Category Archives: Features

The comfort of chai

By Piya Mitra

chai1Some of my most cherished childhood memories are those of my grandmother’s tea estates, in the Dooars (foothills of Darjeeling) region of W.Bengal, sipping tea on the porch of the beautiful bungalow with a picture postcard view. Lush green tea shrubs cover the landscape, dotted with women workers picking tea leaves“ two leaves, a bud” with their nimble fingers and tossing them into the basket on their backs. I consider myself very lucky to have had the opportunity of tasting the freshness of that tea, and breathing that beautiful aroma.

Another unforgettable memory is of a cold winter night, waking up to the jolt of the train stopping at a small non-descript train station and to the ever familiar strain of “Chai Chai, Chai Chai.” Sipping hot chai out of an earthen cup on a cold winter night was pure delight.

Lastly I remember myself as a preteen, peeking into our drawing room(Living room or parlor) to admire all the lovely ladies in their chiffon sarees  playing taash     (cards)/mahjong and sipping  tea in my mother’s fine bone china cups, the teapot covered in a tea cozy to keep the tea warm. The servants served cucumber and mint sandwiches, fresh baked Nankhatai biscuits(cookies), pastries and other mouthwatering snacks. Oh how I wished to grow up and take their place one day.

Chai is an intergral part of our Indian identity like, dal, chawal  roti or Bollywood. After all the   rags to riches story of the life of a poor “Slumdog” chai wala in a Mumbai call center just won an Oscar!

While the British may have their prim and proper “High Tea” we Indians have our version too and it’s a lot more fun and informal.

Alas! The Indian tea or chai party is a lost art here in the US. Our busy lives hardly permit us the luxury of sipping a cup of leisurely tea with our friends.

If you are a tea lover like me, why not throw a tea party? It’s a lot easier than cooking an elaborate dinner or lunch. A ladies tea and gossip session may be a fun way to relax and catch up with your friends, or a Karaoke and chai party promises to be a lot of fun.

There are two basic ways of serving chai. The Masala Chai  or elachi  Chai  is served on informal occasions. It is prepared in a pan with milk added while cooking  and poured directly into cups or mugs. The more formal tea is brewed in a tea pot and served along with sugar and milk.

Masala Chai
Ingredients:

* 2 tsp loose CTC tea
* 1 piece of dry ginger
* 3 cardamom pods, crushed
* 3 whole cloves
* 1 piece of cinnamon stick
* Milk and sugar to taste
* 2 cups of water

Method:
Chop up ginger into fine pieces, and break up the cinnamon stick. Bring 2 cups of water to a boil and then add tea leaves and all the spices. Let everything brew at boiling for 30 to 45 seconds. Remove from heat, then let steep at room temperature for another minute.

Strain out the tea and pieces of spice. Serve hot and fragrant, with only a touch of milk or sugar.

This kind of chai goes very well with Samosas, Pakodas, Chaats, Jalebis  etc.

Hot Darjeeling Tea

chaiThe best Darjeeling tea according to me is Makaibari http://www.makaibari.org. So try it if you can find it. Of course any other brand will do too.

Take fresh water from the cold tap and boil preferably in a kettle, (electric kettles are really convenient as they boil water really fast and to the right temperature). Warm the teapot by rinsing out with hot water. Put one teaspoonful of tea leaf for each cup into teapot. Pour boiling water into it. Cover and wait for three minutes. Pour liquid tea from the teapot into cup through a strainer. Add milk / sugar to taste

Here are some recipes from my mother’s tea parties that go perfectly with the Darjeeling tea.
Nan Khatai biscuits (egg less Indian cookies)

Ingredients:

All purpose flour 1 cup
Baking powder 1 tsp
Vanilla essence 1/4 tsp
Ghee/butter 1/2 cup
Powdered sugar 1/2 cup
Chopped cashews 2 tsps
Cardamom powder 1 tsp
Saffron 1/4 tsp ( soaked in 1 tbsp hot ) (optional)

Method:
Sieve flour and baking powder together. Add vanilla essence. Mix ghee and sugar till creamy. Add the flour mixture, the saffron and cardamom . Knead well and make into small balls. Flatten and place on greased tray. Dip a fingertip in water and dab on the centre of each ball of dough. Now press a few cashew bits on top of each circle of dough. Bake in a preheated oven for about 20-25 mins at 375 degrees.

