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Sector 42 Lake To Come Alive With N-E Folk & Tribal Dances

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You may not have seen something of this sort in the tricity before. A festival of authentic folk and tribal dances of the eight North Eastern States of the country on stage erected right in the middle of a lake with thousands of lamps floating on the waters in an evening setting. Here comes a three-day ‘Octave 2018 – Festival of the North East’ to be held at the artificial lake in Sector 42 of Chandigarh beginning on the first day of the Indian indigenous year ‘Nav Samvatsar’.

Sharing the plans during an interaction with media persons here on Friday, North Zone Cultural Centre (NZCC) Director Prof. Saubhagya Vardhan said 16 teams of folk and tribal dancers, two each from each of the states, will be performing on stage between 6:30 p.m. and 9 p.m. on each day of the festival from March 18 to 20.

Photo By : Life In Chandigarh

On the inaugural day, which coincides with the ‘Nav Samvatsar’, there will be a choir playing at the venue starting with the first rays of the Sun and culminating in rendition of Vande Mataram. Visitors can enjoy early morning bhajans on the last two day of the festival, which will also feature a crafts mela to remain open from 11 a.m. to 10 p.m. on each day. There will also be food stalls of authentic traditional foods from the region at the venue. Painting and wooden sculpture workshops will be other highlights of the festival. The dance performances are slotted for the evening. Seating arrangements are being made for hundreds of audiences.

“Nothing exciting happens in the southern sectors, and since we were looking at a audience of a few thousand we planned the event outdoors, and what better than the ambience of the Sector 42 lake,” Vardhan shared.

The states which are participating in the festival are Assam, Tripura, Arunachal Pradesh, Nagaland, Meghalaya, Mizoram, Manipur and Sikkim. The Cultural Affairs Department of UT Chandigarh is collaborating with NZCC in organising the festival on this scale.

Stalled Projects On Track, Better Patient Management Planned : Prof. Jagat Ram

The affable Director of Post Graduate Institute of Medical Education and Research (PGIMER, PGI for short) Chandigarh Prof Jagat Ram, who completes one year in office on Friday, presented his report card for the year 2017 before media persons on Thursday, vowing to leave no stone unturned to ensure that the experience of lakhs of patients visiting the premier tertiary care institute from across the region improved with every passing month.

Admitting that a lot still needs to be done on various fronts to come up to the expectations of the ever increasing number of patients visiting the PGI facilities with hope and faith, he claimed that during the year gone by the institute had been able to make headway in several critical areas. Several stalled projects were kick started, cadaver organ donations programme received a big boost, path breaking new transplant surgeries were initiated and better management of patient rush received utmost attention of his team of doctors, institute administration and engineering department.

File Photo By : Life In Chandigarh

Prof. Jagat Ram

“Some of the projects, which have been in limbo for several years, have been put back on rails. Work on the 250-bedded hospital on the PGI campus and 300-beded Satellite Centre at Sangrur was started in right earnest and is progressing well. Both are expected to be completed by end 2018. We received approval of Rs 1475 crore for three major new projects – Advanced Mother and Child Centre, Advanced Neurosciences Centre, and Satellite Centre at Una in Himachal Pradesh. Work on Advanced Mother and Child Care Centre and Neurosciences Centre has been allotted in the last finance committee meeting of the institute   and both projects are expected to be completed in the next 40 months,” Prof. Jagat Ram shared.

Deputy Director (Administration) Amitabh Avasthi asserted that the PGI director has been vigorously monitoring the progress of works on all ongoing projects every fortnightly and monthly to ensure that all encumbrances cropping up from time to time are dealt with expeditiously. The effort is to check cost and time overruns, he added.

Sarangpur Extension Campus

Prof. Jagat Ram maintained that the Sarangpur extension campus project, to come up on 50 acres of land, and which is expected to majorly share the burden of patients on the main campus, was also being pursued with the Union Home Ministry through the Health and Family Welfare Ministry. The astronomical Rs 1100 crore price quoted for the land by the Chandigarh Administration was way beyond the PGI to bear and since the Union Territory was administered under the supervision of the Home Ministry the issue of heavily slashing or waiving off this price had been taken up with it, he said.  

PGI received the highest ever 44 cadaver donations during 2017, as compared to 27 in the previous year, which facilitated organ transplant in 107 patients. The institute had also set a trend in robotic surgeries with more than 1,000 robotic assisted surgeries having been done. Urology department has taken a lead accounting for 800 of these surgeries, followed by the gynaecology department, ear and throat department and paediatric department.

