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Memories of Another day

Memories of Another day
While my Parents Pulin babu and Basanti devi were living

Monday, August 31, 2015

Two Weeks After Clash, Dalits Still Live in Fear!Dalits Media Watch - News Updates 31.08.15

Dalits Media Watch

News Updates 31.08.15


-- Cops injured in clash between 2 communities - The Times Of India

http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/city/lucknow/Cops-injured-in-clash-between-2-communities/articleshow/48736670.cms

Two Weeks After Clash, Dalits Still Live in Fear - The New Indian Express

http://www.newindianexpress.com/states/tamil_nadu/Two-Weeks-After-Clash-Dalits-Still-Live-in-Fear/2015/08/31/article3002373.ece1

Abolish caste-based quota, says RSS ideologue - The Hindu

HTTP://WWW.THEHINDU.COM/NEWS/NATIONAL/ABOLISH-CASTEBASED-QUOTA-SAYS-RSS-IDEOLOGUE/ARTICLE7597642.ECE#COMMENTS

Muzaffarnagar: two years later, still a tinderbox - The Hindu

HTTP://WWW.THEHINDU.COM/NEWS/NATIONAL/OTHER-STATES/MUZAFFARNAGAR-TWO-YEARS-LATER-STILL-A-TINDERBOX-AS-PANCHAYAT-POLLS-APPROACH/ARTICLE7596659.ECE

Dearth of hostels puts students in tight corners - The Times Of India

http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/city/mangaluru/Dearth-of-hostels-puts-students-in-tight-corners/articleshow/48739597.cms

Brother-sister duo from Kota crack AIPMT - India Today

http://indiatoday.intoday.in/education/story/brother-sister-duo-crack-aipmt/1/462018.html

 'Seri', 'kuppam' have become derogatory words over the years - The Hindu

HTTP://WWW.THEHINDU.COM/NEWS/NATIONAL/TAMIL-NADU/SERI-KUPPAM-HAVE-BECOME-DEROGATORY-WORDS-OVER-THE-YEARS/ARTICLE7598052.ECE

Dalit bizmen work twice as hard to be in the game - The Times Of India

http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/City/Chennai/Dalit-bizmen-work-twice-as-hard-to-be-in-the-game/articleshow/48741684.cms

Anjaneya hopes internal reservation for SCs will being provided soon - The Hindu

HTTP://WWW.THEHINDU.COM/NEWS/NATIONAL/KARNATAKA/ANJANEYA-HOPES-INTERNAL-RESERVATION-FOR-SCS-WILL-BEING-PROVIDED-SOON/ARTICLE7598357.ECE

Ancient temple abode of social harmony - The Times Of India

http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/city/allahabad/Ancient-temple-abode-of-social-harmony/articleshow/48740618.cms

 

Please Watch:

The Dalit Voice

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wAgU6EKvljo&list=PLUBlrhCs4dCMd7dnn1NgdNsKsEx4W_P_e

 

Note: Please find attachment for DMW Hindi (PDF)

 

The Times Of India

 

Cops injured in clash between 2 communities

http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/city/lucknow/Cops-injured-in-clash-between-2-communities/articleshow/48736670.cms

 

TNN | Aug 31, 2015, 01.05 AM IST

 

FAIZABAD: Several persons, including a police sub-inspector and a constable were injured seriously in a clash between Dalits and Yadavs on Sunday at Behwana police station area of Ambedkarnagar district.


Rioters torched two tractors and a police vehicle and tried to set ablaze some houses in the area. The clash was triggered by the arrival of a police team, along with the complainants on Sunday morning, at Bachirawa village in Akbarpur Tehsil. Police allegedly attempted to evict members of the Dalit community from a piece of land, and hand over its possession to the Yadavs.


According to police, the Dalit families had illegally occupied land belonging to the Yadavs. Talking to TOI, Faizabad DIG V K Garg said the police had intervened to settle the land dispute and local administration had taken action according to law.