Veg Club Sandwich

munchiesIngredients:
3 Sandwich Bread Slices
1tbsp butter
1tbsp mint chutney
1tbsp mustard
1tbsp tomato ketchup
Few cucumbers and tomato rounds
Few lettuce leaves
One potato boiled and cut into slices
Salt and pepper to taste
1 cheese slice or grated cheese
Shredded cabbage and beetroot for garnishing

Method:
Bread slices can be lightly toasted or used as it is. Spread butter and mint chutney on two slices. On another slice, spread mustard on one side and tomato ketchup on the other. On the bread and mint chutney slice arrange lettuce leaves and over it arrange tomato, potato and cucumber slices. Sprinkle salt and pepper. Over this place the mustard/ketchup bread slice. Over this place the cheese slice and arrange lettuce leaves over it and sprinkle salt and pepper. Cover this with the other butter/mint slice. Press the sandwich and cut the brown edges and cut into desired shapes. Arrange the sandwich in a serving plate and garnish with cabbage and beetroot shreds.

Hope I have inspired you to have a few friends over for some hot chai (Hot tea). The teapot is starting to whistle I am off to sip my next cup of tea.
Piya Mitra is a Bay Area event organizer. She can be reached at emailpiya@gmail.com or through her website Elegant Eventz . She also blogs her favorite recipes and party ideas at http://celebratingeveryday.blogspot.com/

Yeh Maya Hai

By Geeta Padmanabhan

mayawatiIf there’s one thing that is predictable about the 15th Lok Sabha elections, it is that it is unpredictable. Even those psephologists who consider their analyses incontestable are talking in terms of “if”.
The bookies are of course making a lot of hay in the unpredictable sunshine. The ruling coalition UPA is expected to get 150-160 seats and so the odds are 1: 70 paise. That is, if you put Re. 1 on UPA (led by Congress), you’ll get 70 paise if it bags 150-160 seats. If NDA (led by BJP) gets 110-120 seats your share will be Re. 1.50.
If the Third Front gets 100 seats, your return will jump to Re. 3/-
No one is betting on that. The odds will keep changing as the polls get near, and that is the charm of the game. Note that no one is sure either of the two groups will have enough seats to form the government. Is that a hung parliament? Not necessarily.

As alliances are made and unmade, one figure is emerging as the eventual tipper of the scale. It is the Bahujan Samaj Party chief Mayawati. I would have said “Kingmaker” but Mayawati may not be satisfied with that. But her caveat in the early stages of negotiations that she be declared the potential PM did not find many takers (imagine the Tamil Amma accepting that!) among the members of the Third Front. So she changed the rules of the game.

Look at this scenario: In the event of either UPA or the NDA falling short of a majority (which is quite likely), and Mayawati getting around 50 seats, all roads will lead to her door, post election. Which is exactly why she has ruled out seat adjustment with any party in the Lok Sabha polls. She has also declared that the issue of the prime ministerial candidate of the Third Front would be decided after the elections. Mayawati’s BSP is contesting 80 seats.

At a dinner she hosted for members of the Third Front she said, “All our allies are contesting the elections separately and after the elections, together we will prevent the UPA and NDA from coming to power,” adding that the way the Front was being targeted showed that its detractors were “panicky.” It was the “heartfelt desire” of party founder Kanshi Ram that BSP captured power at the Centre and in all the states.

What does she promise the voters? Security? Jobs? Infrastructure? Water and Electricity? Runaway prices? Mayawati released the BSP’s “appeal” for the elections in which she says, if her party came to power at the Centre, her government would provide reservation for upper castes. “My party’s policy is not confined to the welfare of Dalits alone,” she said.

Mayawati says her party is the only alternative to the two biggies. National ambition is ok, but how this will work is to be seen. She is in a coalition that will become one only after the elections.
Asked about her becoming PM in the event of a big win for her candidates, Cho Ramaswamy said, “That is a joke.”
Still, the fortunes of the BSP and Mayawati will be interesting to follow.

Highlights and Sidelights
Now everyone’s sort of resigned to the fact that the election will be won – not on ideology, performance, popularity of the contestant or his clean record. It will be the freebies offered pre and post elections. Free or low-priced rice is the major attraction now. Bharatiya Janata Party is promising free cell phones to the people and cheap laptops to the students,

Check out the manifestos. Congress is offering rice at Rs. 3 a kilo. This with the other freebies is giving economists a scare. In a poor economy how is this expected to be fulfilled? Why isn’t anyone learning from DMK’s 2-rupees-a-kilo rice fiasco? Large quantities of this ration rice were routinely transported to neighbouring Kerala. The rice could be used only for idlis and dosas and people had to buy rice in the open market for regular use. Another freebie, the colour television sets is another unpalatable story. A girl in my apartment building earning around 15 k a month has one of those. She said she got it from her grandmother who lives in a small town in Tamil Nadu. A couple of village workers told me that they have bought these TV sets at a cheap price from the villagers. They already own better sets and were selling these free ones off.

