Category Archives: Inspiration / Positive News and Features

Relic Hunter

On a rainy afternoon, Chittaranjan Dasgupta sits hunched on a chair in his dimly lit room in Bankura’s Bishnupur, working on the manuscript of his latest book, ‘Dakshin Paschim Banger Itibritto’ (History of South West Bengal).

He is 90 years old. For more than 50 years, he has been working tirelessly for preserving the history of Bankura and its surrounding region. Age has not dulled his faculties.

He has authored two other books on Bishnupur’s terracotta temple art. Recently, he wrote a paper on ‘International Trade and Cultural Diffusion in Medieval Southwestern Bengal: Some Architectural Evidence’.

His son Basab Dasgupta, economic advisor with the World Bank in Washington, has sent it to the University of Cambridge.

Dasgupta’s tryst with history began in the prime of his youth. He taught Bengali at Bishnupur High School. “Those were heady days,” he recalls. “We were still basking in the glory of new-found freedom after the British left. Everyone, especially the youth, were fired by a deep passion and commitment towards our soil.” They were free spirits, too. “We would travel to villages in and around Bankura regularly. On these trips, we stumbled upon archaeological relics buried deep in the soil.”

Bishnupur, best known for its terracotta temple art and Baluchori sarees, is a treasure trove of relics dating back to the prehistoric era.

Bankura-Bishnupur’s history can be traced back to thousands of years ago, when Proto-Australoids and Proto-Dravidians inhabited the region. Bishnupur was the core of Mallabhum that in its heydays stretched up to the Chhota Nagpur Plateau in the west and Burdwan in the east.

Its monarchs were called Malla Rajas. Bishnupur saw a confluence of various religions and sects, including Vaishnavism, Jainism and Islam. Bishnupur’s kings were patrons of art, music and culture. The eponymous Bishnupur gharana originated here.

Tansen’s descendant Ustad Bahadur Khan, a musician at the court of Bishnupur’s King Raghunath Singh Deo II, established the gharana.

The writ of time, however, ensured Bishnupur’s link with its glorious past became tenuous.

In the 1940s, Jogesh Chandra Roy, who settled in Bankura after retiring as a professor of chemistry and botany from Cuttack’s Ravenshaw College, tried setting up a museum for relics, books, manuscripts of a bygone era. Around that time, the area around the Kangsabati river was being excavated. “Prof Roy was pained to see government officials and others walking away with priceless archaeological finds,” says Dasgupta. Roy then placed an announcement in a reputable Bengali magazine, seeking help to build the museum. He received no response. Then, came a band of enthusiasts who cherished their history.

Besides Dasgupta, the motley group comprised teachers, scholars, students, businessmen and government officials. They wanted to preserve testimonies of the past for posterity.

Inspired by Roy, they set up the Bishnupur chapter of Bangiya Sahitya Parishad in 1951. Dr Manik Lal Singha was a prominent member who contributed immensely to preserving Bishnupur’s history. Like Dasgupta, he, too, taught at Bishnupur High School and became the parishad’s secretary.

“In 1970s, Manik Babu discovered a Chalcolithic site at Dihar, north of Bishnupur on the north bank of Dwarakeshwar river,” Dasgupta says. Coins, beads, semi-precious stone jewellery and pottery were excavated. The find helped establish that Bankura-Manbhum-Singhbhum was the hinterland of the Tamralipta port and part of the trade route that opened into the Bay of Bengal.

Dr Singha wrote to the Calcutta University’s archaeological department, which took charge. Parishad members scoured villages to collect bits of Bishnupur’s past. “We would go to houses asking for ancient manuscripts written on palm leaves or tulot kagoj (handmade paper). These were heirlooms and several families didn’t want to part with them,” Dasgupta says.

For about a decade — from the 1980s, till he retired in 1990 — Dasgupta, like Dr Singha, travelled through villages to collect relics. They found numerous ancient stone sculptures. Coins, ornaments, pot shards, arrow heads, weapons and tools were excavated from the banks of the Kansai, Shilai and Darakeshwar rivers. “Often, we succeeded in retrieving the relics. But there were times when villagers didn’t allow us, especially if the relic was an idol of a deity who they worshipped,” he says. Gradually, when they had a collection of manuscripts, the parishad decided to set up a museum.

