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Is Extravagance Out?

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Aggarwal Sabha's appeal to its community in the city to hold budget weddings is indeed appreciable. But will simple and low-key weddings trend in the future?

It seems to have got the Aggarwal community thinking. Just a few days ago the executive committee of the Aggarwal Sabha in Chandigarh unanimously passed a resolution that the members of the Aggarwal community should spend less on marriages. Weddings should be inexpensive and less ostentatious affairs, appealed the Sabha. A suggestion has also been made by the committee that marriage functions should be held during the day time to avoid extra expenses. While the Sabha denies that demonetisation has had a role to play in their recent announcement, it is a much appreciated move. 


Photo By: Raman Bhardwaj

Speaking about the appeal to its community, Sunil Gupta, general secretary, Aggarwal Sabha, Chandigarh said, “Marriage functions should be simple. We suggest that even guests and relatives should not be given anything in form of ‘shagun’. In the meeting of office bearers of our executive, a decision has also been taken that Aggarwal families should hold simple ‘Rasam Pagri’ functions.” The Akhil Bhartiya Agrawal Sammelan, a national body, had also issued similar directives which the Chandigarh unit has taken forward.    

According to rough estimates, Indian families (middle class to upper middle class) spend anywhere between Rs 20 lakhs to Rs 6 crores for weddings and associated functions. Recently, social media was abuzz with news over preparations for Union minister Nitin Gadkari’s daughter’s wedding. Reports suggested over 10,000 guests, most of them VVIPs, were flown to Nagpur in 50 charter flights. Terming the wedding as extravagant, the Congress party had questioned the extravagance in times of demonetisation and also sought bank details be made public. Also this month, former minister G Janardhana Reddy recreated the Vijayanagara empire at Bangalore Palace for his daughter’s wedding which was spread over five days and saw expenses over Rs 500 crore. 

“People have started using weddings as occasions to flaunt wealth and status,” feels Neha Aggarwal, a city-based entrepreneur. Married to a doctor, Neha’s own wedding was spread over three days but her parents made sure the guest list didn’t run into thousands. “Times are changing and so are communities. Increasingly, we are becoming conscious of how we spend and are making wise decisions with our money,” said the mother of two who hails the Sabha’s appeal to tone down marriages.


Photo By: Raman Bhardwaj

Equally appreciative of the move is Sunil Aggarwal, owner of Patyala – Royal couture, a popular designer clothing store in Sector 22, Chandigarh. “What most people forget is that the wedding is just for one day. Just like everyone forgets the previous day’s news, it’s the same for weddings. I feel the directive is a good move and personally, I feel there should be no wastage in weddings,” said Aggarwal. 

It is a widely known fact that in olden times, the community elders would maintain an account of money spent on a boy’s education and bringing up (a bahi khata of sorts) that was presented to the girl’s side with the aim of being reimbursed. 

Reflecting on the Aggarwal Sabha’s appeal, Dr M S Malik, president of the Jat Mahasabha in Chandigarh said, “It is a good move but we have been saying the same for a long time as well. It is not a result of demonetisation. All communities in general should avoid spending such large sums on weddings. Where is the need to show off?” 

Some years ago, the Delhi Sikh Gurdwara Management Committee (DSGMC) had also tried to discipline the community by issuing an advisory against serving of non-vegetarian food and alcohol at Sikh weddings. The DSGMC had also issued an order asking Sikhs in Delhi to keep their weddings simple instead of hosting elaborate functions. While the move met with mixed reactions, big fat Punjabi weddings didn’t show signs of toning down. It is hoped that the Aggarwal Sabha’s appeal doesn’t go in vain. It would be nice to see simple wedding affairs where the bride and groom mingle among a close set of guests who are treated to limited albeit delicious menu. Can we expect ‘simple and nice’, ‘low-key but fun’ headlines to trend when it comes to weddings in 2017? We sincerely hope to.   

Tunes From Dunes

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Mame Khan keeps the legacy of Mangniyar folk music alive

"After more than 5,000 concerts at nearly 3,000 venues in more than 50 countries, the times I performed with my father, Rana Khan, remain closest to my heart"…..Mame Khan, Sufi singer

From sand dunes to international fame. Sufi singer Mame Khan, who performed on the opening night of Royal Rajasthan Festival at Elante’s café courtyard, remembers the day that turned his life.
 


Photo By: Sumit Kumar

“A scout heard me singing in the wedding choir of musician-actor Ila Arun’s daughter and recommended me to Shankar-ji (singer and music director Shankar Mahadevan), and my Bollywood career stated off with the song ‘Baaware’ from the movie ‘Luck by Chance’,” he says. “Call it luck, but it was the result of my ‘riyaaz’ (years of music practice).”

