri brothers rendered valuable assistance in conducting program management.  Ramesh Garapaty introduced the cultural programs.

Keerthi Kumar Ravoori made a rousing summation on the grand plans being undertaken to host a massive convention. Among the donors, Srinivas Reddy Sarikonda, Satish Velpuru emerged as one of the highest donors. President-elect Karunakar Asireddy, who spoke on the occasion along with Anil Bodireddy represented a strong contingent of Atlanta ATA team of eight. Some of the key ATA members at the gala include Dr. Murthy Chimata, Yedavalli Ramanamurthy, Ramesh Tummuru, Amar Nettem, Venu & Ramana Abbaraju, venkat Tudi.

Tollywood/Bollywood actress: Taapsee Pannu in her remarks made a stirring pitch for ATA convention and laid- out the significance of paying back to the community, society and the country through financial resources. Actress Tapsee Pannu paid glowing tributes to ATA leaders for their steadfast devotion in promoting humanitarian causes.  To the great amusement of the guests, actress: Taapsee performed an impromptu dance which received sustained applause and cheering.

Some of the convention committee chairs who attended include Srinivas Pedamallu, Mohan Manne, Dr Prakasam Tata, Mani Tellapragada, Usha Pariti, Prasuna Vootkur, Sundar Dittakavi, Raghav Jatla, Sujatha Appalaneni, Satish Chilla, Govind Vundru, Dr. Vijaya Susarla, Srinivas Reddy, Karunakar Reddy Doddam, Jayadev Mattupalli, Sarada Mettupalli, Chalama Reddy Bandaru, Sai Yendamuri, Mohan Kakarlapudi, Srinivas Voruganti, Dr. Viswanatham Susarla, Mahidhar  Musukula, Krishna Rangaraju, Ramesh Poola, Hari Raini, Maruti Ram Gudavalli, Dr. Uma katiki , Bhanu Swargam, Saipriya Reddy, TanviShri Jatla, Harsha Vardhan Reddy, Sarath Yettapu and Saimithra Reddy

Vindya of MAA TV anchored the program; while Rahul Sipligunj crooned late into the night to the captive enthralled audience. ATA hosted a grand evening dinner arranged by Tamarind Restaurant. For more information, please visit ATA website:www.ataworld.org

Memoir by Late Stanford Neurosurgeon Paul Kalanathi Released Posthumously

In May of 2013, the Stanford University neurosurgical resident Paul Kalanithi was diagnosed with Stage IV metastatic lung cancer. He was thirty-six years old. In his two remaining years—he died in March of 2015—he continued his medical training, became the father to a baby girl, and wrote beautifully about his experience facing mortality as a doctor and a patient. In this excerpt from his posthumously published memoir, “When Breath Becomes Air,” which is out on January 12th, from Random House, Kalanithi writes about his last day practicing medicine.

Dr. Paul Kalanithi was preparing to wrap up his medical residency in neurosurgery when, in 2013, a CT scan revealed tumors throughout his body. He had stage 4 lung cancer. In his last two years of life, he continued caring for patients. He and his wife became parents. And Kalanithi, a gifted writer, wrote a book, When Breath Becomes Air, a reflection on being a doctor with a terminal illness.

He died March 9, 2015. He was 37 years old.

His widow, Dr. Lucy Kalanithi, is on a book tour for When Breath Becomes Air, which has resonated with a wide audience.

“It’s really kind of a bittersweet process, as you can imagine, quite bitter and quite sweet,” she tells NPR’s David Greene. “Paul died nearly 11 months ago, but being able to talk about how I feel and remember Paul is actually very healing for me. So it’s actually kind of wonderful at the same time.”

In her interview on Morning Edition, she reads excerpts from When Breath Becomes Air and talks about her late husband’s life.

On the cancer spreading to his brain and having a neurological impact

Would you trade your ability to speak for another five months of life, or what type of neurologic devastation would make it more reasonable to stop living than to be alive? And these are not theoretical questions in the neurosurgical context. …

Yeah, that was very hard. This whole second half of the book is Paul thinking about how to grapple, in a very real way, with his own mortality. And then when he was diagnosed with a form of metastatic brain cancer called leptomeningeal disease — it’s essentially like tumors are coating your brain and your spinal cord, and it also holds the prospect of seizures or trouble speaking, trouble thinking. So, it was so intense to get this diagnosis on top of everything else that meant that his ability to participate in all of the things that were bringing him meaning — particularly writing this book and being together with our daughter and our family — was really devastating.

On their daughter, Elizabeth Acadia Kalanithi

He was just thrilled to be a dad, and just the fact of having this infant just breathed this unbelievable life into our house. He was the one who initially had the strong instinct to have a child despite his illness. … I said to Paul, “Don’t you think that saying goodbye to a child would make your death more painful?” And he said, “Wouldn’t it be great if it did?” And what he meant by that was the joy and meaning of having a new family member is so great that wouldn’t it be great if that made it even more painful?

On whether Paul’s illness and death gave him the opportunity to help others through similar journeys

Yeah, it’s sort of bringing tears to my eyes … because he makes this joke in the book where he says something like, “Wouldn’t a terminal illness be the perfect gift to this young man who hoped to grasp mortality in a kind of intellectual sense?” Those questions became not at all theoretical. Paul really had to draw on all these things that he had been developing his whole life — he really returned to literature to cope, he fell back on his training as a physician. … What a funny confluence of factors that would prepare a young person to face this in a particular way despite looking at the fiery light of illness in real time.

He died in March 2015 and 10 months later his book was published in the US, where it went straight to No 1 in the New York Times bestseller list. It is now out in the UK. Lucy Kalanithi, a doctor and academic, is his widow. LOK

When Breath Becomes Air by Paul Kalanithi review – how to live, by a doctor who died aged 37

This fast-selling memoir by an idealist neurosurgeon facing an early death from cancer gains power and poignancy from its detailed descriptions and reflections on mortality

Has the book’s success surprised you?
It’s exceeded our wildest expectations. A month or so before it was published it was getting some critical acclaim but the big question was whether people would actually want to read a book about dying written by a man who had recently died. We weren’t sure. But it turns out they do. I think it is because the book is about living as well as dying. And although it is about what happened to Paul it is also about a universal experience – and it is so beautifully expressed. That’s what people are responding to and holding on to.

How does it feel for you to see him so celebrated after – and because of – his death?
Bittersweet is a vast understatement. But it is fantastic to watch him developing a legacy through the positive reaction. It is very meaningful to me. It’s just under a year since he died and it feels like no time at all: I still want to be thinking about Paul and talking about Paul, and having the opportunity to remember him in a communal way rather than in a lonely way is very helpful.

How would he have felt about the impact of the book?
I think he would have been totally thrilled. His eyes would have been sparkling. He would have been so excited to be part of the conversation around the book because he was so interested in death and mortality.

How did you feel about him writing about your marital problems in the book?
The bottom line is that I felt fine about it. I was surprised at first that he did it because Paul was a relatively private person and I thought of asking him to take it out but then I thought, no, it’s part of the story and it’s important to be authentic. People respond to authenticity and I felt like, OK, go ahead and share it. Now I feel glad it’s in there. It feels real.

There’s a heartbreaking irony in the way his cancer drew you back together and saved your marriage…
I agree. But I think now that it was good timing because our problems came to a head and got out on the table right before he was diagnosed. I often wonder what would have happened if we hadn’t confronted our troubles when we did. As it was, we regained hope in our relationship and started to draw back together literally a week before he found out he had cancer. I think this meant we were in a stronger position to deal with it.

How easy was it to decide to have a baby when you knew he might not live long enough to be a father?
Not at all easy. It was really very considered, as you can imagine. We certainly had our eyes wide open in that we knew it was likely that he wouldn’t live to see her grow up and I would go on to be a solo parent after he died. We first talked about it as soon as he was diagnosed but for a few weeks we were really unsure. We both had the instinct to do it but were both worried about the implications for the other one. I feared it might make his death so much more painful if he had to say goodbye to a child. But he said: “Well, wouldn’t it be great if it did?” His view was that life wasn’t about avoiding suffering, it’s about making meaning. It was obviously a big risk to have a child, to invite more uncertainty and possible pain in to our lives, but it was the best decision I ever made.

I knew that if Paul himself could have described the way he died then he would have done

Did you understand Paul’s decision to push himself back into work to finish his residency after his first bout of lung cancer?
I did understand – because of knowing him the way I did. Not everybody would go back to work in his situation, many people wouldn’t. Everyone has different priorities and Paul endured a certain amount of physical suffering in order to work as a neurosurgeon and to write the book. But he was a natural learner, very driven and a deeply curious, impassioned person. Going back to the operating theatre underscored how much his work was a part of who he was.

Paul’s faith in God has surprised some reviewers. It is rare in a scientist. Do you share it?
He was a top scientist but empirical research didn’t explain for him what it meant to be human. One time I asked him straight out, “Do you believe in God?” and he answered that he thought just as important a question was “Do you believe in love?”, to which his reply would be yes. I thought that was really striking. I would say the same thing.

Writing the epilogue for the book must have been hard for you. How did you approach it?
The hard part was that I have never thought of myself as a writer at all. I’m a doctor: I can write a medical chart and express information. But I’ve never felt compelled to write an essay or anything longer. So when Paul’s editor asked me if I would consider writing an epilogue I was shocked. But I recognised that the story was unfinished and I knew that if Paul himself could have described the way he died then he would have done. I wrote it two months after he died, which was a very raw time and it was actually really helpful and I was so glad to have that opportunity.

Paul’s last paragraph is a beautiful account of the joy your daughter Cady brought him in his final months. What will you tell her about him?
I’ll tell her lots of things but in a sense the book will tell her all she needs to know. Writing it was a way for him to communicate with her after his death. Through reading it and through things he left for her that I am keeping she will understand how much she was loved by him.

What does the future hold for you and Cady?
People keep asking me, “Hey, are you going to stay in your house?” Well, I’ve made a decision not to make any decisions for at least two years. Our house is where Paul and I lived, then where the three of us briefly lived and now it is where Cady and I live. For me it’s now about reforming the space so I can move forward as a doctor, a widow and a mom. I’ve kept a lot of Paul’s things, but a few months ago I painted all the walls white and remade the bookshelves so that he doesn’t have his own bookcase any more, so I am slowly changing things.

At the moment of diagnosis Paul said he hoped I would get remarried. He meant it really lovingly but it was so shocking to me at the time. Now I feel that even if I do ever get remarried I am positive I will love Paul for my entire life. He will stretch into my past and into my future.

Sikh Religious Society Hosts Civic Engagement and Voter’s Education Forum

Palatine, IL: Sikh Religious Society hosted a Civic Engagement and Voter’s Education Forum presented by speakers Reema Kapur and Zahra Saylawala from South Asian American Policy & Research Institute (SAAPRI) and Steve Hosik Moon from Asian Americans Advancing Justice – Chicago on February 21, 2016, at Sikh Gurudwara in Palatine Illinois. Rajinder Singh Mago, Public and Media Relations Coordinator organized the event for the Sikh Society.

The speakers in the forum explained the importance of civic engagement, getting registered to vote and exercising their right to vote by actually casting their ballot. Also, the speakers spoke about the importance of attendees encouraging and mobilizing others in the Asian American community to get the vote out.

The presentation included specific examples backed by statistical data hitting the point home that every vote does count especially where many tight races are decided with a minuscule margin of few hundred votes.

“We need to get inspiration from the Indo-Canadian community which has fared extremely well in the recent Canadian elections where several cabinet ministers and even the federal defense minister appointed are Sikh Indo-Canadians,” said Rajinder Singh Mago, “our community is also encouraged to work as paid poll workers, election judges, or volunteer in election campaigns,” he added.

A display table was also setup in the lobby with pertinent literature to educate the community members. The Asian American community’s population growth rate is such that by the year 2050 the Asian American community is expected to be the leading minority voting block in the U.S.

For the 2016 general and primary elections, the South Asian American Policy and Research Institute (SAAPRI) and Asian Americans Advancing Justice | Chicago (Advancing Justice | Chicago) will be partnering to mobilize the South Asian community to get out the vote.

The goal is to increase voting rates among South Asians in Illinois, particularly the greater Chicagoland area. Together, SAAPRI and Advancing Justice | Chicago will host forums for community discussion about the importance of exercising the right to vote.

“The South Asian community needs to respond to the current climate of anti-immigrant rhetoric, xenophobia and Islamaphobia with political action and power,” said Reema Kapur, Executive Director of SAAPRI. “We encourage South Asian community leaders to join our initiative to empower the community.”

There are over 242,000 South Asians living in Illinois, made up of people born abroad or in the United States and descending from India, Pakistan, Bangladesh, Sri Lanka, Nepal, or Bhutan. Among South Asians in Illinois, 67% are U.S. citizens and therefore eligible to register and vote.

The next election in Illinois will take place on Tuesday, March 15, 2016 where voters will select Democratic and Republican Party nominees for President, Senate, and Congress, as well as the Illinois General Assembly and local races. The general election will be held on November 8, 2016.

Exercise and Meditation – Together – Help Beat Depression, Rutgers Study Finds

Meditation and aerobic exercise done together helps reduce depression, according to a new Rutgers study. The study, published in Translational Psychiatry this month, found that the mind and body combination – done twice a week for only two months – reduced the symptoms for a group of students by 40 percent.

“We are excited by the findings because we saw such a meaningful improvement in both clinically depressed and non-depressed students,” says Brandon Alderman, lead author of the research study. “It is the first time that both of these two behavioral therapies have been looked at together for dealing with depression.”

Alderman, assistant professor in the Department of Exercise Science and Sports Studies, and Tracey Shors, professor in the Department of Psychology and Center for Collaborative Neuroscience, both in the School of Arts and Sciences, discovered that a combination of mental and physical training (MAP) enabled students with major depressive disorder not to let problems or negative thoughts overwhelm them.

“Scientists have known for a while that both of these activities alone can help with depression,” says Shors. “But this study suggests that when done together, there is a striking improvement in depressive symptoms along with increases in synchronized brain activity.”

The men and women in the Rutgers study who completed the eight-week program – 22 suffering with depression and 30 mentally healthy students  –  reported fewer depressive symptoms and said they did not spend as much time worrying about negative situations taking place in their lives as they did before the study began.

This group also provided MAP training to young mothers who had been homeless but were living at a residential treatment facility when they began the study. The women involved in the research exhibited severe depressive symptoms and elevated anxiety levels at the beginning. But at the end of the eight weeks, they too, reported that their depression and anxiety had eased, they felt more motivated, and they were able to focus more positively on their lives.

Depression – a debilitating disorder that affects nearly one in five Americans sometime in their life – often occurs in adolescence or young adulthood. Until recently, Rutgers scientists say, the most common treatment for depression has been psychotropic medications that influence brain chemicals and regulate emotions and thought patterns along with talk therapy that can work but takes considerable time and commitment on the part of the patient.

Rutgers researchers say those who participated in the study began with 30 minutes of focused attention meditation followed by 30 minutes of aerobic exercise. They were told that if their thoughts drifted to the past or the future they should refocus on their breathing – enabling those with depression to accept moment-to-moment changes in attention.

Shors, who studies the production of new brain cells in the hippocampus – the portion of the brain known to be necessary for some types of new learning – says even though neurogenesis cannot be monitored in humans, scientists have shown in animal models that aerobic exercise increases the number of new neurons and effortful learning keeps a significant number of those cells alive.

The idea for the human intervention came from her laboratory studies, she says, with the main goal of helping individuals acquire new skills so that they can learn to recover from stressful life events.  By learning to focus their attention and exercise, people who are fighting depression can acquire new cognitive skills that can help them process information and reduce the overwhelming recollection of memories from the past, Shors says.

“We know these therapies can be practiced over a lifetime and that they will be effective in improving mental and cognitive health,” says Alderman. “The good news is that this intervention can be practiced by anyone at any time and at no cost.”

