Category Archives: NRI’s / PIO’s

The Royal Bengal Lion-tamer

World-renowned Suresh Biswas debuted to great acclaim in Argentina

An 1899 biography of Suresh Biswas was republished by Jadavpur University Press
Image: The Telegraph

In 1970, a comic strip was published in the annual issue of a Bengali children’s magazine called Manihar. The hero of the strip, Bangadesher Ranga, was a fearless Bengali animal trainer living in Brazil. And his name was Suresh Biswas.

“The story was imaginary but the character was based on Biswas,” says Swagata Dutta Burman, who edited a volume of the collected works of illustrator Mayukh Chowdhury, the creator of the comic strip. There is mention of Biswas in one of Satyajit Ray’s Feluda stories too. But who exactly was Colonel Suresh Biswas?

Recently, an 1899 biography of the man was republished by Jadavpur University Press. This book by H. Dutt — titled Lieut. Suresh Biswas: His life and Adventures — and another biography in Bengali by Upendrakrishna Bandyopadhyay published in 1905 were the primary sources of information about Biswas for the longest time.

We know from these that Biswas, born into a Vaishnava middle-class family in Nathpur, Nadia, was an independent spirit and a rebel even when he was a boy. At 14, after an altercation with his father, he left home and converted to Christianity. Soon after, he started looking for a livelihood. The job hunt first took him to Rangoon and then Madras, after which he boarded a ship that sailed for London.

Once in London, Biswas did all kinds of odd jobs to stay afloat — he was a newspaper boy, a pedlar, an acrobat in a circus. It was at a circus company in Kent, a county in South East England, that he learned to be a lion-tamer.

The first independent mention of Biswas’s presence in Europe can be found in the publicity material for the World’s Fair (1881-82). They show him at the cage door with the lions seated behind. He is dressed in boots, red trousers and sash, blue jacket and turban. He also sports a luxuriant moustache. “He was allowed to give an exhibition of his wonderful mastery over the most ferocious and intractable beasts in the World’s Fair held at the Royal Agricultural Hall in London,” writes his biographer Dutt.

When Maria Barrera-Agarwal, attorney, scholar, writer, translator and married to a Calcuttan, read about Ray’s Bengali lion-tamer in Brazil, she was curious. A native Spanish speaker born in Ecuador, she looked up the government archives in Brazil and unearthed a fascinating story.

Biswas had arrived in South America for the first time in 1885, along with a tiger and two lions he had trained while in the employ of famed menagerie owner, Karl Hagenbeck of Hamburg. He had been contracted by The Carlo Brothers’ Equestrian Company and Zoological Marvel to perform with the wild cats and an elephant named Bosco.

First record of his performance in Europe, at the 1881 World’s Fair (top right circle)
Image: The Telegraph File

A young Biswas debuted with his wild cats to great acclaim in Buenos Aires, Argentina. His success and top billing followed him to Rio de Janeiro in Brazil, where the royal family visited the circus to see his performance.

From Brazil, he went back to Hamburg, only to return in 1886. Some documents Barrera-Agarwal dug up, reveal his age at the time to be 26. The occupation noted against his name in the ship’s papers read “kunstler”, which is German for performing artiste. However, in a letter to his uncle dated spring of 1887, he writes that he has been transferred to St. Cruz, a village near Rio de Janeiro, to look after the horses of his cavalry regiment — indicating that in less than a year’s time he had decided to switch careers. He joined the PMDF, a military corps set up to protect the government of Brazil and the capital city.

Dutt sheds some light on the mystery of the great switch. It seems during a show in Rio, he caught the attention of a doctor’s daughter, Maria Augusta Fernandez. And it was she who gently suggested that she would like to see him in a soldier’s uniform. (In 1951, a member of the Indian consulate in Brazil sought the help of a local newspaper to trace Biswas’s family. He met with his wife, Maria Augusta, who spoke of her late husband very fondly.)

Corporal Biswas eventually rose through the ranks. It seems he showed such exceptional courage at the battle of Nitheroy, an 1893 naval uprising, that thereafter he was made first lieutenant.

Though in Indian lore Biswas is often referred to as colonel, Barrera-Agarwal points out that he never became one. When Biswas died in 1905 at the age of 47, he was captain.