New Transplants

In a first for the region, the institute successfully conducted a lung transplant and a combined lung and liver transplant, which involved a team of 20 doctors and support staff working in unison. A new procedure for inoperable Liver Cancer was introduced by the interventional radiology section of the Department of Radiodiagnosis in collaboration with the departments of hepatology and nuclear medicine.

Dwelling on measures being taken for better management of the massive rush of patients to the institute, Prof Jagat Ram and Amitabh Avasthi said the digital display token system had shown encouraging results in three departments where it was introduced recently and will now be implemented in all departments. To reduce rush for registrations, manned kiosks are planned to be set up in various sections of the PGI campus.

It is also being ensured that the senior residents and consultants report at their respective OPDs strictly on time. “I am myself taking regular rounds of the emergency and trauma centre with the medical superintendent and engineering department officials to remove bottlenecks. The process of granting clearances and discharging patients has also been streamlined to ensure that no patient stays admitted there more than is absolutely necessary,” the PGI Director added.

Scan Facilities

Regarding long waiting periods for subsidised PET Scan, MRI, CT Scan, etc, he said efforts are being made to add more machines, wherever possible. “At the same time the radiodioagnosis department has been asked to ensure that very poor patients and those with life threatening conditions are given priority over others.”

Commenting on another contentious issue of alleged nexus between hospital staff and private diagnostics centres and medical stores, Prof. Jagat Ram assured that strict measures were being taken to ensure that this did not happen. PGI security had been given strict instructions to keep a watchful eye and bar entry to representatives of such private interests solicited business.   “A committee has been set up which is investigating specific complaints against hospital staff and strict action will be initiated against them if found guilty.”

He said PGI was among the first institute in the country to provide stents and orthopaedic implants to patients at a cheaper rate through Amrit Pharmacy and constant pressure was being maintained on the pharmacy to ensure that they kept sufficient stocks and prominently displayed the rate lists so that patients did not have to buy these at market rates from outside.

Tele Evidence Facility

Sharing some other details, Prof. A.K. Gupta, who has been PGI Medical Superintendent for the last 22 years, said the institute had introduced the facility of tele evidence under which it was providing information required by courts in various cases through teleconferencing. In the 3,000 odd tele evidences provided so far the PGI had saved precious patient time of doctors and crores of the institute’s funds. 

He also maintained that the institute’s anti-tobacco campaign had been a success, with patients and their attendants surrendering 750 kg of tobacco products at 90 odd entrances to various PGI facilities in the last three years. All such tobacco products were regularly incinerated, he added.

Prof. Gupta claimed that by better management of the 1948 beds available at PGI through an online monitoring system, the institute had admitted 14,000 more patients in 2017 than in the previous year within the same resources.

Others present at the media interaction were Prof D. Behera, Dean Research, Abhey Kumar, Financial Advisor, and S.S Saini, Superintending Hospital Engineer.

PGI Honours

PGI adjudged best public sector hospital for its services towards the promotion of cadaver organ donation by Ministry of Health & Family Welfare, Govt. of India, consecutively for second year. 

PGI’s initiative for promotion of eye donation conferred “Health Excellence Award” for Leadership and Management in Healthcare at 41st World Hospital Congress organized by International Hospital Federation at Taiwan. 

The Week-Nielsen Survey 2017 ranked PGI second best in medical education, research and multispeciality patient care amongst fifteen best institutes in India.   

Big Break Entertainment Brings On Ramp A Bold Message Against Acid Attacks

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A two-day classy fashion week with all the big guns booming. And, a bold and crisp message that brutal crimes like acid attacks on girls have no place in Indian society. That’s what Mumbai based Big Break Entertainment, which has carved a niche for itself in the glamour world, brings to the table. Its upcoming flagship event ‘Tricity Fashion Week 2018’ kicks off at Hotel Holiday Inn in Panchkula on March 24.

Director of Big Break Entertainment Simi Sharma told Lifeinchandigarh.com that ‘Tricity Fashion Week 2018’ is going to feast the people of the region to a fashion extravaganza of stylish, trendy fashionistas, from the established to the budding. The who’s who of fashion industry from ace fashion designers, professional models to TV/Bollywood celebs would sit in the jury to judge the extraordinary collections of designers. The event, at the same time, will also drum up public support for a complete ban on the sale of acid in the open market.