15% of American Adults Have Used Online Dating Sites or Mobile Dating Apps

Throughout human history, people have sought assistance from others in meeting romantic partners – and Americans today are increasingly looking for love online by enlisting the services of online dating sites and a new generation of mobile dating apps. A national survey by Pew Research Center, conducted June 10-July 12, 2015, among 2,001 adults, finds that:

12% of American adults have ever used an online dating site, up slightly from 9% in early 2013.

9% of American adults have ever used a dating app on their cellphone. The share of Americans who use dating apps has increased threefold since early 2013 – at that point just 3% of Americans had used these apps.

Taken together, a total of 15% of American adults now report that they have used online dating sites and/or mobile dating apps, up from the 11% who reported doing so in early 2013.

This growth has been especially pronounced for two groups who have historically not used online dating at particularly high levels – the youngest adults, as well as those in their late 50s and early 60s.

The share of 18- to 24-year-olds who report having used online dating has nearly tripled in the last two years. Today 27% of these young adults report that they have done so, up from just 10% in early 2013. Meanwhile, the share of 55- to 64-year-olds who use online dating has doubled over the same time period (from 6% in 2013 to 12% in 2015).

For young adults in particular, this overall increase in online dating usage has been accompanied by a dramatic increase in the use of mobile dating apps. Fully 22% of 18- to 24-year-olds now report using mobile dating apps, a more than fourfold increase from the 5% who reported using dating apps in 2013. These young adults are now more likely than any other age group to use mobile dating apps.

41% of Americans know someone who uses online dating; 29% know someone who has met a spouse or long-term partner via online dating. Although 15% of Americans have used online dating themselves, a larger share report that they are familiar with online dating from the experiences of people they know. Some 41% of American adults say they know someone who uses online dating, while 29% indicate they know someone who has married or entered into a long-term partnership with someone they met via online dating.

As was the case in previous Pew Research Center surveys of online dating, college graduates and the relatively affluent are especially likely to know people who use online dating or to know people who have entered into a relationship that began online. Nearly six-in-ten college graduates (58%) know someone who uses online dating, and nearly half (46%) know someone who has entered into a marriage or long-term partnership with someone they met via online dating. By comparison, just 25% of those with a high school diploma or less know someone who uses online dating – and just 18% know someone who has entered into a long-term relationship with someone they met this way.

80% of Americans who have used online dating agree that online dating is a good way to meet people. 62% agree that online dating allows people to find a better match, because they can get to know a lot more people. n61% agree that online dating is easier and more efficient than other ways of meeting people. On the other hand, a substantial minority of these users agree that meeting people online can have potential negative consequences, stating that online dating is more dangerous than other ways of meeting people. Some 53% of women who have used online dating agree that it is more dangerous than other ways of meeting people, substantially higher than the 38% of male online daters who agree with this statement.

Second Annual Youth Career Planning Seminar

Chicago IL: “The world of work has been undergoing a metamorphosis, on account of the surging tide of liberalization, privatization, and globalization. As a result, existing careers are losing their sheen and new careers are cropping up, at a mind-boggling pace. This calls for systematic, scientific, and objective career planning by youth in order to ensure that the careers that they choose are in line with these global trends”, said Hitesh Gandhi, Executive Vice President, Gandhi Samaj of Chicago (GSC) in his welcome address at the Second Annual Youth Career Planning Seminar. The event was organized by the GSC at Poplar Creek Public Library 1405 Spark Ave Streamwood IL 60107 on January 31st2016 between 1:00 and 4: 00 PM.

Continuing his address, Gandhi urged the students to consider their aptitude, debt that they are willing to carry, job prospects, and average expected salary before deciding on their majors. “It is of utmost importance to carefully consider the academic, financial, and social issues before zeroing in on the right college to pursue higher education”, he added.

Neha Gheewala, a noted IT and Financial Auditor, said that graduates with accounting major have the highest percentage of job offers, followed by economics, computer science, and engineering. He advised students to equip themselves with a degree in accounting as well as such certifications as Certified Public Accountant, Certified Management Accountant, Certified Internal Auditor, Chartered Global Management Accountant, Certified Financial Manager, Certified Fraud Examiner, Certified Government Financial Manager, Certified Financial Planner, etc. in order to take a lion’s share of emerging career opportunities.

Ashi Shah, a well-known Dentist, said that demand for qualified dentists, during 2014-’24, is expected to increase at the rate of 18%, when compared to a mere 7% in other occupations. He advised students to appear for Dental Admission Test to secure admission in a reputed School. He added that dentists can pursue higher education to become Orthodontist, Oral Surgeon, Periodontist, Prosthodontist, Endodontics, etc.

Dipesh Gandhi, Clinical Risk Manager, AMITA Health Adventist Midwest Health, stated that entry into Law School requires a good score at the Law School Admission Test. He said that in order to practice law, law graduates must successfully sit for and pass the State Bar Examination. He added that Health Law, which calls for clinical and legal experience, is very specialized area which offers career opportunities in such areas as Medical Malpractice, Medical Malpractice Defense, Corporate Transactions, Managed Care, Fraud and Abuse, etc.

Jay Gandhi, a professional Pharmacist, said that the increasing requirement for prescription medicines will lead to more demand for pharmacists in a wide range of settings, including Community Pharmacies, Hospitals, Pharmaceutical Industry, Government Departments, Academics, etc. He advised students to appear for Pharmacy College Admission Test in order to secure admission in a college of their choice.

Hiren D. Ghayal, Youth Secretary, GSC said that a graduate degree in Clinical Psychology opens a number of doors in such fields as Teaching, Research, Assessment, Treatment, Consultation Services, Clinical Supervision, etc. “One can either establish his own private practice or find well-paying jobs in Mental Health Clinics, Healthcare Service Organizations, Hospitals, Schools, Universities, etc.”, he added.

Rebecca Romero said that pursuing college education is a worthwhile proposition considering the fact that the median weekly earnings of those with bachelor degree and above was in the range of USD 1101-1591, whereas, it was as low as USD 668 for those with High School Diploma. She added that Illinois Student Assistance Commission’s Student Portal (http://www.studentportal.isac.org/) helps students with each step in the college-going process by giving them best-in-class online tools and the information they need to make smart college choices, navigate the financial aid process, and manage their money.

Anita Gajula from My College Planning Team said that those with the most knowledge often receive the most financial aid rather than those with the greatest financial need. She advised students to go through the following two books before selecting a college: “Colleges that Change Lives” by Loren Pope; “Paying for Colleges without Going Broke” by Kalman Chany.

Hary Gandhi, Joint Secretary, GSC spoke about multiple career prospects in different branches of engineering. Keith Stewart from the Princeton Review gave an overview of the two most popular standardized College Entrance Tests—ACT and SAT.

The presentations were followed by a Questions-and-Answers Session. All the speakers provided detailed answers to the questions raised by the students to their satisfaction. They shared their contact details and encouraged the students to feel free to seek their guidance as and when it is required. The event was sponsored by C2 Education, My College Planning Team, DeVry University, The Princeton Review, Illinois Student Assistance Commission, and the Poplar Creek Library. Sai Saffron, Spice Box, Asian Media USA, and TV Asia extended support, in multiple ways, in organizing the event. Ashwin Bodalia, Treasurer, GSC proposed a vote of thanks.

Andrew Seo Call upon Asian-Americans to Support His Candidacy for the Position of Commissioner of the Metropolitan Water Reclamation District of Greater Chicago

Chicago IL: “I have an ambitious and far reaching plan of action aimed at transforming the way water is treated, managed, and delivered in Chicago and Cook County, which will be greatly instrumental not only in creating a reliable and resilient water infrastructure but also in facilitating multifaceted prosperity. I, therefore, request each and every one in Chicago and Cook County, including the Asian-Americans, to support my candidacy, in a big way, for the position of Commissioner of the Metropolitan Water Reclamation District of Greater Chicago in order to translate this plan into reality”, said Andrew Seo at a Press Conference, attended by a large number of representatives of Print, Electronic, and Internet Media on Tuesday, February 2nd, 2016, at 1:00 PM at Udipi Palace, 2543 W Devon Ave, Chicago, IL 60659.
Explaining his plan, in detail, Andrew Seo said that Metropolitan Water Reclamation District (MWRD) of Greater Chicago shall assume control of the city of Chicago Department of Water Management, including the City’s two water treatment plants, 12 pumping stations, water/server Mains and Personnel. He added that, as a part of his plan, MWRD would take over maintenance and operations of potable water to the residents/businesses in Chicago and Cook County as well as responsibility for the transport of waste water and storm water throughout the city of Chicago.
Andrew Seo Call upon Asian-Americans to Support His Candidacy for the Position of Commissioner of the Metropolitan Water Reclamation District of Greater ChicagoAndrew Seo claimed that his proposed plan has got a number of beneficial outcomes, which includes shifting the burden of maintaining/modernizing Chicago/Cook County’s aging water and sewer infrastructure from the city of Chicago to the MWRD, generating at least USD 5 billion for the city of Chicago to re-allocate it to funding Police/Fire/Teacher pensions, as well as for other essential city services, streamlining Government and eliminate bureaucratic red tape for homeowners and businesses, and reducing water and sewer fees for the city and suburban taxpayers.
“My plan has the ability to do everything Mayor Rahm Emanuel wants and needs at this critical time in Municipal Government”, said Andrew Seo. “The plan is in response to the call given by him last year to Chicagoans to come up with ideas to help make Government operate more efficiently and raise much needed revenue to successfully grapple with the problems relating to budget shortfalls, outstanding pension liabilities, and impending tax hikes”, Andrew Seo added.
Andrew Seo Call upon Asian-Americans to Support His Candidacy for the Position of Commissioner of the Metropolitan Water Reclamation District of Greater ChicagoAndrew Seo said that Chicagoland’s ability to provide clean and safe water is being challenged, as existing waste water and water infrastructure is aging and deteriorating. “Unless we start updating and modernizing our water and waste water systems soon it will become exponentially more challenging to retain and attract industry, business, and a skilled work force”, he added.
Andrew Seo argued that investments in creating a state-of-the-art water infrastructure will be greatly instrumental in creating jobs, sustaining public health, sustaining environment, and boosting economy. “The US Department of Commerce estimates that each job created in the local water and waste water industry creates 3.5 jobs in the national economy and each dollar spent yields $2.50 dollars in GDP”, he added.
Andrew Seo, a Chicago Engineer, is a former employee of both the MWRD and the City of Chicago’s Department of Water Management. He has got an impressive track record of experience in the fields of treating, managing, and delivering water. He has already pitched his plan to a number of prominent municipal and business leaders and received huge appreciation from them.
Iftehar Shareef, an eminent Indian-American, introduced Andrew Seo to the representatives of the media at the Press Conference. He said that Andrew Seo represents a rare combination of competence and commitment and added that his election as the Commissioner of the Metropolitan Water Reclamation District of Greater Chicago would go a long way in solving the problems relating to the availability of clean and safe water in Chicago and Cook County. He paid rich tributes to the community service of Andrew Seo in innumerable domains.
Shareef appealed to all the Asian-Americans in general and their Indian counterparts in particular to strongly support the candidacy of Andrew Seo in the best interests of Chicago and Cook County.
The representatives of the media posed a barrage of questions about the viability and relevance of the proposed plan concerning issues relating to the availability of safe and clean water in Chicago and Cook County. Andrew Seo answered all the questions, with a professional touch.
Balvider Singh, a well-known Indian-American, expressed his support and best wishes to Andrew Seo for his stupendous success in the election.
The Press Conference concluded with delicious snacks which were relished by one and all.

Gandhi Samaj of Chicago Organized Second Annual Youth Career Planning Seminar

Chicago IL: “The world of work has been undergoing a metamorphosis, on account of the surging tide of liberalization, privatization, and globalization. As a result, existing careers are losing their sheen and new careers are cropping up, at a mind-boggling pace. This calls for systematic, scientific, and objective career planning by youth in order to ensure that the careers that they choose are in line with these global trends”, said Hitesh
Gandhi, Executive Vice President, Gandhi Samaj of Chicago (GSC) in his welcome address at the Second Annual Youth Career Planning Seminar. The event was organized by the GSC at Poplar Creek Public Library 1405 Spark Ave Streamwood IL 60107 on January 31st2016 between 1:00 and 4: 00 PM.
Continuing his address, Gandhi urged the students to consider their aptitude, debt that they are willing to carry, job prospects, and average expected salary before deciding on their majors. “It is of utmost importance to carefully consider the academic, financial, and social issues before zeroing in on the right college to pursue higher education”, he added.
Neha Gheewala, a noted IT and Financial Auditor, said that graduates with accounting major have the highest percentage of job offers, followed by economics, computer science, and engineering. He advised students to equip themselves with a degree in accounting as well as such certifications as Certified Public Accountant, Certified Management Accountant, Certified Internal Auditor, Chartered Global Management Accountant, Certified Financial Manager, Certified Fraud Examiner, Certified Government Financial Manager, Certified Financial Planner, etc. in order to take a lion’s share of emerging career opportunities.
Ashi Shah, a well-known Dentist, said that demand for qualified dentists, during 2014-’24, is expected to increase at the rate of 18%, when compared to a mere 7% in other occupations. He advised students to appear for Dental Admission Test to secure admission in a reputed School. He added that dentists can pursue higher education to become Orthodontist, Oral Surgeon, Periodontist, Prosthodontist, Endodontics, etc.
Dipesh Gandhi, Clinical Risk Manager, AMITA Health Adventist Midwest Health, stated that entry into Law School requires a good score at the Law School Admission Test. He said that in order to practice law, law graduates must successfully sit for and pass the State Bar Examination. He added that Health Law, which calls for clinical and legal experience, is very specialized area which offers career opportunities in such areas as Medical Malpractice, Medical Malpractice Defense, Corporate Transactions, Managed Care, Fraud and Abuse, etc.
Jay Gandhi, a professional Pharmacist, said that the increasing requirement for prescription medicines will lead to more demand for pharmacists in a wide range of settings, including Community Pharmacies, Hospitals, Pharmaceutical Industry, Government Departments, Academics, etc. He advised students to appear for Pharmacy College Admission Test in order to secure admission in a college of their choice.
Gandhi Samaj of Chicago Organized Second Annual Youth Career Planning Seminar
Gandhi Samaj of Chicago Executive Team with students and sponsors of Second Annual Youth Career Planning Seminar

Hiren D. Ghayal, Youth Secretary, GSC said that a graduate degree in Clinical Psychology opens a number of doors in such fields as Teaching, Research, Assessment, Treatment, Consultation Services, Clinical Supervision, etc. “One can either establish his own private practice or find well-paying jobs in Mental Health Clinics, Healthcare Service Organizations, Hospitals, Schools, Universities, etc.”, he added.

Rebecca Romero said that pursuing college education is a worthwhile proposition considering the fact that the median weekly earnings of those with bachelor degree and above was in the range of USD 1101-1591, whereas, it was as low as USD 668 for those with High School Diploma. She added that Illinois Student Assistance Commission’s Student Portal (http://www.studentportal.isac.org/) helps students with each step in the college-going process by giving them best-in-class online tools and the information they need to make smart college choices, navigate the financial aid process, and manage their money.
Hiren Ghayal, Dr. Akshi Shah, Manhar Gajjar, Hary Gandhi, Hitesh Gandhi, Ashwin Bodalia, Ashwin Gandhi, Nitin Gandhi.
Hiren Ghayal, Dr. Akshi Shah, Manhar Gajjar, Hary Gandhi, Hitesh Gandhi, Ashwin Bodalia, Ashwin Gandhi, Nitin Gandhi.

Anita Gajula from My College Planning Team said that those with the most knowledge often receive the most financial aid rather than those with the greatest financial need. She advised students to go through the following two books before selecting a college: “Colleges that Change Lives” by Loren Pope; “Paying for Colleges without Going Broke” by Kalman Chany.