Biswas continued to write letters to his uncle Kailash Chander all his life. In one of them he writes, “I will soon go away from here and invent something that will enable me to travel, because, by travelling only I am happy, for, this gives the idea and nourishes it, of reaching home some day…”

But home he never managed to return to. Perhaps he didn’t try hard enough, though it was on his mind all through as we gather from his letters. His iteration about how he, a vagabond, had done well, his pointed queries about his father who had disinherited him when he was barely out of his teens, and his wish to see his mother again.

In the Introduction to the 2018 republished version of Dutt’s biography of Biswas, Barrera-Agarwal writes: “The need of a hero is indispensable in human society.”

In the last available letter to his uncle, Biswas writes, “I have had several letters addressed to me by many young men of Calcutta, asking me if there is no means of coming here in Brazil. I shall answer them separately.”

source: http://www.telegraphindia.com / The Telegraph, Online Edition / Home> Culture / by Paromita Sen / November 18th, 2018

3 quirky Indian tales from French Reunion Island

The Indian-origin community on this paradise isle is a blend of cultures and eras

A basket maker on Reunion Island whose ancestors are from the Malabar coast
Image: Sudha Pillai

Reunion Islands in the Indian Ocean, an overseas department of France and about 9,000 km from Paris, is like a delicious kichdi – a goulash of African, Asian and European cultures. It’s the comfort food that would lift your spirits in an acrimonious world.

Sandwiched between Mauritius and Africa, this paradise isle has mountains, valleys, sandy beaches, pristine blue seas and vertiginous falls. But more than the natural beauty, it is the people of the island that give it its distinctive characteristics.

And people of Indian origin – about 45 per cent of the total population of 837,000 inhabitants – are shining testimonies to this amalgamation.

How they came to be there

The island, formed from a volcanic rising five million years ago, was first discovered by Arab traders. Soon the invaders — Portuguese, British and the French — arrived. Finally, the French colonised it, and christened it Reunion Island in 1793.

An apt name for what the island is today, if not historically accurate.

Reunion Island began as a place where prisoners were left to die. But the prisoners started living idyllic lives – swimming in the sea, climbing mountains, growing rice, vegetables and fruits in the fertile volcanic soil. After all, the island has 300 micro-climates.

The French decided to reclaim this paradise for themselves. First they brought Africans here as slaves for the sugarcane plantations. After slavery was abolished, they fetched indentured workers from India.

And that is how the Indian community started out on this unlikely island.

Mary Theresa Subramaniam

I met Mary Theresa Subramaniam at the Saint-Pierre market, where she’s been working for the past 30 years. Mary’s great-grandfather came to the island with his wife and nine children. But he abandoned them and returned to India. His young wife raised her children in a foreign land.

Clad in a skirt and lavender top, Mary has distinctive South Indian features. She’s never visited India. She believes she may have a “few relatives back in India” but has no clue about their whereabouts. This is also a typical story amongst the Indian community here.

Mary is both a Hindu and a Christian. And there are many like her on the island
Image: Sudha Pillai

Mary is both a Hindu and a Christian. And there are many like her on the island.

When the Hindu Indians got off the boat two things happened at the immigration office. First, their names were Frenchified. Mary says, “The immigration officers couldn’t get the Indian names right.” Vaidyalingam became Vaitilingam, Arumugam became Aroumougam, and so on.

Second, they were asked to embrace Christianity. Due to the fear of retribution, they embraced it and a few continued to practise Hinduism secretly. Over time, the lines between faiths blurred. When Reunion Islands embraced religious diversity, most Indian families found themselves both Christian and Hindu.

Priest Balaram

A short walk from the market is the Mahakali de Bazaar or the Mahakali temple. Mahakali Utsav and Tamil New Year’s Day are big celebrations on the island.

Tall and lanky Balaram, who can trace his roots back to Pondicherry, is the presiding priest at the Mahakali temple. He is, like most Indians here, fluent in French. “Because that is what we speak at home,” he says. Balaram’s great-grandfather came to Reunion Island. He is one of the few Indians on the island who still has some connection to India. Every year he goes to Munjod, a village in Kanjeepuram, to study Sanskrit.

