Maiden Regional Samvaad held at Coorg

Ponnampet (Coorg):

The first regional edition of Samvaad, a signature platform of Tata Steel’s engagement with tribal identity, was held at the College of Forestry, on September 9-10, 2019.

It was attended by 78 participants representing 19 tribes across the states of Andhra Pradesh, Tamil Nadu, Kerala, Telangana and Karnataka.

The one-and-half day conclave was co-created with the Karnataka State Forest Tribes Student Youths Association, led by former Tribal Leadership Programme leaders.

The organisation networks and mobilises forest-tribe students and connects them to higher-education opportunities.

source: http://www.avenuemail.in / The Avenue Mail / Home> Jamshedpur / by News Desk / September 12th, 2019

S Asia’s first green school to be in India

India’s first environment school — World Environment School — is all set to be opened in Coorg, Karnataka. It will also be the first school in entire South Asia to take a leading role in promoting and delivering environmental education with sustainability at its core. Spread over a hundred acres across the beautiful hills of Coorg, the school’s focus will be to build strong environmental and moral values among its students.

Mobius Foundation, a non-profit organization working towards environmental sustainability, in partnership with the UK-based Whitgift School announced the launch of this initiative at International Conference on Sustainable Education.

“WESc will be operational from 2021 for Grade 6 to 12 students from India and around the world. The school will cater to the parents who want the next generation to be actively involved in the protection and sustainability of the environment apart from a world-class education,” said Pradip Burman, Chairman, Mobius Foundation.

WESc will offer an international curriculum with affiliation from Cambridge Assessments and International Baccalaureate.

“The need for environmental education is growing rapidly as the degradation of the environment is taking place at a fast pace and we have taken a lead role in this direction by launching India’s first environment school,” said Chris Ramsay, Head Master, Whitgift.

source: http://www.dailypioneer.com / The Pioneer / Home> India / by PNS, New Delhi / September 12th, 2019

Annual General Body Meetings

The 18th Annual General Body Meeting (AGM) of Sri Kavery Kodava Association, Mysuru East, will be held at Association office in Sathagalli on Sept.14 at 10 am.

Kodava Samaja, Mysore, will hold its 41st AGM at Gurumane Hall on Sept.15 at 10.30 am. Samaja President B.M. Nanaiah will preside.

Kodagu Sahakara Sangha, Jayalakshmipuram, will hold its AGM at 10.30 am on Sept. 22. Sangha President A.C. Nanjamma will preside.

source: http://www.starofmysore.com / Star of Mysore / Home> In Briefs / September 13th, 2019

‘Cauvery Calling’ campaign kickstarted at Talacauvery

Isha Foundation Chief Sadhguru Jaggi Vasudev at the launch of ‘Cauvery Calling’ campaign, at Talacauvery in Kodagu, on Tuesday. Actors Rakshith Shetty and Diganth took part in the rally.
Isha Foundation Chief Sadhguru Jaggi Vasudev at the launch of ‘Cauvery Calling’ campaign, at Talacauvery in Kodagu, on Tuesday. Actors Rakshith Shetty and Diganth took part in the rally.

Cauvery Calling, a campaign conceptualised by Isha Foundation was launched in Talacauvery, the birthplace of River Cauvery, on Tuesday.

Isha Foundation Chief Sadhguru Jaggi Vasudev rode a motorbike himself to arrive in Madikeri on Sunday. Film actors Rakshith Shetty, Diganth and Shashi followed him.

A puja was offered at the ‘Theerthakundike’ in Talacauvery, earlier to the launch event.

Sadhguru Jaggi Vasudev said that through the campaign, there is an aim to plant 242 crore saplings on the banks of River Cauvery.

Trees help to increase the capacity of soil to retain water. Isha Foundation will work towards getting the necessary assistance from the government, he said.

He pointed out that the River Cauvery has become thinner by 39% in the last 70 years.