Hary Gandhi, Joint Secretary, GSC spoke about multiple career prospects in different branches of engineering. Keith Stewart from the Princeton Review gave an overview of the two most popular standardized College Entrance Tests—ACT and SAT.
The presentations were followed by a Questions-and-Answers Session. All the speakers provided detailed answers to the questions raised by the students to their satisfaction. They shared their contact details and encouraged the students to feel free to seek their guidance as and when it is required.
The event was sponsored by C2 Education, My College Planning Team, DeVry University, The Princeton Review, Illinois Student Assistance Commission, and the Poplar Creek Library. Sai Saffron, Spice Box, Asian Media USA, and TV Asia extended support, in multiple ways, in organizing the event.
Ashwin Bodalia, Treasurer, GSC proposed a vote of thanks.
Keyur Ghayal (President), Hitesh Gandhi (Executive Vice President), Bhumika V. Gandhi (Vice President); Ashwin Bodalia (Treasurer), Manhar Gajjar (Secretary), Roma Bhagat (Cultural Secretary), Ramesh Gandhi, Bharat Ghayal, Dipak Ghayal, Hary Gandhi, Hiren Ghayal, and Hiral Gandhi (Joint Secretary), Priya Ghayal (Youth Secretary).

Dr. Ausaf Sayeed, India’s Consul General Applauded India’s Economic Paradigm Shift at University of Chicago’s Diplomatic Encounters Series

Chicago IL: January 23, 2016: “The World Bank has acknowledged India as the country with the fastest economic growth, which stipulates that it would be growing at the rate of 7.8% during the current year, whereas, it is 6.7% for China, and 2.9% for world economy. This would be greatly instrumental in making India a formidable economic power to reckon with”, said Dr. Ausaf Sayeed, Consul General of India in Chicago in his inaugural address in the University of Chicago’s Diplomatic Encounters Series held on January 21st, 2016. The event, which was free and open to public, was attended by a large number of eminent people from different walks of life.
Continuing his address, Dr. Sayeed said that by registering spectacular growth in almost all sectors of economy, India is integrating its 5000-year old Indian civilization with high-end modernity in all spheres of life. He said that the aviation markets in India are growing at a phenomenal rate of 25%, when compared to 9% in the US and 8.4 % in China. He further stated that India has witnesses a growth of 7.6% in the passenger vehicle markets. “By selling 2.5 million cars every year, India has emerged as the fifth largest passenger vehicle market, whereas a large number of countries are facing a negative growth in this sector”, he added. He said that manufacturers of high value luxury goods are targeting India in a big way considering the growth of 25% in this market on account of increasing purchasing power and brand awareness among Indians.
Dr. Sayeed referred to the urge among Indians to absorb newer technologies and to the electronic boom which is evident from the fact that 6.95 billion electronic transactions took place last year in India. “India is on the top of the world with  over one billion people using mobile phones in India”, he added.
Dr. Sayeed stated that, with the conceptualization and execution of such innovative flagship measures by Prime Minister Narendra Modi as Digital India, Clean India, Make in India, Sills India, and Green India, and his commitment to bring about 100 Smart Cities and to lay down world-class infrastructure, India has emerged as one of the hottest destinations for global investors. “India has set a target of introducing 175 Giga watts of renewable energy in the coming 10 years into the energy needs of the country, including 100 Giga watts of solar energy”, he added.
“While the population worldwide is aging, India is getting younger and by 2020 it would be the youngest country in the world in terms of average age of population”, Dr. Sayeed said. He added that these young Indians, on account of their fresh vision and energetic enthusiasm, are making a breathtaking contribution to the development not only in India but also across the globe, and added that there are 80 Indian Companies operating in the US Midwest, which have made cumulative investments of US $ 2.75 billion and created 13,841 jobs.
Dr. Sayeed said the Indian Consulate caters to about 500,00 Indian-Americans in the US Midwest, who are contributing magnificently in the domains of Education, Science & Technology, Trade, Fine Arts, Culture, etc. He added that about 140,000 students from Indian are pursuing higher education in the US.
Screening of “India Awakes”:
The presentation by Dr. Ausaf Sayeed was followed by the screening of the 60-minute documentary, “India Awakes”, produced by Atlas Network partner Free to Choose Network and  narrated by Swedish historian, Johan Noerberg, The documentary focuses on bold initiatives taken by India in 1991, aimed at liberalization, privatization, and globalization, which resulted in creating fluidity between classes, triggering a boom that sent Indian incomes up at a compound rate of 7.5% annually in the last 25 years, lifting a staggering 250 million people out of poverty, and empowering India to come alive and flourish economically..
According to the documentary, this was a paradigm shift considering the fact that, for centuries, poor continued to remain poor and elite alone prospered in India. The documentary makes a reference to the expensive and cumbersome British bureaucracy which created layers of rules and regulations and hampered the poor from growing out of the shadows of poverty.
The documentary follows three individuals, Banwari Lal Sharma, Rama Bhai, and Mannem Madhusudana Rao, who belong to weaker sections of society. However, in the transformed scenario of liberalization from Government controls, they feel empowered to take charge of their own destinies, demonstrate their inherent entrepreneurial perseverance, and succeed not only in improving their lives but also in breaking down centuries-old caste system.
 “India Awakes demonstrates that the more the people of India are able to build, produce, buy, sell, trade, and invest with one another—and with the rest of the world—the more each person’s unique talents and skills can find their own valuable niche in meeting the needs of others, creating new wealth and opportunity at every turn”, said Tom Palmer, VP, Atlas Network.
Bob Chitester, CEO and President of Free to Choose Media, told that economic freedom is really at the heart of improving lives of everybody in India. “India Awakes, therefore, reveals the enormous power of unlocking human potential and ambition, which could establish India as a preeminent world leader”, he added.
India Awakes was one of the most inspiring stories of the prosperity that arises from economic freedom. The experiment of India is worth-emulating, on a wider scale, across the globe”, said Jim Tusty, Co-Director/Writer of the documentary.
Daniel J. Schmidt, President and CEO, WTTW said that when governments introduce economic liberalization and people come forward to demonstrate their entrepreneurial sills, there will be beneficial outcomes for all the stakeholders.
“While India has transformed its regulatory process and liberalized its economy compared to decades past, the country is still mired in far more red tape and bureaucratic processes. Hence, there is an urgent need to further consolidate the initiatives of 1991 in order to make it more free and prosperous”, opined the audience unanimously.

Denise M Jorgens, Director, International house at University of Chicago welcomed the gathering.

Iftekhar Shareef Released the Trailer of Hyderabadi Landmark Film, “Dawat-e-Shaadi”, in Chicago

Chicago IL: January 23, 2016: Iftekhar Shatreef, an eminent Businessman and Community Leader, released trailer of the upcoming Hyderabadi film, ‘Dawat-e-Shaadi’, in the presence of a number of eminent persons from different walks of life,on January 08, 2016 at Monty’s Elegant Banquets, 703 S York Rd, Bensenville, IL Chicago. The film, which has been shot in the beautiful and aristocratic locations of Paigah Palace Begumpet, is a hilarious situation-based comedy and gripping love story in the backdrop of the traditional weddings of Hyderabad.
Iftekhar Shareef said that while “Dawat-e-Shaadi” is devoid of vulgarity, it guarantees a heavy dose of high-voltage entertainment and hard-hitting punches, which will be enjoyed by the entire family. “The non-stop laughter ride and the subtle message to the audience would result in a positive word-of-mouth publicity to the film”, he added.
“It is a moment of pride that ‘Dawat-e-Shaadi’, is being distributed and released by Rajshree Productions under its banner in February 2016, with a big bang”, said Syed Hussain, Director of the film.
“The release of our film by Rajshree Productions, which has produced a number of blockbusters in India, will take the Hyderabadi cinema up a notch like never before and catapult it into the higher echelons of film appreciation, added Hussain, with a sense of accomplishment.
“While the Hyderabadi Film Industry has been confining itself, since its inception in 2005, to making small budget films for niche market, ‘Dawat-e-Shaadi’ is pioneering in nature and first of its kind, considering the fact that it is a Bollywood-type big-budget film which is rich in terms of exquisite quality, pan-India appeal, breathtaking locations, and high-end technology” said Mast Ali, a. k. a. Saleem Pheku, the king of comedy, who acted in over 20 film and brought laurels to Hyderabad.
“For action and adventure, the movie lovers watch Hollywood films, for songs and dances, they prefer Bollywood films, and for pure and unadulterated comedy, they throng to the Dollywood films, that is, Hyderabadi Films”, said Mast Ali. “The fans of Hyderabad Film Industry will definitely bless ’Dawat-e-Shaadi’ with resounding success, considering its high entertainment quotient”, he added.
Mast Ali said that all the films of Hyderabad, without any exception, registered huge success, both at the box office and in the video market. Considering the Hyderabadi films to be a safe bet, many people came forward to invest in their production.  “Dawat-e-Shaadi”, with a blitzkrieg of aggressive promotion and marketing campaign, unleashed by the Rajshree Productions, is poised to break many records of success”, he added.
Aziz Naser, the popular and powerful actor with over 15 films under his belt, said that “Dawat-e-Shaadi” will entertain the audiences thoroughly, irrespective of their linguistic backgrounds. “The movie lovers of the entire Indian Subcontinent, including those from Pakistan,  can easily understand the ”Hyderabadi Urdu, the lingua franca of the streets of Hyderabad, which is a unique mix of Urdu, Hindi, Telugu, and some Marathi”, he added.
Aziz Naser said that Hyderabad Film Industry, in future, will join hands with Bollywood stars and would churn out great movies by combining their respective success formulae.
Feroz Khan, who has essayed a negative role in “Dawat-e-Shaadi” said that Hyderabadi cinema has come to attain the status of a genre unto itself, not just considering the typical lingo of the City of Pearls, but even given the culture and traditions of the Deccan.
Dawat-e-Shaadi”, which has been produced by an Australian-based duo, Samiullah Fayyaz and Syed Waseem Yaba features three heavy weights of the Hiderabad Film Industry–Mast Ali, Aziz Naser, Feoz Han, and above all, Adanan Sajid Khan a. k. a. Gullu Dada. Three beautiful leading ladies, Kavya, Madhavi, and Manisha too are playing interesting roles in the film.
Mast Ali, Aziz Naser, Syed Hussain, and Farhan Khan thanked Iftekhar Shareef for his help, in a variety of ways, in getting the trailer of “Dawat-e-Shaadi” in Chicago. They thanked Layeeque Ahmed and Shoukat too for their support to them.

India Needs to “Save its Daughters” Through Education and Gender Equality

Women constitute nearly half of the country’s 1.25 billion people and gender equality — whether in politics, economics, education or health — is still a distant dream for most. This fact was driven home again sharply by the recently released United National Development Programme’s Human Development Report (HDR) 2015 which ranks India at a lowly 130 out of 155 countries in the Gender Inequality Index (GII). India trails behind most Asian countries, including lesser developed Bangladesh and Pakistan which rank 111 and 121 respectively, and fares not much ahead of war-ravaged Afghanistan at 152.

The GII reflects gender-based inequalities on three vital parameters: reproductive health, empowerment, and economic activity. India’s record, dismal on all three counts, is especially disquieting when it comes to representation of women in Parliament. Just 12.2 per cent of parliamentary seats in the world’s largest democracy are held by women as against 19.7 in Pakistan, 20 in Bangladesh and 27.6 percent in Afghanistan. Even some of the poorest nations — such as Tanzania, Zimbabwe, Rwanda, Uganda, Mozambique — are way ahead by having over a third to half of their parliament seats occupied by women.

Health remains a niggling worry as well with Indian women’s maternal mortality rate (MMR) being one of the world’s highest. The country witnesses 190 deaths per 100,000 live births as compared to 170 pregnancy-related deaths per 100,000 births in both Bangladesh and Pakistan, states the HDR. Even in terms of the percentage of women receiving secondary education, Bangladesh at 34 per cent outsmarts India at 27 per cent. On labour force participation rate for women, as compared to Bangladesh’s 57 per cent, India is at 27 per cent.

The only parameter where India scores marginally better is the adolescent birth rate or the number of births per 1000 women aged 15 to 19 years. Here, over the last couple of years, India’s GII values have improved marginally from 0.61 to 0.563.

However, activists say India’s low GII scores are hardly surprising given the country’s fierce resistance to change and entrenched patriarchal mindsets. “We’ve been featuring at the bottom of the gender equity pyramid for years. So what’s new?” Dr. Ranjana Kumari, Director, Center for Social Research, a New Delhi-based non-profit, told IPS. “Though the gender agenda has higher visibility in India now, that positive momentum hasn’t really translated into higher investment for women in different sectors due to continued discrimination and ineffectual laws and policies.”

Kumari points out that one of the most pivotal instrument of change — the Women’s Reservation Bill, which seeks to grant 33 per cent of the Parliament’s seats to women — has still not been passed by the upper house (Rajya Sabha) despite being cleared by the lower house (Lok Sabha) in 2010.

“The non-passage of the Bill due to splintered views of different political parties has severely inhibited women’s participation in politics. Until this basic requirement is addressed, Indian women can’t truly be empowered,” observed the activist.

According to some women politicians, bias underlines the selection of women as political candidates. National and regional Indian parties continue to follow the policy of exclusion while allotting seats to women. The common perception is that they lack the ‘win-ability’ factor. Those who manage to win elections have to work doubly hard to prove themselves as compared to the men,” one senior woman politician told IPS on the condition of anonymity.

The current gender picture appears even more disconcerting, say experts, as the principle of gender equality as enshrined in the Indian constitution. The framework of Indian laws, development policies, plans and programs too, are aimed at women’s advancement and equality. India, also a signatory to the Millennium Declaration adopted at the United Nations General Assembly in September 2000, has reaffirmed its commitment towards promoting gender parity.

“These goals are not only desirable in themselves but are critical for achieving UN’s other Millennium Development Goals,” opines Dr. Abha Khatri, former professor of political science at Delhi University. “These include 33 per cent reservation for women in local bodies, state legislatures and Parliament; elimination of all forms of violence against women; skill development for women; making women’s participation in education safe and secure; elimination of sex selection before birth; and universal access to sexual and reproductive health.”

The benefits of India becoming a 2-trillion dollar economy, Asia’s third largest, have also not percolated down to its women, point out economists. On the contrary, Indian women’s workforce participation has plummeted from 35 per cent in 1990 to 27 per cent in 2013. According to a 2012 report on global employment trends by the International Labour Organisation, many Indian women are able to find only marginal work in the informal economy, with low wages and little or no job security.

Ladakh, India – Widespread unemployment here leaves little choice of employment for women. Most have no educational background as schools are few. Credit: Neeta Lal/IPS

Well-qualified young urban women too, admit to having limited job options. Though over 60 per cent of urban females are a part of the informal sector, unemployment among those with graduate degrees and above qualifications continues to be a high 15.7 per cent, states the report.

Even educated urban women are unable to find opportunities that fit their profiles. Close to 20 per cent of urban females work as domestic help, cleaners, vendors, hawkers and salespeople. Nearly 43 per cent of urban women were self-employed and the same proportion of women had regular wage salaried jobs, according to the National Sample Survey Organisation 2011. Nearly 46 per cent of urban women with regular wages have no social security or employment benefits, while 58 per cent have no written contract for their jobs.

The example of Archana Desai, 35, is illustrative. New Delhi-based Desai had to give up her job at a global retail chain when it started downsizing due to budget cuts. Despite an MBA degree, Desai is currently employed as a part-time tutor at a coaching institute earning a fraction of her previous salary. “Though I’m technically qualified to hold a manager’s position, I’m stuck with something I don’t have any passion for. Why can’t the government provide jobs for women like us?”

Addressing women’s unemployment or underemployment issues can be deeply transformative for the country’s economy, says a McKinsey Global Institute report, “The Power of Parity: Advancing Women’s Equality in India”. The report states that improving gender parity at the workplace can help India add a whopping 2.9 trillion dollars to its GDP in 2025.

If this isn’t incentive enough, what is question activists. Besides, Indian women constitute almost 30 per cent of the total workforce in the country. Stricter policy and legislative measures need to be adopted as there is statutory recognition of the principle of equal job opportunities and equal pay under the Equal Remuneration Act, 1976.