With administrative functionaries trying to evict the families, members of the dalit community turned violent and attacked the police force, officials said. Police personnel and the administrative staff sustained grievous injuries in the clashes.

 

The New Indian Express

 

Two Weeks After Clash, Dalits Still Live in Fear

http://www.newindianexpress.com/states/tamil_nadu/Two-Weeks-After-Clash-Dalits-Still-Live-in-Fear/2015/08/31/article3002373.ece1

 

By Karal Marx L  Published: 31st August 2015 04:57 AM  Last Updated: 31st August 2015 05:05 AM

 

VILLUPURAM: Fifteen days after the clash between Vanniyars and Dalits in Seshasamudram village, the district police officials on Sunday claimed that the situation in the village is completely under control, even as Dalit and Vanniyars say they continue to live in fear.

 

According to a senior policeman, as soon as the police were informed about the clash on August 15, around 120 police personnel, headed by the Villupuram SP, rushed to the village, which has been in the papers for the last few years over the caste dispute. By the morning of August 16, as many as 500 policemen were deployed and the situation was brought under control, the senior police official. However, Dalits have asked the district administration to construct a separate ration shop, school and other basic amenities for them as Vanniyars were denying them access to the facilities.

 

It may be recalled that Rathika (30), a Dalit woman from Seshasamudram village, had said everybody in the village got along well with one another until a politician poisoned their minds and turned erstwhile friends into enemies to achieve his personal political gain.

 

According to her, the Dalits built a Muthumariamman temple and consecrated it with the Vanniyars in 2009.

Earlier, both the communities performed special pujas during the Aadi month and distributed porridge to the devotees.

 

However, in 2012, when Subramani, the DMDK  cadre from the Vanniyar community, had the Dalits build a car for the Muthumariamman temple and conduct a procession, to which he contributed `1 lakh on the eve of the panchayat poll.

 

He won with a huge margin as both communities supported him. Subramani, who prodded the Dalits to build the car and take the procession, then said they couldn't do so as  the Vanniyars were opposed to the Dalits carrying the procession on the  common road.

 

It may be noted here that on January 7, 2014, Express carried a report about 300 Hindu Dalits of the Seshasamudram Colony embraced Buddhism as they were tired of being discriminated against by caste Hindus for the past two years.

 

The Dalits had petitioned the then Collector V Sampath, who had requested them to withdraw the decision on the conversion.

 

They said after the intervention of the DMDK village president, communal discrimination started in the village. This made the villagers file 40 petitions from 2012 to 2015.Based on their petitions, the district administration had arranged 15 rounds of peace talks on the car procession.

 

The Hindu

 

Abolish caste-based quota, says RSS ideologue

HTTP://WWW.THEHINDU.COM/NEWS/NATIONAL/ABOLISH-CASTEBASED-QUOTA-SAYS-RSS-IDEOLOGUE/ARTICLE7597642.ECE#COMMENTS

 

PAVAN DAHAT

Senior Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh (RSS) ideologue M.G. Vaidya has argued that caste-based reservation given to the Scheduled Castes (SCs), the Scheduled Tribes (STs) and Other Backward Classes (OBCs) in government jobs and educational institutions should be done away with as caste is "no more relevant."

 

Speaking to The Hindu in the context of the Patel community's agitation for reservation in Gujarat, Mr. Vaidya said, "There is no need for caste-based reservation now, because no caste has remained backward. At the most, continue it [reservation] for the SCs and STs, but only for 10 years. Abolish it [caste-based reservation] completely after that."

 

The senior RSS leader also trashed the claims of the Patel community in Gujarat and other "dominant communities" in other parts of the county for reservation.

 

"All the trade in Gujarat is controlled by the Patels. Do they really need reservation? In Maharashtra, Marathas are demanding reservation, whereas most of the Chief Ministers of the State have been Marathas. Jats and Gurjars are also pitching for reservation in other States. Are they really backwards? Even the governments entertain such demands to nourish vote banks," he claimed.

 

Favouring the change of criteria for reservation from caste to economic status, Mr. Vaidya said that caste-based reservation has "strengthened" caste divisions rather than eradicating them.