Photos By : Life In Chandigarh

Director of Big Break Entertainment Simi Sharma poses with the banner of the upcoming event 

Noting with concern that the northern states like Delhi, UP, Punjab and Haryana, which have among the worst sex ratios in the country, account for most number of acid attack survivors, Simi Sharma said, “Being a woman, I can understand the trauma and loss of self-confidence an acid attack survivor has to suffer. It is really shameful that in today’s times women are being subjected to this brutality. At Big Break Entertainment, we have always been at the forefront of women rights, and events like ‘Tricity Fashion Week 2018’ are our way of making more and more people aware of this malady and enlisting their support for the cause.”

A felicitation ceremony will also be a prominent part of the ‘Tricity Fashion Week 2018’ in which acid attack survivors, who have become role models for others by living life gracefully under all circumstances, will also be honoured. So will be doctors/ surgeons, who have provided medical aid to acid survivors at negligible cost and enabled them to start life afresh, and NGOs and media professionals, who helped them fight for justice.

The message of ‘Tricity Fashion Week 2018’

“We are open to nominations or references of such noble souls – survivors, doctors, NGO heads, media professionals and social workers from the region. People can write in to us with a brief description about their work on the following email IDs: tricityfahionweek@gmail.com, simi.bigbreak@gmail.com

Big Break Entertainment has also roped in famous personalities to orchestrate support for the cause of acid survivors. Their video recorded messages of support will be showcased during the ‘Tricity Fashion Week 2018’.

Big Break Entertainment is also bringing another of its flagship event ‘Tourism Diva India 2018’ to the tricity in the month of May 2018.

www.bigbreak.in

After Military, Now Sports Literature Festival Comes To City

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The rapidly declining trend of reading has not been able to deter the select die hard community of litterateurs, writers and reading enthusiasts from their continuing efforts at promoting reading by providing platforms for unfettered exchange of thoughts and ideas. And Chandigarh is one of the torch bearers in this field, as in many other progressive activities. A couple of literature festivals have been a part of the Chandigarh calendar for some time now, but now specialized literature festivals are moving in to catch the attention of the tricity residents with refreshing new flavours. First to come was the Military Literature Festival in December 2017 and, here comes a sports literature festival, a concept prevalent in few cities across the world, including London and Melbourne. The two-day inaugural ‘Play Write 2018’ will be on at hotel The Lalit March 17-18.

‘Play Write 2018’, being organized by recently launched Vibrant Networking Forum, will bring together sports personalities who have either written books or have been the subject of one or more books themselves, curators of the event Vivek Atray and Chitranjan Agarwal formally announced at a news conference here on Monday.

Photo By : Life in Chandigarh

Key speakers expected at the event, powered by Ethos and Kuantum Papers Ltd,  include legendary Indian hockey center forward and triple Olympic gold medalist Balbir Singh Senior, 106-year-old marathoner Fauja Singh, members of the sensational Minerva Punjab Football Club, which last week won the premier Indian football I-League, members of the  Indian Women’s rugby team, skiers Himanshu and Aanchal Thakur, Olympic boxer Akhil Kumar, golfers Shubhankar Sharma, Ajeetesh Sandhu and Gurbaaz Mann and radio jockey, actor and stage host Aparshakti Khurana.

The event moderators for different sessions will include well known sports writers Vijay Lokpally, Novy Kapadia, G. Rajaraman, Sandeep Nakai and Amrit Mathur besides Chandigarh’s very own writer Khushwant Singh.

The sports literature festival will feature 10 sessions covering hockey, cricket, marathon running, soccer, boxing, women’s rugby and kabaddi, etc. Kings XI Punjab players will be part of a session on cricket and I-League soccer champions Minerva Punjab FC will be represented in a discussion on soccer.

The organisers said ‘Play Write 2018’ was an attempt to bring sports personalities, sports writers and sports lovers and enthusiasts under one roof. Children from a school in Amritsar, trainees of the Rural Tennis Academy being run by Chandigarh Lawn Tennis Association (CLTA) and inmates of a local NGO will get an opportunity to interact with the sports personalities and writers, they added.

With the kind of response we have received in the very first foray, we have thoughts of making the event an annual affair and keep growing in the level of participation as we go along, Vivek Atray and Chitranjan Agarwal said.  