Balaram, the presiding priest at the Mahakali temple, speaks French at home
Image: Sudha Pillai

On the island, Indians from South India, often Hindu, are known as Malbars. Immigrants from North India came later. Muslim Indians from North India are known as Zarabes.

Temples and mosques – the first mosque of France was built here – stand alongside churches. Nowhere is this intermingling of faiths more evident than in the pretty cemeteries. At the St-Pierre Cemetery, amidst decorative family vaults and single graves with cherubs on tombstones, I found numerous graves of Indian-origin Christians. They had a saffron-coloured Trishul-cross combo on the headstones. This was the best religious khichdi I had ever seen.

Tombstones of Indian origin Christians at the St-Pierre Cemetery
Image: Sudha Pillai

Jacky Arourmougam

Many elements of India are integrated into the weave of the island. But the influence of Indian cuisine stands out. Jacky Arourmougam, a celebrity chef on the Island, says, “About 80 percent of Creole food is inspired by India.” Rice and lentils are staples along with croissants and baguettes. Samoussas or Samosa is the undisputed national dish.

I enjoyed an outdoor picnic at Trou d’eau at La Saline Les Bains with Jacky. His forefathers hail from Bengal and South India. Some of his unique dishes are inspired by the secret recipes of his mother and grandmother who came from Bengal. When the French-sounding ‘achhard’ is placed on the table, you realise it is but the spicy Indian achaar and that kurkuma is turmeric which is used extensively in the island cuisine. And chicken cari draws heavily from the Indian curry. No doubt, the mingling of communities has given Reunion Island its unique food culture.

Celebrity chef Jacky Arourmougam is inspired by the recipes of his mother and grandmother who came from Bengal
Image: Sudha Pillai

For most Indians in Reunion Island, their acquaintance with India has been through faded stories of their ancestors travelling through the family vine or the banyan and mango trees in the backyard, the seeds of which were brought to the island by their forefathers or the recipes that are carefully passed down from great-great-grandmothers. While few Indian-islanders desire to travel to India, most of them are indifferent to the distant association. Reunion Island is where they feel rooted. It’s not that they shun their past. It is just that they prefer to live in the present.

source: http://www.telegraphindia.com / The Telegraph,Online edition / Home> Travel / by Sudha Pillai / November 13th, 2018

London Bongs go all out for England

Bengalis from London gather at a Wetherspoons pub to cheer England in the quarter-final against Sweden

Calcutta:

It’s coming home… With old favourites Brazil and Argentina out of the World Cup, Bengalis in England are joining the rest of the country in chanting the choral lyric to the 1996 No. 1 single Three Lions (referring to the English football team’s logo).

“The lyrics are being put up as social media status, memes are getting forwarded on it…” said Sourav Niyogi, a resident of central London.

A video clip he forwarded to Metro had Jaya Bachchan beaming towards the door, silver tray and diya in hand, but instead of the title track of Kabhi Khushi Kabhie Gham there is the Three Lions chorus playing and in place of Shah Rukh Khan, it’s England captain Harry Kane running in with a FIFA World Cup cut-out.

“Streets are getting empty when England is playing. People are hanging flags from houses and cars. Yesterday, I saw a group break into the song at Liverpool Street station,” said Saikat Roy Chowdhury, an IT professional. “Till the other week, our WhatsApp group was divided into supporters of Brazil, Argentina and Germany. Now we are all united under St George’s Cross,” said the 42-year-old.

“Nobody expected England to go this far. This team has no superstar. People have been caught by surprise at how well they have done,” said Tushi Banerjee, a Lionel Messi fan who had “wanted him to go all the way”. Now she buys chart paper for her six-year-old son Ryan to prepare charts with scores of England’s matches.

Saikat and another 60-odd members of the Bengali community group London Sharad Utsav (LSU) had gone for a seaside picnic at Margate on Saturday. “We wrapped up quickly to watch England play at the local Wetherspoons pub.”

Suranjan Som, general secretary of LSU, explains: “Those who come from Calcutta tend to stick to their respective football loyalties – Brazil or Argentina – initially. But as they gradually get sucked into British life and the English Premier League, their loyalty starts shifting towards England. But this time there is no division.”