A developing story is the one about Varun Gandhi. A murder charge has been slapped on him. The case is getting curiouser and curiouser. BJP first tried to distance itself from his alleged fiery speech against Muslims, but now has decided to back his candidature. Is that how they understand the voters’ mood? As things stand, it looks like he may not be able to campaign at all. If he wins his Philibit seat, it will not be the first time a candidate wins sitting in a prison cell.

Bharatanatyam, Bollywood and Ballet

selvi-and-kidsGiven the profusion of dance forms that thrive in India, it would not be a stretch to say that Indians are born with a sense of rhythm. No one exemplifies the love affair that we have with movement better than Selvi Pragasam, the founder of the Indian Fusion Dance Academy (IFDA) in San Jose.

A graduate of the Master of Fine Arts program in India, Selvi traveled abroad extensively as a professional dancer, even managing to perform in front of the Pope. Like many Indian American immigrants, Selvi put up her dancing shoes when she came to the US pursuing a career in technology.

dance-3Life took a serious turn when her newborn son Aidan was diagnosed with a rare illness called Propionic Acidemia. She devoted herself to caring for his special needs for several years. Eventually she joined Jeena, the support organization for parents of kids with special needs and started choreographing dances for them. Her  involvement with community groups like the Bay Area Telegu and Kannada Associations also kept her busy organizing and choreographing dances for their functions.

Friends suggested she set up a dance school and the Indian Fusion Dance Academy was formed. She started it as an evening and weekend program in the beginning, but it proved to be so successful that the Academy became a full time enterprise within 3 months.

Today Selvi runs the IFDA with the help of a dancer friend who also has a special needs child. The Academy has about 150 students, a number that Selvi wants to limit herself to be able to do justice to her pupils.

dance-4The school prides itself on the creativity of its offerings. “Bharatanatyam is a lovely art form, but it does have its fixed set of rules,” says Selvi, “and artists like Shobana who have tried to experiment with it have been heavily criticized. I would rather keep its purity and experiment outside the format.” She and her partner Lavanya Gopal experiment with incorporating belly dance, jazz, salsa and many other forms of dance into their performances.

“I want to have the full freedom to do what I want to do,” adds Selvi. “We have classical classes as well as classes that offer half an hour of Bollywood or folk. Our combo classes are never boring. We have semi-classical pieces which incorporate western influences like ballet, jazz and salsa. My advanced class is doing a bit of Mediterranean dance. Sometimes we structure our dance around a theme.”  The academy offers its own certification to the dancers apart from the formal arangetrams that the Bharatanatyam dancers train for.

dance-2IFDA is not limited to teaching Bharatanatyam and fusion dance classes. Because of her background with special needs, Selvi puts up shows as fundraisers for Jeena and the Propionic Acidemia foundation, among other worthy causes. The academy also makes it possible for  middle and high-school students volunteer at her special needs dance classes as part of their community service requirements through Selvi’s connection with Jeena.

The Indian Fusion Dance Academy just began its spring session a few days ago and registrations are mostly closed. “We have just found a fantastic bhangra instructor,” says Selvi. That is a new class being offered by the school that is still open. “I want to add yoga classes and develop this into a full fledged fine arts mecca for Indian Americans.” IFDA also offers Carnatic music classes.

IFDA students will perform at the upcoming Jeena Yahaan. Jhalak Dreams, the academy’s annual fundraiser is scheduled for June 6. 2009.

The Indian Fusion Dance Academy
2847 S. White Road , Suite 207 San Jose CA 94148

Akshay Patra – Food for education

By Seema Joshi and others

akshaypatra2The Akshaya Patra Foundation is the world’s largest NGO-run midday meal program currently feeding close to one million underprivileged children daily in over 5,700 schools in seven states in India.  Akshaya Patra is a public-private partnership that combines good management, innovative technology and smart engineering to deliver school lunch at a fraction of the cost of similar programs in other parts of the world. It costs $28 to feed a child daily for the entire year.

For many of the children this is their only complete meal for the day. This gives them an incentive to come to school, stay in school and provides them with the necessary nutrients they need to develop their cognitive abilities to focus on learning.

akshaypatra3Through kitchens specially designed by engineers to leverage technology and sourcing its food stocks from local markets, Akshaya Patra is able to reduce costs associated with transportation and food spoilage while supporting the local economy. In a short time, the foundation has grown to become the largest, and certainly most innovative, school lunch program in the world. Akshaya Patra is a great example of what a non-profit organization can achieve– a cost effective, scalable solution with high quality service delivery.