In January 1951, Kabishekhar Kalidas Roy inaugurated a room from where the museum began.

Later, Bishnupur’s Bhattacharya family donated about 10 bighas of land, where then Union education minister Humayun Kabir laid the foundation of the museum, Jogesh Chandra Purakriti Bhavan, in 1954. Named after Prof Roy, today it is a two-storeyed building. The state government, too, chipped in.

During the Left Front regime, the foundation was laid for a new wing. Victoria Memorial gave a grant of Rs 15 lakh for its modernization. Dasgupta is the museum’s member-secretary. The museum became a crucible of culture.

The Parishad organized various lecture series, discussions and music performances. The list of speakers had Bengal’s best — scientist Satyen Bose, author Tarashankar Bandopadhyay, scholars like Shashibhushan Dasgupta, Suniti Chattopadhyay, Sukumar Sen, Kalidas Nag, economists Ashok Mitra and Biplab Dasgupta.

Now, most parishad members are either dead or old. Lectures and performances are no longer held. “Nobody seems to be interested in intellectual pursuits anymore,” Dasgupta feels. Also, today, moving in villages in search of relics would have been tough. “Violence and suspicion stemming from politics have eroded the innocence and peace in Bengal’s villages,” he rues.

The museum boasts a collection dating back to the Paleolithic Age. There are sculptures of Jain Tirthankaras, Parasnath, Choumukha votives and Hindu gods, including Chamunda, Vishnu on Ananta Shajya, Ganesha, Kartikeya, Shankha Purush, Indrani, Pragya Paramita and Ambika. The music gallery chronicles the Bishnupur gharana, its exponents and their instruments.

Curator Tushar Sarkar and two guards are in charge of the museum. During peak season, the museum attracts about 400 visitors a day.

Yet, such priceless treasures of Bengal’s history are left practically unguarded with not even electronic surveillance or high-tech round-the-clock vigil.

source: http://www.timesofindia.indiatimes.com / The Times of India / Home> City> Kolkata / by Rakhi Chakrabarty, TNN / June 20th, 2015

Bengali on Queen’s honour list

Kolkata :

Seventy-year-old Pratima Sengupta, who pressed on with her charity and social activities despite debilitating arthritis, is among those being appointed Member of the Order of the British Empire (MBE) in the birthday 2015 Honour List of the Queen.

The honour is recognition for her services to the community in East Renfrewshire, Scotland. Sengupta has been living in Glasgow since 1969 and is now confused about which of her five grandchildren she will take along to accept the honour from the Queen.

On April 30, Sengupta got a letter from the Cabinet Office stating that the British Prime Minister had proposed her name to the Queen. On June 12, her name was published in the London Gazette. “I started shivering when I heard this news. All those who are on the Honour List will be invited to an investiture. The events are organized by the Central Chancery of the Orders of Knighthood in St James’ Palace. I was told that I will receive the invitation about five weeks before the event,” Sengupta told TOI from Glasgow.

Sengupta had spent her early years in Kolkata where her father, Dr Promodranjan Dasgupta, was a teacher at Presidency College. After marriage, she moved to Glasgow where she worked at the tax office. Due to arthritis, she was forced her to take early retirement in 2002. Pain in her joints notwithstanding, she continues to do voluntary service at a hospital.

“I started the Women’s Voluntary Royal Service (WVRS) at the Victoria Infirmary. I loved to give company to patients. Some of them couldn’t speak English and I worked as their translator,” she said. But her failing health didn’t make it easy. “They made special shoes so that I could walk properly. I refused to use a wheelchair. Sometimes, I’d fall down or bleed from my hands. At night, I’d cry in pain. Yet, I never stopped working,” she said.

Wearing a sari with a red bindi, Sengupta would stand out in the crowd. “Initially, people would ask me about the red blot on my forehead!” she laughs. She became a director with Voluntary Action group in Glasgow that worked with children who couldn’t afford higher education. “I’d sing ‘Phule phule dhole dhole’ to them. I also got in touch with an NGO in Tollygunge that worked with impaired children,” she added. She joined an organization called Women Across the World. “I’d go door to door asking for donations. I remember telling people: ‘You don’t need to give me more. Even one penny is enough.”