 

"Concessions have become rights now. Does the son of a Chief Minister or a Collector need reservation," asked the former spokesperson of the RSS.

 

Reservation based on economic criteria would benefit the poor and needy among Muslims, Christians, Marathas, Brahmins and other communities, he said.

 

Mr. Vaidya, however, agreed with Hardik Patel's contention that either reservation should be given to everyone or it should be abolished altogether.

 

"He [Hardik] is right in this regard. People are backward these days not because of caste but because of economic conditions. If the criteria of reservation is changed from caste to economic status, then there won't be permanent reservation. Caste-based reservation is making people remember their caste. How can you eradicate it [caste], if you are making them remember it since their birth?" asked Mr. Vaidya, whose son Manmohan Vaidya is the current chief spokesperson of the RSS.

 

The RSS ideologue also contended that atrocities against Dalits, at least in Maharashtra, did not take place because of caste hatred but because of land dispute and other reasons.

 

"What is the relevance of caste? I am a Brahmin but do I practise Purohit Yoga? Does my son do it? Only politicians need caste and have kept it relevant for vote bank politics. It is dangerous for the nation as it divides communities," said Mr. Vaidya, while expressing concern over the current political situation in the country.

 

The Hindu

 

Muzaffarnagar: two years later, still a tinderbox

HTTP://WWW.THEHINDU.COM/NEWS/NATIONAL/OTHER-STATES/MUZAFFARNAGAR-TWO-YEARS-LATER-STILL-A-TINDERBOX-AS-PANCHAYAT-POLLS-APPROACH/ARTICLE7596659.ECE

 

MOHAMMAD ALI

 

Many believe the communal incidents in the region were

strategically timed ahead of the panchayat polls

 

"This man was killing cows near the mandi. He's a cow murderer. Listen to what we have to say! If anyone else is caught slaughtering cows, this is what we will do to them."

 

This provocative line suddenly popped up on WhatsApp in the last week of June, accompanied by a video clip of Bajrang Dal activists in Shamli assaulting the "cow murderer". As it went viral on the social media, communal tension in Shamli and Muzaffarnagar — the districts devastated by deadly riots exactly two years ago in August 2013 — rose, interrupting the fragile peace.

 

This was just the beginning.

 

Communal clashes began to be reported from different parts of western Uttar Pradesh, even from towns that had been peaceful in the recent past like Saharanpur, or those outside this region such as Faizabad. Starting mid-June, around 20-odd small and big incidents have been reported, coinciding with the start of Ramzaan and later, Kanwad.

 

The spurt in communal incidents that broke the relative calm of the region, many here believe, were strategically timed ahead of the panchayat polls, scheduled for later this year. Just as the clashes of August 2013 led to the emptying of villages, and communal polarisation followed by a clean sweep by the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) in the general elections here last year.

 

This time, the BJP and the ruling Samajwadi Party (SP) are expending their energy on these local polls, hoping its results will set the stage for the Assembly polls slated for early 2017.

 

The riots here began in the last week of August 2013, after the murders of Shahnawaz and Sachin and Gaurav, residents of Kaval and Malakpur villages, triggered off a series of hate speeches by Jat and Muslim leaders to their respective communities.

 

Earlier this year, when two boys on motorcycles, one a Dalit and the other a Muslim, crashed into each other in Deoband, hundreds of people came on to the roads, pelting stones and opening fire. In another incident in Meerut, when a local farmer parked his trolley on farmland belonging to someone of another community, the incident swiftly turned communal. In both cases, the Provincial Armed Constabulary (PAC) and the police had to be called in.

 

Local BJP activists told The Hindu this was "inevitable".

 

Even though the police took prompt action and arrested the Muslims reported to have started the fight in Deoband, Dalit youth continue to highlight alleged instances of the State government's pro-Muslim bias. Topping the list of instances is how a senior SP State Minister got police officers transferred to "save" Muslim rioters during the 2013 Muzaffarnagar riots. "Riots would have been controlled had the officers not been shifted by Azam Khan [a senior SP leader]," said Vivek, a Valmiki youth in Deoband.