To be fair, some measures have been taken by the Center to address the gender parity skew. The government has announced a 33 per cent reservation for women in police forces of union territories, including Delhi, for posts from constables to sub-inspectors to make the police more gender-sensitive. Another scheme — ‘Beti Bachao, Beti Padhao’ (Save the Daughter, Educate Her) — focuses on improving the life of the girl child in 100 districts with low child sex ratio (CSR), meaning many fewer girls than boys. The initiative is especially critical for a country like India which hosts one of the world’s lowest CSRs. Daman and Diu records a CSR of 618 girls per 1,000 boys.

“The key to achieving gender parity is resources. We need gender-responsive budgeting and money to be allocated and spent effectively on achieving these goals,” elaborates Kumari. Any breakthrough on gender equality also requires changes in the mindsets of all stakeholders –including legislators, administrators as well as the public — so that every social, economic and political issue can be made gender-sensitive, sums up the activist.

Lohri festival: Celebrations of fertility and magnificence at Hari Om Mandir

Chicago IL: This year also Lohri was celebrated with great fanfare at Hari Om Mandir located at 6 North 20 Medinah Road, Medinah, IL on Wednesday, January 13, 2016. The cold and snowy weather did not deter the attendance & excitement of the devotees, who thronged the Temple in large numbers – “House Full”!!! The devotees celebrated the day with traditional food of Saag (Mustard Greens), Makki Ki Roti (Corn), Lassi (Buttermilk), followed by a vibrant cultural evening of Gidda, Bhangra, Jago, Punjabi Folk Songs, culminating in a lively night of blazing bonfire.
The Mandir was beautifully decorated on the traditional theme of a Punjabi Village. The Special Events Team led by Jeetu Patel and Aarti Singla created a virtual village home from Punjab….the newly wed Bride & Groom sitting by the Lohri Fire, enjoying the treats of the season like Moongphali, Popcorn, Rewari, Bhugga etc. The Hukka, Charkha, Chullah, the Village Well with the costumes like Kurtis, Jackets & Pagris hanging in the backdrop…..ALL added to the ambience & mood of the Festival. Lohri is a time to enjoy the foods of the cold weather and look forward to a bountiful harvest in the coming season. The farmers and people in general thank God for His countless blessings and pray for a prosperous future.
Lohri festival: As part of the celebrations, ladies dressed in colorful Phulkaris and Punjabi Suits, performed Giddha – led by Mona Sharma, Rajeshwari Rawat and team. Amrit Salwan, Nirvka Sharma, led the Jago team.
Lohri festival: As part of the celebrations, ladies dressed in colorful Phulkaris and Punjabi Suits, performed Giddha – led by Mona Sharma, Rajeshwari Rawat and team. Amrit Salwan, Nirvka Sharma, led the Jago team.

As part of the celebrations, ladies dressed in colorful Phulkaris and Punjabi Suits, performed Giddha – led by Mona Sharma, Rajeshwari Rawat and team. The guys were not behind either….Tushar Sharma along with Sahil Butani & Arjun Vyas did Bhangra. Several ladies from the congregation joined the two young Brides – Amrit Salwan, Nirvka Sharma, who led the Jago team – special Pot (Gaggar with lighted lamps/candles) and ABOVE ALL, the beat of the DHOL by our very own Ajay Ghai set the mood, and very soon everybody joined to dance their hearts out on Punjabi Boliyan – sung by Mr. Deepak Sharma, Mr. Subhash Sharma & Mr. Atwal.

Mr. Satpal Salwan, Chairman Board of Trustees wished everybody a Happy Lohri. Mr. Vipan Wadhera, President Executive Board greeted everybody on this auspicious occasion and congratulated all the new born babies, newlyweds on the First Lohri occasion. He also gave special Lohri Wishes to the newly wed couples of the Hari Om Parivar – Manish & Amrit Salwan, Chandan & Aarti Kalia, Sunny & Sapna Sharma and Sohail & Nirvka Sharma and requested Pandit Dinesh Ji to bless them with holy Mantras. Mr. Ayodhya Salwan started off with the traditional Lohri Song “Sunder Mundriye” and also sang the “Badhai Geet” for one & all.
Lohri festival: Celebrations of fertility and magnificence at Hari Om MandirMr. Vipan Wadhera also thanked everyone for their generous donations and participation in the Mandir Events. Special thanks to Mrs. Usha Verma & Mrs. Shubh Sharma and their team for their outstanding efforts in arranging & managing the Food & Prasad. Kudos to Mr. Anil Saxena and his team for doing an excellent job in handling the traffic & parking for almost a 1000 people who attended the function.
Finally, under the guidance of Pandit Dinesh Kumar, the Lohri Bonfire was lighted by the President Vipan Wadhera & Chairman Satpal Salwan. All the Board Members joined hands and gathered around the fire to offer prayers, and as the ritual is, to throw chidwa, moongphali, popcorn, rewari etc into the flames to seek abundance, pray for prosperity from Agni Devta. Once again the Dhol Beat started and people sang and danced with joy to make merry on the cold night.
Packets of Moongphali, Rewari, Bhugga, Popcorn, Dates were distributed as Prasad, which was relished by all the devotees!

CoP 21: The Start of a Long Journey

NEW DELHI, Jan 14 2016 – The agreement reached in December, 2015 at the 21st Conference of the Parties under the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC) is a major step forward in dealing with the challenge of climate change. The very fact that almost every country in the world signed off on this agreement is a major achievement, credit for which must go in substantial measure to the Government of France and its leadership. However, in scientific terms, while this agreement certainly brings all the Parties together in moving ahead, in itself the commitments that have been made under the Intended Nationally Determined Contributions (INDCs) are quite inadequate for limiting temperature increase to 2 degrees Celsius by the end of this century relative to pre-industrial levels.

Any agreement on climate change has to take into account the scientific assessment of the impacts that the world may face and the risks that it would have to bear if adequate efforts are not made to mitigate the emissions of greenhouse gases (GHGs). Scientific assessment is also necessary on the level of mitigation that would limit risks from consequential impacts to acceptable levels. The Fifth Assessment Report (AR5) of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) has come up with a clear assessment of where the world is going if it moves along business as usual. The AR5 clearly states that without additional mitigation efforts beyond those in place today, and even with adaptation, warming by the end of the 21st Century will lead to high to very high risk of severe, widespread and irreversible impacts globally. Adaptation and mitigation are complementary strategies for reducing and managing the risks of climate change. Correspondingly, substantial emissions reductions over the next few decades can reduce climate risks in the 21st Century and beyond, increase prospects for effective adaptation, reduce the costs and challenges of mitigation in the longer term and contribute to climate-resilient pathways for sustainable development.
Dr. Rajendra Kumar Pachauri, is the Director General of The Energy and Resources Institute (TERI), and Former Chairman, Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC), 2002-2015
Dr. Rajendra Kumar Pachauri

In the AR5, five Reasons For Concern (RFCs) aggregate climate change risks and illustrate the implications of warming and of adaptation limits for people, economies and ecosystems across sectors and regions. The five RFCs are associated with: (1) Unique and threatened systems, (2) Extreme weather events, (3) Distribution of impacts, (4) Global aggregate impacts, and (5) Large scale singular events. These RFCs grow directly in proportion to the extent of warming projected for different scenarios.

Substantial cuts in GHG emissions over the next few decades can substantially reduce risks of climate change by limiting warming in the second half of the 21st century and beyond. Cumulative emissions of CO2 largely determine global mean surface warming by the late 21st century and beyond. Limiting risks across RFCs would imply a limit for cumulative emissions of CO2. Such a limit would require that global net emissions of CO2 eventually decrease to zero and would constrain annual emissions over the next few decades. But some risks from climate damages are unavoidable, even with mitigation and adaptation. This results from the fact that there is inertia in the system whereby the increased concentration of GHGs in the earth’s atmosphere will create impacts which are now inevitable.
The Paris agreement is an extremely significant step taken by the global community, but to deal effectively with the challenge ahead, a much higher level of ambition would be required by all the countries of the world than is currently embodied in the INDCs. A review of the INDCs is due to take place only in 2018 and 2023. This may be too late, because a higher level of ambition will need to be demonstrated urgently, if the world is to reduce emissions significantly before 2030. Delaying additional mitigation to 2030 will substantially increase the challenges associated with limited warming over the 21st century to below 2 degrees Celsius relative to pre-industrial levels. And, if the global community is serious about evaluating the impacts of climate change within a limit of 1.5 degrees Celsius above pre-industrial levels, then stringent mitigation actions will have to be taken much earlier than 2030. If early action is not taken, then a much more rapid scale up of low carbon energy over the period 2030 to 2050 would become necessary with a larger reliance on carbon dioxide removal in the long term and higher transitional and long term economic impacts.
In essence, Paris has to be seen as the beginning of a journey. If the world is to minimize the risks from the impacts of climate change adequately, then the public in each country must demand a far more ambitious set of mitigation measures than embedded in the Paris agreement. That clearly is the challenge that the world is facing, and the global community must take in hand urgently the task of informing the public on the scientific facts related to climate change as a follow up to Paris. Then only would we get adequate action for risks being limited to acceptable levels.

Record Setting Fund-Raising By “ Ekal Vidyalaya” in 2015

“Ekal Vidyalaya Foundation – USA” (known as ‘Ekal-USA’) had record setting fund-raising in 2015. It raised over $6 million in USA alone and it has satellite Organizations in 10 different countries. Moreover, Ekal has just received a generous donation of $500,000 from Mrs. Prabha Jhunjhunwala, daughter of Shri Madanlal Agarwala, who started Ekal Movement in late 1988 in India. Considering the way it has kick started this New Year, and it is poised to establish a new record for 2016. “My father is my inspiration. He was a very compassionate soul and strongly believed that the Ekal movement would transform India. Were he alive, he surely would have been delighted to see strong Global support reaching into 53,000 villages,” says Prabhaji. “When Prabha decided to make a donation in the name of her father, I couldn’t be happier” says Vinod Jhunjhunwala, her husband and President of Ekal-USA. He further elaborated that,” the seed-money will help us build an endowment that will ensure strong financial footing for Ekal USA”.

Ekal raises funds through series of concerts all over USA and through direct appeals to generous philanthropists. Braham Aggarwal, Avadesh Agarwal, Himanshu Shah, Mohan Wancho have been some of the most generous and valuable benefactors of Ekal. According to Dilip Kothekar, Chairman of Ekal’s Event Committee, two famous musical groups from ‘Bollywood’ would be performing in series of 60-65 concerts all across USA, starting from February 26’ 2016.

For past 27 years, ‘Ekal Vidyalaya Foundation (EVF)’, has been rigorously involved in total transformation of villages, giving sustainability to its people and empowering them. For basic donation of just $365, Ekal has been providing functional literacy and health care training for the whole year to an ‘Ekal-school’, consisting of 35-40 children. For one-time generous donation of $5,000, one can sponsor a whole village for its perpetual development.

To make women-folks self-reliant in villages, multiple cottage-industries have been introduced by training them in tailoring, food-processing, weaving etc. “EVF” is a duly registered as tax-exempt, charitable organization, not only in USA, but also, in several other countries, making it globally the largest grassroots village-development movement undertaken by Indians and NRIs. As of this moment, it is operating all over India, including in Jammu & Kashmir region benefiting over 1.50 million children (half of whom are girls).

“Health Foundation for Rural India (HFRI)”, under the leadership of Dr. Veena Gandhi is committed to eradicate Anemia also in Ekal villages. New water conservation techniques, and use of solar-power for domestic use etc. have been adopted in several villages. In addition, an innovative ‘Ekal-on-Wheels’ digital pilot-project has been launched in some states to make villages computer-literate..

According to Bajrang Bagra, CEO of Ekal-India, this year, Ekal took a giant leap forward in 2015 by establishing 10 village development centers, each catering to the needs of 100 villages, thereby directly impacting at least one million people, and exposing 10 million villagers to innovative techniques. Villagers are trained in multiple cropping, Vermicomposting, based on local conditions.

Pradeep Goyal, Chairman of Ekal-India recently confirmed that retraining villagers for agro-farm based products has given them income ranging from Rs.50,000 to Rs.8 Lakhs. Because of Ekal’s extensive rural network, many Organizations that were engaged on their own in divine rural projects have now forged alliance with Ekal. Dr. Subhash Chandra, CEO of ZEE-TV Network, has recently joined as the ‘Chairman of Ekal-Global’ and plans to take this ‘Literacy’ movement’ to the upper zenith of worldwide conscientious global organizations. According to Subhash Gupta, recent Chairman of Board of Advisers, Ekal derives its strength from its 300,000 global volunteers. As PM Modi said, “When you invest in village, you are investing in India’s future; let’s develop one village, one school at-a-time.

Asian-American Community Leaders call for a sustained platform for communication with political leadership, at the Breakfast Event hosted by Moin Haque and Saima Haque

Chicago IL: Moin Haque, a well-known businessman from Chicago, and his better half, Saima Haque, organized a Breakfast Event with the objective to bring a large group of Asian-American Community Leaders and Illinois State Representatives under one roof. The purpose of this “Dialogue for Democracy” was to understand each other’s perspectives and also to find ways and means to ensure that democratic institutions in the US are led by the silent majority, rather than hijacked by the most vocal minority.

‘Lou’ Lang, who represents the 16th District of Illinois State since 1987 and serves as House Deputy Majority Leader, said that while he is concerned about the broader welfare of people, irrespective of their religion, race, color, social background, etc, he is keenly interested in knowing the unique aspirations of each and every community, including those of the Asian-Americans. “Today’s Breakfast Event, therefore, is a rich opportunity to acquire their perspective and also to share with them my expectations from them”, he added.

“Combating hate crime in the US with strong political will is one of the priorities of the Government”, said ‘Lou’ Lang and called upon different minority communities, including Asian-Americans, to pass on their concerns about hate crimes not only to their community leaders but also to elected officials, in order to strengthen the hands of the Government in putting an end to the hate crimes.

‘Lou’ Lang  also highlighted, with a sense of disappointment, that approximately 30% people vote in elections and added that lack of interest in the democratic processes on the part of the staggering-70% of the population has dangerous consequences for them, their families, and next generation at large.  He urged leaders of all the communities to create wider awareness about the importance of enriching democratic institutions in their personal interests and that of our Nation.

He advised talented people from different communities to join the political system of our Nation as their political career and contribute to it. “Otherwise, those candiates who have a view to serving their vested interests, will dominate and control this important organ of the society”, ‘Lou’ Lang added.

Stephanie A. Kifowit, who represents the 84th District of Illinois State, said that a small number of people, who represent a tiny minority, are creating much hate in society and thereby eroding the freedom of religion, freedom to associate, and freedom to enjoy life, all the attributes which make the US a great Nation.

“The people in general, who represent the silent majority, should come out of their respective shells, pay attention to the anti-social forces that are brewing, act decisively when wrong things are being done, cast their votes in elections for candidates that represent them, and play an active part in shaping of the political system of our Nation in order to counter the devisive designs of the most vocal minority in the society”, Stephanie added.

Stephanie called upon people belonging to all sections of society, including Asian-Americans, to find time for nation-building initiatives, as being too busy with the day-to-day routine is not in the interests of the Nation and their communities.

Aadil Farid, an eminent Community Leader, said that the cultural, religious, ethnic, gender, social, economic, linguistic, and racial diversity is the hallmark of the US society. “The networking among different sections of society results in better communication and strengthens democratic institutions”, Farid opined.

Farid stated that the recent events of hate-centric politics has triggered a strong desire among people, especially the youth who are turning 18, to take a proactive part in the electoral process not only to protect their faith, family, and freedom but also to defend the Great American Nation and its Universally-relevant Values.

“Armed with our preference for positive and inclusive politics, and committed to such core values as development, justice, peace, and tolerance, we can add great value to the democratic apparatus of the US and to its very fabric”, Farid added.

Aiman Beg, another renowned Community Leader, in his welcome address, said that 2016 is going to be a very important year considering the Presidential, State, and other Local elections. He further said that all sections of society, including the Asian-Americans, have a significant stake in the results of these elections. He added that, towards this, different Community Organizations should line up interactive sessions of their members with elected officials/candidates running for electoral offices so as to ensure that they understand each other’s vision, perspectives, and aspirations.