Meeting the Queen is the big event on her calendar now. “My husband and I had once attended the Queen’s Garden party at Edinburgh. I have been told that I can take four guests to this event. But I have five grandchildren. And all of them want to go to see the Queen,” Sengupta laughed.

source: http://www.timesofindia.indiatimes.com / The Times of India / Home> City> Kolkata / by Priyanka Dasgupta, TNN / June 16th, 2015

Autistic youth from Kolkata makes waves with art

Kolkata :

Autism has put a poser on his abilities to communicate, but it could not limit his imagination. Avishek Sarkar, an autistic youth, has made a splash in the art world with his extraordinary paintings.

While people with autism often do not understand or recognize human emotions, Avishek (22) is able to convey the story of his life and interpret his sentiments, an ability that fascinated the visitors.

An exhibition of his artwork, titled “Asadharon”, which was organized by the Autism Society West Bengal in association with ITC Sonar, took chief guest Wasim Kapoor by surprise on Thursday.

“The paintings are simply out of the ordinary. Avishek is so talented,” said Kapoor. Avishek’s guides, including secretary of the Autism Society West Bengal Indrani Basu, said, “His works give a different perception on persons with autism. Avishek, just like other individuals with autism, has a penchant for details as his sketch of the Howrah Bridge reveals.”

“The sense of accuracy, proportion and perspective in Avishek’s drawings, as well as the detailing, is amazing,” said another painter present at the exhibition.

With Avishek’s artwork that were aimed at giving people a deeper understanding of autism, the event served as an open door to the mysterious world of autistic children.

His mother Soma said, “There is a meaning behind each of the artwork. He has painted motor pumps, the sound of which troubles him, and the rickshaw, the bumpy rides of which he loathes.”

Avishek never asks for paper and uses whatever he can lay his hands on to — like a newspaper or some scarps lying around. He not only paints what bothers him but also things such as lines of a block of flats or a collapsible gate which intrigue him.

“When Avishek was little, I thought he could learn to draw and paint pretty landscapes or portraits. But, he did not keep himself limited to that and delved on experimentations instead,” said Soma.

As an autistic youth, it has been hard for Avishek to express himself through words, gestures and actions. He began doing art as therapy, but his parents decided to put the works for public view.

These days, Avishek is more inclined to make an eye contact than ever and his social skills have also improved. “Avishek has a natural understanding of colours. As his paintings demonstrate, disability is no barrier to creativity,” said Kapoor. Atul Bhalla, GM of ITC Sonar, said, “We are happy to be able to host this exhibition .”

German deputy consul-general Rosemarie E-Hille, who was present at the show, found Avishek’s creations to be “awe-inspiring”.

source: http://www.timesofindia.indiatimes.com / The Times of India / Home> City> Kolkata / by Ajanta Chakraborty, TNN / April 06th, 2015

Unique initiative for mentally-ill patients

A unique initiative involving the West Bengal Health Department and a non-government organisation here on Monday has brought hope to mentally ill patients of Kolkata’s Pavlov Hospital.

Ostracized by society and abandoned by their family members, patients of the biggest mental health facility in West Bengal can now dream of financial independence and a life beyond the confines of the hospital.

A memorandum of understanding for Dhobhi Ghar, a laundry project, was signed between the representative of State Health Department and Anjali, a mental health rights NGO, which at the outset will involve at least 12 patients who have recovered from their ailment but are unable to return home.

“Initially, we will be dry-cleaning clothes from hospitals and slowly we will take orders from hotels and restaurants. The 12 people who are involved in the project will be paid Rs 232 per day as per minimum wages laws,” said Ratnaboli Ray, who signed the MoU on behalf on Anjali.

While the machines for starting the project have been imported by the NGO, the Bengal government has provided necessary infrastructure and ensured water and electricity supply for the project.

“We thought that it was a good proposal to provide livelihood and rehabilitation to mental health patients. This is the first such initiative taken in Bengal involving mental health patients,” Moloy De, Principal Secretary of Bengal’s Health Department told The Hindu .

According to mental health activists like Ms Ray this is first such initiative tried anywhere in the country and it comes as good news from the mental health instruction of Bengal after many years.

In the past, the mental hospitals of Bengal particularly the Pavlov Hospital were in the news for unnatural deaths and human rights violations.