Bill Detrimental To All Forms Of Medicine: IMA

The medical fraternity is up in arms against the central government’s National Medical Commission (NMC) Bill, which is to replace the Medical Council of India (MCI) Act, alleging that the Bill is a big scam aimed at benefitting the lucrative private medical education industry, an overwhelming majority of which is either controlled by politicians or patronised by them.

Interacting with media persons on Saturday, senior functionaries of the Chandigarh Branch of the Indian Medical Association (IMA) denounced the legislation as an ill conceived and half baked exercise which has the potential to play havoc with the medical education system and infuse mediocrity in the medical profession.

Photos By : Life In Chandigarh

How do you explain the provision in the Bill that an MBBS student, who has to pass 30 odd exams during the course of his four and a half years of academic study, will now have to pass a National Licentiate Examination (exit exam), to obtain a license for practice, while the AYUSH doctors will be permitted to practice allopathic medicine by just undergoing a six month bridge course without having to sit for the exit exam, the doctors asked.

The senior IMA functionaries, Dr Bhushan Kumar, Dr Ajay Aggarwal, Dr Neeraj Kumar, Dr R.S.Bedi and Dr Neeraj Nagpal alleged this was a ploy to benefit the politicians from all hues who were running big businesses in medical education and had a vast number of AYUSH seats lying vacant in these institutions. This way the AYUSH seats are bound to get more lucrative for medical students as compared to the hard work having to be put in by MBBS students, they asserted.

The doctors further claimed that the Bill provides for doing away with the system of regular inspections of the medical education institutions and giving the managements unbridled freedom in fee structure and increasing the number of seats at will.

They maintained that the National Medical Commission under the Bill will be completely controlled by the central government with all members nominated by it. This will lead to arbitrariness in decision making and greater corruption.

Defending the institution of Medical Council of India (MCI), they said it had ensured good quality of doctors coming out of medical education institutions. This is borne out by the fact that Indian doctors are rated highly and are much sought after in advanced countries. The government used the ruse of rampant corruption in MCI to dissolve it, but this issue could have been tackled by resorting to greater checks and balances and taking strict penal action against those found guilty.

The IMA leaders claimed that the Parliamentary Standing Committee on Health had rejected the bill but the government was adamant to reintroduce the bill in the same shape in the current session of Parliament.

They demanded reconsideration of the Bill in its current form and a considered nationwide debate on its provisions so that the final document which emerges is above board and representative of all stakeholders. The national body of IMA has decided to hold a massive mahapanchayat in this regard in New Delhi on March 25 to compel the government for reconsideration of the Bill. As part of a national campaign, the doctors held an awareness drive at the Sukhna Lake on Sunday morning.

The doctors clarified that they had the highest respect for all forms of medicine but expressed their opposition to the ‘khichri’ which was sought to be prepared by the central government. They felt that any such move was fraught with danger and was detrimental to the interests of both allopathic for of medicine and the traditional forms of medicine.

Get Your Eyes Examined for ‘Kala Motia’ Along With Sight

Crossed 40 years of age. Time for most of us to start wearing spectacles. Along with getting our eyesight checked, it is also time to get ourselves examined by an eye specialist for a silent disease which has no defined symptoms, but which, if left undetected, has the potential to severely impair our vision, and even leave us completely blind for life. The common and incurable disease of the eye – Glaucoma, or ‘Kala Motia’ – causes vision loss due to slow and progressive damage to the optic nerve, which relays images captured by the eyes to the brain for recognition and further interpretation. This is mostly caused by normal pressure inside the eye balls, which keeps them in proper shape and does not allow them to collapse, rising too high.

Giving media persons insight into the disease on the eve of Glaucoma Awareness Week being observed by the PGI from March 11, experts from the Advanced Eye Center in PGI said Glaucoma is third major cause of blindness after cataract and uncorrected refractory errors. Blindness due to cataract and refractive errors is reversible; in contrast, blindness due to glaucoma is irreversible. Glaucoma cannot be cured but blindness due to glaucoma can be prevented in majority of the cases by timely diagnosis and treatment.

Photo By : Life In Chandigarh

Sharing the PGI’s experience in tackling the disease, Prof SS Pandav and his team of doctors informed that the premier institute has 45,000 registered glaucoma patients from the region. On any working day the department of ophthalmology attends to 150-200 existing and new patients of Glaucoma. “Our experience shows that every month 900-1,000 new patients of the disease are added to the already huge list of existing patients, which means more than 10,000-12,000 new patients are being added every year,” Prof Pandav added.