“We are Americans, irrespective of the ancesteral countries to which we belonged, and it is our duty to play a proactive role in the functioning of democratic institutions”, said Sadia Gul, a Social Activist. She added that Stephanie Kifowit and ‘Lou’ Lang are broad-minded, inclusive, and development-oriented persons, and above all, they are the true friends of Asian-Americans. She requested people to strengthen their hands by sustained engagement with them.

Ashfaq Hussain, a Senior Banker and a well-known Community Leader, called upon continued interaction, across different sections of society, in order to demolish the walls of hate.

Moin Haque, in his vote of thanks, said that his initiative to hold the Breakfast Event was only a humble beginning. “There is an urgent need to multiply these efforts towards creating a more informed, enlightened, and loving society”, he added.

The Illinois State Representatives, Community Leaders, and the participants unanimously thanked Moin Haque and Saima Haque for hosting the Breakfast Event.

New Year Eve Bash -2016, with Bollywood Actress Neha Dhupia, at the Meadows Club in Chicago

Chicago IL: Nick Joshi from Shy Entertainment organized a splendid New Year’s Eve celebration on Thursday, December 31, 2015 at Meadows Club, Rolling Meadows, IL. The gorgeous Bollywood actress, Neha Dhupia, set the stage literally on fire with her foot thumping and show stopping dance performance on a medley of songs that left the audience spellbound on the eve of the New Year. Audiences were house full despite awful weather in Chicago.
The spectacular celebrations also brought together the best of entertainment, beverage, fun, food, and festivities into one power-packed evening. Dramatic technical effects, including three-dimensional projection, stereophonic sound, and cold pyrotechnics accentuated the evening.
In addition to the dance performances, Neha played an exciting game, “Kaun Banega Neha Ka Pati”. To her pleasant surprise, a large number of her hardcore fans, as young as 8 and as old as 80, took to the stage and staked their serious claim to marry her. Neha got everyone involved, asked them interesting questions and had a great timeAnd of course, all of them got an once-in-a-lifetime opportunity to grove to the music and compliment to the moves of the lovely lady on the dance floor and added a sparkling dash of Neha to their New Year’s Eve celebrations.
Bollywood actress Neha Dhupia with event organizer Nick Joshi from Shy Entertainment, Jeen Varghese (Promotions Director) and  Performers from The Yeh Cheez Group.
Bollywood actress Neha Dhupia with event organizer Nick Joshi from Shy Entertainment, Jeen Varghese (Promotions Director) and Performers from The Yeh Cheez Group.

The action-packed and electrifying dance performance by one of the finest, most talented, and best dance groups of the US, Yeh Cheez Group, on the song “Singh is King”, conceptualized by Noman Khan and Farah Khan, uplifted the mood of the audience. Even Neha, who was a part of the song in the film, looked super-excited watching Yeh Cheez Group perform on this medley. The usage of glow swords, formations, and executions were just phenomenal. “One of the best performance that I have ever witnessed; it was really magical”, said Neha who was virtually in a state of shock and awe.

Right after “Singh is King”, there was another dance performance by Yeh Cheez Group, which was interrupted by Noman Khan in the middle. He requested Neha to join them on stage and shake a leg. Neha was very hesitant, but when the crowd, with their loud scream and applauses, requested her to dance, she could not say “No”. She joined Yeh Cheez Group and they did a mind blowing dance performance which got everyone on their feet and the performance literally ended 10 seconds before the countdown for the New Year. It ended on the song “Abhi To Party Shuru Hui Hai”.
The versatile trio, Pratibha Jairath, Rinki Talati and SanketMohan Patel rendered hit and happening Bollywood tracks, including “Prem Ratan Dhan Payo”, “Chikni Chameli”, “Mainu Pyar Na Mile Na Mile To Mar Jawan”, “Ram Ji Ki Chal Dekho”, and many more and mesmerized the audience.
There was a belly dancing performance by Alexandra Constantinescu and Dimitra Louloudaki, which proved to be a riotously colorful and entertaining spectacle. It offered an intriguing glimpse into the world of belly dance, which was a scintillating mix of myth, history, folklore, and fantasy.
The DJ, Prashant Shah, played hits of yesterday, today, and tomorrow for the audience to dance their feet off into 2016.
There were raffles in between the performances and the organizers gave away a lot of exciting gifts to the raffle winners sponsored by Studio Elite, Holiday Inn (Itasca), Expressions Boutique, etc.
02 AMU_9351“What an amazing night and what a superb way to bring in 2016! The crowd at the Meadows Club was tremendous, responsive, and supportive. With their fabulous and unstoppable energy, they truly inspired me as a performer”, said Neha with sense gratefulness.
“We set out to create a memorable night and going by the response we all received, the evening was a super success. Thank you for being such a wonderful audience. You have given us a great start to 2016″, said the team of artists unanimously.
The team of artists further stated that the presenters of the event dared to dream big and inspired everyone involved to make this happen. “Their attention to detail, artistic vision, and quest for perfection pushed us all as a team to go above and beyond to deliver something that we truly hope our fellow Chicagoites will cherish and remember”, they added.
“The audience were fantastic. When we were on the stage, we could feel it. All the different movements and things that we do strikes a response by their applause “said Sagar Bhatt Performer.
Neha posted a picture on all her social media sites (Twitter, Face book, and Instagram) and wished everyone Happy New Year around the world wearing a “New Year 2016” Hat along with the amazing dancers of Yeh Cheez Group.
The Yeh Cheez Group comprised the following 16 Performers: Noman Khan (Lead Performer and Captain), Nishma Patel, Sarvangi Patel, Aliyah Sayed, Naimiti Desai, Pooja Patel, Dipti Vats, Diya Khan, Kajol Topiwala, Madhura Patil, Lovish Thakur, Mahi Thakur, Sagar Bhatt, Ravi Patel, Anand Bhatt, and Anup Kilani
Hair and Makeup for Neha Dhupia by Beauty by Shabana Bhatti, Ruby Rizvi (Expressions Boutique), Vaishali Dev (AKS Entertainment), and Jeen Varghese (Marketing and Promotions Director), was sponsored by Royal Basmati, Suga Builders, Desi Junction, Hi India, Asian media USA, Pearl Banquet, Melange Decour, Studio Elite, Maha Designs, New York Life, Yeh Cheez Group, India Video, Shree, Bridal Lounge Chicago, Nirav Foods, Desi Bazaar, and Makkah Printing.
The presenters profusely thanked Rafi Hussain, Sunil Shah, Hitesh Gandhi, Shalini Saxena, Madan Kulkarni, Hemi Patel, Payal Shah, Siraj Khan, Hina Trivedi, Zainab Zafar, Sandeep Palakkal, Stuti Chris, Erum Hassan, Uroosa Rahim, Fahad Zuberi, Taha Rizvi, Shahida Khan, and Asian Media USA for their valuable help in organizing the event successfully.
The handsome Noman Khan and lovely Tanya Sharma conducted the proceedings of the evening with a professional touch and kept the audience thoroughly engaged and fully involved. Everyone had the great time and the event organizer Nick Joshi from Shy Entertainment left no stone unturned to provide the most entertaining and glamorous event ever done in Chicago.

Chennai Flood Disaster Fundraiser, “Ek Shaam Chennai Ke Naam”, Held in Chicago

Chicago IL: Top 20 organizations from all over Chicago, including Desi Junction Radio, FIA, Jeen Varghese, and Chicago for Chennai Group, organized a phenomenal Chennai Flood Disaster Fundraiser on December 20th, 2015, between 2:00 PM and 6:00 PM at the Waterford Banquet Hall in Elmhurst, IL. Over 800 persons, belonging to different regions and religions, attended the event to show their support and solidarity to the people of Chennai.

Jassi Parmar, CEO of Desi Junction Radio said that bringing all the communities of India together under one roof for a noble cause was not only a historical  initiative, no one has ever done before, but also gave a great sense of achievement to the organizers. He added that fifty plus volunteers, vendors, performers, sponsors, and donors contributed in a big way to the stupendous success of the event.

Jeen Varghese, Community Leader said that Chennai and surrounding areas in the State of Tamil Nadu have been devastated by the torrential rains and massive flooding.   “Damage has been enormous – 250 lives lost, 2 million people displaced, $ 3 Billion impact on the economy, and $ 15 Billion in infrastructure damages”, she added and made a fervent appeal to people to contribute to the relief operations.

Within no time, a whopping $ 45,000 was raised at the event, which will be donated to Association for India’s Development in order to enable it to take up relief-oriented initiatives in Chennai. The donors were not confined to India alone; a significant number of non-Indians too contributed to the cause. Following were the top 10 donors: Senthil Kumar Soundarapandian, Shobashalini Chokkalingam, Nirup Krishnamurthy, Shyam Krishnamurthy, Balaji Padmanabhan, Durai Ramachandran, Sri Rajini Sabarathy, Anand Srinivasan, and Suganya Prathap.

Raja Krishnamoorthi, an Eminent Community Leader, based in Illinois, said that the floods in Chennai have touched a chord among the Indian Diaspora in the U.S. “The Indian-Americans, even though thousands of miles away from India, are comrades-in-arms, and are ever ready to reach out to their fellow-Indians, whenever required”, he added.

Krishnamoorthi underlined the need for achieving the long-term solution to the problem of recurrent floods in different parts of India by following the environmental norms of construction and a more efficient urban planning with stringent implementation. “Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s Smart City Mission is an opportunity to revisit the potential impact of haphazard development that is happening in the urban centers in India”, he added.

“What we did today was only a humble beginning; we are committed to engage in the long-term process of rebuilding of the communities once the relief agencies address their immediate priorities”, said Ravi Rawat from Bombay Chopsticks and  Perl Banquet, with a sense of enthusiasm. “We have taken a pledge that our efforts will not end until the affected people back home get a new beginning”, he added.

“The print, electronic, and social media in Chicago, which gave sufficient attention to the Chennai floods, became the agent of mobilization and resulted in a huge crowed at the event today,” Chandrakant Modi, President of Asian Media USA pointed out. “Social Media is flooded with heart touching comments about the Chennai’s plight in general and the Fund Raising Event for it in particular”, he added.

Neetu Chandra, the highly sought-after Global actress from India, who graced the event as Guest of Honor, without any cost to it, at the invitation of Desi Junction, said that natural calamities like floods are the litmus test for the communities to show to the world that they can come together in times of great crises and can help each other.

“The acts of bravery demonstrated by Chennaites to rescue people caught in the floods by forming chains and multifarious instances of love, kindness, and resilience have become a source of inspiration to people, across the globe, in grappling with the natural calamities”, Neetu Chandra said. “On account of the innumerable tales of humanity that emerged from rain-battered Chennai, Chennaites have occupied a special place in my heart”, she added.

The instantaneous offer of Neetu Chandra to dance with everyone who donates $ 500 was not only a pleasant surprise for the audience but also turned out to be an instant hit. And many of them grabbed this once-in-a-lifetime opportunity without even batting an eyelid. This was followed by a dance riot on the stage by Neetu Chandra and her hardcore fans, a stream of donations, and, naturally, a big smile on faces of the organizers.

Jassi Parmar, Ravi Rawat, Neil Khot from FIA, Surender Mathur, Neela Patel, and Jeen Varghese jointly presented an Award to Neetu Chandra in recognition of her contribution to the Indian films.

“Neetu Chandra is blessed with a golden heart; her presence at today’s event, despite her multifarious professional appointments, proves this beyond any doubt”, said Raj Sharma, Promoter for Neetu Chandra. “She will be happy to associate herself to similar events in future, aimed at the amelioration of the lot of poorer sections of society”, he added.

A high-voltage entertainment program that followed the fundraising process was the biggest highlight of the event. The singers presented a large numbers of hit tracks from Bollywood and uplifted the mood of the audience. The dancers not only showcased their ability to perform different genres of dances but also conveyed a gamut of emotions.

The artists belonging to Yeh Cheez Group, Desi Junction, and Comedy Junction and a large number of professionals, including Rinki Talati, Nisha Saraswat, Rashik, Megha Mathur, Maegha Saraf, Sawpna Balakrishnan, Sharanya Gururajan, Chandrakala Vijay, Ravi Shankar Subramanyan, Noman Khan, Nisima Patel, Suman Sharma, Ruby Saraf, etc. participated in the entertainment program and captured the hearts of the audience.

The event commenced with one minute silence to pay tribute to those who perished in Chennai disaster, which was followed by “Vande Mataram” sung by Sharanya, Ravi Subramaniam, Chandini Duvvuri, and Suman, and “Ganesh Vandana”, performed by Megha Saraf. The event concluded by singing of the National Anthems of India.

The event was professionally managed by Jassi Parmar, Jeen Varghese, Ravi Rawat, Ravi Subramaniam, Senthil Kumar, Murugesh Kasilingam, Sharmila Varadarajan, Neil Khot, Shyamala, Nirup Krishnamurthy, Sri Lala, Pritesh Gandhi, Surender Mathur, Ranga Rajan, Vandana Walia, Chandini Duvvuri, and 50 plus volunteers from various organizations.

A large number of Chicago-based eminent organizations, including Desi Junction Worldwide Radio, Jeen Varghese, Happiness Junction, India House, Waterford Banquet and Conference Centre, The Art of Living, Sai Saffron Chat House, TV Asia, TANA, Arya Sounds, Wintrust Commercial Banking, GLO, Massage and Spa, Asian Media, Mysore Woodland, Deccan and Spice, etc. sponsored the event.

Ten restaurants, namely, India House, Indian Harvest, Vishnu Vilas, Cuisine of India, Sai Saffron, Curry Bowl/Mysore Woodland, Dakshin, Hyderabad Biryani, Deccan and Spice, and Vishnu villas, generously sponsored sumptuous dinner for all the attendees, which was relished by one and all.

Dr Chandrakant Modi spoke about the services provided by Asian Cremation USA (ACU), a not-for-profit organization, for the dignified funeral/cremation.  He added that the details are available at its website: www.asiancremationusa.org On this occasion, on behalf of ACU, an Award for Outstanding Service to the Community was presented to David Pimm, President and Funeral Director of Bohemian National Cemetery, located in Chicago. Jassi Parmar  conducted proceedings of the event with a professional touch.

Climate Change Seen as Top Global Threat

As the world leaders were gathering in for the United Nations Climate Change Conference in Paris this December, many publics around the world name global climate change as a top threat, according to a new Pew Research Center survey measuring perceptions of international challenges. This is particularly true in Latin America and Africa, where majorities in most countries say they are very concerned about this issue. But as the Islamic militant group ISIS maintains its hold in Iraq and Syria and intensifies its grisly public executions, Europeans and Middle Easterners most frequently cite ISIS as their main concern among international issues.

Global economic instability also figures prominently as the top concern in a number of countries, and it is the second biggest concern in half of the countries surveyed. In contrast, concerns about Iran’s nuclear program as well as cyberattacks on governments, banks or corporations are limited to a few nations. Israelis and Americans are among the most concerned about Iran’s nuclear program, while South Koreans and Americans have the greatest concern about cyberattacks relative to other publics. And apprehension about tensions between Russia and its neighbors, or territorial disputes between China and surrounding countries, largely remain regional concerns.

These are among the findings of a new Pew Research Center survey, conducted in 40 countries among 45,435 respondents from March 25 to May 27, 2015. The report focuses on those who say they are “very concerned” about each issue.

Across the nations surveyed, the level of concern about different international issues varies considerably by region and country, and in some places multiple issues vie for the top spot.

Publics in 19 of 40 nations surveyed cite climate change as their biggest worry, making it the most widespread concern of any issue included in the survey. A median of 61% of Latin Americans say they are very concerned about climate change, the highest share of any region. And more than half in every Latin American nation surveyed report substantial concerns about climate change. In Peru and Brazil, where years of declining deforestation rates have slowly started to climb, fully three-quarters express anxiety about climate change.