“The groundwater level in the river catchment area has been depleting drastically. Due to excessive deforestation in the catchment areas of the river, water is not flowing further and the river is getting dry even before reaching the sea. As a result, a drought-like situation has been arising during the months of April-May itself. This has created repercussions in terms of droughts in Karnataka and Tamil Nadu. Around 47,000 farmers living on the banks of River Cauvery have ended their lives in the last 10 years. It is noteworthy that the places of massive landslides have been due to excessive human interference. It is the need of the hour to wake up to the warning sign,” said Sadhguru Jaggi Vasudev.

Udupi-Chikmagalur MP Shobha Karandlaje said that the Central and the state governments will support the ‘Cauvery Calling’ campaign.

This month, the state government will sign a memorandum of understanding with Isha Foundation in this regard, she said.

MLA K G Bopaiah strongly felt the need to conduct a scientific study so as to know the reason behind massive landslides in Kodagu. He also demanded action against those who have encroached the government lands.

Air Marshal (retd) K C Nanda Cariappa and sportsperson Ashwini Nachappa were present during the programme held at Crystal Hall in Madikeri.

PM tweets

Replying to a tweet by Sadhguru Jaggi Vasudev, Prime Minister Narendra Modi tweeted at 4.13 pm on Tuesday, conveying his wishes to ‘Cauvery Calling’ campaign.

“Happy to know about your effort. It will surely add to the endeavour of harnessing Jal Shakti and preventing unnecessary wastage of water,” said the prime minister.

He also wished Sadhguru on his birthday saying, “Also wishing you a Happy Birthday! Praying for your long life and best health!”

15-day bike rally

The motorbike rally organised as a part of ‘Cauvery Calling’ campaign will pass through Hunsur, Mysuru, Mandya and Bengaluru. Public functions will be held in these places. The rally will reach Bengaluru on September 8.

The bike rally will traverse a distance of 1,500-km in Karnataka and Tamil Nadu and will culminate in Chennai on September 17.

source: http://www.deccanherald.com / Deccan Herald / Home> State> Mangaluru / by DH News Service, Madikeri / September 03rd, 2019

Arms Act Exemption To Kodavas: Stakeholders Urged To Present Facts Before Court, Government

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Union Home Ministry seeks opinion from Kodagu DC

Madikeri:

The filing of writ petition in Karnataka High Court by Captain (retd.) Yaladalu K. Chethan, who has questioned the exemption to Kodavas and Jamma land holders in Kodagu district from obtaining a licence to possess firearms under Section 3 and 4 of the Indian Arms Act, 1959, has resulted in several Kodava organisations coming together to put up a united front to fight for their rights and resist attempts from vested interests to snatch away that privilege.

Among the organisations that are pressing for Kodava rights is Nelaji Farmers Club who has urged the Kodava community leaders, Kodava Samajas and other stakeholders to provide proper information to the Government and the Courts in this regard. Even Napoklu Kodava Samaja has criticised the filing of the writ petition and has extended its support to Codava National Council that is fighting a relentless battle to safeguard the gun rights.

On its part, Ministry of Home Affairs (MHA) told the High Court recently that the exemption granted since 1963 to certain class of people in Kodagu district from obtaining licence to possess and carry firearms under the provisions of the Arms Act, 1959, is being reviewed along with the review of the entire Arms Act to amend the old enactment.

Assistant Solicitor General of India C. Shashikantha informed the Court that MHA has constituted a Committee to review and suggested amendments to Arms Act, and the process had been initiated to secure the views of stakeholders with regard to exemption granted to a class of people in Kodagu district.

Addressing a press conference in Madikeri on Tuesday, Nelaji Farmers Club President M.K. Nanjappa said that Kodavas have been using the gun as an item of worship and a gun is a symbol of culture, tradition and is a part of a Kodava attire.

“A gun is linked to the life of a Kodava from birth and till death, and its cultural influence is one of the reasons why the British gave the community an exemption to possess firearms. When a child is born in the Kodava community, four gunshots are fired to let residents of the village know of the birth.”

“In villages in Kodagu, houses are spread out far apart and as a community we get together when a baby is born. Hearing the gun shots, residents know that a birth has taken place and they try and help in any way they can,” said Nanjappa.

Similarly, when someone dies, two gunshots are fired so that residents can rush to help the families in distress. “We take pride in our association with guns and they are not misused,” he said and added that the Courts and the Government must be informed about the exclusive rights of Kodavas so that the right stays.