Some highlights from their latest newsletter, which can be found here
–    The Agnihotri family in New Jersey organized a six-week yogaclass for nearby children, with each child donatingat least $28 to Akshaya Patra as a fee for attending the class. In addition to the yoga class, Agnihotri and his mother also showed an AkshayaPatra video to the students to illustrate the good work being done in India.
–    Akshaya Patra was recognized by the Limca Book of Records for being the world’s largest NGO-run midday meal program.
–    Akshaya Patra has also been awarded the 2008 India Business Leader Award for Social Enterprise of the Year from CNBC –TV in India.

There are also several local chapters of this organization in different states.  To see how you can get involved and support this noble cause, please contact guptacharu@yahoo.com.

Peanut Butter and Jelly

By Isheeta Sanghi

pbjThere’s something so warm and comforting about it. Whenever I have a PBJ I immediately return to those blissful days of school when the most I had to worry about was finishing my homework on time. Funny how the world changes isn’t it? Now schools have banned Peanut Butter, and kids are exposed to so much more than some of us can even imagine, Now there’s so much more to life, so much more to worry about, so much more to think about, so much more to be grateful for, and so much more to appreciate.

Maybe it’s because it brings me back to my comfort zone that I still sometimes make a sandwich for work, or maybe it’s because I can relate so much to the sandwich itself. I am a peanut butter sandwich, we all are. We are our mother, and our father. We are Indian and American.

For a while I stuck to just peanut butter sandwiches, and I think maybe on some level that was all psychological, maybe I only wanted to associate myself with one side, whether that mean being only like my Mom, or only being an American.

Maybe I only wanted to be a girl that grew up in California, and leave it at that, but that would be a lie. I’m not only that girl. I’ve lived all over the world, I’ve been exposed to a global lifestyle from a very young age, I’ve been friends with people from all corners of the world, from all walks of life, and I’ve seen so much. It’s hard to just be that girl from California driving around in her SUV with her sunglasses on and soaking up the sun when I know that when I go to sleep at night there are girls out there that are being abused, and there are children out there that are being trafficked around for money and drugs.

In actuality, we all have a little bit of everywhere we’ve come from in us. I’m the girl that used to recite lines from the Mahabharat while growing up and I’m not ashamed of it, I’m the girl that decided to be a cheerleader in high school and I’m not ashamed of that either. I’m the girl that loves her independence, but I’m the girl that still lives at home with her parents. I’m a mix, a mutt, a khichari, a peanut butter sandwich, and I accept it, embrace it, and live it.

Is it hard being from two worlds, two countries, two cultures, two families? Of course, but like anything in life you’ve got to figure out what you are comfortable with and adapt to the situation, and you have to be true to yourself. It takes a while, it’s taken me a good 2 years to find this place that I’m in right now, and more importantly, accept it. You come across all types of people in this world, I see expats here who are very comfortable with only being American, and sort of disowning the Indian side, and that’s a choice that they have to be comfortable with and live with, and that’s good for them. For me, that’s not a possibility because I’d be living a great big lie.

If I was asked to change it, to go back and not move, to go to college in the States and live in the dorms and come home to do laundry, to be part of an Indian club and perform ‘Bollywood’ dances for various functions and lead a relatively ‘normal’ life, a part of me still would probably say yes. I’d change it and never have moved and changed anything; I’d go on living life being that Californian girl.

But the other part of me would say no, the relationships that I’ve fostered, the life lessons  I’ve learned are invaluable and irreplaceable. You’re in limbo, but it’s not a bad thing, sometimes you get confused because life plays tug of war with you and your heart pulls you from side to side, but we all manage to pull through it. What you need to realize is that it’s not the end of the world, nothing ever is, there’s no situation that you can’t get through, and sure you might not see results as soon as you want to, but that’s just life. My advice, don’t take life too seriously, things will get better and it may take time. When in doubt, make yourself a peanut butter sandwich or whatever that comfort food is that brings you back to happy memories, and let go, just enjoy the moment, and everything that comes with it!

