Friday, March 2, 2018

Israeli police question Benjamin Netanyahu in telecoms corruption case

Israeli police questioned Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu on Friday for the first time in a corruption case that involves the country's largest telecommunications company Bezeq, Israel Radio said.

Israeli police questioned Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu on Friday for the first time in a corruption case that involves the country's largest telecommunications company Bezeq, Israel Radio said. Along with two other corruption cases, in which Netanyahu is suspected of bribery, the probes pose a serious threat to the four-term prime minister's political survival. Netanyahu denies any wrongdoing in all the cases. In the newest investigation, known as Case 4000, police allege that the owners of Bezeq Israel Telecom provided favourable coverage of Netanyahu and his wife on a news website they controlled in return for favours from communications regulators. A police spokesman declined comment. A Reuters cameraman saw a vehicle carrying two police officers pull into the prime minister's official residence on Friday morning.
Israel Radio said Netanyahu's wife Sara was providing testimony at the same time, at a police station near Tel Aviv. The controlling shareholder of Bezeq Telecom, Shaul Elovitch, is currently in police custody, along with a former Netanyahu spokesman. They deny any wrongdoing. Shlomo Filber, a confidant of Netanyahu and former director general of the Communications Ministry, has also been arrested in connection with the case, and has agreed to turn state's witness, according to Israeli media.
Netanyahu, Israel's dominant political figure for a generation - in power since 2009 and for 12 years in total since 1996 - calls the allegations against him a "witch hunt". He has said he will seek a fifth term in a national election due in late 2019. Police recommended in February that Netanyahu be indicted in two other corruption investigations. The attorney-general must determine whether to accept the police recommendation to charge him. The final decision on both cases could take months.
In one, known as Case 1000, he is suspected of bribery over gifts, which police say were worth nearly $300,000, that he received from wealthy businessmen. The other, Case 2000, involves an alleged plot to win positive coverage in Israel's biggest newspaper by offering to take measures to curtail the circulation of a rival daily.
So far, partners in Netanyahu's governing coalition have stood by him, saying they were awaiting the attorney-general's next moves. Political analysts say that could change if the investigations against Netanyahu intensify. Netanyahu could also call a snap election to try to stall legal proceedings during the campaign and rally his right-wing power base behind him.

UGC NET July 2018 Notification Released at cbsenet.nic.in; Application Process to Begin on March 6


UGC National Eligibility Test 2018 for Junior Research Fellowship & Eligibility for Assistant Professor is scheduled to be organized on Sunday, 8th July 2018 at 91 cities across the country.

UGC NET July 2018 Notification has been released by the Central Board of Secondary Education (CBSE) on its official website - cbsenet.nic.in. As per the Information Bulletin, the application process for the UGC National Eligibility Test 2018 is set to begin on 6th March 2018, next week on the official website, and the last date to apply online is 5th April 2018. However, candidates who successfully register before the deadline will be able to pay the application fee till 6th April 2018. 

UGC National Eligibility Test 2018 for Junior Research Fellowship & Eligibility for Assistant Professor is scheduled to be organized on Sunday, 8th July 2018 at 91 cities across the country. Candidates can choose from 84 subjects to appear for the UGC National Eligibility Test 2018.

As per the latest changes introduced for the UGC NET 2018, the upper age limit for Junior Research Fellow has been extended by two years from 28 years to 30 years now. The age-relaxation rules for reserved categories for JRF and no upper age-limit for Assistant Professor remain same.

Also, the UGC NET 2018 exam will comprise of 2 Papers only wherein Paper 1 will check the teaching/research aptitude of the candidates and will include 50 Objective Type Questions carrying 100 marks based on reasoning ability, comprehension, divergent thinking and general awareness; and Paper 2 will check the proficiency and mastery of the candidates in their chosen subject and will comprise of 100 Objective Type Questions carrying 200 marks.

Candidates can read through the official notification at the url mentioned below:
https://cbsenet.nic.in/CMS/Handler/FileHandler.ashx?i=File&ii=76&iii=Y 

CBSE UGC NET July 2018 – Important Dates
Online Application Process Begins – 6th March 2018
Online Application Process Ends – 5th April 2018
Last date to Submit fee through Online Generated Bank challan at any branch of Syndicate/Canara/ICICI Bank, or via credit/debit card – 6th April 2018
Correction of Application Form – 25th April 2018 to 1st May 2018
UGC NET 2018 Examination Date – 8th July 2018

Thursday, March 1, 2018

Holi special: How Europeans documented their encounter with India’s festival of colours



To the European observer, the festival was essentially tied up with Hinduism, Lord Krishna and his flirtatious ways and of course the tradition of spraying colours.