The death of 84 inmates in the mental health facility of Bengal in 2013 over the past three years had resulted in strong criticism by activists.

source: http://www.thehindu.com / The Hindu / Home> News> Cities> Kolkata / by Shiv Sahay Singh / Kolkata – March 03rd, 2015

Mother Teresa was a `butterfly’; an artist paints his viewpoint

TeresaKOLKATA01mar2015

Mumbai :

Even as the recent controversial statement of the RSS leader Mohan Bhagwat on Mother Teresa has received strong opinionated responses and also started an online war between opposing views on the issue, a Mumbai based artist has gently put forth his impression with charcoal and acrylic on canvas.

Artist Ajay De is currently holding an exhibition titled `Butterfly People’ at Jehangir Art Gallery where he has shown among other artworks two paintings in which Mother Teresa is a butterfly.

“I have correlated beautiful people as butterflies through art. In fact, I feel that everyone can be a butterfly, a creature that lives for just a few days but spreads beauty and happiness all around it,” explained De, whose exhibition is on till Monday (March 2).

When asked what he thinks of the latest controversy on whether Mother Teresa used to convert the people she rescued from the streets, De said: “I do not want to get into this political controversy, though I will say that it has not affected the reputation of Mother Teresa.”

The artist who had met Mother Teresa just once in the early ’80s in Kolkata, elaborated: “When a stone is thrown at a celebrity, his or her image is not tarnished, but someone else may get some publicity.”

His two artworks on Mother Teresa have already been sold, while the other paintings have also got a favorable response at the exhibition.

“From the time it breaks out of the chrysalis and transforms into a beautiful winged creature, the butterfly stuns the world with its beauty and soothes the world its spirit. In life, we humans come close to being the butterfly, yet only a few are able to embrace the life of a butterfly. That is the challenge we all have to think about,” he concluded.

source: http://www.timesofindia.indiatimes.com / The Times of India / Home> City> Mumbai / by Vijay Singh, TNN / March 01st, 2015

Grandniece continues Nivedita’s quest for truth

Kolkata :

When a 73-year-old woman stepped into Mayer Bari — Maa Sarada’s house at Bagbazar — everybody was busy with their daily chores. Sight of tourists is nothing unusual for them. But when they came to know that the lady was actually the grand-niece of Sister Nivedita, there was no leaving her alone. For rest of the day, a strong crowd milled around Selenda Margot Giardin, who came all the way from Newbury at Vermont in the US. By evening, it was a day well-spent for Saradha Math monks, students of Nivedita School and Selenda as well.

“I am fascinated. I feel like a celebrity,” beamed Selenda, who was the centre of attraction at Sarada Sarani on Monday. The pangs of Parkinson’s and acute arthritis could not dissuade Selenda from embarking upon the long journey in quest of “truth, love and God”.

Selenda didn’t know how to react when people touched her feet. Anushuya, a student at Nivedita School where Selenda led a prayer, said: “For us, it’s like being with Bhagini Nivedita herself.”

Some found the same eyes in Selenda, who shares her middle name (Margot) with her Irish grand-aunt Margaret Elizabeth Noble, whom Swami Vivekananda christened Nivedita. “My middle name is ‘curiosity’. From the age of seven, when I first read at the church that ‘God is Love’, I have been curious about God. The search continues…and now I am here, searching…” reminisced Selenda, who runs her choir at the United Church of Christ at Vermont.

The septuagenarian will be attending a host of programmes over the week. She will spend two days at Belur Math before flying back to the US on Saturday. Her son John Grow is accompanying her.

Selenda let out more about herself and the Nobles as she spoke to TOI: “Ever since I was a child, I remember my mother, Isabel Noble, telling me stories of her aunt who pursued her quest for truth and worked for the people living in this faraway land.”

She gifted the monks of Sarada Math the handwritten notes by Sister Nivedita circa 1909 and a replica of Michaelangelo’s Pieta, which Sister Nivedita had gifted Selenda’s mother Isabela. These items will be on display at the upcoming Nivedita Museum inside Nivedita House.