The man who gave his voice to more than 500 songs, including film numbers for ‘No One Killed Jessica’ and ‘Mirzya’, and darling-of-the-masses ‘Chaudhary’ in Coke Studio Season 2 on MTV, belongs to a family of master singers from Rajasthan that preserves a unique tradition. He doesn’t remember the age at which he first sang but he has been travelling and performing in since 12.

“My first performance,” he says, “was before the-then prime minister, Rajiv Gandhi.” After more than 5,000 concerts at nearly 3,000 venues in more than 50 countries (across Europe, North America, the Gulf, and Africa) the times he performed with his father, Rana Khan, remain his most cherished. “It was a dream came true to share the stage with him and travel together.”

Rana Khan taught him the nuances of Mangniyar folk music, including ‘Jangra’. Mame Khan carries forward the family legacy of leading a simple life, singing at festivals and for the ‘jajmaan’ (patrons) at weddings and childbirth.

He has emerged as one of the country’s most admired Sufi singers, for his range of traditional, folk, and devotional songs. In 15 years, his family revived the once dying art of Indian Sufi singing, and Mame Khan has set his heart on taking it to new heights.
 


Photo By: Sumit Kumar

Mame Khan, who blends Sufi and traditional Rajasthani music, regaled the audience with ‘Mast Qalandar’, ‘Chhap Tilak’, ‘Jugni’, ‘Baaware’, and, of course, ‘Chaudhary’ on the opening night of Royal Rajasthan Festival.

“We need stronger cultural ties to build a stronger India,” UT administrator VP Singh Badnore observed at the inauguration. If it needs a brand ambassador, there’s Mame Khan.

The Mangniyars
The Mangniyar are Muslim classical folk musicians in Sindh (Pakistan) and the bordering Thar desert of Rajasthan’s Barmer and Jaisalmer districts. Wealthy landlords and aristocrats have patronised them for generations. The Mangniyar consider themselves descendants of the Rajputs, whose songs are passed on from generation to generation as oral history of the desert. They sing about Alexander, local maharajas, and past battles in the region.

Never Give Up

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In times of endless worries and stress, Maj DP Singh's story of grit and determination is something we all can learn from

The doctors had given up on him. But he came back from the dead. A Kargil war veteran, Major DP Singh (retd) has made sure every second of his new life is well-lived with not a moment to waste. “Maybe God did not want me to come to him so soon and there was much more written in my destiny,” remarked the 42-year-old as he readied to share details about his latest endeavour in Chandigarh recently.

 


Photo By: Life in Chandigarh

 

The Blade Runner

India’s first amputee distance runner or blade runner as he is more popularly referred to, Singh has participated in 18 marathons since he first started running in 2009 with a prosthetic leg. It wasn’t easy. There were times when he would bleed profusely but that didn’t deter his spirit. His running got better when he got his first artificial blades in 2011 courtesy the Indian Army’s Artificial Limb Centre. “My mantra has been ‘never quit’. It is what first drove me to run despite all odds, and even today, I motivate other people, including those with disabilities to have a never-give-up attitude,” says Singh, who ran in the Delhi Half Marathon 2016. 
Despite the fact that he cannot hear properly and has as many as 50 bomb shrapnels embedded in his body – he calls it a gift from the enemy – Singh is upbeat about life. His aim is motivate others in all spheres of life

New initiative in city
“If a physically disabled person can be socially responsible, then why not others?” questions Singh who announced the event – Swachh Ability Run 2016. Held on November 27, the run was open to amateur and professional runners. Organised as part of a seven-city event, there were two runs – 3 km and 10 km. “The main aim is to promote cleanliness and to show people that keeping a city clean is a joint effort,” informed Singh. “But whatever run you chose to be a part of, you have to finish it. Don’t leave it halfway. You should be concerned about completing the target with sheer resolution,” was the blade runner’s advice.

 


Photo By: Life in Chandigarh

 

One for all
To motivate fellow amputees and to steer a community of disabled people like himself, Singh formed a group in 2011 called ‘The Challenging Ones’. “We have a large number of members and we also participate collectively in marathons,” says Singh who also gives lessons in blade running.

Did you know?
German sportswear brand Adidas has a unique footwear initiative called ‘Odds’, which is a pair of shoes for the same foot — catering to the needs of the para-athletes. Incidentally, the ad campaign for the shoe in India is spearheaded by Major D P Singh while veteran actor Kabir Bedi has lent his voice for the same. The ad film captures Singh’s life, his passion for running and becoming the first Indian to run a marathon with an artificial limb. Singh believes that losing a part of the body does not lead to disability. Losing the will to fight out odds does. “Celebrate the odds and be the winner. If you wish to give up anything, give up giving up. That’s the message I wish to give everyone. And that’s the reason I run every day.”