Highlights and Sidelights

By Geeta Padmanabhan

india-elections21. Cashing in: Academy for political aspirants: Former Congressman Raj Ranjan believes “political thinking should be inculcated deep into human mind to curb corruption.” As a first step towards implementing this lofty but vague goal, he has launched The Netagiri Vidyalaya in Ranchi. The word “Netagiri” should have put off a lot of people, but it didn’t.  So far, he has imparted training to 200 aspiring politicians.
Admission comes with paying a fee of Rs. 50. Classes are held every Saturday for two hours. Lessons start with an explanation of what a manifesto is.
With no bar on age and ambition, you’ll find students like 69-year-old Sukhdev Lohra, among the 10 politicos on the roster now.  Raman Balhav, a lecturer says he is “proud of the school where ethics, moral values and government-sponsored welfare schemes comprise the syllabus”. He added, “I interviewed some of the candidates readying themselves to contest the ensuing Lok Sabha elections. I asked them how they would serve people. To my utter surprise nobody could give a proper answer.”

2.  Woman power hasn’t gone far in Indian parliament history: The number of women MPs in India’s 545-member Lok Sabha has never touched 50. This in a country that had a woman PM (Indira Gandhi) for 17 years. The 13th Lok Sabha after the 1999 elections had 49 women members. It was just 9.02 percent of the total Lok Sabha Seats. The last (14th) Lok Sabha failed to pass the bill giving 33% reservation for women candidates.

3. Glamour Girls:Having said that, let’s take a look at some of the women who will lend glamour to the contest. Meera Sanyal, country-head of ABN-Amro may be the first woman banker joining politics. She stands from Mumbai South as an independent candidate. Her rivals here are Milind Deora of the Congress, and Mohan Rawle of the Shiv Sena. Meera Sanyal is taking a sabbatical from the bank for a taste of Indian politics. Why? The 26/11 attacks on Mumbai last November was the trigger, she said.
She has a draft masterplan for the campaign. She’ll stay away from media ads and posters to avoid any conflict of interest, but she has launched a website. She knows her constituency well. Sanyal, 47, was a student of the Convent of Jesus & Mary and Cathedral School and went to Sydenham College. Her office is at Nariman Point. She lives on Malabar Hill.
It will be a miracle if she wins. Her biggest drawback is she has no political lineage.
“Is the banking industry collapsing in India?” asked a friend. “Is Sanyal trying to get out?”

4. Private helicopter companies in India will strike it rich this election season. Political parties are hiring them for poll campaigning, bringing in their wake (or should I say contrail) remarks like “Great way to gloss over problems”, “What you don’t see doesn’t exist” and “That’s how far they stay from reality.”
The demand for helicopters three times of what it was in 2004 general elections. Obviously, commercial aspects of campaigning are no longer a taxing consideration. The “stars” must reach the masses with the least fuss possible. “It’s only a means of transportation for them,” said M K Chandrasekhar, Director, Jupiter Aviation, Bangalore.
Reportedly, fleets of helicopters operated by various companies were booked by the political parties two months ahead of the announcement of the poll dates.
Deccan Aviation, an air service provider from Bangalore, has 12 choppers and five executive aircraft. All of them have been rented out.
Non-scheduled continuous flying takes a heavy toll on the pilots and the aircraft. So campaigning on chartered flights is not cheap. A chopper ride can cost a party as much as Rs. 80,000 – 1 crore per hour.
Do your Math about campaign expenditure.

Picture courtesy PBS.org

The Community Ambassador Program for Seniors – a successful Fremont initiative

By Asha Chandra

sikh-ambassador

A Sikh Ambassador

The city of Fremont in the Bay Area was once a quiet enclave of white middle-class families. But as emerging technologies in nearby Silicon Valley and the area’s relative affordability drew immigrants from all over the globe, demographics began to shift rapidly.

Today, not only is the area’s original population aging, with over 12% of its residents over 60, but almost 47% of its residents are foreign born and over 57% speak a language other than English in their homes. While many of the younger immigrants have assimilated, their parents and more recently arrived refugees are challenged by a language and system they don’t understand. Today the senior population of 30,000 in the City of Fremont resembles a mini United Nations, with its own need for diplomacy and understanding between its many ethnic and faith groups.

As communities across the country seek new ways to improve the lives of their seniors, Fremont and its Tri-City Elder Coalition—an affiliation of over 60 community, health and governmental agencies—has faced the added challenge of extreme cultural diversity. To address this need, the City of Fremont Human Services Department and its partner organizations developed the Community Ambassador Program for Seniors (CAPS), a grant-funded program by the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation. “The best way to develop a program,” explained Suzanne Shenfil, Director of Human Services for the City of Fremont “was to create an interactive model that engaged the many diverse groups that make up this community.”