 

It is the internalising of such grievances that makes the BJP confident that wherever Dalits constitute less then 40 per cent in Muslim-dominated towns and villages, they will vote for the BJP. "If polarisation takes place, the Bahujan Samaj Party (BSP) will not get Dalit votes. No Valmiki or Dalit is a Dalit now. All of them have become Hindus," a BJP leader told The Hindu in Shamli.

 

Such has been the lasting impact of the Muzaffarnagar riots that for a majority of the Hindus here, the SP Government is "anti-Hindu".

 

In the first week of July, Satbir, a youth from the OBC community of Kashyaps, sitting outside a mosque in Meerapur Assembly constituency's Bhumma village, was killed by two people from the same village.

 

As the alleged killers were Muslim, Satbir's family expressed its lack of confidence in the local station house officer (SHO). The SHO was called back to police headquarters and the Muslims in the village, outnumbered by the Hindus, were forced to take shelter in the mosque.

 

As the situation grew increasingly tense, local BJP MP, 2013 riot-accused and now a Central Minister Sanjeev Baliyan, arrived, accompanied by the Vishwa Hindu Parishad (VHP)'s Sadhvi Pragya. So inflammatory were the Sadhvi's remarks that even the State BJP chief distanced himself from her statement.

 

The BJP, says Shahid Manzoor, Labour Minister in the SP government, wants to neutralise the anger and disillusionment of the local Hindu farmers, largely Jats, against the Centre. "In May, everyone in U.P. was criticising the Modi government for remaining silent on the sad plight of farmers and sugarcane growers. Now the BJP wants to counter that. The easiest way is to communalise the environment."

 

So tense is the situation now that even a small fight can spark off violence.

 

The alleged attack on riot victims in Kutba village on Saturday and violent attack on a prominent Muslim cleric by Bajrang Dal workers on Friday worked to enflame the already polarised communal tempers of the region.

 

The Times Of India

 

Dearth of hostels puts students in tight corners

http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/city/mangaluru/Dearth-of-hostels-puts-students-in-tight-corners/articleshow/48739597.cms

 

TNN | Aug 31, 2015, 10.34 AM IST

 

MANGALURU: Dearth of adequate hostel facilities for girls under the care of social welfare department came to the fore at the monthly SC/ST meeting organized by Mangaluru city police on Sunday


Dalit leaders noted that this shortage of accommodation in hostels has forced women students from the two communities to either discontinue their studies or opt for expensive paying guest accommodations in the city. 


Raising the issue at a recent meeting, DSS leader S P Anand said that the department has received around 70 applications in excess of the stated capacity for Kudmul Ranga Rao Hostel near PVS Junction. Noting that the department has failed to address the situation in accommodating these students elsewhere, he said, "I have apprised the commissioner of the social welfare department. However, the directions given by the commissioner to the officials to resolve the issue have not fructified." 


The hostel can accommodate 119 students and it is finding it difficult to rent a building to accommodate students, said an official from the social welfare department. 


"There is no building near the hostel to accommodate them. "We are trying to obtain a suitable building for rent," she said, adding that she needs support from various dalit organizations to help the department locate a suitable place. 

Sanjeev M Patil, deputy commissioner of police (crime and traffic), who chaired the meeting, exhorted Anand and others to help the department find a suitable building as per the limits fixed by the government. The DCP also advised the department officials to display any such communication on the department notice board so that the stakeholders are aware of the developments pertaining to their request or memorandum submitted by them on various issues. 


The DCP also took note of a complaint that Anand raised about alleged illegal activities taking place in a lodge in the city. 


Anand said that he had already informed the city police chief about the same. "There was a clash between the brokers from two different communities," Anand claimed, adding that the incident could develop into a full-blown communal clash, for which the police would solely be held responsible if they don't take necessary action. Patil assured him that the issue will be addressed. 

