Monday, March 30, 2015

Day out with kids: people of Chhattisgarh (छत्तीसगढ़िया)

We meet amazing people in our life.  
Though strangers they are but bear character of profound depth and diversity.


Their story, quote, photograph,
makes it magical-reality
as if this being an incredible act of freezing a fleeting moment. 

Portrait of strangers, inhabitants of a state
vibrant monologue of human life,
to share herewith !!


"I won't go to school.
Teachers punish."

"But things have changed 'Yashwant'.
Now teachers love their students in school."

"Noooooope...
I won't go... !!"
Yashwant, Age: 4 years, with mother Eshwari Bai, Saraitikra near Ambikapur


"It's so nice to see you 'Krishna', helping your father doing mud work for the home."

"Yupp....I love that."

"And you go to school too."

"Yupp...I go to the 'Aangan Bari' (a play school)."

"You like your school, teachers..."

"Yaaaa ... I like, 
...they are good. 
...Even I play there !!"
Krishna, Age: 5 years, with his sisters and father Chhertoo Ram, Saraitikra near Ambikapur

Thursday, March 19, 2015

Karate kids: people of Chhattisgarh (छत्तीसगढ़िया)

We meet amazing people in our life.  
Though strangers they are but bear character of profound depth and diversity.
Their story, quote, photograph,
makes it magical-reality
as if this being an incredible act of freezing a fleeting moment. 

Portrait of strangers, inhabitants of a state
vibrant monologue of human life,
to share herewith !! 


It was an amazing initiative taken by the state government.
All over the state of Chhattisgarh of India, all school girls of standard 9th 
were offered 10 days Karate marshal art training course, 
from March 9th to March 18th 2015.
 
Female Karate trainer were provided to each cluster of schools 
selected in a way that each and every school kid including the remotest village 
could easily participate in that.

It was a time perfect, 
the spring time, morning hours, 
just before the school academic schedule starts.

Enthusiasm was worth witnessing.
Upbeat mood, brimming confidence was a common gift 
visible on the faces of all teenager girls.

Crime against women and girls are our common concern.
Empowering women, we all have heard so many time.
Perhaps this was one worth program to achieve both.
Should this be the permanent feature of their trainings 
so that our girls could feel safe 
while they toil their journey in society for their equal opportunities.



My father told me, "Sure you go to these classes, do it well".
Miss Rita Singh, class 9th, Government High School Sukhri, Ambikapur
My mom said, "Be regular to these classes, go daily, so that you come back as you have learn well."
Miss Anusuiya, class 9th, Government High School Sukhri, Ambikapur
"These village girls are so good in running. Endurance is high as compared to the city girls. 
They have all capability to cross to State and National level championship, if they are given opportunity."
Miss Varsha Gupta, Karate trainer

"I participated in National level Karate championship many a time, 
last in 2014 in Tyagraja Stadium in New Delhi. 
This game was regarded as for boys only, 
but now more and more girls are coming to this sport."
Miss Varsha Gupta, Karate trainer

"Karate capability shall boost morale and confidence in girls who go away from their home for studies and parents too will feel that their daughters are safe as they can safeguard them self."
Miss Varsha Gupta, Karate trainer

Friday, March 6, 2015

Color in the air: people of Chhattisgarh (छत्तीसगढ़िया)

We meet amazing people in our life.  Though strangers they are but bear character of profound depth and diversity.

Their story quote with photograph 
makes it magical-reality, as if this being an incredible act of  freezing a fleeting moment.
 


Portrait of strangers, inhabitants of a state
vibrant monologue of human life, to share herewith !!
 





Celebrating colors

Festivals are finely embroidered in the culture of a nation. 

They provide an occasion to bring festivity in life, forgetting our all hardship and trivialities for a while, leaving them behind. 

'Holi' in India is such a festival, it brings out all our madness for love, amity and oneness through colors. 