Prasenjit Bhatacharjee, who has put his sky-blue-and- white jersey away and taken out his England shirt, has started a winner prediction poll on Facebook. “Of course, England has got the most votes,” he laughed. “The average age of this team is only 26. Seventeen members of this squad were not even born when England last reached the semi-final in 1990.”

Indians of other communities are excited about the on-going cricket series. “But for Bengalis, the World Cup is a bigger talking point,” he said.

source: http://www.telegraphindia.com / The Telegraph,Calcutta,India / Home> Calcutta / by Sudeshna Banerjee / July 11th, 2018

Software developed by N Bengal techie helps check Oz shark attacks

Shark Spotter has been deployed in 11 beaches in north New South Wales such as Byron Bay, Ballina (picture for representation only)

Jalpaiguri :

Remember Jaws, the 1975 Hollywood thriller on a giant man-eating great white shark that struck terror on fictional resort town Amity Island? In beaches across Australia, the Steven Spielberg reel horror is real with the country recording the largest number of unprovoked shark encounters with humans after the United States.

Now several Australian beaches have deployed a technology co-developed by a technologist from north Bengal that uses artificial intelligence to seek out sharks based on aerial footage from drones and warn swimmers to get out of the water quickly.

Dubbed as Shark Spotter, the software uses an algorithm capable of using video footage streamed from drones to detect sharks and alert swimmers. “The Shark Spotter is the world’s first, non-destructive technology able to detect sharks and other potential threats using real-time aerial video imagery. The new algorithm is 90% accurate in distinguishing sharks from other marine life. Human spotters from fixedwing aircraft or helicopter have accuracy of 12%-18%,” said Nabin Sharma, a lecturer at the University of Technology Sydney, who along with Michael Blumenstein developed the software that is making waves Down Under.

Shark Spotter has been deployed in 11 beaches in north New South Wales such as Byron Bay, Ballina, where shark attack was a major problem. And they have already saved lives. Shark attack reports from these beaches have declined significantly, prompting authorities in beach towns in the US and Europe to also consider the technology.

The Shark Spotter technology has won in three major categories (Research & Development Project of the year, Artificial Intelligence or Machine Learning Innovation of the year and Community Service Markets) in the Australia Information Industry Association, iAward 2018, New South Wales.

Sharma did his schooling in Holy Child School, Jalpaiguri, before graduating from Ananda Chandra College in the town. He then did Master of Computer Application (MCA) and Bachelor of Science from Siliguri Institute of Technology, before doing his PhD from the School of ICT, Griffith University. He is currently a lecturer with the School of Software, University of Technology Sydney (UTS).

Of more than 500 known shark species, 26 have been involved in unprovoked attacks on humans. Of these, Australia has 22 shark species. Australia records an average 1.5 deaths per year from shark .

source: http://www.timesofindia.indiatimes.com / The Times of India / Home> City News> Kolkata News / by Pinak Priya Bhattacharya / TNN / June 24th, 2018

Calcutta ‘plot’ eyes crime prize

UK author’s debut thriller on harrogate shortlist

London:

UK-born Abir Mukherjee’s debut thriller set in Calcutta in 1919, A Rising Man, has been shortlisted for a prestigious crime-writing prize.

He is one of six authors selected from a longlist of 18 for the Theakston’s Old Peculier Crime Novel of the Year Award, which is sponsored by T&R Theakston, a brewery in the market town of Masham, North Yorkshire.

It is awarded annually at the Harrogate Crime Writing Festival, held every July. The winner receives £3000 and a small, hand-carved oak beer cask.

This year’s prize, created “to celebrate the very best in crime fiction” and open to UK and Irish authors, is for a novel published in paperback between May 1, 2017, and April 30, 2018.

News of Abir’s nomination comes as he is about to release his third novel, Smoke and Ashes. His second work was A Necessary Evil.

The winner will be decided by the panel of judges, alongside a public vote that opens online on July 1 and closes on July 14. The winner will be announced on July 19.