“After the First War of Indian Independence in 1857, the British introduced the Disarming Act, which outlawed the use of weapons in Coorg. But in 1861, an exemption was granted for a class of people in Coorg to possess firearms, for the first time by Mark Cubbon, the then Chief Commissioner of Coorg,” Nanjappa explained.

“In 1878, the British drafted a law, which later came to be known as the Indian Arms Act, in which the exemption granted to the people of Coorg was extended to two groups of people — a person of Coorg (Kodava) race and a Jamma tenure holder. These rights are unique and Kodavas never misused this. The Kodagu District Administration must inform the facts to the Court and see to it that the rights are safeguarded,” Nanjappa demanded.

Club Secretary Sachin Ganapathy, Directors Viju Appaiah and Naveen Nachappa were present in the press conference.

Meanwhile, Kodagu Deputy Commissioner Annies Kanmani Joy has stated that the District Administration has received a notification from the Ministry of Home Affairs seeking opinion on this issue. “We have sought some time due to the floods and landslides relief work in the district to carry out the consultation,” she said.

Background of the case

Y.K. Chethan, son of Yaladalu D. Keshavananda filed a Writ Petition in the High Court on Jan.8, 2018. In his petition, (WP No. 1386/2018), Chethan, a resident of R.T. Nagar in Bengaluru, claimed that the continuation of the exemption, granted to some class of persons by the British Government in pre-Independent India in furtherance of their divide-and-rule policy, was unconstitutional, as it was based on irrational, fictitious and discriminatory grounds, such as race and ancestral land tenure.

He claimed that the exemption granted to Jamma land holders and for the members of Kodava race under Section 3 and 4 of Indian Arms Act differentiates between communities living in a society and promotes disharmony.

The original petition (a Public Interest Litigation) was filed by Chethan in 2015 and the High Court had disposed it and asked the petitioner to submit a representation on his grievance about exemption to the Union Home Ministry. On its part, the Ministry had told the Court that the exemption provided to Kodavas was as per law. Not stopping at this, Chethan filed another Writ Petition in the High Court in 2018, questioning the arms exemption.

source: http://www.starofmysore.com / Star of Mysore / Home> News / August 31st, 2019

‘Kail Muhurtha’ observed with religious fervour

Puja was offered to the guns, ‘Peeche Katti’ and agricultural equipment during the 25th annual ‘Kail Muhurtha’ observed by Codava National Council at the Junior College ground in Madikeri on Sunday.
Puja was offered to the guns, ‘Peeche Katti’ and agricultural equipment during the 25th annual ‘Kail Muhurtha’ observed by Codava National Council at the Junior College ground in Madikeri on Sunday.

The 25th annual ‘Kail Muhurtha’ was observed by Codava National Council (CNC) at the Junior College Ground in Madikeri on Sunday.

Puja was offered to agricultural equipment, ‘Thok’ (gun) and ‘Peeche Katthi (sickle) on the occasion.

Later, a procession was taken out from Junior College road via Chowki, old bus stand, Kodava Samaja, T G Circle and Sudarshana Circle till Capital Village.

Speaking during a formal programme at Capital Village Auditorium later, CNC President N U Nachappa said that the Kodavas and Jamma landholders enjoy the special privilege of possession of guns, as per Sections 3 and 4 of the Indian Arms Act 1959.

“But, attempts are being made to snatch the special right from Kodavas,” he added.

He also mentioned that the gunshots are an integral part of Kodava rituals.

N U Nachappa further went on to urge the Central government to grant political autonomous status to Kodagu, to add Kodava tribe to the scheduled list of Indian Constitution and to grant permission to continue the right to own guns as per the law.

Kodava Samaja, Napoklu President Manu Muttappa and Kodava Samaja President Mandira Nanda were present.

source: http://www.deccanherald.com / Deccan Herald / Home> States> Mangaluru / by Adithya K A / DH News Service, Madikeri / September 01st, 2019

Yet Again, Kodavas Forced To Defend Their Right To Carry What They Literally Worship – Their Guns

Snapshot
They worship the gun. It’s part of their identity. Never have the Kodavas misused their privilege to carry it. And yet, once again, they find themselves fighting to preserve their right.