 

India Today

 

Brother-sister duo from Kota crack AIPMT

http://indiatoday.intoday.in/education/story/brother-sister-duo-crack-aipmt/1/462018.html

 

A 19-year-old girl and her teenaged brother, whose father was a farmer, have cracked the All India Pre-Medical Test. The AIPMT re-examination was conducted on July 25 and the results were declared on August 17.

 

While Alka secured an all India rank of 432, her 18-year-old brother Pradeep stood third in the Scheduled Caste category in the test. Their father, 45-year-old Kalulal Meena, was earlier a farmer but now paralysed and bed-ridden for the last 15 years.

 

"Despite being in bed, my father has been a constant inspiration and has helped overcome any sort of negativity," Pradeep said. "This Rakhi is super special for both of us as we are celebrating the festival in our native village with other family members," the brother-sister duo, natives of Kothunwan village here, said.

 

The sarpanch of the village Navneet Nandwana said both of them would be honoured soon. "Our uncle, Hansraj, took the financial responsibility of our education and got us admitted in a renowned coaching institute in Kota for preparing for AIPMT exam," Pradeep added.

 

"I performed very poor in my initial regular tests of the institute but my father encouraged me to focus on improvement at whatever level it may," said Alka. The director of the coaching institute Naveen Maheshwari, where the siblings took coaching, said in view of their poor financial conditions, the institute has decided to award Rs 1,500 each as scholarship to them every month throughout the four years of their MBBS course.

 

Pradeep is now eligible to seek admission to any higher medical college in the country as he has also cracked AIIMS exam this year with 52 all India rank in ST category but he said he would prefer doing his MBBS from Kota medical college as he can take care of his father here.

 

The Hindu

 

'Seri', 'kuppam' have become derogatory words over the years

HTTP://WWW.THEHINDU.COM/NEWS/NATIONAL/TAMIL-NADU/SERI-KUPPAM-HAVE-BECOME-DEROGATORY-WORDS-OVER-THE-YEARS/ARTICLE7598052.ECE

 

B. KOLAPPAN

 

Writer and former VCK MLA Ravikumar said that the functional meaning of these words had become insulting to Dalits.

 

Former IAS officer P. Sivakami's petition in the Madras High Court seeking the removal from government records of terms such as colony, seri and kuppam, which are used to identify Scheduled Caste habitations, has brought into focus the change that these words have undergone over the years in their functional meaning.

 

"Seri is a place where various sections of people lived together (sernthu vaazhvathaal seri)," said Tamil scholar R.P. Sethu Pillai in his book, Tamilagam Oorum Perum.

 

Padseri is a place where Pallars lived and Paraiseri is the habitat of the Paraiyar community. The settlement of Aayar(shepherds) was known as Aaiseri, according to the author. Sethu Pillai, however, agreed that in modern times Seri has become a derogatory term and is used to identify areas where only Dalits resided.

 

Folklorist A.K. Perumal said one could find the word seri in ancient Tamil literary works, including Kaliththogai, Silappathikaram and even the 'Porulathikaram' of Tholkappiam.

"It is Silapathikaram that calls a Brahmin settlement as 'Paarpanaseri'. But the meanings of hundreds of Tamil words have become corrupt and got distorted with time, place and other considerations," he said.

 

He said once the words 'kuppai' and 'maadu' meant 'wealth'. "Today, they are used to refer to garbage and cattle. In ancient times, kaamam would mean love. Today, it has a negative meaning," he said.

 

Similary 'kuppam' in Tamil literature used to refer to Neithal villages — fishing hamlets. Kaatukuppam, Nochikuppam, Ayodhyakuppam and Karungudikuppam are some of the well-known kuppams, but today they are used in a derogatory manner. And Paakkam is used as suffix to settlements adjacent to fishermen's hamlets. Pattinappakam, Nugambakkam, Kodambakkam, Kelambakkam and Eenjambakkam are the paakams of Chennai.

 

Writer and former VCK MLA Ravikumar said while the etymological meaning of these words remained unchanged, their functional meaning had become insulting to Dalits.