Abir’s new tale, Smoke and Ashes, is set in 1921 – two years on from when his debut novel opened. He has created an unlikely partnership between Captain Sam Wyndham and his Bengali assistant, Sergeant “Surrender-not” Banerjee. The latter is patrician, Cambridge educated and socially a cut above his boss, who has arrived from the UK to join the Calcutta police. Wyndham is haunted by his memories of the Great War and is now “battling a serious addiction to opium that he must keep secret from his superiors”.

Abir has said his ambition is not simply to tell a detective story but to set it against the background of racist British attitudes when the days of the Raj drew to a close and the fight for Independence became more intense.

source: http://www.telegraphindia.com / The Telegraph,Calcutta,India / Home> Calcutta / by Amit Roy / May 27th, 2018

Kolkata youth now a London councillor

Rohit K Dasgupta (L)

Kolkata :

Rohit K Dasgupta, 30, has become the first Bengali from India to be elected as councillor in the London Borough of Newham. An alumnus of St James’ School and Jadavpur University, Dasgupta had joined UK politics in 2009, when he shifted to London to pursue his masters in English.

Last year, Dasgupta had unsuccessfully contested as the Labour Party’s parliamentary candidate for East Hampshire against the Theresa May government. This year, he won with 70% votes.

His parents — Mukut and Joyasree — are ecstatic. “My mother said my hard work paid off. My parents were up all night waiting for the results. They will have a celebration dinner,” Dasgupta said. After results, Dasgupta partied with all the Labour activists who contributed to his win.

Though he comes from a Left political tradition, none of Dasgupta’s parents have been involved in active politics. “I joined the Labour Party as I thought Gordon Brown was a fantastic leader and deserved to remain UK’s PM,” he explained. As for contemporary Indian politics, Dasgupta is against the “kind of Hindutva nationalism being espoused by the BJP”. “I was born in a secular country and to see that secularism being eroded makes me angry. I’m glad Bengal is one of the few states that has remained immune to Hindutva politics,” he said.

However, the recent Metro incident at Dum Dum — where his parents live — has left him ashamed. “Kolkata has been a bastion of liberal values compared to many other Indian cities. Moral policing is unacceptable. Showing affection should not be something we should be ashamed of or be censured for,” he said.

He will now he busy balancing his academic job at the Loughborough University and responsibilities as a councillor. Both jobs, he said, complement each other. As an elected representative, his priority is to expand “the equalities agenda of the council, repair and maintain all council homes and increase crime prevention”. Housing, he pointed out, is a big issue in Newham. “I’d like to see our council build more affordable homes for everyone,” he said.

Looking forward to strengthening the connection between Kolkata and London, he said, “Newham also has a sizeable number of Indian and Bangladeshi communities. There is opportunity for all kinds of cultural exchange with Kolkata and also learning good practices from each other.”

source: http://www.timesofindia.indiatimes.com / The Times of India / Home> City News> Kolkata News / by Priyanka Dasgupta / TNN / May 06th, 2018

Kolkata girl nominated for global sci-fi award

Kolkata :

Writer, editor and Jadavpur University alumna Mimi Mondal has been nominated for the 2018 Hugo Awards for co-editing her first science fiction book — the anthology ‘Luminescent Threads’. The 30-year-old, who hails from Kolkata,is the first from the city to be nominated for the top honour in science fiction. Previous Hugo nominees include names like Arthur C Clarke, Isaac Asimov and Neil Gaiman. Her fellow nominee in the Best Related Works category is the late Ursula K Le Guin.

“I am not an outlier genius. I am completely homegrown and following the path of my elders. Growing up in Kolkata, I read very little purely generic science fiction. And honestly, I taught myself English from a dictionary so I didn’t see people like myself in the worlds written by white, male writers. What I did grow up reading, and this is where we Bengalis have an advantage, was a lot of Dakshinaranjan Mitra Majumdar, Satyajit Ray, Premendra Mitra, Rabindranath Tagore, Narayan Gangopadhyay, Lila Majumdar and Sunil Gangopadhyay… I read them all,” says Mondal, who lives in New York now.

The writer in her emerged in her teens when Mondal studied at Nava Nalanda and then at Calcutta International School. Mondal’s inner editor is unforgiving of her earliest poetry, which she says was ‘of a somewhat middling quality’. “Then I discovered Marquez and Rushdie and Kolkata writer Samit Basu. These completely blew open my mind,” she said.