For foreign eyes, colours and India have always had a connection. Remember the much talked about music video produced by Coldplay back in 2016? Almost every glimpse of it was smeared with the shades of Holi, to the point that the spring festival almost appears synonymous for the Indian subcontinent. Holi has, for centuries, held a special place in the hearts and minds of foreign visitors to India. At times associated with exoticism, at other times with primitivity, the festival has for years been seen as an essential segment of the Indian cultural landscape.

When the Europeans first started ruling over parts of India, the region, its geography and its people were just as incomprehensible to them as were their manners and traditions. They were particularly fascinated by the festival of colours, as they described it variously as “the carnival of the Hindus,” or the “Hindu spring festival in honour of Krishna, the amorous cowherd.” The name of the festival too was hard to assimilate in the English tongue. For a long time, it was referred to as Houly, Huli, Whoolye and Wooly  before the current spelling of the word was used by the English dictionaries of the early twentieth century.
To the European observer, the festival was essentially tied up with Hinduism, Lord Krishna and his flirtatious ways and of course the tradition of spraying colours. The dictionary Hobson-Jobson, first published by Henry Yule and

 A.C.Burnell in 1886 describes Holi in the following words:

“It is a sort of carnival in honour of Krishna and the milk-maids. Passers-by are chaffed and pelted with red powder, or drenched with yellow liquids from squirts. Songs, mostly obscene are sung in praise of Krishna, and dances performed around fires.”

But the European documentation of the festival went far beyond the carnivalistic aspects of it. They described in details the multitude of ways in which different tribes, castes and communities of the subcontinent ritualistically celebrated the festival. The strangeness experienced by the Western spectator is evident from their accounts, and so will some of their documentation appear unknown to the modern Indian urbane reader.
F.S. Growse

F.S. Growse was the Joint Magistrate of Mathura from 1871. In his celebrated work, “Mathura Memoir,” he documented the history and culture of the region. He made some interesting observances of Holi rituals in Mathura, for instance that of the lighting of fire and the village lads leaping across the flames.
“The lads of the village kept on running close round it, jumping and dancing and brandishing their lathis, while the Panda (village priest) went down and dipped in the pond and then, with his dripping pagri (turban) and dhoti (loin-cloth) on, ran back and made a feint of passing through the fire.”

Captain G. R. Hearne

Documenting the festival in the northern part of Mathura district, another British official, Captain G.R. Hearne writes about rituals involving sexual conflict during the festival.
“At the other Jat villages in the northern part of the Mathura district, Jan and Bathen, a peculiar game is played about the time of Holi. The men arm themselves with branches of trees and form a ring, while the women with stout lathis or staves and with saris (sheets) drawn over their faces, fiercely assault the ring and break it, soundly belabouring the men. Separate rings are formed by the Jats and the Chamaars or low castes. Finally they return to their village in pairs, the man chanting a song, and the woman, when he has finished, driving him on a few paces.”

Louis Rousselet

Louis Rousselet was a French traveller, writer and photographer who was in India between 1864 and 1868. He travelled widely across Central India to places like Alwar, Baroda, Bhopal and parts of Rajasthan as well. Rousseldocumented his travels in several works namely, “L’Inde des Rajas: voyage dans  l’Inde centrale et dans les prĂ©sidences de Bombay et du Bengale,” and “Les royaumes de l’Inde.” In another such work, “India and its native princes,” he wrote about his experience of Holi in Central India wherein a procession was being led through the streets amidst singing, dancing and spraying of red powder.
“The most remarkable incident of the day was a procession. The principal figure in it was a fat merchant, who having been fully intoxicated, represented the companion of Holica. Bestriding a small donkey, his face smeared with ochre, a string of the most heterogenous objects round his neck, and his head covered with flowers, he moved along, held upon the donkey by two staggering acolytes. His cortege consisted of a drunken and vociferous crowd of half-naked men and women, who howled and rolled themselves on the ground, like the chorus of the antique Silenus, and naked children, decked with flowers, ran in front, blowing earthenware horns or beating cracked tomtoms (drums). In this order the procession traversed the mela, or fair, swollen by all the vagabonds on its route, and assailed by a shower of harmless projectiles, such as sacks of purple powder or rotten fruit.”

Dr John Fryer

Documenting the Holi festival, Dr John Fryer wrote the following in his accounts:
“In their Hooly, which is their other seed-time, I observed they cut a whole tree down to the roots and lopped off the under-branches till it became straight. They shouldered it with great clamour, the Brahmins beginning a note which they all followed. Thus, they brought it into the pale of their pagoda, before which, easing it down at one end, the foremost made a salam, and hoisted it with the same noise again, and about they went three or four times repeating the same; which being finished, the Brahmin digs a hole and baptises it with holy water, wherein they fix the tree, crowning it with flags aloft, and about the body upto the green boughs they bind wisps of straw, to which they put fire and look earnestly at the flame. They then offer rice and flowers, painting their bodies with ashes, departing with a mace of flowers carried before them, beating drums.”