As Glaucoma has no symptoms, it mostly remains undetected until it is too late. It is estimated that 90% of Glaucoma patients in our country remain undiagnosed which puts a large population at risk of going blind.

Since awareness is the key to detect Glaucoma early, the Advanced Eye Center in association with Eye Research Foundation and Glaucoma Support Group, Chandigarh, regularly organizes awareness programmes for the public. Glaucoma Support Group at Advanced Eye Center has been active in this field for the last 10 years, and has conducted a number of Glaucoma educational campaigns for the public as well as for the health care professionals. Apart from a number of public lectures, television and radio talks, street plays, Glaucoma musical concerts and walks, the Group has organized 10 Glaucoma workshops for the general ophthalmologists to upgrade their Glaucoma diagnostic and treatment skills, in the last three  years alone.

Who is at risk of developing Glaucoma? Glaucoma can occur at any age but generally it affects people above 40 years of age and the risk increases as the age increases. People over 60 years of age are six times more at risk than population at large. People with high ‘eye pressure’ and people with a family member having Glaucoma are particularly at risk of developing the disease. Certain ethnic groups and people with diabetes are also prone to develop Glaucoma.

Can it be prevented? All Glaucomas cannot be prevented, but visual impairment and blindness can be prevented by early detection and treatment. Since Glaucoma may not have any symptoms, periodic eye checkup is of utmost importance for early detection. Some people may see colored halos around lights and have mild blurring of vision in the evenings. Such people should consult an eye specialist without delay. Otherwise, whenever you visit your eye specialist for reading glasses, you must insist on checkup for Glaucoma which includes measuring ‘eye pressure’, examining the optic disc for any damage and evaluation of drainage angles of the eye. Opticians who make glasses for you are generally not trained to do this.

How is Glaucoma treated? The aim of treatment is to prevent further damage and preserve the remaining visual function. This is best achieved by reducing ‘eye pressure’. In most cases ‘eye pressure’ can be reduced by using eye drops. As Glaucoma is a chronic disease, the treatment is life-long. The number and nature of eye medication is likely to change over a period of time, therefore, regular periodic checkups are important. Some people need lasers or surgery to control the disease.

 

Coming, CCTV Cameras With Night Vision & Speed Radar Capability

With the effectiveness of the closed circuit television (CCTV) cameras already installed in the Union territory still in doubt, comes news that it is readying to install CCTVs in the city with night vision and accurate speed check capabilities. The information was shared by Chandigarh Senior Superintendent of Police (Traffic and Security) Shashank Anand while dealing with the subject of night time traffic regulation during a media interaction at a private function in the city on Friday.

Admitting that it was not practically possible for traffic policemen to be physically present on the roads at all times during the day and night, he said induction of modern technology was imperative for effective traffic regulation round the clock at all places. The installation of these modern cameras will ensure that night time traffic offenders do not go scot free and are penalised for their violations.

Photo By : Life In Chandigarh

SSP Traffic & Security Shashank Anand (left) helping paste a honk free awareness sticker on the SUV of HDFC Bank Regional Manager Vineet Arora (center)

This raises a pertinent question whether induction of modern technology alone will help in remedying the situation? The hotly debated and much hyped Varnika Kundu stalking case has already exposed the chinks in the CCTV network in the city. The investigating agency in the case has been unable to provide the footage of the cameras installed on the entire route of the alleged chasing episode and the multiple cameras installed at Housing Board Crossing, where the alleged attempt to kidnap the girl was reported to have been made.

Shashank Anand and his team of senior traffic police officials was at the HDFC Bank Regional Office in Industrial and Business Park Phase I as part of the continuing awareness campaign to ensure a honk free Chandigarh. Besides sensitising the HDFC officials to the need for controlling the menace of indiscriminate honking, honk free Chandigarh stickers were also pasted on the vehicles of some top officials of the bank.

Bank Regional Manager Vineet Arora told Lifeinchandigarh.com that he had promised to partner with the Chandigarh Traffic Police to spread the message through awareness drives within the bank staff in all branches and their respective customers by physical means, emails and social media posts. All bank staff will also affix campaign stickers on their vehicles and will launch a drive to paste these on the vehicles of its willing customers and the general public outside high footfall public places like malls.

Spelling out various initiatives being taken by the traffic police, Shashank Anand said a mapping of honk free zones like schools, hospitals, courts and old age homes was being done where honking within a 100 metre perimeter was absolutely prohibited even under the most compelling circumstances, and the regulation will be strictly enforced.