Here in these pictures are teachers of a school in the same mood, just a day before when school closes for this 'Holi' day. 
teaching staff of Government High School Saraitikra, near Ambikapur
teaching staff of Government High School Saraitikra, near Ambikapur

Thursday, February 19, 2015

Fruits of pilgrimage: people of Chhattisgarh (छत्तीसगढ़िया)

We meet amazing people in our life.  
Though strangers they are but bear character of profound depth and diversity.


Their story quote with photograph 
makes it magical-reality, as if this being an incredible act of  freezing a fleeting moment.

Portrait of strangers, inhabitants of a state
vibrant monologue of human life
to share herewith !!





"I am the one who started sowing tomato and potato crops first time in this village."


Which crop you are sowing right now ?

"Onion, Okra, Corn."

And you do it alone ?

"I have 15 acres of land. Which is sufficient to us. My son helps me a lot. Since last three generations we are singles in the family. My grand father, me and my son....one in the generations. I have all the machines, tools, tractor, motors needed for the farming."

And your success credit goes to ?

"Did you see the sudden rains we had last night. It came from the Himalayas. Clouds comes from Badrinath and water from the Rameshwaram."

"These are the holy places for the Hindus, which I have visited all."

"Gangotri, Yamunotri, Badrinath, Kedarnath, Haridwar, Gangasagar, Puri, Rameshwaram, Kanyakumari, Tirupati bala, Madurai, Dwarikadheesh, Vrindawan, Gokul, Mathura, Ayodhya, Allahabad." 

"Gangotri is the coldest place of all in northern Himalayas."

"Grace of god is so important in our lives."

Sadharan Ram, Saraitikra near Ambikapur
Sadharan Ram with son Budhan Ram, Saraitikra near Ambikapur
Sadharan Ram, Saraitikra near Ambikapur
Sadharan Ram, Saraitikra near Ambikapur

Thursday, February 5, 2015

Morning at Ambikapur Railway station

Poets have found trains irresistible. Steam's mucky glamour may only exist now between the covers of The Railway Children, but the romance of the railway lives on. Certainly, there's something compelling about the environment to which the train exposes you - it's the train's ability to suspend you between here and there - outside regimented time, away from the quotidian - that attracts. There's something regenerative in the act of boarding a train in one place and disembarking in another, without having actively engaged in the process at any juncture; it transports, in both senses of the word (
The train is running on the track, track, track 
And I’m sitting in the carriage at the back, back, back
For we’re going on a journey that is fast, fast, fast
The fields and the cows whizz past, past, past
We’re going to the seaside very quick, quick, quick
And I’m listening to the wheels as they click, click, click
And we’re going over the hills to the top, top top
But slowly, very slowly, we come to a station and we stop, stop, stop..sssshhhhhhh
(by Brenda Williams)
Ambikapur Railway Station/©Anjani Kumar Tripathi/Indian Railways
Dawn break as soft light from the east envelopes all while moon light in the west sky fades gradually looks as if hanging from the lamp post, train ready to take passengers for their journey in cold winter morning.
Ambikapur Railway Station/©Anjani Kumar Tripathi/Indian Railways
“The world is a book and those who do not travel read only one page.”
― Augustine of Hippo
Ambikapur Railway Station/©Anjani Kumar Tripathi/Indian Railways
Listen to the quiet peaceful dawn. Sun touching the rim of spaces' night. Stars fading to brushes of paint In whirlwinds of dusk colored breezes. Passing away the moon's guard To the light of the sun's shift begins Now sweeping into a new day. (share courtesy:Gelene Beverly)
Ambikapur Railway Station/©Anjani Kumar Tripathi/Indian Railways
The platform of Ambikapur (India) Railway Station in an early morning glow
This railway station became operational on 3rd June 2006
Ambikapur Railway Station/©Anjani Kumar Tripathi/Indian Railways
Side view of the Railway Station building
Ambikapur Railway Station/©Anjani Kumar Tripathi/Indian Railways
Old kingly palace of  'Ambikapur' State (popularly known as 'Surguja' State)
Surguja Palace Ambikapur/©Anjani Kumar Tripathi

http://throughpicture.blogspot.in/2013/03/architecture-with-endemic-flavour.html
http://throughpicture.blogspot.in/2013/09/romance-of-indian-rail-in-hilly-terrain.html