Chandigarh Beopar Mandal on eBay

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Chandigarh's Beopar Mandal goes online via eBay

Facing one onslaught after the other—first from online shopping giants such as Amazon and Snapdeal, and a cash crunch following demonetisation—the traders of the city decided to swim with the tide instead of against it.

 


Photo By: TS Bedi

 

They decided to bite the bullet by joining hands with one of the online shopping portals that not so long ago they considered their avowed adversaries. They have signed a partnership deal with worldwide shopping giant eBay, under which a dedicated page has been created on the eBay site ebay.in for the Chandigarh Beopar Mandal (CBM) to give their business exposure to eBay’s 164 million buyers worldwide.

Announcing the partnership, CBM president Anil Vohra, its chairman Chiranjiv Singh, and eBay’s director retail exports Navin Mistry said some 30,000 traders from Chandigarh stand to benefit. “We were in talks with eBay for 7-to-8 months and finally we got the best deal,” they revealed. While eBay’s Mistry refused to divulge details of the deal, Vohra did say that the commission eBay would charge them would be less than their normal cut. Vohra and Chiranjiv said: “Exchange will be much more convenient because the sellers are local.” Mistry said: “We will equip the sellers with the skill-sets for online business.

The Lunch Box Woes

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As children raise their noses to anything green and parents walk the tight rope between healthy and junk food, we address the never-ending dilemma – what to pack in the daily tiffin?

So, your child brought back the lunch box as it is. The, “very healthy” sabzi–stuffed sandwich, a healthy fusion according to you, did little to excite your child’s palate. The saga of the tiffin is not new. This dilemma becomes a parent’s (mothers in most cases) constant companion the moment one’s child starts going to school.

 


Photo By: Life in Chandigarh

 

You can toss up some healthy yet tasty treats – think aloo patties, vegetable paranthas, cucumber sandwiches and the likes but barring a few days (perhaps the day there’s a sports class in school when the tiffin is gobbled up), the lunch box returns empty. The children constantly rue that their tiffin is the most unexciting and all because of you. They will want stir-fry noodles, cheese-filled sandwiches and pizzas, plump burgers and creamy pastas and you will turn up your nose to all of this.

What do children have to say?
We dropped in at Chitkara International School in Sector 25, Chandigarh during the school’s tiffin time. It was an assortment of dishes that we saw. When asked about their likes and dislikes for their daily lunch box, Jaskaran Singh, a student of class five said: “I don’t like eating gobhi and baingan in my tiffin.” And while that’s easy to relate to – who would like a soggy sabzi like baingan for tiffin time in school – he says he makes sure he finishes everything in his tiffin even if his mother packs in the dreaded ‘karele ki sabzi’. We think the hunger pangs have a role to play here. Elsewhere in the school, Kavya, a student of nursery shares, “I like paneer and bhindi and nothing else,” she says with a twinkle in her eyes. Disha Sharma, another student of class five admits that while she loves rajma-chawal and rues why she can’t get it every day, there are things which she just doesn’t like at all. “I detest shimla mirch but I have agreed to eat it if my mom gives packs more of aloo and less of the green vegetable,” says Disha.

It could be any school, any class, any day. Sabzi-roti combo meals are frowned upon; stuffed paranthas are “okay” once in a while and so are rice-based meals. But it would be “awesome” to get pizzas and burgers every day, say the kids.

Parents’ take
With kids only wanting junk food and mothers in no mood to surrender, the tiffin war continues in every household every morning. The parantha stuffed with gobhi, suggested by mummy, might win once in a while but on other days, as most mothers point out, the demand from children is for yummier, cheesier and saucier meals (read pizza and pasta). A mother’s culinary skills are put to test if she wants to take the middle route, i.e. a blend of healthy and junk food. Seema Gupta, a resident of Sector 38 B and parent to a girl studying in LKG, who likes to see pasta and Maggi in her tiffin every day, has found a way to deal with this problem. “I alternate between giving her mixed vegetable parantha and pao bhaji so that she gets the required nutrition,” admits Gupta.

A cross section of parents that Life in Chandigarh spoke to told us that schools can help in a big way. “In my daughter’s school, they have a meal plan for the kids. It makes it very easy for me because it’s less confusing and, gives us a chance to do variations. For the paneer day, it can be shahi paneer one day and paneer parantha the next week,” said Karuna Sharma, a mother of two daughters whose elder daughter studies in Carmel Convent School, Sector 9.

 


Photo By: Life in Chandigarh

 

School’s can take charge
According to Jagjit Kaur Sekhon, Principal, Ajit Karam Singh International Public School (AKSIPS), Sector 41 said, “We have a menu for every day of the week for the pre-primary classes. For other classes, we keep sending circulars home; teachers take a round to see what the kids are eating, and if the child is not bringing healthy food, we send a note to the parents regarding that.” 