The CAPS program is a unique civic partnership between the City of Fremont’s Human Services Department and 7 local cultural and faith-based organizations: Centerville Presbyterian Church, Muslim Support Network, Sikhs Engaged in Volunteer Activities, India Community Center, Taiwanese Senior Help Association, Our Lady of Guadalupe (Latinos), and St. Anne Catholic Parish (Filipinos).

CAPS integrates immigrants through a strength-based model that engages the full community and supports seniors in their own language, within their own cultural norms, and does so where seniors live, worship, and socialize. Ambassadors serve as a bridge between the formal network of social services and their respective faith and cultural communities.

The City of Fremont, San Jose State University, and the Stanford Geriatric Education Center collaborated to develop the comprehensive CAPS curriculum. In February 2009, CAPS graduated an additional 39 new ambassadors. To date, 88 ambassadors have completed the 40-hour training to learn how to provide information and referral services to seniors and families focused on issues such as housing, transportation, health benefits, social security, and legal assistance.

Many local senior service providers have actively participated as presenters in the training, and are listening to the needs of the diverse community.  One of our hospitals is learning about the needs of Muslim patients (e.g. they now know that Jell-O is considered an animal product not suited for vegetarians and that Muslim women find it shameful to be examined by a male doctor.)

muslim-support-network

The Muslim Support Network

CAPS trains and develops natural networks and gives them the tools they need to serve their own seniors using methods that fit their unique cultural norms.  For example, Sikh seniors are seen at the Gurdwara, and Filipino seniors are seen at their church, where they regularly come for worship, companionship and food.  The India Community Center has its ambassadors housed at their community center where they are well known to the senior attendees.  They also do some home visiting in order to “take the center to the community” when seniors are home-bound.

Over 600 older adults have been served by the CAPS program to date. Says Prafullata Bir,  one of the volunteer Community Ambassadors, “I am like a bridge between people coming from India and people who are here as Indians for a long time.”

Adds CAPS site coordinator Pragna Dadbhawala, “What is wonderful about CAPS is that it not only helps our seniors, but it uses my talents and my culture in the right manner.”

The program has been met with enthusiastic response from the immigrant community. The effort is now to see if similar programs can be introduced in other communities.

To find out more about the CAPS program or if you are aware of a senior who can benefit from the program, check out http://www.capseniors.org/.

Asha Chandra is the Marketing Coordinator and Program Manager, Community Ambassador Program for Seniors,Pathways to Positive Aging Project,City of Fremont Human Services.

The Third Front

By Geeta Padmanabhan

third-frontIt happened on 12 March at Dobbespet, Karnataka. The attendance was surprisingly big, considering a lot of these were regional parties. There was the usual speechifying and the now-expected raising of locked hands while standing.

The Third Front is a wedding menu of parties – different colours, shapes, tastes and temperaments. It is a collection mostly of parties defeated at the last Lok Sabha elections. All bound loosely by the “rice” of power. Some of these parties are familiar while others make it to the news only when horse-trading begins. A rainbow coalition.

Don’t expect ideology here, but there is an agenda – defeat the Congress-led UPA and the Bharatiya Janata Party-led NDA in the Lok Sabha elections to form the next government at the Centre. So you can expect them to be together for a while.

Here is the guest list: Communist Party of India (Marxist), the Communist Party of India, the Janata Dal (Secular), the Telugu Desam Party, the Bahujan Samaj Party, the All-India Anna Dravida Munnetra Kazhagam, the Telangana Rashtra Samithi, the Revolutionary Socialist Party, the Forward Bloc, and the Janhit Congress Party of the former Haryana Chief Minister, Bhajan Lal.

The former Prime Minister and JD (S) chief H.D. Deve Gowda is supposed to have “engineered” it. He said it was all CPM Prakash Karat’s doing. Karat returned the compliment. The “historic” alignment would address the “country’s need for a new alternative.” It is of course a “secular democratic alternative, to fulfil the aspirations of the masses.” Members believe the Front will “expand” during the run-up to the elections. Biju Janata Dal (BJD) may hop into this odd bandwagon.

Party heads conspicuous by their absence were the two women heavy-weights – BSP’s Mayawati and AIADMK’s Jayalalitha. But the Left, which has 60 seats in the outgoing Lok Sabha is supposed to provide the glue to keep the members together.

The Congress reacted typically: “It is a mirage. Every time the Third Front is formed, it benefits only the communal forces.

BJP said: Won’t work. It has no agenda, no leader.