Happy Holi 2018: Drink bhang for inner peace

This Holi, do you intend to drink bhang? Well, recent medical research have shown that cannabis (bhang) grows brain cells. Bhang is mentioned in Book 11, Hymn 6, Verse 15 of Atharva Veda as a cure for many diseases. Other translations state that bhang is described as a ‘liberator’.

The story of Holi is not complete without a mention of bhang. In modern times, bhang consumption has bucketed only as a tool for merriment during Holi and sometimes during Shivratri. Bollywood has also done its bit to propagate this myth through popular songs. The original usage of bhang was, however, for serious seekers, yogis and aghoris who wanted to achieve transcendental states.
Bhang is mentioned in Book 11, Hymn 6, Verse 15 of Atharva Veda as a cure for many diseases. Other translations state that bhang is described as a ‘liberator’.
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So how is bhang different from other intoxicants?

Some recent medical researchers have shown that cannabis (bhang) grows brain cells. Dr Roberta J Pentney, a former researcher with the State University of New York, found that alcohol on the other hand, severely impairs neurons in the brain and disrupts brain activity. But before one ditches the bottle of imported liquor to go in search of green bhang leaves, one needs to understand what bhang is all about.
Using bhang for spiritual upliftment

This is the point where a word of caution is required. Anything has the potential for abuse and this tool needs to be handled very carefully. Excessive usage of bhang without first preparing the body and the mind for its consumption is highly dangerous.
Consuming bhang is a sacred act. Recall that Atharva Veda states that bhang is a ‘liberator’. This could well mean that under the influence of bhang, certain recessed memories are opened for access to the mind. Past memories – long forgotten – or certain insights/visions may also occur, which may immediately uplift the perspective of the seeker.

Bhang is an amplifier and, hence, the state of mind in which it is consumed gets amplified. It is extremely important that bhang is consumed after few days of meditation and yoga has been done to introduce the mind to silence. Once consumed, it is worth sitting in meditation. Highly recommended technique for meditation after taking bhang would be to visualise the breath moving up the spine (for every inhalation) and coming down the spine (for every exhalation).
Alternative literature and experiences of people around the world (found easily on the Internet) point to the mind achieving higher levels of silence during a bhang-intoxicated state. Silence brings awareness, which, in turn, brings inner peace.

Activity should be avoided after taking bhang, if the intention is to find silence.
What happens after effects go down?

The journey into the inner self does not end with one dose of bhang on Holi. Well, it was never meant to be so in the ancient past. The seeker should carefully understand the visions and insights received under influence of bhang and make careful changes in the lifestyle thereafter, before taking the next dose. The time of day, quantity, breed of the plant, the environment in which it is consumed, and seeker’s state of mind separates each ‘experience’ from the next.
This Holi, instead of colouring the world with harmful chemicals and artificial colours, why not colour your brain from inside and plunge into a surreal world of divine colors and experiences.

Unable to pay Rs 6,000 loan instalment Madhya Pradesh farmer hangs self

Hours after Madhya Pradesh Finance Minister Jayant Malaiya presented the state's annual Budget in the Assembly for the fiscal year 2018-19, a 35-year-old debt-ridden farmer committed suicide at his home in Sita Dongri village of Betul district.

Interestingly, Malaiya allocated Rs 37,498 crore to the agriculture sector, of which Rs 3650 crore were reserved for the yet to be defined Krishak Smridhi Yojna.

The deceased, identified as Maniram Salame, hanged himself late Wednesday night. Salame, according to his family members, had failed to pay an instalment of Rs 6000 for his debt when he took the extreme step. The farmer was under a debt of Rs 3 lakh.

According to documents accessed by India Today, Maniram had taken a loan of Rs 1.20 lakh from Land T Finance, Micro Annpoorna and two other finance companies.

Maniram had also taken a loan of Rs 35000 from the local society and Rs 1.5 lakh from local money lenders.

Salame is survived by three minor daughters and a pregnant wife.

Police have registered the suicide case and are investigating possibility of abetment to suicide.

"The family members have told us that he committed suicide debt-ridden, documents recovered from his home show that he indeed was indebted. We are now investigating if anyone was pressurizing him for repayment of his loan and if we find anything conclusive we will register a case of abetment to suicide as well," said the concerned police official.

Family members and fellow villagers confirmed that Maniram was under pressure to repay his loans. They staged a protest on Thursday demanding waiving off his loans and compensation for the family.

Interestingly,Madhya Pradesh Chief Minister Shivraj Singh Chouhan, who has been trying to woo the farmers this election year, had announced a series of sops in the past couple of weeks.

Elections are due in Madhya Pradesh for the end of the year and farmers who constitute a brute majority across all castes in the state are likely to play a crucial role in deciding the fate of Chouhan and his government.