An advisory on tiffin contents is something that children can learn to adjust to and schools should encourage sticking to pre-set balanced meal plan. As Neha Aggarwal, a resident of Sector 16 and mother to an eight-year-old boy points out, “Planning for the tiffin is a constant struggle. My son is forever complaining that his classmates get chips, burgers almost every day and he wants to do the same. If schools make rules that disallow junk every day, it will be easier for parents too.”

Incidentally, earlier this year, the Chandigarh Administration had issued an advisory to various private and government schools of Chandigarh for complete ban on the sale of junk food in school canteens. According to the advisory, no such food item should be sold in the school canteens which contain high fat, sugar and salt.

 


Photo By: Life in Chandigarh
 

 

Nutrition mantra
So the war between nutrition and taste is always on admits Rakhee Vaswani, celebrity chef and culinary expert, who was in Chandigarh to conduct a workshop to help mothers with healthier tiffin options. A mother herself, she feels that one has to move away from the monotony and start experimenting. “Change is the constant factor. You have to keep changing, you have to keep upgrading,” she said adding, “Children should not be forced as they then become rebellious. If you want to incorporate an ingredient in his diet, you should use a different approach. Inculcating healthy eating habits at an early age is important.” And in her view, the child should not be kept away from what he fancies eating. “If your child likes fancy food, give him fancy food. Everything that you cook at home can be healthy, only if you prepare it in a healthy manner and if you use healthy ingredients. So a little bit of cheating is allowed. So you can prepare different meals, even Thai and Continental at home which automatically become healthy because you are using fresh ingredients,” said Vaswani.

Chef Richa Johri from Whistling Duck, Sector 26, supports the idea of a cheat day when it comes to making children eat healthy. “Children go by looks and taste is all that matters. Wrapping it in a foil or a good packing makes it even more attractive,” advises the chef. She further dishes out tricks: “Use recipes where they can’t make out the components. Any dish that looks wonderful and has an amazing texture works well for kids. For example, one can make a pizza with roti and tomato gravy at home. The only difference is, it’s cooked in an oven instead of the traditional tawa,” says Johri adding curry noodles and glass noodles salad work well too.

Against All Odds

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These brave hearts have not let disability come in the way of their dreams

The only disability in life is a bad attitude – a quote by Scott Hamilton puts across the guiding message that physical or mental disabilities can pose no hurdles where passion, commitment, hard work and zeal are the strengths employed to excel in life and achieve the envisaged goals.

 


Photo By: Life in Chandigarh

 

Even as the country as a whole, including state and central government establishments, schools, colleges celebrate International Day of Persons with Disabilities on December 3 as a compulsory ritual, there are other brave hearts, who utilize this day to accomplish their chartered mission, by putting in their best.

“Hope keeps you moving and it’s good to motivate and inspire others,” says Aditya Mehta, a tricenarian, who lost his leg in an accident, a decade ago, chose to fight it out through sheer grit and dogged determination.

An intrepid Mehta became the first accomplished Indian paracyclist to bag two silver medals at the para-Asian Cycling Championships held in 2013. And then there was no looking back for him.

 


Photo By: Life in Chandigarh

 

Panchkula-based Tejaswini Sharma is another such inspiration, who has made a mark in the realm of singing. With IQ level 25, Tejaswini is stilldependent on her parents but holds to her credit the prestigious President Award for a string of her scintillating performances, the Indira Gandhi Award, a certificate and diploma awarded to her by Pracheen Kala Kendra, Chandigarh, besides numerous awards and accolades in her kitty. Her mother, Harsh Sharma says, “She was not able to speak till the age of seven. She cannot write, count or even speak a word, but she is blessed with an amazing voice and we believe singing is God’s gift to her.” Surprisingly, the girl who cannot speak, can recite more than 1000 bhajans and songs in more than five different languages. She can easily sing for hours at a stretch. What’s more, Tejaswini has been a part in several musical shows on television and has successfully qualified to the top levels.

 


Photo By: Life in Chandigarh

 

Veer Singh Sandhu, wheelchair cricket team captain from Chandigarh is also among those whose determination and perseverance has outgrown his physical disabilities. Singh says, “I have been passionate about sports since the beginning. I never let my disability come in the way of fulfilling my cherished dreams. After introducing wheelchair cricket to Chandigarh I was confident and I knew we had the ability to move mountains if we have the zeal to achieve our goals in life.”

The Mohali Paraplegic Rehabilitation Centre (PRC), Mohali, Punjab is one place that works for the rehabilitation of soldiers and make them self-reliant. PRC caters to 100 per cent disabled soldiers (paraplegic and tetraplegic) hailing from northern, central and eastern regions of the country. PRC works for the empowerment of the inmates and gives them vocational training in different courses to make them self-supporting citizens and regain their lost pride. Wheelchair basketball is one of the major practices of PRC which helps the soldiers to enjoy the time and also to stay fit.