Mayer Bari head Swami Viswanathananda said: “Selenda’s amazing. We never imagined that a descendent of Sister Nivedita would come here after all these years.” Another monk Prabuddhaprana shared the euphoria: “We are glad to discover the Sister’s family at last.”

source: http://www.timesofindia.indiatimes.com / The Times of India / Home> City> Kolkata / by Ajanta Chakraborty, TNN / February 17th, 2015

Sex workers’ cooperative wins award

A sex worker withdrawing money at Usha Multipurpose Cooperative Society Ltd.Photo: Sushanta Patronobish
A sex worker withdrawing money at Usha Multipurpose Cooperative Society Ltd.Photo: Sushanta Patronobish

With low interest rate, they have been able to educate their children and manage their finances better

A cooperative run by sex workers of Songachi, which functions as a bank for sex workers, has won the prestigious award for the best run cooperative in West Bengal for 2014.

Usha Multipurpose Co-operative Society Ltd, the largest sex workers’ financial institution in Asia, owned and managed by sex workers, has a corpus of Rs 19 crores and 20,000 members.

“Before the cooperative was started, we were left at the mercy of moneylenders and madams. Since the sex workers did not have address and identification proof, it was impossible for us to open an account in banks,” said Rita Rai, a sex worker who is actively involved in the Usha Cooperative.

Like Ms Rai, Abida Begum, has taken loans from the cooperative a number of times. “It is with the help of the cooperative that I managed my finances and was able to buy a piece of land. Earlier most of our earnings were spent in paying back the moneylender,” she said.

The cooperative has given sex workers a sense of empowerment. With this, they have been able to release themselves from the clutches of madams and pimps. As a result of this bank, The Hindu came across several women who have been able to educate their children, arrange the marriage of their daughters and even buy property of their own. Dependence on the bank has also mitigated the impact of the recent deposit collection scams that have rocked West Bengal on sex workers.

The beginning, however, was not easy. Chief Advisor to the cooperative, S Jana recalls the resistance faced by him and the sex workers when they decided to set up a bank of their own.

“I was personally threatened, bombs were hurled at us, and the girls were under pressure to not join the cooperative movement. However, slowly we were able to convince the women who joined us in greater numbers each year,” Dr Jana told The Hindu .

The cooperative started its operations in 1995. “To begin a society run by sex workers was not an easy task. There was a debate in the West Bengal Legislative Assembly and an amendment was brought to the Cooperative Act to enable sex workers to start a cooperative society,” Dr Jana said. He is hopeful that in 2015 itself, the Reserve Bank of India will give the cooperative a full-fledged licence to function as a bank.

The members of the cooperative society say that they do not demand an identification proof for opening an account and the rate of interest is lower than many nationalized banks.

source: http://www.thehindu.com / The Hindu / Home> News> Cities> Kolkata / by Shiv Sahay Singh / Kolkata – February 01st, 2015

First batch of military nurses from Kolkata commissioned

Kolkata :

The first batch of 18 nursing cadets from the College of Nursing, Command Hospital, Eastern Command, Kolkata, were commissioned as lieutenants into the Military Nursing Service on Wednesday. Among those present were Maj Gen A K Nagpal, MG (Med), HQ, Eastern Command and Maj Gen Deepak Kalra, Commandant, Command Hospital, Eastern Command.

“Lt Sushila Bishnoi was awarded the gold medal for securing first position in the University exams and was also adjudged best all-rounder. Lt Priyadarshni Kumari bagged the silver medal for standing second in the batch while Lt Isha Sharma was awarded the silver medal for best clinical nurse. In his address to the nursing officers, Gen Nagpal, spoke about the responsibilities of a nursing officer as being both challenging and rewarding. They have the role of nursing soldiers and their families in the armed forces hospitals across the country in times of peace and war, as well as abroad over land, air and sea, he said,” an officer said.

The School of Nursing was established at the Command Hospital in 1973. It was converted to the College of Nursing in 2010 and conducts BSc (N) programme of four-year duration. Recently, a two-year post graduate programme was also introduced at the college.

source: http://www.timesofindia.indiatimes.com / The Times of India / Home> City> Kolkata / by Jayanta Gupta, TNN / January 14th, 2015

Bringing smiles to a thousand lips

Kolkata :

About 25 years ago, a surgeon at the state-run SSKM Hospital, Sankar Chatterjee, had applied stitches on the scalp of a Congress leader, a woman who was to create history in Bengal by single-handedly dislodging the Left Front from power.

Today, Chatterjee has created a sort of record by himself. As a project director of Smile Train programme, he has performed cleft lip and cleft palate surgeries on 1,000 underprivileged children in Tripura and Assam over the last six years.