Sub-Saharan Africans also voice substantial concerns about climate change. A median of 59% say they are very concerned, including about half or more in all countries surveyed. Climate change is particularly worrying in Burkina Faso (79%), Uganda (74%) and Ghana (71%), while South Africans (47%) and Tanzanians (49%) are the least concerned.

Top Threats by Region
Top Threats by Region

Both regions are especially vulnerable to the effects of climate change, as is Asia, where a median of 41% voice great concern about the issue. Indians (73%) and Filipinos (72%) are particularly worried, but climate change captures the top spot in half of the Asian countries surveyed.

Concern about climate change is relatively low in Europe. While a median of 42% report being very concerned, global climate change is not one of the top two threats in any European country surveyed. Anxiety about this issue is highest in Spain (59%), but just 14% in Poland say the same. In a number of European nations, concern about climate change is more pronounced for those on the left of the political spectrum. Ideological differences are particularly large in the United Kingdom, where about half of those on the left (49%) express serious concerns, compared with 30% of those on the right. Those to the left of the political center are also considerably more concerned about global climate change in Italy, France and Spain.

Global climate change ranks substantially lower as a comparative global threat for Americans, with 42% saying they are very concerned about the issue. The only global issue that is even less worrying to Americans: territorial disputes between China and its neighbors (30%). Much like in Europe, perceptions in the U.S. about the threat of climate change depend on ideology. About six-in-ten Democrats (62%) are very concerned about climate change, while just 20% of

Publics in 14 countries express the greatest concern about ISIS, the militant group seeking to create an Islamic state in Iraq and Syria. In Europe, a median of 70% express serious concerns about the threat posed by the growing organization. Apprehension is greatest in Spain (77%), but anxiety about ISIS is high throughout the continent. Even in Poland, where just 29% voice serious worries, fear of ISIS is second only to worries about tensions between Russia and its neighbors.

As ISIS continues to control territory in Iraq and Syria, concern in neighboring countries is high. More than eight-in-ten in Lebanese (84%) are very concerned about ISIS. Fear is especially high among Muslims in Lebanon, Syria’s western neighbor: 90% of Sunnis and 87% of Shia say they are very concerned, compared with 76% of Christians. More than half in Jordan (62%) and the Palestinian territories (54%) also express substantial worries about ISIS. Compared with other international issues, concern about ISIS also ranks highly in Israel and Turkey, which has seen a flood of refugees across its southern border as violence escalates.

A majority of Americans (68%) and Canadians (58%) are also very concerned about the looming threat of the Islamic State. In both countries, anxiety about ISIS is the top concern of the issues included in the survey. Concern is similarly high in a number of Asian nations, including South Korea (75%), Japan (72%), Australia (69%) and Indonesia (65%). Publics in all four countries cite ISIS as their top concern. Relatively few in Africa and Latin America voice serious concern about the threat of ISIS. Only in Tanzania do roughly half (51%) report substantial concerns, the highest of any country in either region.

Climate Change Seen as Top Global ThreatWhile concerns about climate change and ISIS take the top spots in an overwhelming majority of the countries surveyed, the most frequent secondary concern around the world is the instability of the global economy. A top concern in five countries, including Russia, the economy is the second highest concern in 20 countries.

Economic instability is among the top threats in Latin America, where a median of 54% express serious concerns. Six-in-ten in Brazil and Venezuela say they are very concerned about economic issues, the highest in Latin America. Both nations have seen little to no growth in the past year, and their economic woes are expected to deepen in 2015. Economic worries are similarly troubling for countries in Africa. Ghanaians (67%), Ugandans (62%) and Senegalese (59%) are most concerned about the economy, but economic instability is considered one of the top two concerns in every country surveyed in Africa.

Russia and Ukraine, which are facing contracting economies in 2015, consider economic instability a major threat. In Russia, 43% say they are very concerned about the economy, the highest-ranking concern of any issue tested there. About a third of Ukrainians (35%) agree; economic worries are second only to their concerns about tensions with Russia.

The economy is somewhat less concerning in Europe, Asia and the Middle East. Still, a third or more in each region say they are very concerned about global economic instability, and the issue still ranks as the second-highest threat in seven countries, including some of the world’s largest economies – China, France, India and Italy all rate economic issues as one of their top two concerns.

Israelis are the only public surveyed to rate Iran as their top concern among the international issues tested. More than half of Israelis (53%) have substantial concerns about the threat posed by Iran’s nuclear program. Israeli Jews (59%) are far more likely than Israeli Arabs (23%) to express anxiety.

Americans also see Iran’s nuclear program as a major issue. Roughly six-in-ten (62%) say they are very concerned, making Iran the second-highest-ranked threat of those included in the poll. While a median of 42% of Europeans express strong concern about Iran, only in the UK is it considered one of the top two dangers. Relatively few in Latin America, Africa, Asia and the Middle East say they are very concerned about Iran’s nuclear program.

Worldwide, the threat of cyberattacks on governments, banking or corporations does not resonate as a top tier worry, though there are pockets of anxiety. In particular, worries about the systematic hacking of computer networks are highest in the U.S. (59%) and South Korea (55%), both of which experienced high profile cyberattacks in recent years. Fewer than half in every other country surveyed express serious concerns about the threat of cyberattacks.

Many Millennials see Christmas as more cultural than religious holiday

Millennials are less religious than older Americans and less likely to identify with a religious group, and those traits are reflected in the way they celebrate Christmas. Nine-in-ten Millennials say they take part in Christmas, but only four-in-ten say they do so mainly as a religious holiday, according to a survey we conducted in 2013.

That stands in contrast to those in older generations, who in some cases are more likely to say they celebrate Christmas as a religious holiday, attend religious services for Christmas and believe Jesus Christ was born of a virgin, according to a new look at the data.

Instead, 43% of Millennials say Christmas to them is more of a cultural holiday – about as many as celebrate it as a religious holiday (40%). By contrast, members of older generations are more likely to say they celebrate Christmas as a religious holiday. Among Baby Boomers, for example, more than twice as many see Christmas as more religious (56%) than cultural (26%).

Similarly, about half of Millennials (49%) said before Christmas in 2013 that they did not plan to attend religious services on Christmas Eve or Christmas Day, compared with 41% of Boomers and 35% of Silent generation members. And while fully one-quarter of Millennials (26%) say they do not they believe Jesus Christ was born to a virgin, about one-in-five or fewer among older generations say the same.

Despite these religious differences, Millennials celebrate many of the cultural parts of Christmas at roughly equal rates to older Americans – and sometimes at even higher rates. For instance, about nine-in-ten Millennials (91%) said they planned to buy gifts for friends or family during the 2013 holiday season, higher than the share of members of the Silent generation (79%) and Baby Boomers (86%) who said the same. And Millennials are at least as likely as their elders to say they planned to attend a gathering with extended family or friends, put up a Christmas tree or go caroling.

The one exception among the cultural traditions mentioned in the survey is the sending of Christmas or holiday cards. Members of the Silent generation (76%), Baby Boomers (68%) and Generation Xers (65%) are all more likely than Millennials (57%) to say they send such cards.

Mast Ali & Aziz Naser, Stars of Hyderabad Film Industry Address Press Conference in Chicago

Chicago IL: “The Hyderabad Film Industry, even though only about 10 years old, has churned out a series of comedy blockbusters and gained popularity not only in Andhra Pradesh and different parts of India but also among the large Diaspora in the Middle-East and the US, thanks to the Internet and DVDs”, said Mast Ali, a. k. a. Saleem Pheku, the king of comedy, who acted in over 20 high impact making films in different languages and brought laurels to Hyderabad, at a Press Conference held on December 23, 2015,: 5.30 PM at Mysore Woodlands, Devon Ave, Chicago. The Press Conference was attended by a huge number of representatives from the Print, Electronic, and Internet Media.

“Our films entertained their audiences thoroughly, irrespective of their linguistic backgrounds, as the Hyderabadi Urdu, the lingua franca of the streets of Hyderabad, which is a unique mix of Urdu, Hindi, Telugu, and some Marathi, is widely understood across the Indian Subcontinent, including in Pakistan”, added Mast Ali.

Mast Ali said that the Hyderabad Film Industry is currently in the growth mode and, hence, there is a great demand for story writers, lyricists, singers, etc. “Currently, we are caught up in all the departments of film making. Once the demand for different professionals is met, we can focus on our core job of acting and on producing high-quality films according to the felt needs of our audience, across the globe”, he added.

“It is a matter of gratification that the Hyderabad Film Industry is currently undergoing a metamorphosis; it is no longer confining itself to making small budget films for its niche market. Instead, it is focusing on producing typical Bollywood films, which are rich in terms of exquisite quality, pan-India appeal, and high-end technology”, said Aziz Naser, a. k. a. Jahangeer, another equally popular and powerful star.

“It is a moment of pride that Dawat-e-Ishque’, a landmark Bollywood-type movie of the Hyderabad Film Industry, is being released by Rajshree Productions under its banner, with a big bang”, said Syed Hussain, Director of the film.

“The release of our film by Rajshree Productions, which has produced a number of blockbusters in India, will take the Hyderabadi cinema up a notch like never before and catapult it into the higher echelons of film appreciation, added Hussain, with a sense of accomplishment.

Feroz Khan, who has essayed a negative role in “Dawat-e-Ishque” said that Hyderabadi cinema has come to attain the status of a genre unto itself, not just considering the typical lingo of the City of Pearls, but even given the culture and traditions of the Deccan.

“Our films, which deliberately shun vulgarity and item songs, considering the culture of Hyderabad, focus mainly on delivering authentic entertainment for the entire family”, he added.

“The stars of Hyderabad Film Industry will present a 90-minute Comedy Show, a charity-oriented event, on December 29th, 2015, 8:00 PM onwards at Northshore Banquet Hall, Devon, Chicago. The Show, comprising a unique combination of funny gags, mimicry, stand-ups, etc. will be laced with typical Hyderabadi-style comedy”, said Mast Ali and Aziz Naser.

“The Show will be our tribute to the worth-emulating success of people of Hyderabad in the US. Hyderabad has been the capital of comedy for decades and we hope that the Show will be instrumental in further improving the relations among the people of India, Pakistan, Bangladesh, and Sri Lanka”, they added.

“On the occasion of the Show, the trailer of the upcoming Hyderabadi film, ‘Dawat-e-Ishque’, produced by an Australian-based duo, Samiullah Fayyaz and Syed Waseem Yaba, which features Mast Ali, Aziz Naser, and Adanan Sajid Khan a. k. a. Gullu Dada, and three beautiful leading ladies, Kavya, Madhavi, and Manisha,  will be released”, said Syed Hussain, Director of the film.

Mast Ali, Aziz Naser, Syed Hussain, Farhan Khan, and their team, including Layeeque Ahmed, Shoukat, and Keerthi thanked Iftekhar Shareef, a prominent Businessman and Community leader, for sponsoring the Comedy Show and helping them out in a variety of ways in Chicago as well as in Hyderabad.  Iftekhar Shreef requested all the Indian Americans belonging to the Indian Subcontinent in general and Telengana State in particular to attend the Comedy Show, in large numbers.

Gandhi Samaj of Chicago Elects New Team of Office Bearers for 2016

The Gandhi Samaj of Chicago (GSC), Illinois, a not-for-profit organization, established in 1984, and consisting of 700+ members, unanimously elected Keyur Ghayal as  its President for 2016 and 2017, who, in turn, selected, as per the by-laws of the organization, Keyur Ghayal (President), Hitesh Gandhi (Executive Vice President), Bhumika V. Gandhi (Vice President); Ashwin Bodalia (Treasurer), Manhar Gajjar (Secretary), Roma Bhagat (Cultural Secretary), Ramesh Gandhi, Bharat Ghayal, Dipak Ghayal, Hary Gandhi, Hiren Ghayal, and Hiral Gandhi (Joint Secretary), Priya Ghayal (Youth Secretary).

Keyur Ghayal is one of the eminent persons in the Chicagoland, who have been associated with a number of organizations. Other office bearers too have got an excellent track record of community service.

“GSC is a 32-year-old organization which has been led by a number of eminent persons in the past. I take this opportunity to pay rich tributes to them for putting their best foot forward for bringing laurels to the GSC in the US”, said Keyur Ghayal.

Gandhi Samaj of Chicago Elects New Team of Office Bearers for 2016Keyur Ghayal extended a deep sense of gratitude to all the members of the GSC for reposing trust in him and his team and assured them of their democratic and transparent functioning. “Even as we pledge to contribute our optimum best for the welfare of the members of the GSC, we seek their wholehearted and continued support”, he added. He assured that he and his team will contribute their best to help keep the inherited culture thriving while assimilating into diverse for the current generation and beyond.

Keyur Ghayal said that the top priority of his team would be to preserve, protect, and defend the integrity and credibility of the GSC. He strongly underlined GSC’s commitment to empower its members to realize their American dream. “We are determined to uphold GSC’s preeminent place in the Chicagoland and to enrich its brand value for the common good of one and all”, he added.

Hitesh Gandhi, the Executive Vice President said that the new team would achieve the GSC’s objectives to achieve and promote unity amongst the members while helping the community to enhance cultural awareness via education and also through celebration of festivals such as Diwali and Navratri.   He said that he would conceptualize and execute a number of innovative events aimed at preserving the unique culture and heritage of India by involving the members belonging to different age groups.  “My vision is also to expand the membership base of the GSC in order to make it an effective platform for providing guidance and support”, he added.

Bhumika V. Gandhi, the Vice President said that her focus will be on involving the youth in the activities of the GSC by organizing a number of events in accordance with their felt needs. “We propose to organize ‘Youth Career Planning Seminar’ on January 31st 2016, in order to expose the youth to the emerging, newer, and innovative career and educational opportunities”, she added.

Directors of the GSC congratulated Keyur Ghayal and his team on their election and assured them of his full cooperation in their endeavors. They advised them to generate more revenues through newer partnerships with businesses in Chicagoland in order to achieve the vision and mission of the GSC with renewed vigor. For more details, please visit: www.gandhisamajchicago.com

Parenting in America

Contemporary debates about parenthood often focus on parenting philosophies: Are kids better off with helicopter parents or a free-range approach? What’s more beneficial in the long run, the high expectations of a tiger mom or the nurturing environment where every child is a winner? Is overscheduling going to damage a child or help the child get into a good college? While these debates may resonate with some parents, they often overlook the more basic, fundamental challenges many parents face – particularly those with lower incomes. A broad, demographically based look at the landscape of American families reveals stark parenting divides linked less to philosophies or values and more to economic circumstances and changing family structure.

A new Pew Research Center survey conducted Sept. 15-Oct. 13, 2015, among 1,807 U.S. parents with children younger than 18 finds that for lower-income parents, financial instability can limit their children’s access to a safe environment and to the kinds of enrichment activities that affluent parents may take for granted. For example, higher-income parents are nearly twice as likely as lower-income parents to rate their neighborhood as an “excellent” or “very good” place to raise kids (78% vs. 42%). On the flip side, a third of parents with annual family incomes less than $30,000 say that their neighborhood is only a “fair” or “poor” place to raise kids; just 7% of parents with incomes in excess of $75,000 give their neighborhood similarly low ratings.

Along with more negative ratings of their neighborhoods, lower-income parents are more likely than those with higher incomes to express concerns about their children being victims of violence. At least half of parents with family incomes less than $30,000 say they worry that their child or children might be kidnapped (59%) or get beat up or attacked (55%), shares that are at least 15 percentage points higher than among parents with incomes above $75,000. And about half (47%) of these lower-income parents worry that their children might be shot at some point, more than double the share among higher-income parents.

Concerns about teenage pregnancy and legal trouble are also more prevalent among lower-income parents. Half of lower-income parents worry that their child or one of their children will get pregnant or get a girl pregnant as a teenager, compared with 43% of higher-income parents. And, by a margin of 2-to-1, more lower-income than higher-income parents (40% vs. 21%) say they worry that their children will get in trouble with the law at some point.