“I come from a background which made every success in life feel like a little ‘whoop’ to me because nobody in my family had done anything like that. I felt like that when I got into the English department of Jadavpur University in 2007. I don’t think I have stopped,” she says.

Mondal was the Octavia Butler Memorial Scholar at science fiction writing workshop Clarion West in 2015. In strange poetic justice, it is Octavia Butler to whom Mondal’s co-edited anthology pays tribute. “Butler was a number of firsts — the first major African American, queer, woman author of the genre. ‘Luminescent Threads’ is a book about celebrating the triumph of diversity,” Mondal says.

Diversity and inclusion of diverse people remain the writer’s chief concern. Mondal finds herself asserting her Dalit identity to a Western readership “which does not even know what Dalit means”. “I didn’t write from a Dalit sensibility until a few months ago. I am still teaching myself the process. I represent my community by declaring I am Dalit in my author bios and everywhere else.”

source: http://www.timesofindia.indiatimes.com / The Times of India / News> City News> Kolkata News / TNN / April 06th, 2018

Calcutta boy Ramit Tandon is fast climbing up the squash charts

Ramit Tandon at The Saturday Club. Picture: Arnab Mondal

There is something earnest about Ramit Tandon that strikes you instantly. Genial, confident and candid, the 25-year-old started playing squash full-time in September last year and has quickly moved up to become world number 65. Before he left for a training camp to Chennai ahead of the Commonwealth Games next month, t2 caught up with the boy from Lord Sinha Road.

How excited are you about the Commonwealth Games?

I am not feeling the butterflies yet! Once I get to the village and I see the other athletes… maybe then it will hit me. I haven’t processed the thought of being in Australia. I am happy to be home for 10 days with my family. The last week or so, I have been pushing myself hard. Also, squash is such an individual sport, you always enjoy being part of a team. That energy, where you have other people supporting you, means more than being on your own. I am trying not to stress too much. Of course, we will give our best. It is the biggest event for us this year.

When did you start playing squash?

My dad (Raman Tandon, The Saturday Club president) used to play squash. So, I followed him to the club and slowly got interested. By the time I was eight or nine, I started playing.

What’s great about the game?

Well, now my life revolves around squash. The last 10-15 years have been only squash. It’s been a big part of my life. The reason I like it is, it’s fast… in an hour you know the result. It’s a lot of fast thinking. My personality is similar. It’s taught me a lot of life lessons. There are so many different aspects of the game that have to be right to get to the end result.

Take us through your career till now…

I was a top-ranked junior in India from 2010-2012. I moved to the US for my education and graduated from Columbia University, with statistics. I was one of the best college squash players over there. At that point I wasn’t sure if I would play professionally because it is a hard sport to jump into. Cricket and tennis were more out there, more popular. It was a risk and I wanted to hedge myself before taking a risk. I felt I needed to finish my education first.
I worked in finance in New York for two years. Hedge fund job vs professional squash player… pick one… it’s a no-brainer. I mean I really wanted to play squash, but also I wanted to experience the work environment. While I worked there, I kept playing in a few tournaments here and there and got a few good results. The people I met at the hedge fund, like my CEO, were very supportive of my decision to go give it a shot. So, September 2017 I decided that I was going to start playing full-time. I am based in New York and Calcutta and I shuttle. I started off as 400 or something in the world and now I am 65.

Wow!

I have the belief. I am happy about the fact that I moved so quickly. When you start doing something full-time, there is a different sort of pressure to it. It’s hard when you’ve been sitting at the desk for two years crunching numbers.

What was the turning point?

So, Ali Farag, who is the current world number three, I beat him in a tournament in the US while working. I was ranked almost 500 in the world.

I would train quite a bit during the weekends and about three times during the week. Ramy Ashour, who is like the Roger Federer of squash, moved to New York and we became very close and we would train together on a daily basis. When I started working, I would train three-four times a week with him. Training with him gave me a lot of confidence. I think he was a big reason I was able to maintain my game while working.

