Friday, April 24, 2009

Bangalore Autorickshaw Complaints

I'm so excited to recieve this email from BTRAC (Bangalore Traffic Review and Action Commitee). I had previously mailed to almost all complaint email ids about the auto drivers' attitude near our place (Whitefields). Of late few of them wouldn't budge even for Rs.100 from our place to KR Puram station which is not even 5 kms. Still worse, while I look for an auto early mornings in the KR Puram station, they demand rs.150 or more, mercilessly. I had demanded the following and have received a response from BTRAC saying those would be looked into (please read below).

Please note these no's 22943381 and -IVRS 25588444/25588555 and don't forget to register a complaint anytime an auto driver misbehaves.

I would encourage you to send complaints to the following ids and also forward it to as many friends you could. I'm sure most of us are frustrated by these auto drivers. Let the officials and the auto drivers know our demand.

dcptrafficeast@gmail.com, acat@kslmd.com, clm@kslmd.com, transcom@kar.nic.in

Happy to see something happening!

***************************************************
The mail that I sent and the response from BTRAC.

From: Automation centre
Date: Thu, Apr 23, 2009 at 8:20 PM
Subject: Re: Complaint - Greedy Auto drivers
To: John M Stephen


Dear sir

We will try to set up prepaid auto stand. We issue display card to all auto where the complete details will be available and it is pasted backside of driver seat. In case of such problems you can note down the reg no of that auto and complaint to 22943381 and -IVRS 25588444/25588555. We will send notice to the auto driver. Under BTRAC (Bangalore Traffic Review and Action Commitee) we are planning to have easy auto by sms auto will come to you.

Enforcement officer

On 4/21/09, John M Stephen wrote:
>Dear Sir/Madam,

My house is located at Hoodi circle, Basavanna Nagar Main Road. It is really a pain to get an auto rickshaw as they refuse to put on the meter but demand Rs.100 to 250 rupees for just 5 kms to KR puram station. No one would even listen even if I plead them that I have to reach KR Puram station urgently. I've paid Rs.250 from Hoodi circle to KR Puram station once as I had to somehow catch my train. The same is with the KR Puram auto drivers. As soon as we come out of the railway station a flock of drivers offer to take, but demand atleast rs.200 or more to Hoodi circle.

I feel very bad as the auto drivers take advantage of our needs and exploit it. I sincerely request you to take necessary action.

My humble requests are :

1. Please put a PRE-PAID auto counter at KR Puram station.
2. Please introduce receipts so that every time I travel in an auto I get a reciept for the money I paid with all the details of the auto rickshaw and the driver.
3. Please make it compulsory to have a complaint number printed on the auto-rickshaws so that the customers know whom to call in case the auto driver is misbehaving
4. Please conduct surprise visits to these auto drivers to catch them red-handed. In this way auto richshaw drivers would know that they are being watched and would behave well with us.

Thank you for your cooperation. Any improvement in this regard would be highly helpful to every common man living in Bangalore.

regards
John Manoah

Tuesday, April 14, 2009

Why Tamil is a Classical Language



Statement on the Status of Tamil as a Classical Language - by Prof.George L Hart, Berkeley University, California

Professor Maraimalai has asked me to write regarding the position of Tamil as a classical language, and I am delighted to respond to his request.

I have been a Professor of Tamil at the University of California, Berkeley, since 1975 and am currently holder of the Tamil Chair at that institution. My degree, which I received in 1970, is in Sanskrit, from Harvard, and my first employment was as a Sanskrit professor at the University of Wisconsin, Madison, in 1969. Besides Tamil and Sanskrit, I know the classical languages of Latin and Greek and have read extensively in their literatures in the original. I am also well-acquainted with comparative linguistics and the literatures of modern Europe (I know Russian, German, and French and have read extensively in those languages) as well as the literatures of modern India, which, with the exception of Tamil and some Malayalam, I have read in translation. I have spent much time discussing Telugu literature and its tradition with V. Narayanarao, one of the greatest living Telugu scholars, and so I know that tradition especially well. As a long-standing member of a South Asian Studies department, I have also been exposed to the richness of both Hindi literature, and I have read in detail about Mahadevi Varma, Tulsi, and Kabir.

I have spent many years -- most of my life (since 1963) -- studying Sanskrit. I have read in the original all of Kalidasa, Magha, and parts of Bharavi and Sri Harsa. I have also read in the original the fifth book of the Rig Veda as well as many other sections, many of the Upanisads, most of the Mahabharata, the Kathasaritsagara, Adi Sankara’s works, and many other works in Sanskrit.

