“Don’t give us food packets, we can buy rice from the ration shop. Find a solution for the flood waters!” said the women gathered in a group in Semmanjeri. That area, 30 kilometres south of Chennai city, on the Old Mahabalipuram Road, in Kancheepuram district, was severely flooded on November 25, 2020. The submergence was neither new nor unusual for the residents of this low-lying locality. In 2015, when Chennai went under water in a historic and notoriously mismanaged flood, so did Semmanjeri. But in some neighbourhoods at least, the streets and storm water drains seemed to be somewhat better prepared…
Read moreGENRE: Features
Five years since the international community agreed to the list of 17 UN Sustainable Development Goals or SDGs, achievement of the sixth (SDG 6) -- ensuring inclusive access to clean water and sanitation facilities -- remains a far cry in Indian cities. What obstructs inclusive and resilient access to water, sanitation, hygiene (WASH) and healthy spaces for all urban dwellers? What are the challenges specific to Indian cities, especially the metros? Are there successful experiments led by communities or organisations, using either technology or nature-based solutions, that can be showcased and scaled to bridge the gaps that exist? To probe…
Read moreEarlier this decade, ‘new political movements’ focusing on transparency and fighting corruption -- such as India Against Corruption -- were the flavour in many Indian cities. As Kerala goes into election mode with local bodies polls this week, several such movements at the local level have fielded independent candidates for city corporations and municipalities across the state. Most of these movements are new, some being formed in the last few months even, but are mostly helmed by those with some experience in social work or activism. These groups have for now avoided political affiliation, and consider themselves an alternative to…
Read moreOn October 13, Tanishq withdrew an advertisement – featuring a Hindu daughter-in-law and her Muslim mother-in-law – in response to widespread trolling on social media that the company was promoting ‘love jihad’. A couple of months earlier, on August 11, even as the country was emerging from the Covid-19 lockdown, Bengaluru witnessed communal violence. We are living in a communally charged atmosphere where anything and everything seems to be susceptible to becoming a source of religious polarisation. It is in times like this that initiatives, both at the interpersonal and institutional levels, that encourage tolerance and co-operation between religious communities,…
Read moreReminiscing moments from the early days of their romance, J Prasanna (30) and M Murugan (34) celebrated their 12th year anniversary over a simple feast two months ago. It was a celebration that marked the triumph of love in a homophobic society. Murugan loves Ilayaraja's music, while Prasanna is a devout Sam Smith fan. Murugan is an avid reader of the works of Sujatha and Kalki and Prasanna pores over anything that is written by Sydney Sheldon or Jeffrey Archer. Testament to the common adage that opposites attract, Murugan and Prasanna fell in love in 2008, finding solace in each…
Read moreAround five years ago, Suvarna Sane was looking for unique products to gift during a get-together. At one exhibition of women entrepreneurs, Sane came across upcycled products of reCharkha. "I was always an environmentally conscious buyer and the purses and totes from upcycled plastic appealed to me,” says Sane, a government servant. “My friends and relatives also appreciated them.” Sane later learnt that Amita Deshpande and her team at reCharkha also accepted plastic bags as donation. "I went to her workshop, which was also their tailoring unit, with my plastic bags,” adds Sane. “I was impressed with their work and…
Read moreAs urban citizens, we all have different desires, aspiration and expectations from our city. We raise issues that we face in our day-to-day lives, we voice our concerns, share our wishlists, but we rarely perceive things from the perspective of a child. This Child Rights Week (November 14th to 20th), we spoke to a few children from the city. Here is what they had to say about the city and what they want from it: K Mithun, Class 6, Chitlapakkam Due to COVID, all our day-to-day learning activities have moved online. While it is convenient for most of us, it…
Read moreRepresentational image: Alastair/Wikimedia Commons: CC-BY-SA-2.0 On August 11, a mob gathered around Pulakeshinagar Congress MLA R Akhanda Srinivasa Murthy’s house in Kaval Byrasandra, protesting an allegedly derogatory post on the Prophet Muhammed by his nephew. The mob soon turned violent, leading to clashes with the police that resulted in the imposition of curfew. The police reportedly used tear gas shells and opened fire, killing three people, only after which order was restored late at night. While some have characterised this riot as an organised event, some others said it was a spontaneous reaction to a provocation. No definitive account of…
Read moreஒருங்கிணைந்த குழந்தை வளர்ச்சித் திட்டத்தின் கீழ் செயல்பட்டு வரும் அங்கன்வாடி மையங்கள் நமது கவனத்தை அவ்வளவாக கவராமல் இருந்திருக்கலாம். ஆனால், தற்போது கொரோனா தொற்று காரணமாக அவை மூடப்பட்டிருக்கும் வேளையில் தான் அவற்றின் இருப்பும் சேவையும் எவ்வளவு மகத்தானது என்பதை நம்மால் உணர முடிகிறது. இம்மையங்கள் அதன் சுற்றுப்புறத்தில் வசிக்கும் குழந்தைகளின் ஆரம்பக்கல்விக்கான ஒரு அஸ்திவாரத்தை இடுவது மட்டுமின்றி அவர்களுக்கு ஊட்டச்சத்து மற்றும் உணவளிப்பதோடு மற்றும் அடிப்படை மருத்துவ தேவைகளையும் அளிக்கும் மையங்களாக செயல்பட்டு வந்துள்ளன.‘ அத்துடன் ஒரு குழந்தைகள் காப்பகமாகவும் அப்பகுதி வாழ் மக்களுக்கு அளப்பரிய சேவை செய்து வந்துள்ளன என்பது கூடுதல் அம்சமாகும். இப்பகுதியில் வாழும் குழந்தைகளுக்கான தடுப்பூசி மற்றும் போலியோ சொட்டு மருந்திற்கான முகாம்களும் இந்த மையங்களில் நடைபெறும். இவ்வாறாக, அதன் சுற்றுப்புறங்களில் வாழும் மக்களுக்கு அவர்தம் வாழ்க்கையின் ஒரு ஒன்றிணைந்த அங்கமாகவே மாறிவிட்ட அங்கன்வாடிகள் அடைக்கப்பட்டிருந்த காலகட்டம் எத்தகைய ஒரு விளைவினை ஏற்படுத்தியது என்பது குறித்து…
Read moreThe narrow lane of Koya Arunagiri Street in Royapettah leads to the house of R S Venkatesan, a seasoned potter, who has made Chennai his home. Although it is just 5.30 am, he and his wife Vasanthi V are already up and busy with their work. A potter’s wheel, a bunch of firewood logs, dried cow dung cake and other paraphernalia lie scattered around their compound. Koya Arunagiri Street runs just behind the Royapettah Hospital in Chennai. Years ago, the entire stretch was known for the potters who lived here. Venkatesan informs me that over the years, many from the…
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