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Each year on 3 September, the Kodava community adorns its traditional attire, brings out the weapons which are otherwise kept at the altar in the ‘puja room’, burnishes them and offers puja to the kovi (gun) on the occasion of Kailpodh.

“This is like the ayudha puja of the Kodavas,” says N U Nachappa of the National Codava Council (NCC), as he talks about the preparations for this year’s Kailpodh.

The weapons are placed upright near the thokkbolcha (suspended lamp) with the climbing lily flower (thokk poo) placed upon the nozzle of the gun after which the river deity of the land, Kaveramma, is invoked.

Post lunch on Kailpodh, the senior-most Kodava, Kodavukar (chief of the clan) picks up the kovi which has been worshipped in the morning, and holds it in his hands, and recites aloud in Kodava takk: “Narino pandino battebutt panang, shatturana enangate, shatturu enanchengi, batte ketti pannang, mitturuk toneyayi nil, raayang miniyate, devara mareyate (Be it a tiger or a boar, go face it upfront, never incite an enemy, but if an enemy attacks, fight back unapologetically, stand up for a friend, and never nurture feelings against the ruler, never forget the almighty)”.

“The last words reiterate loud and clear that never shall a Kodava wield his kovi either against the ruler or the one governing and never is he to forget the almighty. Initiated this way, every young Kodava is handed over the gun as not just a right but also a huge responsibility,” explains Kokkalemada Manju Chinappa.

The prayers are followed by target-shooting (suspended coconuts), which was earlier a tradition where the Kodava set out with his loaded rifle to hunt down a wild boar.

While the floods ensured a low-key celebration last year, this year the NCC, one of the organisations representing Kodava interests, is geared up not just to worship the gun but also to state it clearly that the Kodava will not let go of his right to wield the gun without a licence, “for it is a part of who we are. It is an integral part of our cultural fabric and existence,” says Nachappa.

Kodava women also take pride in inheriting the gun. “Given that among Kodavas both men and women have an equal say, the gun isn’t just a man’s weapon. It is so much a part of my identity and who I am,” says a young Kodavathi Kshipra Cariappa, reminiscing how her dad initiated her into using the gun right and responsibly.

“Every Kodava child grows up watching, worshipping and wielding the gun with as much awe as pride,” adds Cariappa.

Cariappa, whose tryst with the gun began as a six-year-old helping her dad clean the gun for Kailpodh, looks forward to initiating her toddler daughter into it during their annual visits to Kodagu.

“We don’t have the gun here in Australia but we worship the kathi on Kailpodh,” says Cariappa as she prepares for the annual celebration away from Kodava land in Melbourne.

The privilege to own a gun was in the news once again recently in the context of a review of the Arms Act. A writ petition had been filed in the Karnataka High Court questioning the exemption granted by the government of India to the people from Kodagu under the provisions of the Indian Arms Act, 1959.

This petition was dismissed on 13 August by the high court after the Centre informed the court of the formation of a committee under the Ministry of Home Affairs for a review of the Arms Act, including the granting of exemption to people of Kodagu. The court has asked the Centre to take a decision in eight weeks.

The ministry on its part has sought comments and views on the said exemption from all the stakeholders “keeping in view the law and order situation in the region, and culture and sentimental issues of the said race”.

One of the views opposed to the privilege is that race and ancestral land tenure aren’t grounds to grant such a right.

The petition, originally filed in 2015, had been disposed even then with the court asking the petitioner to have his grievance addressed by the Home Ministry, which had told the court that the exemption provided was as per law.

While local politics and the demographic changes in the region are said to have triggered the current debate, what is at stake here is the cultural trait of an ethno-linguistic group whose numbers are already dwindling.

Exemption And Its History

The ‘exemption’ debate goes back to the late nineteenth century. After the rebellion of 1857, when the Disarming Act of February 1861 came into being, the then commissioner applauded the loyalty of this group of warriors and declared that the Disarming Act would not be “applicable to the gallant people of Coorg”.