There are some worries, though, that are shared across income groups. At least half of all parents, regardless of income, worry that their children might be bullied or struggle with anxiety or depression at some point. For parents with annual family incomes of $75,000 or higher, these concerns trump all others tested in the survey.

The survey also finds that lower-income parents with school-age children face more challenges than those with higher incomes when it comes to finding affordable, high-quality after-school activities and programs. About half (52%) of those with annual family incomes less than $30,000 say these programs are hard to find in their community, compared with 29% of those with incomes of $75,000 or higher. And when it comes to the extracurricular activities in which their children participate after school or on weekends, far more higher-income parents than lower-income parents say their children are engaged in sports or organizations such as the scouts or take lessons in music, dance or art. For example, among high-income parents, 84% say their children have participated in sports in the 12 months prior to the survey; this compares with 59% among lower-income parents.

The dramatic changes that have taken place in family living arrangements have no doubt contributed to the growing share of children living at the economic margins. In 2014, 62% of children younger than 18 lived in a household with two married parents – a historic low, according to a new Pew Research Center analysis of data from the U.S. Census Bureau. The share of U.S. kids living with only one parent stood at 26% in 2014. And the share in households with two parents who are living together but not married (7%) has risen steadily in recent years.

These patterns differ sharply across racial and ethnic groups. Large majorities of white (72%) and Asian-American (82%) children are living with two married parents, as are 55% of Hispanic children. By contrast only 31% of black children are living with two married parents, while more than half (54%) are living in a single-parent household.

The economic outcomes for these different types of families vary dramatically. In 2014, 31% of children living in single-parent households were living below the poverty line, as were 21% of children living with two cohabiting parents. By contrast, only one-in-ten children living with two married parents were in this circumstance. In fact, more than half (57%) of those living with married parents were in households with incomes at least 200% above the poverty line, compared with just 21% of those living in single-parent households.

Across income groups, however, parents agree on one thing: They’re doing a fine job raising their children. Nearly identical shares of parents with incomes of $75,000 or higher (46%), $30,000 to $74,999 (44%) and less than $30,000 (46%) say they are doing a very good job as parents, and similar shares say they are doing a good job.

Though parental scorecards don’t differ by income, they do vary across other demographic divides, such as gender and generation. Among all parents, more mothers than fathers say they are doing a very good job raising their children (51% vs. 39%), and Millennial mothers are particularly inclined to rate themselves positively. Nearly six-in-ten (57%) moms ages 18 to 34 say they are doing a very good job as a parent, a higher share than Millennial dads (43%) or any other generational group.

Regardless of how they see themselves, parents care a lot about how others perceive their parenting skills. For married or cohabiting parents, the opinion of their spouse or partner matters the most: 93% of these parents say it matters a lot to them that their spouse or partner sees them as a good parent. But most single parents (56%) also say they care a lot that their child’s other parent sees them as a good parent.

About seven-in-ten (72%) parents want their own parents to think they are doing a good job raising their children, and smaller but substantive shares care a lot that their friends (52%) and people in their community (45%) see them as good parents.

Parents are nearly evenly divided about whether their children’s successes and failures are more a reflection of how they are doing as parents (46%) or of their children’s own strengths and weaknesses (42%). Parents of younger children feel more personally responsible for their children’s achievements or lack thereof, while parents of teenagers are much more likely to say that it’s their children who are mainly responsible for their own successes and failures.

There are significant differences along racial lines as well, with black and Hispanic parents much more likely than whites to say their children’s successes and failures are mainly a reflection of the job they are doing as parents.

About six-in-ten parents (62%) say they can sometimes be overprotective, while just a quarter say they tend to give their children too much freedom. More also say they criticize their kids too much than say they offer too much praise (44% vs. 33%). American parents are more divided on whether they sometimes “stick to their guns” too much or give in too quickly (43% each).

In several key ways, mothers and fathers approach parenting differently. Mothers are more likely than fathers to say that they sometimes are overprotective of their children, give in too quickly and praise their children too much.

Mothers also have more extensive support networks that they rely on for advice about parenting. They’re much more likely than fathers to turn to family members and friends and to take advantage of parenting resources such as books, magazines and online sources. For example, while 43% of moms say they turn to parenting websites, books or magazines at least sometimes for parenting advice, about a quarter (23%) of dads do the same. And moms are more than twice as likely as dads to say they at least occasionally turn to online message boards, listservs or social media for advice on parenting (21% vs. 9%).

In at least one key area gender does not make a difference: mothers and fathers are equally likely to say that being a parent is extremely important to their overall identity. About six-in-ten moms (58%) and dads (57%) say this, and an additional 35% and 37%, respectively, say being a parent is very important to their overall identity.

The survey findings, which touch on different aspects of parenting and family life, paint a mixed portrait of American parents when it comes to their involvement in their children’s education. About half (53%) of those with school-age children say they are satisfied with their level of engagement, but a substantial share (46%) wish they could be doing more. And while parents generally don’t think children should feel badly about getting poor grades as long as they try hard, about half (52%) say they would be very disappointed if their children were average students.

A narrow majority of parents (54%) say parents can never be too involved in their children’s education. But about four-in-ten (43%) say too much parental involvement in a child’s education can be a bad thing, a view that is particularly common among parents with more education and higher incomes. For example, while majorities of parents with a post-graduate (65%) or a bachelor’s (57%) degree say too much involvement could have negative consequences, just 38% of those with some college and 28% with no college experience say the same.

Black and Hispanic parents have a much different reaction to this question than do white parents, even after controlling for differences in educational attainment. Fully 75% of black and 67% of Hispanic parents say a parent can never be too involved in a child’s education. About half of white parents (47%) agree.

Whether or not they feel too much involvement can be a bad thing, a majority of parents are involved – at least to some extent – in their children’s education. Among parents with school-age children, 85% say they have talked to a teacher about their children’s progress in school over the 12 months leading up to the survey. Roughly two-thirds (64%) say they have attended a PTA meeting or other special school meeting. And 60% have helped out with a special project or class trip at their children’s school. Parents’ level of engagement in these activities is fairly consistent across income groups.

Reading aloud is one way parents can get involved in their children’s education even before formal schooling begins. Among parents with children under the age of 6, about half (51%) say they read aloud to their children every day, and those who have graduated from college are far more likely than those who have not to say this is the case. About seven-in-ten (71%) parents with a bachelor’s degree say they read to their young children every day, compared with 47% of those with some college and 33% of those with a high school diploma or less.

American children – including preschoolers – participate in a variety of extracurricular activities. At least half of parents with school-age children say their kids have played sports (73%), participated in religious instruction or youth groups (60%), taken lessons in music, dance or art (54%) or done volunteer work (53%) after school or on the weekends in the 12 months preceding the survey.

Among those with children younger than 6, four-in-ten say their young children have participated in sports, and about as many say they have been part of an organized play group; one-third say their children have taken music, dance or art lessons.

Parents with annual family incomes of $75,000 or higher are far more likely than those with lower incomes to say their children have participated in extracurricular activities. For parents with school-age children, the difference is particularly pronounced when it comes to doing volunteer work (a 27 percentage point difference between those with incomes of $75,000 or higher and those with incomes less than $30,000), participating in sports (25 points), and taking music, dance or art lessons (21 points). Similarly, by double-digit margins, higher-income parents with children younger than 6 are more likely than those with lower incomes to say their young children have participated in sports or taken dance, music or art lessons in the 12 months prior to the survey.

Parents with higher incomes are also more likely to say their children’s day-to-day schedules are too hectic with too many things to do. Overall, 15% of parents with children between ages 6 and 17 describe their kids’ schedules this way. Among those with incomes of $75,000 or higher, one-in-five say their children’s schedules are too hectic, compared with 8% of those who earn less than $30,000.

But if kids are busy, their parents are even busier. About three-in-ten (31%) parents say they always feel rushed, even to do the things they have to do, and an additional 53% say they sometimes feel rushed. Not surprisingly, parents who feel rushed at least sometimes are more likely than those who almost never feel rushed to see parenting as tiring and stressful and less likely to see it as enjoyable all of the time.

Parents employ many methods to discipline their children. The most popular is explaining why a child’s behavior is inappropriate: three-quarters say they do this often. About four-in-ten (43%) say they frequently take away privileges, such as time with friends or use of TV or other electronic devices, and a roughly equal share say they give a “timeout” (41% of parents with children younger than 6) as a form of discipline, while about one-in-five (22%) say they often resort to raising their voice or yelling.

Spanking is the least commonly used method of discipline – just 4% of parents say they do it often. But one-in-six parents say they spank their children at least some of the time as a way to discipline them. Black parents (32%) are more likely than white (14%) and Hispanic (19%) parents to say they sometimes spank their children and are far less likely to say they never resort to spanking (31% vs. 55% and 58%, respectively).

Spanking is also correlated with educational attainment. About one-in-five (22%) parents with a high school diploma or less say they use spanking as a method of discipline at least some of the time, as do 18% of parents with some college and 15% of parents with a bachelor’s degree. In contrast, just 8% of parents with a post-graduate degree say they often or sometimes spank their children.

We Cannot Continue to Fight Tanks with Slingshots

December 18, 2015 (New York, NY) – Over the past 14 years, the Sikh Coalition has become remarkably adept at staring down tanks, carefully aiming our slingshot, and delivering monumental victories on behalf of Sikh civil rights in America.

These victories are just some of the many we carry forward into 2016, but we do this work on a shoestring budget that constantly forces us to make terribly tough choices about the work that we do on your behalf. While we have grown into the largest Sikh civil rights organization in the United States, we are tiny compared to our peer organizations and the corporations, government agencies and institutions that we’re fighting against.

We Cannot Continue to Fight Tanks with SlingshotsThe Sikh Coalition has a team of twelve full time staff and four part time staff who dedicate their professional careers to tackling critical battles on behalf of the Sikh American community. For example, we have two full time practicing attorneys who responded to more than 200 requests for legal assistance this year. We have one policy expert who is responsible for 535 members of Congress and a dozen federal agencies. We have just two community development colleagues for a population of 500,000 Sikh Americans.

In 2016, special interest organizations with budgets ten times our size will continue to try to distort Sikh history in America. Our children will still be ignored by educators and in classrooms across the country. The U.S. Department of Defense, our nation’s largest employer, will continue to religiously discriminate. As community anxiety mounts around political fear and backlash, we must invest even more in the fight for justice. If you support our work and you’re proud of our success, will you help make the rocks that we put into our slingshot bigger for next year? Donate today: www.sikhdonate.org

“Pakistan Renews its Commitment to End Terrorism on the First Anniversary of Peshawar School Massacre”-Faisal Niaz Tirmizi, Consul General of Pakistan in the US

Chicago IL: Pakistan marked the first anniversary of the deadliest terrorist attack on the Army Public School in the northwestern city of Peshawar, termed a “Mini-9/11 for Pakistan”, in which over 150 people, most of them children, were gunned down by Taliban militants on December 16th, 2014. Glowing tributes were paid to the martyrs of the School and strong solidarity was displayed with them. In another display of solidarity with the victims of the attack, vehicular traffic remained halted for two minutes beginning 10: AM in Lahore, and one-minute silence was observed to mark the tragic incident in different cities.

“The first anniversary of this massacre is an occasion to pause and take note that consequent upon the military-led crackdown in the North Waziristan tribal region along the Afghan border and the implementation of the National Action Plan, the acts of terror and serious crimes have fallen by sixty about percent”, said Faisal Niaz Tirmizi, Consul General of Pakistan, with a sense of satisfaction. “The anniversary is also an occasion to renew our resolve to continue the campaign, with the hardened resolve, till we permanently uproot the menace of terrorism from the soil of Pakistan and make it a place of eternal peace and vibrant prosperity”, he added.

 “Pakistan Renews its Commitment to End Terrorism on the First Anniversary of Peshawar School Massacre”-Faisal Niaz Tirmizi, Consul General of Pakistan in the US
Faisal Niaz Tirmizi, Consul General of Pakistan in the US

Tirmizi paid rich tributes to the Pakistan’s top civilian and military leadership, which demonstrated exemplary courage in stepping up the action-packed interventions, called Operation Zarb-e-Azb, aimed at checking the domestic terrorism like never before with an iron hand. He said that lifting of moratorium on the death penalty, trying alleged militant extremists in military courts, regulating the country’s religious seminaries, building the walls and extra defenses by all schools,and tightening security systems at schools added a great punch to the campaign. “Today, parents feel safe to send their children to schools, which suggest that the civilian and military leadership was successful in keeping their promises of a secure environment for the students”, he added.

Tirmizi said that a balanced fusion of army crackdowns and educational campaigns would be an enduring solution to the longstanding problem of militancy in Pakistan. “Declaring December 16th as the “Day of National Resolve to Promote Education” by Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif would be a right step in the direction of defeating the heinous designs of the extremists to put off the flame of knowledge and education”, he added.

“The Government’s two-dimensional policy of using selective force and initiating development in areas most affected by terrorism will be fruitful. The economic transformation, trade promotion, employment generation, and educational development would be of great help in maintaining sustainable peace in the region”, Tirmizi stated.

Tirmizi welcomed the collective and concerted approach towards tackling terror by a large number of countries, from across the globe, in view of the fact that it is not the problem of Pakistan alone. He added that the successful hosting of Heart of Asia Conference in Islamabad on December 9th, 2015, which was attended by President Ashraf Ghani of Afghanistan and Foreign Ministers of seven countries including that of China, India, Iran, Kyrgyzstan, Turkey and Latvia,  besides senior representatives of 29 countries, including those of  the US, was an important step in this direction. He called upon all the regional countries too to join hands to make a collective and comprehensive effort, involving further strengthening of the economic, commercial, sporting, and people-to-people linkages with a view to successfully eliminating terrorism from the region.

Tirmizi wholeheartedly welcomed the release of a video by the Pakistani Army commemorating the victims of the massacre, which shows kids singing a song glorifying the role of education in grappling with terrorism: “Mujhe dushman ke bachon ko parhana hai (I want to educate the children of my enemies) and “Mujhe ma us se badla layne jana ha (Mother, I have to go take revenge)”. “Education as revenge seems a fitting response to one of the most shocking terrorist attacks on Pakistani soil, Tirmizi added.

Bollywood Actors Succeed in Making Their Presence Felt in Hollywood

Chicago IL: Many Bollywood actors, including Amitabh Bachan, Aishwarya Rai Bachan, Priyanka Chopra, Anupam Kher, Anil Kapoor, Amrish Puri, Naseeruddin Shah, Tabu, Om Puri, Mallika Sherawat, etc. have already made their mark globally. They have gained wide recognition for their performances and it would not be long before they play main leads in the Hollywood cinema”, said Neetu Chandra and Tarun Mullick, the lead actors in the newest primetime Hollywood Sitcom, in their interactive session held on Tuesday, December 15, 2015 at Mysore woodlands, 2548 W Devon Ave, Chicago, IL with a large number of representatives from Print, Electronic, and Internet Media in Chicago. Bhavesh Patel of SAHIL, who is considered to be one of the heavyweights in Chicago’s entertainment industry, was also present at the event.

Neetu Chandra congratulated Tarun Mullick, Executive Producer on 10 productions, for his pioneering role not only in bringing to light South Asians in the Hollywood but also in ensuring that their contributions as a society are expressed and embraced.

Bollywood Actors Succeed in Making Their Presence Felt in HollywoodNeetu Chandra and Tarun Mullick told that their hilarious comedy Sitcom has been filmed in Chicago over the past several weeks and will continue next year. “Even though it is a typical Hollywood production, it would be a vehicle for showcasing the Indian culture too”, they added unanimously.

“Even though my role in the Sitcom is quite challenging in terms of content and style, I look forward to doing an action movie too in the Hollywood considering my strong credentials in martial arts”, said Neetu Chandra and added that, despite her strengths in English language, she is taking classes in order to acquire and fine tune the typical American English.

Neetu Chandra said that in Bollywood the widespread perception is that one should either belong to a filmy family or have a Godfather for his entry into the movies; whereas in the Hollywood, talent alone holds the key not only for the initial entry but also for subsequent success in different departments of film making, including acting.