“On August 16, 1990, I was on duty at SSKM Hospital when Mamata Banerjee was wheeled in with two deep injuries on her scalp. She had fended off a third blow with her left arm and fractured it. I was called in to repair the injuries to her scalp as a micro-surgeon. I applied 18 stitches on her scalp under local anesthesia. She didn’t even wince when I applied local anesthesia for the stitches,” Chatterjee recalled.

He took early retirement from state health service and became a part of Smile Train in 2008. He was assigned two hospitals at Agartala and Silchar where cleft surgeries were to be conducted free of cost.

“In Agartala and Silchar, my experience have been heartwarming. The smiles on the faces of the children after they see their ‘new’ faces on mirrors are worth dying for. I still remember a 14-year-old girl from Silchar who turned up a month after her surgery. She told me: ‘Daktarbabu, ami jiboney prothom baar lipstick lagiyechhi (Doctor, I have applied lipstick for the first time in my life).’ I was overwhelmed,” Chatterjee added.

Chatterjee completed his 100th cleft lip surgery in Silchar around the time when the film “Smile Pinki” bagged an Academy Award in 2008.

source: http://www.timesofindia.indiatimes.com / The Times of India / Home> City> Kolkata / by Jayanta Gupta, TNN / January 11th, 2015

Four decades of a special cause

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From a two-room set-up in Ballygunge Military Camp with just a couple of students to a full-fledged campus in Taratala, Indian Institute of Cerebral Palsy has come a long way in 40 years.

The institute recently celebrated its journey with an exhibition that paid tribute to the city that has been home to it and all the people who have lent their support.

Samiran Nundy, gastro specialist from Delhi and guest of honour, remembered the special place IICP had in the life of his mother Shanti Nundy, the first qualified special educator at the institute.

For Raman Dhawan, GoC, Bengal, and the chief guest on the occasion, it was his first visit to IICP and he admitted to feeling “privileged” to be part of the 40th anniversary celebrations.

“It is this institute or institutes like this, the caregivers, the special children… the special adults who work for self-reliance… they are the actual heroes. We all need to applaud them,” said Dhawan. He also shared how the place once occupied by IICP at the Ballygunge Military Camp is now home to a special school. “They (IICP) were with us for a decade or so… I want to assure this institute, you may have left us to come to your new premises but you are very close to our heart. The place that you left, those two rooms… we made it into a slightly bigger establishment and there we run a small Asha school. A school for the special children of the armed forces,” Dhawan said.

Nundy took a trip down memory lane, remembering how his mother joined IICP at age 60 and how much she loved the institute. “At the age of 54 she enrolled herself in Brandon University in Canada and for three years she studied special education. When she returned to India in 1977, Sudha (Kaul) and Junie (Sethi) were very kind in employing someone who was nearing 60,” he said.

“My mother absolutely adored the school. She, I think, cooked, looked after the garden, looked after the children and she taught a little,” smiled Nundy. He also shared how even when her children were back home during holidays, she never used to miss out on work. “She would still be going out to work in the morning, saying ‘I can’t miss my job, I have to go to work whether my children are here or not’.”

Even after being diagnosed with cancer and undergoing treatment, she continued to work with IICP.

A short film, Beyond Barriers, by Jayabrato Chatterjee on IICP’s 40-year journey was screened on the occasion, followed by the release of the institute’s newsletter, Deepshikha, sponsored by ABP, where students, parents, teachers and people associated with the institute have shared their memories.

Jeeja Ghosh, an ex-student of IICP, gave a PowerPoint presentation on Ankur, an advocacy group she heads.

“Our parents and teachers have encouraged us. As we grew up we learnt to voice our rights and achieve our goals. We believe that people with disabilities have rights, the ability to shoulder responsibility and need to be recognised,” said Jeeja, who now works at IICP as head of advocacy and disability studies.

Madhuri Kapur, one of the first two students of IICP, was felicitated by vice-chairperson Sudha Kaul.

The exhibition titled Salaam Kolkata, which was on display at the Taratala campus, had students of the junior section put together Calcutta Canvas with vignettes of city life from phuchkawallah to animals from Alipore zoo.

source: http://www.telegraphindia.com / The Telegraph, Calcutta / Front Page> Calcutta> Story / by Shweta Keshri / Monday – December 22nd, 2014