The promulgation of Mark Cubban of 1861 read — “In consideration of the exalted honour, loyalty and intrepidity, characteristics of this little Nation of warriors and in recollection of its conspicuous services in aid of the British Govt, it is my pleasing Duty to notify hereby, for general information, in virtue of the power vested in me by the Govt of India, that the provisions of the act, commonly called disarming Act are not applicable to the gallant people of Coorg”.

But this too was not a privilege that the British accorded de novo but was a mere recognition of the existing customs and traditions of the natives of the region.

While the Indian Arms Rule 1951 continued to grant them the privilege, the Arms Rules 1962 had initially abolished this right. Statutory orders that were then issued in 1970 conferred these back.

The Kodavas thereby had to only avail an exemption certificate and a clarification by the Additional Secretary of the Karnataka government which stated that “every person of Kodagu race and Jamma tenure holder in Coorg is exempted from the provisions of section 3 and 4 of the arms act…”

Reminiscing the words of Sardar Vallabhbhai Patel in Parliament in 1948, that “he expects no danger from Codavas since they have proved themselves to be exceptionally law abiding people and that any other group of people except Codavas would certainly misuse the privilege given to any such groups,” Nachappa reiterates the legitimacy of the special rights.

And it is not just the Kodavas by race. The ‘traditional inhabitants’ of the land, around 22 communities, have this exemption.

The Kodavas And His Kovi

The Kodavas, who are ancestor worshippers, are said to see the guns as representing those that lived earlier, and hence hold them in equal reverence. The kovi is an integral part of all their rituals right from the birth of a child to the final journey. The birth of a child is marked by the firing of two shots while the death of a Kodava is announced with one.

“It is my birth right. The moment I am born a Kodava or a Kodavathi, I inherit this right to hold my kovi. So can those who have the jamma rights,” asserts a young vocal Kodava Prathik Ponanna, of the Kodava Naad Brigade.

“This is just an attempt to rile up communities,” says journalist Santosh Thamaiah, whose recent book Samara Bhairavi documents the lives of soldiers from the region. “Kodavas are known to live life large, celebrating, earning and making merry and keeping to themselves. We have never been those to upset equations,” explains Thamaiah.

The Kodava relation with the arms has been an eternal one. They have a long history of having served various rulers in the region. Then, in the eighteenth century, they were the ones to engage Tipu Sultan in battles. This is when they signed a treaty with the British having braved the massacre of thousands of their brethren at the hands Tipu’s forces at Devat Paramb in Kodagu in 1785. They later went on to brave the British atrocities too. And their contribution to the armed forces in independent India is part of popular memory and culture.

Theirs is the pride of having given the country its first Indian commander-in-chief Field Marshal Kodandera Madappa Cariappa (who had also ensured the dropping of a similar proposal in 1964), and Padma Bhushan General Kodandera Subayya Thimayya of the Kumaon Regiment who was the only Indian to command an infantry brigade in the Second World War.

Ajjamada Boppayya Devayya, the only Indian Air Force officer to be posthumously awarded the Maha Vir Chakra, was also a Kodava. Those who took the baton from them have added to an illustrious list of sons who have served the nation.

An ideal legal regime is not the one which imposes equality. It is rather the one that delivers fairness. And that is all the Kodavas ask for.

source: http://www.swarajya.com / Swarajya / Home> Magazine / by Harsha Bhat / September 03rd, 2019

A.K. Subbaiah As I Knew Him

SubbaiahKF31aug2019

My college-mate, a fellow Kodava like me and a politician who spewed fire and brimstone like a dragon on rampage against his political or personal opponents, Ajjikuttira K. Subbaiah is no more.

However, there is no denying the fact that in Karnataka politics he was a role model to all Opposition Leaders. Subbaiah was my college-mate in the only First Grade College in Madikeri, Kodagu, in the late 1950s. When he was doing his B.Sc. first year, I was doing my first year in BA. I remember Subbaiah and M.C. Nanaiah, senior in the college and also a powerful public speaker, showing their eloquence in the college debates.