That is not true. Each one of the partners is a leader.  The problem is who will be PM if the Third Front together is able to chalk up the numbers to form the government. Mayawati has “expressed her willingness to serve the country as the next PM.” Jayalalitha said the decision would be made after the elections (if there’s need for that decision). “Every one has a right to aspire for the post,” she said.

Will they find the 270-odd seats together? Can’t say. So Karat declared today: If the Congress wants to join us post-poll, they are welcome.

Now that’s interesting. A Third Front government, with Congress as alliance partner.

Eprasaran Internet Radio

eprasaran team

eprasaran team

Streaming Bollywood music on the web has been around for a while. Lovers of Hindi music will probably have explored the various options available on the web and zoomed in on their favorites. But my own experience has been mixed – many sites claiming to offer a good musical experience are choked up with ads or require player downloads (in.com is a refreshing departure but even it offers a bewildering array of choices for the casual listener who is just interested in listening to some good music). Few offer commentary on the song lists.

In the face of increasing complexity of content and services and multiple players in the field, eprasaran Internet Radio is an extraordinary simplistic attempt at creating a radio experience for listeners. But in its own uncomplicated way, or maybe because of its simplicity, it works.

Friends Atul and Vidya Vaidya and Milind and Madhura Gokhale started eprasaran three years ago as a way to create and broadcast Marathi language programs for the Marathi diaspora the world over. “We explored the traditional AM and FM options,” says Atul, “and came to the conclusion that it was not only too expensive but limiting in the number of people it would reach.”

Vidya and Madhura, both professional stage artists, brought their talents to scripting the shows while Milind provided the technical expertise in designing the website. On weekday evenings and weekends the friends work on compilations that are uploaded to the site. Initially the programs featured Marathi music, interviews with well known Marathi personalities, children’s programs and news. Very soon, public demand made it necessary to add Hindi music shows.

Today the site features two strands of Hindi and Marathi programming. Each week the eprasaran team puts up 10-11 shows. Some shows are compiled by loyal listeners who have an interest in a particular genre or era of film or classical music.

The technology is simple. Audio files are uploaded to the site by the team and can be listened to on the website without any downloads. The content changes every week. The shows are  not interactive but listeners can send in their requests by clicking “Aapli Aawad” ( “your choice” in Marathi) and many do. The site gets listeners from over 120 countries and 750,000 hits a month( and growing).

I spent yesterday afternoon sampling some of the Hindi content and found it charming. One regular compiler, Subhash Kelkar, creates a regular show called Geetanjali featuring golden oldies. His style, whether deliberate or accidental, is very reminiscent of Amin Sayani’s on Binaca Geetmala from my childhood and I got a real kick out of listening to old Johnny Walker songs and some beautiful Lata and Rafi songs I would have a hard time finding on my own. The host also provides  trivia about the songs that are played and I found it a delightful experience. It is also a boon to the listener that the songs have been chosen with a discerning ear – at many other streaming music sites the content is random.

With 3 years of programming behind them, the eprasaran team is sitting on a treasure trove of archives but is not quite sure what to do with them. (The archives are not available to the listener at this particular time.) “There is a mindset that everything on the internet should be free,” laments Atul. The site recoups its costs at present by providing live webcast services and some advertising on the site, though the latter is not intrusive at all, at least for now. Eprasaran even offers a broadcast of Bay Area theater company Naatak’s play Sultana Daaku for a modest price of $10 but there have not been many takers.

For now, the simple idea and the loyalty of thousands of listeners is keeping the team going. First generation Indian Americans will enjoy the weekly content and I definitely recommend trying out the programs at eprasaran .

Tennis Ball with CricBay: Spartans win the Tech CU Fall Open 2008

By Anal Shah & Sunil Shenoy

cricket-1Tennis ball cricket has taken a whole new dimension and grown to a different level in the Bay Area. CricBay started 3 years back with a simple ideology, a platform for the cricketers, by the cricketers and of the cricketers. It started with 28 teams competing for the coveted trophy and now just 3 years down the line, it has grown to 68 teams.
The organization is run by volunteers, who work tirelessly to make this form of weekend cricket not only enjoyable but highly competitive. The backbone is the website, cricbay.com which has everything from forums to blogs to statistical data of teams and individual players. This weekend saw the finals for this competitive bay area league.

Extreme XI

Extreme XI

The two finals played on the weekend of March 14th were the gold and the platinum finals.

Based on the league games, the teams were divided into 3 groups-Silver, Gold and Platinum. Extreme XI bagged the Silver trophy last week by defeating Cheers CC by 45 runs.