 

"When these words are used to reiterate caste identity, they should be dispensed with. That was why the AIADMK government led by M.G. Ramachandran issued an order for removing all prefixes and suffixes with casteist connotations," Mr Ravikumar said.

 

The Times Of India

 

Dalit bizmen work twice as hard to be in the game

http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/City/Chennai/Dalit-bizmen-work-twice-as-hard-to-be-in-the-game/articleshow/48741684.cms

 

Sandhya Ravishankar,TNN | Aug 31, 2015, 01.03 PM IST

 

Since Arun Kumar was in engineering college, he knew that he did not want to be an employee. "I needed to wipe away the stain society has put on me," said Kumar, 30, an entrepreneur in Perambalur. "Only by being an employer would I be able to do that," he said.

 

The stain he refers to is that of caste being a dalit from a poor background has only enervated him to aspire to and reach higher goals. Today Kumar is an entrepreneur, running Aukar Technologies (investment of 2 crore) that manufactures solar panels and inverters employing 24 people, many of whom are dalits. 


Kumar's moment of glory will come within the next ten days -he is pledging an investment of '40 crore in the upcoming Global Investors' Meet."My mother was a teacher at a Balwadi in our village in Perambalur and she earned a meagre '1,300 a month," reminisced Kumar. "My sister and I never knew our father. We managed to study by taking loans from people in our village," he said. Battling discrimination has not been an easy task.Kumar narrates an in stance when he was in col lege, seeking an educational loan from a bank to pay his fees. "The bank manager told me point blank that dalits don't repay their loans," he said. "But I did repay mine," says Kumar. 


Arun Kumar is among tens of thousands of dalit entrepreneurs in Tamil Nadu - the state has more MSME enterprises than any other state. Sons and daughters of those who got precious salaried jobs as dalits, they are as aspirational as others, if not more so. Only around 6% of dalit households in the state are headed by men or women earning more than the national per capita income, yet that's among the highest for any state. 


The larger picture of Arun's success story is that, in TN, empowerment politics, of rights and demands, may well be slowly becoming passe among dalits too. 


Not one to miss a trend, Prime Min ister Narendra Modi called for supporting entrepre neurship among dalits in his Independence Day speech. "Discrimination is not the only reason why dalits are not getting jobs - many of them are also unskilled," says VCK leader and dalit activist D Ravikumar. 


"Political parties are now only speaking of rights and protesting against the government. We all can definitely play a role in helping impart skills-related knowledge to dalits," he said. 


The Dalit Indian Chamber of Commerce and Industry's (DICCI) Tamil Nadu chapter finds that Tamil dalits rarely choose to speak of their caste openly . Despite being a state with a large number of dalit-founded businesses worth over 100 crore, being low key and tightlipped is the preferred norm. 


Some say they are afraid that if they fail, it would be quickly ascribed to their 'lowborn' status. Kalavathi Sridharan, 38 years old, who runs a garment unit in Chennai says: "No one will support you when they know your caste. No one will openly say that they won't support you but work will simply not happen." 


Like Arun Kumar, Kalavathi too is a first generation dalit entrepreneur but from Kumbakonam. Her father, a postman, was single-minded about giving her and her five siblings a good education. While her brothers and sisters hold government jobs, Kalavathi is the only one who has become an entrepreneur. 


A mother of two, Kalavathi works more than 12 hours a day. Her '1.7 crore business is now all set to expand -she says a new, bigger unit will come up soon in Perambalur, providing employment for 200 people. She is excited that her unit may soon start exporting. "We don't have any sort of background in business," explained Sridharan. "As first generation dalit entrepreneurs, our parents and relatives have no idea how to guide us or support us," she said. 


What affects other entrepreneurs affects dalits too, often doubly . "They do not have direct access to the market because it is very tough to break the circle of traditional players," said chairman of the Centre of Study of Caste and Capitalism Chandra Bhan Prasad. 