I was staying in the hostel and the hostellers had issues with regard to quality of food and water supply. Since we didn’t get positive response from the Principal we decided to go on strike. And on the appointed day both the hostellers and the day scholars (who also had issues relating to hygiene and water supply etc.) gathered in front of the college building and took out a procession towards the Police Grounds shouting slogans against the college authorities and the Principal holding the National Flag.

I still remember a student who refused to hold the Flag and march in front, apparently, for fear of the Police who had by then arrived there. Since I was next to that boy I showed my bravado by grabbing at the Flag and marching ahead shouting slogans. Young, hot blood I suppose!

At the Police Grounds, a senior hostel-mate began his harangue only to be pulled aside by a student known as A.K. Subbaiah who delivered his speech in a loud and spirited manner holding everybody’s attention.

The consequence of this protest, the march and the meeting was impacted on a few students soon after. Among them were A.K. Subbaiah and Yours Truly also included. I was lucky that I was rusticated from the hostel whereas Subbaiah and a few others were rusticated from the college itself. That was the last I saw of Subbaiah but was hearing about his political activities through my friends and newspapers when I was in Bangalore and later in Bombay.

Since he had worked for nearly five years after intermediate (present day PUC) he was looking like a senior person. However, the juniors used to admire him for his determination to pursue higher education. He later pursued his Law degree from Sarada Vilas College in Mysore while I went to Bangalore to do my Law. I had heard that he was practicing Law in Virajpet simultaneously flirting with politics by campaigning for a Praja Socialist Party candidate from Virajpet Constituency. Later, I came to know that he changed his political loyalty to the Hindu Rightist Party — Jan Sangh. This turned out to be a spring- board for him to plunge head-on into full-time politics while also practicing a successful legal career. It is, therefore, not surprising he served as MLC for four terms while he could not make it even once as an MLA despite his efforts.

A powerful public speaker, inside the Legislative Council he would take on the ruling dispensation to an experience of thunder and lightning. Just to give an example, when R. Gundu Rao was the Chief Minister, C.M. Ibrahim was a Minister against whom Subbaiah made an allegation which involved National Security. It was popularly known as Rolex Watch Scandal and attracted attention in print and electronic media all over the country. To recall, Subbaiah, an inveterate politician of extraordinary tongue-power, had simply made a mountain out of a molehill.

The allegation was that Ibrahim in one of his public speeches rhetorically said, showing off a Rolex wrist watch to the audience that it was given to him by an Arab Sheikh and that watch was his visa to enter that Arab country. The demagogue of a speaker, Subbaiah, went hammer and tongs accusing Ibrahim of many legal and moral crimes as if Ibrahim’s conduct was a threat to the country itself. The impact was such that Ibrahim found himself, despite his denials, like being caught between a rock and a hard place. He resigned.

Those were Subbaiah’s glorious days as a Member of Jan Sangh, Janata Party and BJP at different times of the changing political developments in the country. Because of his oratorical skills and leadership qualities he was made the first State President of BJP in 1980. In the Assembly elections that followed, Subbaiah was able to get a total of 18 MLAs including the present CM B.S. Yediyurappa and late V.S. Acharya. It was an extraordinary feat for Subbaiah, who was showered with admirations and encomiums by not only the BJP but also other political parties who least expected such a performance. Unfortunately, this victory got into his head that he thought for BJP he was indispensable in Karnataka. Sadly, what happened later was his fall from BJP. And what a fall! Indeed, pride goes before the fall. He was expelled from BJP following his criticism of RSS ideology and its leaders.

We must remember that during the Emergency of 1975-77, he was jailed for 19 months. Interestingly, but for his mishandling of support to the Ramakrishna Hegde Government, Janata Dal(S) would not have been in the State as it is now.

While the BJP High Command under Atal Behari Vajpayee declared unconditional outside support to Ramakrishna Hegde, Subbaiah was nursing ambitions of becoming the Home Minister by joining Hegde’s Government. The rift between him and the BJP at the Centre was obvious leading to Subbaiah’s removal from the Presidentship of the Party. Thereafter, his political decline began never to rise again.

He thought the people of Karnataka would rally around him if he formed his own political party. Indeed, he formed his own party called ‘Kannada Nadu’ which ended in a disaster. After this, he became a habitual party-hopper. He joined Congress, BSP, JD(S) and then again Congress.