Friday, January 30, 2015

Gandhi photographed by Margaret Bourke-White

Gandhi and his spinning wheel
It was the defining portrait of one of the 20th century’s most influential figures, 
but the picture almost didn’t happen. LIFE magazine’s first female photographer, Margaret Bourke-White was in India in 1946 to cover the impending Indian independence. She was all set to shoot when Gandhi’s secretaries stopped her: If she was going to photograph Gandhi at the spinning wheel (a symbol for India’s struggle for independence), 
she first had to learn to use one herself.

It was a rare photo-op and Bourke-White was not going to lose it. She learnt how to use the spinning wheel, but further demands followed–Gandhi wasn’t to be spoken to (it being his day of silence.) And because he detested bright light, Bourke-White was only allowed to use three flashbulbs. The humid Indian weather wreaked havoc on her camera equipment, too. She tried to take the picture without flash, but the bright Indian day hindered her further. 

When time finally came to shoot, Bourke-White’s first flashbulb failed. And while the second one worked, she forgot to pull the slide, rendering it blank.She thought it was all over, but luckily, the third attempt was successful. In the end, she came away with an image that became Gandhi’s most enduring representation.
(courtesy share: https://iconicphotos.wordpress.com/2009/05/07/gandhi-at-the-spinning-wheel/)

In typed notes that accompanied Bourke-White’s film when it was sent from India to LIFE’s New York offices in the spring of 1946, the significance of the simple spinning wheel in the photo is made abundantly clear:

[Gandhi] spins every day for 1 hr. beginning usually at 4. All members of his ashram must spin. He and his followers encourage everyone to spin. Even M. B-W was encouraged to lay [aside] her camera to spin. . . . When I remarked that both photography and spinning were handicrafts, they told me seriously, “The greater of the 2 is spinning.” Spinning is raised to the heights almost of a religion with Gandhi and his followers. The spinning wheel is sort of an Ikon to them. Spinning is a cure all, and is spoken of in terms of the highest poetry.

Of the most famous portrait Bourke-White ever made of Gandhi, meanwhile, the memo to LIFE’s editors simply states: “Gh. [a common shorthand for Gandhi in the notes] reading clippings — spinning wheel in foreground, which he has just finished using. It would be impossible to exaggerate the reverence in which Gh’s ‘own personal spinning wheel’ is held in the ashram.” 
(courtesy share; http://time.com/3639043/gandhi-and-his-spinning-wheel-the-story-behind-an-iconic-photo/)
Margaret Bourke-White—The LIFE Picture Collection/Getty Images
A final note: Like many photographers, Bourke-White was not above occasionally allowing herself the liberty of a playful self-portrait. Here she is, then — the legendary photojournalist in India, posing with a loom of her own. (courtesy share: http://time.com/3639043/gandhi-and-his-spinning-wheel-the-story-behind-an-iconic-photo/)
Margaret Bourke-White—Time & Life Pictures/Getty Images

Caption from LIFE. "Surrounded by his adoring disciples, Gandhi goes walking each morning. Here he is supported by his granddaughter Sita (left) and daughter-in-law Abha (right)."
Margaret Bourke-White—The LIFE Picture Collection/Getty Images

Mohandas K. Gandhi, 1946.
Margaret Bourke-White—The LIFE Picture Collection/Getty Images

Not published in LIFE. Mohandas K. Gandhi, 1946.
Margaret Bourke-White—The LIFE Picture Collection/Getty Images

Not published in LIFE. Mohandas K. Gandhi, 1946.
Margaret Bourke-White—The LIFE Picture Collection/Getty Images