People started talking after I beat Ali Farag. The buzz around me… people at work would be like… ‘Why don’t you go and play?’ But for me, it was very risky. Also, you are more comfortable on court when you know you have a job and you are not worried about winning or losing… you don’t have to worry about paying rent. I enjoyed that mindset. But then a lot of people around me started telling me… and I started to believe in it as well. I had a few more events which went well.
Then in a game, I lost to this guy who was among the top 20 in the world. I lost to him in five games. That’s when I realised that I was losing out on match experience. I was playing one or two tournaments a year, which wasn’t enough to compete at that level. I was enjoying my job, but I realised that squash gave me more happiness.

How has life changed?

It’s been a change of lifestyle for me. From sitting at my desk for eight to 10 hours a day to hitting the gym in the morning… then squash… then fitness again.

So, a much healthier lifestyle…

I don’t think it’s healthy (smiles). People think an athlete’s life is very healthy, it is not. It’s torture for the body. I can sense it… when I am hating the work I am doing, the tournaments go well after that. If I am enjoying the preparations and not pushing myself hard enough, my tournament doesn’t go well. In six months, I have realised that. We overdo it for sure and you need to because the competition is so high.

A lot of the hard training is based around the physical stuff and that’s the hard part. At night you are sleepless because you’ve been through so much. If you are a professional, there is no day off. At this level, no coach can tell you X amount of work is ideal for you. As a player, you’ve got to figure it out… how hard you can be pushed, when you need to slow down.

In the first phase, I went for a lot of tournaments where I overdid it. I realised I wasn’t as fresh as I should be. Sometimes, I didn’t train that hard. It’s all about finding that balance. In matches too, it is a fine line… when to be aggressive, when to stay calm. I am still learning every day. The first few months was just about finding a routine. Now, I think I have just stabilised into a routine. The challenge has been to get used to all the physical work, the travelling and finding the exact balance… which I am still figuring out.

What is your workout routine like?

I play for about a couple of hours in the morning, followed by a fitness session… could be gym or sprinting for another hour or two hours. Gym is at The Saturday Club… I work with Anwar Wahhab. He has been with me since I was eight or nine. By the time I am out, it is 1pm-2pm. Then it is time for lunch and then I am back training around 4pm. In the evening it is mostly skill and then maybe a relaxation session… swimming. I am back home by 8pm-8.30pm.

You need a strong core to prevent injuries. My sport requires a lot of speed and agility. It is all about developing strength without getting too bulky. For me, it is a lot of leg work and a lot of core work. I do sprinting sessions for the cardio. I do agility and footwork sessions for the quick turnings. I enjoy this the most. I do swimming mostly as recovery and cardio.

Have you picked up anything from Ramy Ashour?

He is very unique. Most of it is the mental side. I want to go into a match feeling how you go to office. On match days, I still wake up feeling it is an event, a festival. And that is never good.

What is your bigger goal?

By this year end, I would like to get into the 30s. I am happy with the progress so far. I feel I can still do better.

So, you are not easily happy?

I am not. I don’t know if it is a good thing or a bad thing. (Smiles)

KNOW RAMIT

Joined PSA World Tour in September 2017
Current world rank: 65
Was the ‘top male player’ of the Indian team that finished 2nd at the U-21 World Cup in 2012
Won 2 PSA world titles in 2017
Won 6 junior national titles
Captain, Indian junior team (2010-2012)
Asian Junior team championship winner and individual championship runner-up
I unwind: By following the markets!
Music fave: Marshmello.
Fave actors: Shah Rukh Khan, Leonardo DiCaprio.
Fave actress: Deepika Padukone, and Alia Bhatt because she watched my match in Bombay.

source: http://www.telegraphindia.com / The Telegraph,Calcutta,India / Home> Lifestyle / by Saionee Chakraborty / March 27th, 2018

Doc with city roots a star author in Britain

London:

Who is Rangan Chaterjee and why has he suddenly become just about the most famous doctor in Britain – a bit of a heart throb, actually?

For starters, Chatterjee, son of a doctor, Tarun Chatterjee, who came to England from Calcutta in the 1960s, has written a book, The 4 Pillar Plan: How to Relax, Eat, Move and Sleep Your Way to a Longer, Healthier Life, which is now No. 1 on Amazon UK.

“I am a Bengali boy and this book will have special appeal for Bengalis who tend to eat late at night,” Chatterjee told The Telegraph, as he remembered frequent Calcutta holidays at his father’s home in Shyambazar and his mother Bandana’s in Chetla.