As part of a broader awareness drive, road users were being sensitised to the need for good road etiquette and persuaded to be mutually accommodative, compassionate, understanding and cooperative and not to get worked up on minor issues with other road users to prevent incidents of road rage. Regarding the honk free campaign, he said, it will continue for a reasonable time since persuasion invariably leads to permanent solutions. “We will not self pat ourselves for the work we are doing, and there will be a periodic independent impact assessment of the campaign. Enforcement, without which the entire exercise will be incomplete, will follow with full vigour,” he added.

Other traffic police officials claimed that the awareness campaign against honking and modified silencers, especially in Royal Enfield motorcycles, had started showing positive results. Violations had reduced marginally, but a lot needed to be done still. No campaign can succeed without people’s mass participation and cooperation, and our approach is in consonance with that spirit, they added.

Lifeinchandigarh.com sincerely hopes that today’s awareness initiative will go beyond a mere photo opportunity and a PR exercise and make a real impact on the ground.

Celebrity Chef Gunjan Goela Curates Veg Magic From Old Delhi Bylanes

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Trust celebrated chef Gunjan Goela to curate a menu in a five star setting which will give you a feel of being in the famous food streets of Old Delhi. If you are imagining that it will be Muglai, which most people identify the National Capital with, then you are wrong. The food historiographer and gourmet, who travels across the ITC’s chain of hotels and who popularly features on cook-shows across television channels like BBC, TLC, History Channel, NDTV Good Times, to name a few, has brought a pure vegetarian ensemble so delicious and lip-smacking that it will have the foodies craving for more. Welcome to WelcomHotel Bella Vista Panchkula for the ‘Dil Lazeez Delhi 6’ Food Festival – on from March 9 to 18 !

In an exclusive interaction with Lifeinchandigarh.com, after live demonstration of cooking a couple of dishes, and tastings of some others she has brought on the table, which delighted  our taste buds no end, Gunjan said she has been working these past two decades to bring the traditional authentic Indian flavours back into a five-star setting. “We must take pride in our own traditional cuisines,” she added.

Photos By : Life In Chandigarh

On Thursday, alongwith media persons, wives of defence officers had been invited as special guests on International Women’s day to pre-festival tastings. As they departed, the ladies appeared as delighted with the main course dishes and the desserts as the media persons.

If the Amrood (guava) Ki Sabzi turned out to be a dream taste, the other items on the table like Chakundar (beetroot) Ke Pakore, Katthal (jackfruit) Ki Sabzi, Moong Dal Pakori, Saabat Moong Dal cooked in Chhajj (butter milk) with a sprinkling of ‘hing’ and ‘zeera’ and Palak Mangodi Kadhi were no less delightful. And an assortment of desserts – the textured Khirni with an unusual grainy feeling on the tongue, unlike the smooth custard-like Khirni of Punjab, the Malpua and the Ghiya Ki Lauj (barfi made out of ghiya) – to round off a sumptuous meal were simply awesome.

Gunjan opined that the recipes for all these dishes are standard but their tempering matters a lot towards enhancing the tastes, textures and flavours. Tracing the history of the original Delhi cuisine, she said Delhi has since ages been traditionally an important trading centre not only within India but for overseas markets as well. And the backbone of this huge wholesale trade, including of spices, have been the traders, most of whom were ‘banias’, “a community I am proud of belonging to.”

“The ‘banias’ indulged in pure vegetarian cooking without the use of onion and garlic and the cooking medium invariably remained desi ghee. Though these traders travelled extensively as per the demands of their profession, and hence assimilated varied experiences from far and near, which eventually influenced their eating habits, but they largely retained the original flavours of their food. I am deeply influenced by the richness of this Delhi food and my effort always is to use desi ghee as a medium of cooking, which besides giving the food the depth of taste and flavour is also now being considered among the healthiest cooking mediums by the medical fraternity,” Gunjan said.

The celebrity chef during the course of the festival plans to add Tinda, Tori and Ghiya to the menu to telling effect with her expert tempering. Crispy Arbi cooked in curd, Jeemikand Kofta, Aloo cooked in Methi Ki Chhatney, Chandni Chowk Kachori, Bajre Ki Khichhri, Gur Chawal and Urad Dal Ki Kheer are some of the other items on her mind.