"Credit is the other big challenge since banks ask for collateral. If a bank gives a loan, 25% has to be the loan seeker's contribution. That's almost impossible for most dalits. Banking reforms and access to market and credit are the two big issues that are not allowing dalits to explore," he said.

 

 

The Hindu

 

Anjaneya hopes internal reservation for SCs will being provided soon

HTTP://WWW.THEHINDU.COM/NEWS/NATIONAL/KARNATAKA/ANJANEYA-HOPES-INTERNAL-RESERVATION-FOR-SCS-WILL-BEING-PROVIDED-SOON/ARTICLE7598357.ECE

 

M. AHIRAJ

 

H. Anjaneya, Minister for Social Welfare, was hopeful that the internal reservation for Scheduled Castes, as recommended by the Justice A.J. Sadashiva Commission, would be provided soon.

 

Responding to questions by presspersons here on Sunday, Mr. Anjaneya, while recalling his struggle seeking reservation commensurate to population, said that he had discussed in detail with Chief Minister Siddaramaiah about implementing the commission report and that one had to wait for some time for the government to take a decision in this regard.

 

Alliance

Regarding reports of the Congress and the Janata Dal (Secular) forging an alliance to take control of the Bruhat Bengaluru Mahanagara Palika, Mr. Anjaneya said that while he was not aware of any such developments, it was left to the Chief Minister and the president of the Karnataka Pradesh Congress Committee to decide on the matter.

 

He said that the Rs. 204-crore special package of development in Ballari district, announced by him during the recent by-election to Ballari (rural) Assembly constituency, was ready and approvals had also been given. Steps would be taken to set in motion the developments work before December this year.

 

The Minister, while expressing grief over the killing of writer M.M. Kalaburagi, wanted the perpetrators to be punished.

 

Mr. Anjaneya was here to participate in a function organised by Madiga Employees Association.

 

The Times Of India

 

Ancient temple abode of social harmony

http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/city/allahabad/Ancient-temple-abode-of-social-harmony/articleshow/48740618.cms

 

Kapil Dixit,TNN | Aug 31, 2015, 11.49 AM IST

 

PRATAPGARH: The campus of historic Lord Shiva temple, known as Bhayaharan Nath Dham at Katra Gulab Singh village on the border of Allahabad and Pratapgarh districts, has an ancient Shivlinga of Bhayaharan Nath established by Bhim, after killing demon Bakasur. 


The temple has ten small constructed and under-construction temples, which are manned by people of different castes, exhibiting a fine example of social harmony. 


These small temples are being maintained by Scheduled Caste, Vaisya, Vishwakarma, Agrahari, Patel, Maurya and Yadav communities. 


Over 10 lakh devotees had offered prayers at the temples during Shrawan and Malmass. 


The people of the area claim that they to take the issues to be settled before Lord Shiva at the temple. The complainants invite people of all communities to get the issues heard and sorted out amicably. 


The idol of goddess Durga is set up and maintained by Agrahari Society. Nageshwar Nath is maintained by people belonging to Scheduled Caste Society. 


Samaj Shekhar, general secretary of Bhayaharan Nath Dham said that members of Sansthan take care of main Lord Shiva temple. The campus has temples of deities like Goddess Durga, Goddess Parvati, Radha-Krishna, Nageshawar Nath, Lord Vishwakarma, Lord Hanuman, Ram-Janki and Raja Daksha. 


People of all communities take care of temples and assist members of Sansthan to make the campus clean and green. There are 35 members in the Sansthan, who are now planning to renovate the decade-old roof of the main temple. 


Main priest Bhola Nath said: "Bhayaharan Nath Dham has most ancient Shivaling temple in the country. It is believed that the Shivaling here was established by Bhima after killing the demon Bakasur." 


Devotees come from all over the country to offer prayers at temple during Shrawan and Mahashivratri. 

 

News monitored by AMRESH & AJEET

 

.Arun Khote
On behalf of
Dalits Media Watch Team
(An initiative of "Peoples Media Advocacy & Resource Centre-PMARC")
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