This is Gujarat’s map of Mal-nutrition.
Red colour shows more than 45 % mal-nutrition. It is tribal belt of Gujarat. Now,
you can understand why rest of the Gujarat is vibrant. Yellow colour shows
40-45 % Mal-nutrition. Light green shows 35-40 % Mal-nutrition. Dark green
shows less than 35 % Mal-nutrition. This dark green area covers Gandhinagar and
Ahmedabad, where rulers of the state live. They are green, because rest of the
Gujarat is red.
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Monday, September 23, 2013
Sunday, August 11, 2013
I am hungry
“I am hungry, please give
me ten rupee,” a teenager beggar boy begs near world-famous Indian Institute of
Management building in Ahmedabad. A local daily carries a news story on trendy
‘beggars’ of Gujarat’s economic capital which boasts of hundreds of charitable
trusts begging millions of rupees for sick, aged and crippled cows. The
‘apprentice’ reporter said that he was surprised when he saw such an
English-speaking beggar.
It is not surprising that beggars
learn English. Reason is simple. They are real beggars. And if you are a
political beggar like Rajnath, you may not realize importance of English. The
real beggars know that they can’t beg in Sanskrit. Because, begging in Sanskrit
demand unique attire – a pot belly wrapped in yellow silky cloth; a sacred, stinking
thread entwined around ear and above all a caste certificate given by divine
order.
Begging in English is
constitutional. Begging in English is revolutionary. It is anti thesis of
institutional begging practised by religious mendicants and political parties.
Long live India’s new generation of belligerent beggars!
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