Chatterjee, who has been interviewed by BBC News, The Daily Telegraph, the Daily Mail, the Daily Express and elsewhere, appears to have struck a chord by focusing “on finding the root cause of diseases and helping my patients make their illnesses disappear”.

“The handsome 40-year-old father-of-two, star of BBC One’s Doctor in the House, is at the forefront of a new generation of social-media-savvy medics,” wrote one interviewer about the 6ft 6in tall doctor who lives in Wilmslow, Cheshire, with his Gujarati wife, Vidhaata, a criminal barrister, and their children, aged seven and five.

Based on his “experiences serving as a doctor for nearly 20 years”, Chatterjee, MBChB, BSc (Hons), MRCP, MRCGP, says that his “book goes beyond the sort of health advice we’ve all been reading about for so long – beyond the fad diets and the quick fix exercise programmes”.

His plan has been endorsed by, among others. Celebrity chef Jamie Oliver, who believes “Rangan’s easy, common-sense plan can help everyone live a happier, healthier life”.

Two events have shaped Chatterjee’s life – one was caring for his father who died five years ago. He was a consultant at Manchester Royal Infirmary, “a first-generation immigrant, who worked and worked and worked”.

Even more traumatic was the near death of his infant son who was diagnosed with “an easily rectified calcium deficiency”.

With a sensible diet, exercise and meditation, Chatterjee says: “I have routinely helped my patients reverse type 2 diabetes; eliminate irritable bowel syndrome; lower blood pressure without drugs; reduce menopausal symptoms naturally; sleep better and regain their energy; regain control of their autoimmune conditions; restore harmony to their circadian rhythms; add life to their years, as well as years to their life.”

source: http://www.telegraphindia.com / The Telegraph, Calcutta,India / Home> Calcutta / by Amit Roy / January 03rd, 2018

Gratitude to genius behind Boson

Prime Minister Narendra Modi pays tribute to S.N. Bose (below) on his 125th birth anniversary
via video-conferencing from New Delhi on Monday. (PTI)

Calcutta:

Physics was his calling but he could play a complex classical raga on the esraj with as much dexterity as he could read out a French novel in impromptu English translation.

Stories highlighting the multifaceted genius of Satyendra Nath Bose, after whom the Boson particle is named, on Monday filled the curtain-raiser to a yearlong commemoration of his 125th birth anniversary.

Prime Minister Narendra Modi inaugurated the event from Delhi through video-conferencing, reminding the audience at the SN Bose National Centre for Basic Sciences in Salt Lake that “just as a quantum particle does not exist in isolation, we should also get out of isolation”.

Modi said the scientific ecosystem needed to connect with innovators, entrepreneurs and technocrats to work on artificial intelligence, big data analytics, machine learning, genomics and electrical vehicles. “These are some of the rising technologies on which we need to get ahead,” he pointed out, holding up Bose as the inspiration to test new frontiers.

Born on January 1, 1894, Bose had collaborated with Albert Einstein to create what came to be called the “Bose-Einstein Condensation”. Physicist and author Partha Ghose, who did his PhD under Bose, recounted one among many instances of how humble he could be despite his brilliance.

“He was in a reflective mood one day and spoke about the ‘photon spin’ aspect in his derivation of Planck’s law. But then, with a mischievous smile, he said, “But the old man (Einstein) struck it off”.

Ghose said the anecdote left him flabbergasted because Nobel laureate C.V. Raman’s research later vindicated Bose’s derivation.

“When I asked him why he didn’t claim credit for his discovery, he said, ” Ki ba eshe gelo? Ke baar korechhilo tatey ki eshe jaye? Baar to hoyechhilo (How does it matter? Who discovered it is not the main thing, is it? At least it was discovered)’,” he reminisced.

Planck’s law is the basis of quantum theory.

In his speech, the Prime Minister said many Nobel prizes had been won for work based on Bose’s research.

Union science and technology minister Harsh Vardhan also paid tribute to Bose.

source: http://www.telegraphindia.com / The Telegraph, Calcutta,India / Home> Calcutta / by Anasuya Basu / January 02nd, 2018