The list of snacky foods includes Aloo Tikkia, Moong Daal Cheela, Dahi Saunth Pappri, Paani Ke Batashe, Mattra Kulcha, Aloo Kachori etc.

The menu for breakfast is quite appetizing and has more delicacies to offer with Aloo Kachori, Mattar Samosa, Daal Samosa and Pakoras. The main course includes numerous dishes with Mangochi, Aloo Dum, Bhuni Arbi, Nimonaey, Dungare Kathal, Dahi Bhindi, Palak Mangodi Kadhi, Sabut Matar Chonkey. The dessert section includes Jave, Phirni (popular rice and milk dish), Moong Daal Halwa, Goand Ke Ladoo, Ghiya Lauj, Urad Kheer and Kesar.

Spelling out the tweaks made to the ambience for the festival, Hotel General Manager Vivek Khanna said, “Adding to the ambience of the festival is a creative decoration which includes a buffet decor and use of hanging umbrellas and kites, symbolic of the kite flying culture in Delhi. Banta bottles have been put on the shelves. The Tea and Golgappa stalls give a feel of road side eating experience, so typical of Delhi.”

Lookout For A Startup & Innovation Hub

Chandigarh is already up there when we talk of the most desirable places to visit in the world, but can we now focus on making it the startup, innovation and entrepreneurship hub for North India, just as Bangalore has established itself as the hub for South India ? This, and many other issues cropped up during a discussion on ‘Chandigarh: An Aspirational Destination’ organized on the occasion of the Annual Session of CII Chandigarh Council on Wednesday. UT Home Secretary Anurag Aggarwal, Chandigarh Mayor Davesh Moudgil and the top leadership of CII’s northern region participated in the discussion.

Anurag Aggarwal in his address said the uniqueness of Chandigarh’s town planning and architecture was already a topic of animated discussion the world over and was a result of French architect Le Corbusier breathing life into then Prime Minister Jawaharlal Nehru’s dream of a new capital city for Punjab "a new town, symbolic of the freedom of India, unfettered by the traditions of the past".

Photos By: Life In Chandigarh

So, in many ways the aspirations around Chandigarh had already come true, he said, adding that the UT Administration with the support of the people of Chandigarh would not like to sit on its laurels but strive to take it to a still higher level. The effort is not only to make it the  first renewal energy city of the country but also usher it into a leadership role in economic development with a difference.

Spelling out the “small, small steps” continually being taken on the ground towards that end, the Home Secretary said after the Capitol Complex was declared a Heritage Site by UNESCO in 2016, a lot of work at restoration and conservation of the buildings and structures in the complex had been undertaken with the assistance of a renowned architectural consultant. “Although we keep hearing talk of the administration not being able to preserve the heritage structures and capitalising on the tourist potential of the Capitol Complex, the fact is that there is a sea change in the condition of the complex four years ago and now. And, for the first time people are getting to see the various assets of the Complex in their original glory,” he said.

The potential of solar panels on rooftops of government buildings had reached a saturation point with 20 MW power being generated from them and now it was time for rooftop potential of private buildings being exploited. “We have been going from sector to sector to rope in the cooperation of the people to set up solar panels atop their houses, but so far we have not been very successful in persuading the people. Less than 2 MW solar power is being generated from private rooftops. Luckily, we have found a new sizable potential of generating another 20 MW by setting up solar panels atop raw water tanks at all waterworks of the municipal corporation, which is going to be exploited soon.”

He said apart from celebrating the heritage buildings and structures, the administration had identified 30 age old heritage trees across the city for conservation and preservation and sought support from CII for this purpose. “These trees can be a rich source for attracting religious tourism,” he added.

For boosting employment opportunities, Aggarwal informed that an economic development model with sharp focus on innovation and entrepreneurship was under preparation. The Chandigarh Region Innovation and Knowledge Cluster (CRIKC) had already submitted a proposal to the UT administration regarding this and it was being considered. A decision had already been taken to convert the defunct Government Press into the city’s first Incubation and Innovation Centre, he said.

Mayor Davesh Moudgil while pointing to the municipal corporation’s initiative begun on Wednesday to persuade all its employees to cycle to work every Wednesday, said more such steps will be taken in the future to improve the environment. He made an impassioned appeal to the residents of Chandigarh to adopt segregation of waste in every household to prevent an ecological disaster.