Mentioning of Ramakrishna Hegde brings to my mind one of Subbaiah’s wry humour for which he was very famous. He had made an allegation against Ramakrishna Hegde’s son of taking money from a person promising a medical seat. But, he did not get the seat nor the money was returned. The allegation was so severe that the Chief Minister appointed a Commission to get at the truth of the allegation.

As I remember, the well- known Criminal Lawyer and Supreme Court Advocate Ram Jethmalani was hired to represent Hegde’s son before the Commission while Subbaiah appeared for the medical student. In the course of the proceedings, Jethmalani was repeatedly addressing Subbaiah as ‘Sabaiah’ despite Subbaiah telling Jethmalani the correct pronunciation of his name. When Jethmalani continued to address him as Sabaiah, Subbaiah was so annoyed he got up and told Jethmalani, “If you continue to call me Sabaiah I will have to call you as Joothmalani.”

RIP A.K. Subbaiah

e-mail: kbg@starofmysore.com

source: http://www.starofmysore.com / Star of Mysore / Home> Columns / Aabracadabra by K. B. Ganapathy / August 30th, 2019

‘Cauvery Calling’ campaign to be flagged off on Sep 3

Chief Minister B S Yediyurappa releases the handbill on ‘Cauvery Koogu’ campaign.
Chief Minister B S Yediyurappa releases the handbill on ‘Cauvery Koogu’ campaign.

Chief Minister B S Yediyurappa had a discussion with Isha Foundation’s Sadhguru Jaggi Vasudev on ‘Cauvery Calling’ campaign which will commence on September 3 from Talacauvery in Kodagu district.

The latter met the chief minister in Bengaluru on Thursday, in connection with the campaign, and sought coordination from the state government.

Responding positively to the request made by Sadhguru, the chief minister said that the state government will extend necessary cooperation.

Speaking on the occasion, Udupi-Chikmagalur M P Shobha Karandlaje lauded the ‘Cauvery Calling’ campaign led by Isha Foundation under the guidance of Sadhguru Jaggi Vasudev and called upon the people to join hands with the movement for a better tomorrow.

The ‘Cauvery Calling’ drive will be flagged off from Talacauvery, the birthplace of River Cauvery, on September 3, proceed through Thiruvaroor and will culminate in Chennai.

‘Cauvery Calling’ is a part of ‘Rally for Rivers’ campaign conceptualised and implemented by Isha Foundation.

The journey covers a distance of 1,500 km. Public awareness programmes will be held along the course of the campaign, stressing on the need to undertake steps to conserve River Cauvery.

Many celebrities, sportspersons, political figures and entrepreneurs have already associated themselves with the campaign, which has gathered an immense response from the general public, especially from the farmers.

The drive also focuses on planting saplings along river banks and improving the economy of farmers. ‘Cauvery Calling’ campaign will support farmers to plant 242 crore trees to rejuvenate River Cauvery.

source: http://www.deccanherald.com / Deccan Herald / Home> State> Mangaluru / by Adithya K A / DH News Service, Madikeri / August 29th, 2019

At home in the highlands

Unexpected wonders abound when immersed in the Coorg culture of southern India.

A thunderclap heralds the first, early rains of the monsoon season minutes after my arrival in the misty highlands of Coorg in southern India. From the deck of the Taj Madikeri Resort and Spa, cantilevered over a seemingly infinite valley, I have a dress-circle view of the approaching stormfront and rolling peaks silhouetted to the horizon. Swallows pirouette as front office manager Anant Marwah describes the coming wet season, when clouds billow into the open foyer and pass through the body like shivers. “You should see the monsoon — it’s amazing,” he says. “Mother Nature does most of the work here.”

Despite its name the resort is not, in fact, in Madikeri, the hill-station capital of Coorg district in Karnataka state. This is frustrating because I’d hoped to be staying in the heart of the land eulogised by Irish writer Dervla Murphy for its sacred forests and coffee-scented hills. But my disappointment is short-lived. The property, 1200m above sea level and 9km from Madikeri down a broken road flanked by rice paddies and the odd azure kingfisher, turns out to be a microcosm of Coorg culture.