I say this not because I wish to show my erudition, but rather to establish my fitness for judging whether a literature is classical. Let me state unequivocally that, by any criteria one may choose, Tamil is one of the great classical literatures and traditions of the world.

The reasons for this are many; let me consider them one by one.

First, Tamil is of considerable antiquity. It predates the literatures of other modern Indian languages by more than a thousand years. Its oldest work, the Tolkappiyam,, contains parts that, judging from the earliest Tamil inscriptions, date back to about 200 BCE. The greatest works of ancient Tamil, the Sangam anthologies and the Pattuppattu, date to the first two centuries of the current era. They are the first great secular body of poetry written in India, predating Kalidasa's works by two hundred years.

Second, Tamil constitutes the only literary tradition indigenous to India that is not derived from Sanskrit. Indeed, its literature arose before the influence of Sanskrit in the South became strong and so is qualitatively different from anything we have in Sanskrit or other Indian languages. It has its own poetic theory, its own grammatical tradition, its own esthetics, and, above all, a large body of literature that is quite unique. It shows a sort of Indian sensibility that is quite different from anything in Sanskrit or other Indian languages, and it contains its own extremely rich and vast intellectual tradition.

Third, the quality of classical Tamil literature is such that it is fit to stand beside the great literatures of Sanskrit, Greek, Latin, Chinese, Persian and Arabic. The subtlety and profundity of its works, their varied scope (Tamil is the only premodern Indian literature to treat the subaltern extensively), and their universality qualify Tamil to stand as one of the great classical traditions and literatures of the world. Everyone knows the Tirukkural, one of the world's greatest works on ethics; but this is merely one of a myriad of major and extremely varied works that comprise the Tamil classical tradition. There is not a facet of human existence that is not explored and illuminated by this great literature.

Finally, Tamil is one of the primary independent sources of modern Indian culture and tradition. I have written extensively on the influence of a Southern tradition on the Sanskrit poetic tradition. But equally important, the great sacred works of Tamil Hinduism, beginning with the Sangam Anthologies, have undergirded the development of modern Hinduism. Their ideas were taken into the Bhagavata Purana and other texts (in Telugu and Kannada as well as Sanskrit), whence they spread all over India. Tamil has its own works that are considered to be as sacred as the Vedas and that are recited alongside Vedic mantras in the great Vaisnava temples of South India (such as Tirupati). And just as Sanskrit is the source of the modern Indo-Aryan languages, classical Tamil is the source language of modern Tamil and Malayalam. As Sanskrit is the most conservative and least changed of the Indo-Aryan languages, Tamil is the most conservative of the Dravidian languages, the touchstone that linguists must consult to understand the nature and development of Dravidian.

In trying to discern why Tamil has not been recognized as a classical language, I can see only a political reason: there is a fear that if Tamil is selected as a classical language, other Indian languages may claim similar status. This is an unnecessary worry. I am well aware of the richness of the modern Indian languages -- I know that they are among the most fecund and productive languages on earth, each having begotten a modern (and often medieval) literature that can stand with any of the major literatures of the world. Yet none of them is a classical language. Like English and the other modern languages of Europe (with the exception of Greek), they rose on preexisting traditions rather late and developed in the second millennium. The fact that Greek is universally recognized as a classical language in Europe does not lead the French or the English to claim classical status for their languages.

To qualify as a classical tradition, a language must fit several criteria: it should be ancient, it should be an independent tradition that arose mostly on its own not as an offshoot of another tradition, and it must have a large and extremely rich body of ancient literature. Unlike the other modern languages of India, Tamil meets each of these requirements. It is extremely old (as old as Latin and older than Arabic); it arose as an entirely independent tradition, with almost no influence from Sanskrit or other languages; and its ancient literature is indescribably vast and rich.

It seems strange to me that I should have to write an essay such as this claiming that Tamil is a classical literature -- it is akin to claiming that India is a great country or Hinduism is one of the world's great religions. The status of Tamil as one of the great classical languages of the world is something that is patently obvious to anyone who knows the subject. To deny that Tamil is a classical language is to deny a vital and central part of the greatness and richness of Indian culture.


(Signed:)
George L. Hart
Professor of Tamil
Chair in Tamil Studies

Source: http://tamil.berkeley.edu/Tamil%20Chair/TamilClassicalLanguage/TamilClassicalLgeLtr.html