He also appealed to the people to be prepared to make more sacrifices in terms of generating greater revenues to enable the municipal corporation to maintain a high level of maintenance of services in the city. He also offered the rooftops of dozens of community centres in the city for installation of solar panels in an effort to generate more renewable energy.

Moudgil utilised the opportunity provided by the presence of the UT Home Secretary, who is also Local Bodies Secretary, to reiterate the growing demand for increasing the tenure of the Mayor from one year to five years as in most states to ensure continuity of development activities.

CII Northern Region Chairman and Chairman & CEO, ReNew Power Ventures Pvt. Ltd., Sumant Sinha, while appreciating Chandigarh for its unique architecture and world class infrastructure, felt that the city must aspire to become the first Model Solar City in Northern India, it must be promoted as an economically viable city and needs to be endorsed as a hub for entrepreneurship and startups. Among the other challenges would be increasing its air connectivity with all major cities and towns of the country and establishing a robust local transport system. The ease of doing business must also improve, leading up to ease of living, he said, adding in a lighter vein that since ease of living in Chandigarh was already high, the reverse must be ensured with ease of living leading up to ease of doing business.   

Calling Chandigarh the city of the present and of the future, CII Northern Region Deputy Chairman, and Vice Chairman & Managing Director of Vardhman Special Steels Ltd, Sachit Jain said the city ticked all the right boxes in the field of education, health services, infrastructure, governance, modernity, etc., and was hence very close to being a smart city already. 

 

Sarvjit Samra & Viren Popli Take Charge In Punjab, Sofi Zahoor & Sarvjeet Virk In Chandigarh

A New Year, A New Team. The Punjab State Council and the Chandigarh State Council of the Confederation of Indian Industry (CII) on Wednesday elected new teams, with Sarvjit S. Samra and Viren Popli taking over as Chairman and Vice Chairman respectively in the Punjab Council and Sofi Zahoor and Sarvjeet S. Virk occupying the respective posts in the Chandigarh Council for the year 2018-19.

Sarvjit S. Samra: Managing Director and Principal Promoter of the rapidly expanding Capital Small Finance Bank Limited, Sarvjit S. Samra is an MBA in Finance and Marketing and based out of Jalandhar. He has been a driving force behind India’s first small finance bank, which graduated from a local area bank in 2015. Today the bank has 100 branches with a very strong footprint in Punjab and planning to rapidly expand towards Delhi and Haryana. The total business of the bank at present is Rs.4450 crore with nearly 5 lakh accounts. The bank has 80% of its business in rural and semi urban areas.

Photos By: Life In Chandigarh

Viren Popli: Currently Chief Operating Officer of Swaraj, the second highest selling tractor brand in India and farm equipment sector of Mahindra & Mahindra Ltd., Popli is based out of Mohali. He has over 24 years of work experience across diverse industries ranging from pharmaceutical, media and two wheelers to farm mechanisation. Viren is a Bachelor of Mechanical Engineering from Nagpur University and Masters in Management Studies from SP Jain Institute of Management & Research, Mumbai University. Before taking over as COO of Swaraj Division, Viren was the Chief of Operations, Mahindra Two Wheelers Limited. Before joining Mahindra, Viren worked with Star India for 10 years and with Ranbaxy Laboratories Limited for 6 years. He also managed India’s first girl band – Viva! Besides being a seasoned professional, he is also a qualified scuba diver.

Sofi Zahoor: Senior Director India – HR and Operations for India, Quarkxpress Publishing R&D (India) Pvt. Ltd., Sofi Zahoor brings several years of professional experience to Quark. During his career he has worked with multinational companies across several positions. His 18+ years of experience in IT industry brings forth a unique blend of cross functional experience with over three years experience in customer support, five years in sales and marketing and almost 10 years in human resources management covering areas of talent management, organizational design, performance management and entire gamut of change management initiative in the area of HR.

Sarvjeet S. Virk: Co-founder and Managing Director of Finvasia Group of Companies, Sarvjeet S. Virk has had 10 years global experience holding various positions. Before founding Finvasia, he had experience of working in USA on multiple positions and his last profile was as Vice President, Spectrum Novel Solutions Inc (NY). He has a CABP (Executive Professional Course) from City University of New York-Baruch College and a Master’s in Business Administration (MBA) from Amity University with a specialization in International Business and Marketing. He has a Bachelor’s degree in Engineering from Punjab Engineering College. Sarvjeet has extensive knowledge of all aspects of business, including business development with global institutional investors, risk management practices and day-to-day operations.