Not published in LIFE. Mohandas Gandhi with his secretary, Pyarelal Nayyar, 1946.
Margaret Bourke-White—The LIFE Picture Collection/Getty Images

Not published in LIFE. Mohandas K. Gandhi, 1946.
Margaret Bourke-White—The LIFE Picture Collection/Getty Images


Not published in LIFE. Mohandas Gandhi stands near his nephew Kanu (right) and his wife Abha, as his secretaries (left to right) Sushila Pai, Raj Kumari and Pyarelal Nayyar sit at his feet during a twilight prayer meeting, 1946.
Margaret Bourke-White—The LIFE Picture Collection/Getty Images

Not published in LIFE. Mohandas Gandhi (center, top) seated on bed-like platform at start of evening prayers, 1946.
Margaret Bourke-White—The LIFE Picture Collection/Getty Images

Not published in LIFE. Mohandas Gandhi's bungalow retreat and the grounds surrounding it, India, 1946.
Margaret Bourke-White—The LIFE Picture Collection/Getty Images


Not published in LIFE. Mohandas Gandhi (third from right) walks with (left to right) his secretary, Pyarelal, Dr. Horace Alexander of the Friend's Ambulance Unit. Also pictured: Abha Gandhi (second from right) and his son Manilal's wife, Sushila.
Margaret Bourke-White—The LIFE Picture Collection/Getty Images


LIFE magazine, May 27, 1946.
Margaret Bourke-White—LIFE Magazine

LIFE magazine, May 27, 1946.
Margaret Bourke-White—LIFE Magazine

LIFE magazine, May 27, 1946. 
Margaret Bourke-White—LIFE Magazine

LIFE magazine, May 27, 1946.
Margaret Bourke-White—LIFE Magazine

Margaret Bourke-White 


This picture of Life Magazine’s photojournalist Margaret Bourke-White atop the Chrysler Building was taken by her dark room assistant Oscar Graubner.
Photography is a very subtle thing. You must let the camera take you by the hand, as it were, and lead you into your subject Margaret Bourke-White led the rest of us by the hand on many occasions. In 1929, she did the lead story for the first issue of Fortune, and the next year was the first Western photographer allowed into the USSR. In 1936, she collaborated with future husband Erskine Caldwell on a book documenting the rural poor of the South. Later that year she became one of the four original LIFE photographers, and had the cover shot for the inaugural issue.
She was America’s first accredited woman photographer in WWII, and the first authorized to fly on a combat mission. She was one of the first to depict the death camps, and later became the last person to interview Gandhi, six hours before he was slain. Her hundreds of thousands of photos are about adventure, sensitivity, composition and courage.(share courtesy:https://iconicphotos.wordpress.com/tag/margaret-bourke-white/)

Reference link for more about the photographer
http://www.britannica.com/EBchecked/topic/75883/Margaret-Bourke-White

Saturday, January 24, 2015

Down through memory lane in Pandonagar: people of Chhattisgarh (छत्तीसगढ़िया)

We meet amazing people in our life.
Though strangers they are
but bear character of profound depth and diversity.
 
Their story quote with photograph 
makes it magical-reality, as if this being an incredible act of  freezing a fleeting moment.

Portrait of strangers, inhabitants of a state
vibrant monologue of human life

to share herewith !!



"I remember things."
"My memories are not so good now."

"As more often they keep on slipping out of my mind."

"Do you remember the President of India's visit to your village?"


"Yes, very well, he gave me 3 houses to live in, a bullock pair for farming...."

"What was your age then?"


"Well, I had two sons...."

Note: Gendi Bai, the oldest survivor (claims 105 years age) of the village, reminisces the visit of  India's first president Dr. Rajendra Prasad's visit to her place, 62 years ago on 22nd November 1952, to rehabilitate the Pando Hill Tribe in the plain.
blogger Anjani Kumar Tripathi with Gendi Bai
blogger Anjani Kumar Tripathi at the monumental site