“No one in the Hollywood bothered to enquire about my nationality, religion, family background, and other demographics; instead, they focused on the body of my work, talent, attitude, and inherent potential and evaluated them in a scientific, objective, and professional fashion, and had no hesitation in welcoming me on board with open arms”, said Neetu Chandra.

Neetu Chandra said that she was greatly impressed by Hollywood’s strong discipline in all spheres of movie making, professional attitude in the conceptualization and execution of projects, deep commitment for quality, and utmost respect for timelines. Neetu Chandra had great praise for the people of the US for their warmth, friendliness, sense of dignity, positive attitude even in a negative situation, and peaceful coexistence despite the diversity of population, in terms of such parameters as religion, language, race, etc.

Bollywood Actors Succeed in Making Their Presence Felt in Hollywood“Many a time, I seriously consider settling down in Chicago considering its unique culture which presents a rare mix of modernity and tradition. While its hip and happening profile brings in its wake multiple opportunities for continuous learning, it remains to be extremely soothing, calm, and quite”, added Neetu Chandra.

Neetu Chandra applauded the integration of Indian-Americans into the US way of life, while maintaining the unique identity of their own culture and heritage. “Their stupendous success in contributing to the vibrant growth of both the US and Indian economies is a source of inspiration for me and it is my keen desire to emulate them in my professional and personal life”, she added. Neetu Chandra appreciated the efforts of the US in further enriching the unity among different sections of society in view of the fact that conflict anywhere is a danger to peace everywhere.

Neetu Chandra called upon girls to come forward and take a lion’s share of career opportunities on the domestic as well as global fronts. She underscored the need for teaching martial arts to them as a part of the curriculum at the school level in order to empower them to defend themselves effectively.  Neetu Chandra and Tarun Mullick said that they are currently acting in a number of good movies. “Our decision to join a movie is solely based on the nature and quality of the script. A good script, rather than a great star, alone is a guarantee of a movie’s success”, they opined.

Neetu Chandra is the first Bollywood actress from India to hit mainstream American television for prime time ever. Similarly, Tarun Mullick is the first ever India-American to produce and be the lead actor on an American Sitcom. “The interactive session proved to be a worth-remembering event for us as we rarely come across persons like Neetu Chandra, who possess the lethal combination of gorgeous beauty, hourglass figure, and extraordinary brain”, opined many a media representative unanimously.

Diverse faiths pray together in Nevada for Peace & Unity

In view of growing violence nationally and globally, diverse northern Nevada faith groups joined hands to pray together on December 20. “Multi-faith Prayer Vigil for Peace & Unity”, coordinated by religious statesman Rajan Zed and hosted by South Reno United Methodist Church (SRUMC) included Christian, Muslim, Hindu, Buddhist, Jewish, Baha’i, Shinto and Native American prayers. Attendees signed a banner pledging peace and unity.

Starting with lamp lighting by leaders of diverse faith communities with seriously different faith traditions; prayers were read in English, Sanskrit, Hebrew, Arabic, Pali, Paiute; besides through flutes and Taiko drums.

Religious leaders and others after the prayer vigil
Religious leaders and others after the prayer vigil

Zed, who is President of Universal Society of Hinduism, speaking on the occasion, said: In view of growing violence nationally and globally, many times targeting innocent people, there is the need to come together in prayer, dialogue, and community to bring light and hope to the spreading darkness. Participants repeated Gayatri Mantra, considered most sacred mantra of Hinduism, in Sanskrit after Zed.

Besides Rajan Zed, other participants included Dawn Pidlypchak, Senior Pastor of SRUMC; Rita K. Sloan, Life-Peace-Justice Commission Coordinator of Roman Catholic Diocese of Reno; Sherif A. Elfass, President of Northern Nevada Muslim Community; Shelly L. Fisher and Matthew T. Fisher, Priests at Reno Buddhist Center; ElizaBeth Webb Beyer, Rabbi of Temple Beth Or and Tahoe Hebrew Congregation; Roya Galata, Baha’i Teacher; Gene Savoy Junior, Head Bishop of International Community of Christ; Joseph E. Johnson, Sparks Stake President of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints; Brian E. Melendez, American Indian Spirituality Scholar; Becky Stockdale, Pastor at SRUMC; Rieko Shimbo, Director of Tsurunokai Taiko; and well know musician Oscar Dallas Smith III.

Muslims and Islam: Key findings in the U.S. and around the world

Muslims are the fastest-growing religious group in the world. The growth and regional migration of Muslims, combined with the ongoing impact of the Islamic State in Iraq and Syria (ISIS) and other extremist groups that commit acts of violence in the name of Islam, have brought Muslims and the Islamic faith to the forefront of the political debate in many countries. Yet many facts about Muslims are not well known in some of these places, and most Americans – who live in a country with a relatively small Muslim population – say they know little or nothing about Islam.

There were 1.6 billion Muslims in the world as of 2010 – roughly 23% of the global population – according to a Pew Research Center estimate. But while Islam is currently the world’s second-largest religion (after Christianity), it is the fastest-growing major religion. Indeed, if current demographic trends continue, the number of Muslims is expected to exceed the number of Christians by the end of this century.

Muslims and Islam: Key findings in the U.S. and around the worldAlthough many countries in the Middle East-North Africa region, where the religion originated in the seventh century, are heavily Muslim, the region is home to only about 20% of the world’s Muslims. A majority of the Muslims globally (62%) live in the Asia-Pacific region, including large populations in Indonesia, India, Pakistan, Bangladesh, Iran and Turkey.

Indonesia is currently the country with the world’s single largest Muslim population, but Pew Research Center projects that India will have that distinction by the year 2050 (while remaining a majority Hindu country), with more than 300 million Muslims.

According to our best estimate, Muslims make up just less than 1% of the U.S. adult population. Pew Research Center’s 2014 Religious Landscape Study (conducted in English and Spanish) found that 0.9% of U.S. adults identify as Muslims. A 2011 survey of Muslim Americans, which was conducted in English as well as Arabic, Farsi and Urdu, estimated that there were 1.8 million Muslim adults (and 2.75 million Muslims of all ages) in the country. That survey also found that a majority of U.S. Muslims (63%) are immigrants.

Our demographic projections estimate that Muslims will make up 2.1% of the U.S. population by the year 2050, surpassing people who identify as Jewish on the basis of religion as the second-largest faith group in the country (not including people who say they have no religion).

A recent Pew Research Center report estimated that the Muslim share of immigrants granted permanent residency status (green cards) increased from about 5% in 1992 to roughly 10% in 2012, representing about 100,000 immigrants in that year.

There are two major factors behind the rapid projected growth of Islam, and both involve simple demographics. For one, Muslims have more children than members of other religious groups. Around the world, each Muslim woman has an average of 3.1 children, compared with 2.3 for all other groups combined.

Muslims are also the youngest (median age of 23 years old in 2010) of all major religious groups, seven years younger than the median age of non-Muslims. As a result, a larger share of Muslims already are, or will soon be, at the point in their lives when they begin having children. This, combined with high fertility rates, will fuel Muslim population growth. While it does not change the global population, migration is helping to increase the Muslim population in some regions, including North America and Europe.

Like any religious group, the religious beliefs and practices of Muslims vary depending on many factors, including where in the world they live. But Muslims around the world are almost universally united by a belief in one God and the Prophet Muhammad, and the practice of certain religious rituals, such as fasting during Ramadan, is widespread.

Recent surveys show that most people in several countries with significant Muslim populations have an unfavorable view of ISIS, including virtually all respondents in Lebanon and 94% in Jordan. Relatively small shares say they see ISIS favorably. In some countries, considerable portions of the population do not offer an opinion about ISIS, including a majority (62%) of Pakistanis.

Favorable views of ISIS are somewhat higher in Nigeria (14%) than most other nations. Among Nigerian Muslims, 20% say they see ISIS favorably (compared with 7% of Nigerian Christians). The Nigerian militant group Boko Haram, which has been conducting a terrorist campaign in the country for years, has sworn allegiance to ISIS.

More generally, Muslims mostly say that suicide bombings and other forms of violence against civilians in the name of Islam are rarely or never justified, including 92% in Indonesia and 91% in Iraq. In the United States, a 2011 survey found that 86% of Muslims say that such tactics are rarely or never justified. An additional 7% say suicide bombings are sometimes justified and 1% say they are often justified in these circumstances.

In a few countries, a quarter or more of Muslims say that these acts of violence are at least sometimes justified, including 40% in the Palestinian territories, 39% in Afghanistan, 29% in Egypt and 26% in Bangladesh.

In many cases, people in countries with large Muslim populations are as concerned as Western nations about the threat of Islamic extremism, and have become increasingly concerned in recent years. About two-thirds of people in Nigeria (68%) and Lebanon (67%) said earlier this year they are very concerned about Islamic extremism in their country, both up significantly since 2013.

Our 2011 survey of Muslim Americans found that roughly half of U.S. Muslims (48%) say their own religious leaders have not done enough to speak out against Islamic extremists. Living in a religiously pluralistic society, Muslim Americans are more likely than Muslims in many other nations to have many non-Muslim friends. Only about half (48%) of U.S. Muslims say all or most of their close friends are also Muslims, compared with a global median of 95% in the 39 countries we surveyed.

Roughly seven-in-ten U.S. Muslims (69%) say religion is very important in their lives. Virtually all (96%) say they believe in God, nearly two-thirds (65%) report praying at least daily and nearly half (47%) say they attend religious services at least weekly. By all of these traditional measures, Muslims in the U.S. are roughly as religious as U.S. Christians, although they are less religious than Muslims in many other nations.

When it comes to political and social views, Muslims are far more likely to identify with or lean toward the Democratic Party (70%) than the Republican Party (11%) and to say they prefer a bigger government providing more services (68%) over a smaller government providing fewer services (21%). As of 2011, U.S. Muslims were somewhat split between those who said homosexuality should be accepted by society (39%) and those who said it should be discouraged (45%), although the group had grown considerably more accepting of homosexuality since a similar survey was conducted in 2007.

A Pew Research Center survey conducted in 2014 asked Americans to rate members of eight religious groups on a “feeling thermometer” from 0 to 100, where 0 reflects the coldest, most negative possible rating and 100 the warmest, most positive rating. Overall, Americans rated Muslims rather coolly – an average of 40, which was comparable to the average rating they gave atheists (41). Americans view the six other religious groups mentioned in the survey (Jews, Catholics, evangelical Christians, Buddhists, Hindus and Mormons) more warmly.

Republicans and those who lean toward the Republican Party gave Muslims an average rating of 33, considerably cooler than Democrats’ rating toward Muslims (47). Republicans also are more likely than Democrats to say they are very concerned about the rise of Islamic extremism in the world and to say that Islam is more likely than other religions to encourage violence among its believers.

In spring 2015, we asked residents of some European countries a different question – whether they view Muslims favorably or unfavorably. Perceptions at that time varied across European nations, from a largely favorable view in France (76%) and the United Kingdom (72%) to a less favorable view in Italy (31%) and Poland (30%).

In a 2011 survey, majorities of respondents in a few Western European countries, including 62% in France and 61% in Germany, said that relations between Muslims and Westerners were bad, while about half of Americans (48%) agreed. Similarly, most Muslims in several Muslim-majority nations – including Turkey, Lebanon, Egypt and Jordan – agreed that relations were bad, although fewer Muslims in Pakistan (45%) and Indonesia (41%) had this view.

The same survey also asked about characteristics the two groups may associate with one another. Across the seven Muslim-majority countries and territories surveyed, a median of 68% of Muslims said they view Westerners as selfish. Considerable shares also called Westerners other negative adjectives, including violent (median of 66%), greedy (64%) and immoral (61%), while fewer attributed positive characteristics like “respectful of women” (44%), honest (33%) and tolerant (31%) to Westerners.

Westerners’ views of Muslims were more mixed. A median of 50% across four Western European countries, the U.S. and Russia called Muslims violent and a median of 58% called them “fanatical,” but fewer used negative words like greedy, immoral or selfish. A median of just 22% of Westerners said Muslims are respectful of women, but far more said Muslims are honest (median of 51%) and generous (41%).

“Pakistan is All Set to Embark on a Higher Growth Trajectory”

Chicago IL: “Pakistan stands at the crossroads of the world where the cultures of the Central Asia, the Middle East, and South Asia meet and become one. For centuries, the ‘silk route’, through Pakistan, was the main route for trade in silk, spices, and other commodities and exchanges in ideas, skills, and religious beliefs, across Europe and Asia, thereby making it an important country in the international sphere”, said Faisal Niaz Tirmizi, Consul General of Pakistan at a gathering of International Baccalaureate Students and Faculty Members, organized by Morgan Park High School of Chicago.

Tirmizi, while giving a presentation on “Economy, Social Systems, and Culture of Pakistan”, said that Pakistan’s economy is all set to embark on a higher growth trajectory due to implementation of stabilization policies and marked improvement in macroeconomic indicators. He said: “Our government is fully committed to economic growth of the country and we have already achieved the set goals of economic boost and will achieve desired economic progress in coming years too by following the vigilant economic policies”.

Tirmizi said that the prudent policies of the Government have resulted in a number of beneficial outcomes, including increasing foreign reserves, positive business sentiments, growth in the real GDP, reduced inflation rate, creation of new employment opportunities, larger inflow of foreign direct investment, etc., and added that these positive parameters indicate that the economy of Pakistan is moving into right directions.

“Pakistan is All Set to Embark on a Higher Growth Trajectory”“Recently, several international monetary organizations have widely appreciated the current macroeconomic stability and the overall economic conditions of Pakistan”, he added with a sense of pride.

Tirmizi said that Pakistan has positioned itself for global leadership in the realm of education, taking into consideration the present-day fiercely-competitive world of education and work. Towards this, he added, Pakistan has been according a sharper focus on different essential aspects of higher education, especially its diversification, high-end quality, and accessibility to the best and brightest students from all strata. “On account of these initiatives, thousands of students from Pakistan are successfully serving, across the globe, including in the USA as leading Physicians, Engineers, IT professionals, Professors, etc.”, he added.

Tirmizi said that the women in Pakistan will not be allowed to lag behind in the campaign for empowering youth to take a lion’s share of educational and career opportunities not only in Pakistan but also in different developed countries. He applauded developmental programs of Government and proactive efforts of NGOs, Human Rights Organization, and media aimed at giving a big boost to women’s education. “It is gratifying to note that women are registering a decent share not only at different levels of education but also in numerous sectors of employment”, he added.

Tirmizi said that Pakistan has the distinction of electing the first Muslim woman Prime Minister, Benazir Bhutto, first woman Speaker of National Assembly, Fahmida Mirza, besides over twenty five female Ambassadors and combat pilots. He cited Malala Yousafzai and Samina Baig Mirza as representatives of the women of modern Pakistani.

Tirmizi stated that Pakistan has all types of tourism opportunities, be they archaeological, religious, adventure or of the conventional type. “Pakistan is home to beautiful beaches and a vast array of mountains. It has many distinctive animals and birds. It has places, which are like earthly paradise, such as the Neelam Valley, Swat, Hunza, the unique Kalash valley, the Murree hills, the Shandur Pass and many others”, he added and invited tourism-lovers from different parts of world, including the students of Chicago Public School system, to visit Pakistan and explore its multifaceted and exciting tourism potential.

“Currently, Pakistani society is in transition where tradition and modernity coexist. In this phase of change, Pakistanis have not abandoned their traditional traits of great hospitality, warmth, and friendliness and they continue retain their deep sense of dignity”, concluded Tirmizi.

The scholarly presentation by Tirmizi was followed by a highly spirited and informative one-on-one discussion about a number of key issues relating to Pakistan, including its economic scenario, education system, culture and heritage, tourism potential, etc.  Tirmizi underscored the need for further diversifying and enriching the existing mechanism of student- and faculty-exchange between educational institutions of Pakistan and the US.  He invited the authorities of the Chicago Public School system to establish a vibrant mechanism of student- and faculty-exchange with leading educational institutions in Pakistan.

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