Silver Finals’ scores:
Extreme XI 77/7 in 20.0 overs [20.0] (Aditya 18, Ashu 14, Abhishek 4/0/13/3) defeated
Cheers CC 32/10 in 12.4 overs [20.0] (Kiran 10)


Megastars

Megastars

Gold Finals: The Gold Finals was played between Megastars and the RisingXI. Megastars played well on the windy day on an unpredictable pitch and reached a competitive score of 74 off the allotted 20 overs. Rising XI were equal to the task and at the end of the 19th over they were at 69 runs needing just 6 runs off the last over; easier said than done. The first ball of the over was a wide. Each run was cheered at the ground. The bowler was booed at and the tension was widespread. What followed over the next 4 balls were 3 cheeky singles, a dropped catch and a bye run. They were running for just about everything.
Scores were leveled and Rising XI needed just one run off the next 2 balls. The team almost started celebrating, but the bowler had different ideas. 5th ball – outside off stump, a swing and a miss, oops. The last ball was a game changer, instead of RisingXI getting the much needed single, they ended up with one more run out.
With the scores level, both teams were given one over to bat (the team that scores most runs would win). Rising XI batted first and after a really good spell from Megastars managed just 4 runs from the over. The game had turned around. Megastars got the 5 runs in just 4 balls and won the Gold cup. This just shows how unpredictable the game of cricket is!
Gold Finals’ Scores:
Megastars 74/6 (20.0 overs) tied with Rising XI 74/6 (20.0 overs)
Tie Breaker: Rising XI 4/2 in 1 over Megastars 5/1 in 5 balls


Spartans

Spartans

Platinum Finals – These are played for the number 1 rank in the league. Spartans and Indians faced off for this game – A game that all bay area tennis ball cricketers dream to play. Spartans won the toss and elected to field first. Spartans were looking to contain the Indians who had some of the best batsmen in the league. But this was the Spartans’ day. They started bowling really well and their fielding was equally strong. With 3 wickets a piece for CricBay’s Best Bowler Jaymin and the MVP for the tournament Dilip and 3 runouts the Indians were bundled out for just 43 runs.
Needing 44 runs to win the Spartans started out cautiously making sure they don’t lose wickets and give Indians the edge they were looking for to run through the Spartans line-up. At the end of the 10th over mark Spartans were comfortable placed at 24/1 needing 20 runs with 9 wickets in hand in 10 overs. Again as it looked to be fairly simple Indians came out with a purpose after the break and sent a scare through the Spartans with some quick wickets. At the end Spartans finished strong, as ever, and completed a famous win with their captain hitting the winning shot. The team went berserk and ran on to the field with stumps and the scenes were dramatic. They were the new bay area champs and the feeling was slowly getting to them.
Platinum Finals’ Scores:
Indians 43/10 in 19.1 overs (Ramana 12; Jaymin 3/3 Dilip 3/6) lost to
Spartans CC 44/6 in 18.1 overs (Anal 15, Jaymin 9; Vishal 1/4)

The games were followed with the presentation ceremony. This little cricket community is expanding exponentially and apart from the enthusiastic players it also owes it success to its sponsors Tech CU, Swati Tiffins and ERP Factory.

The closing article of the 2008 season would not be complete without the mention to the sensation of CricBox; a weekly section initiated by Rohan Pai(Nemesis) and sponsored by Evolution Stone, Inc. which highlights the games scheduled for the forthcoming weekend along with highlights about the statistics, players in the spotlight and a lot of spice.

Volunteers

Volunteers

We are thankful to the CricBox writers guild, Manish Nadkarni(WCW), Rohan Pai(Nemesis), Rajeev Tharoor(Mavericks), Samkit Shah(The Immortals) and Krishnan Iyer(Thunderdawgs).
Also, any event could not be a success without the support of fellow community volunteers. We thank Girish Bangalore(Nemesis), Sulo Wijetunga(Mavericks), Roshan Shanbhag(Aryans), Rajendra Badadare(Cheers CC), Sheshu Shenoy(Aryans), Mehul Patel(Aryans), Ashish Tarhalkar, Manish Nadkarni(WCW), Naresh Nayak(Burlingame United), Prashant Ulavapalli(Raiders), Kirit Dawda(Hattrickers), Govind Jayant(Weekend Champs), Ciby Thomas(Daakus), Raghu(Seamers), Nagendra A(Megastars), Shiv Memamajal(Mavericks), Avi Gupta(Friends XI), Vasant Kumar(Syndicate CC), Vinod Vijayan(Aptech CC) and Sunil Shenoy(Aryans) and the members of the playing teams for their support and dedication to complete the third successful CricBay season.