A guestroom at the Taj Madikeri
A guestroom at the Taj Madikeri

Its 63 cottages and villas, carefully built over seven years to minimise disruption to the landscape, sit cloistered in 12ha of rainforest and coffee plantations. Constructed from recycled timbers and bricks made on-site from marsh soils (the quarry is now a pretty lake between the herb garden and main pool), the cottages’ external walls are coated in natural mud paint so as not to disturb wildlife. Pitched-roof interiors feature vast, screened windows over the semi-wilderness, fireplace snugs and fish-trap decorations woven by local tribal people. Barking deer stalk the grounds at night.

But it is the indigenous Kodava staff who give the hotel its strongest character and meaning. Colonel Pattamada Muthana, retired, commutes daily from Madikeri to the hotel’s onsite “conservatory”, a compact museum where he shares his people’s story with guests. Displays depict Coorgi dress, marriage rituals, faith and other traditions.

Dressed in camel corduroys, braces and impeccably polished boots, his kind face framed by specs and a faintly regimental moustache, Colonel Muthana explains how the Kodava view themselves as a distinct tribe, despite not being recognised as such by the Indian government.

“For some reason we were not scheduled, maybe because nobody knows our origin,” he suggests. But many Kodava suspect their ancestors were followers of Alexander the Great, who fled here after the Macedonian king’s failed bid to conquer India.

Guide Amaanda Pradhan Poovanna, known as Pradhan, picks up the Kodava creation story during a dawn hike to the top of Nishani Peak.

“It’s still believed we don’t belong to India, that we are descendants of Persians,” he explains as we pass by tiger pug marks, perhaps a week old, on the track.

The Kodava language, a hybrid of southern tongues and about 200 Persian words, and their distinctive features set them apart from other Indian peoples. “The ladies are fairer and they have blue eyes. The men have broader noses and curly hair, and most of them are from the warrior race.”

Coconut refreshment station at the end of a nature walk.
Coconut refreshment station at the end of a nature walk.

Kodava men often seek army careers. “If there are two sons, one will definitely be in the army,” Pradhan explains. “The other will be in sports. I am the only son, so my parents didn’t let me join the army. But I play hockey, for 15 years now.”

The cries of jungle fowl and yellow-throated bulbuls greet us as we emerge from a shola grove on to a grassy summit with a mesmerising sweep of highland scenery.

“What you are breathing is the purest oxygen, totally unpolluted,” he grins. I learn so much from Pradhan about life in Coorg (also known as Kodagu in post-colonial India), from the timing of the harvest calendar — cardamom in October, arabica coffee berries and rice in November-December, robusta berries in January, pepper in March — to the local diet of smoked boar meat and booze.

The Kodava are keen and resourceful drinkers, making wine out of everything from coffee to bird’s-eye chillies. “Without liquor and meat nothing happens in Coorg,” Pradhan assures me.

Privileged access and insights into local traditions are hallmarks of my 10-day, tailor-made swing through South India with Adventure World Travel. Even if I had been staying in the heart of Madikeri, I can’t imagine understanding the region as well as I do within the confines of the Taj resort.

Every aspect of the hotel is steeped in Coorgi culture, from ritual gudda baths of wood-heated local water rich in minerals and fragrant with lime leaves, to the seasonal and regional menus of executive chef Jose Thachil. Hel hails from neighbouring Kerala so is well versed in South India’s spice bounty of pepper, cloves, cardamom and kokum that has lured Roman, Greek and Arab traders to the Malabar Coast since ancient times. He prepares fish steamed in cardamom leaves and pork slow-braised in a cocktail of spices and laced with syrupy black kokum vinegar, a staple Kodava condiment so tart it makes the cheeks flinch.

On a nature walk through some of the resort’s 70ha green belt, Pradhan shares his ancestral knowledge of forest medicines.

Wild tobacco is used on the skin as a leech repellent during the monsoon. Peppercorns and basil are blended into a paste to “keep the throat clear”; Brahmi leaves are considered very good for children’s hair and memory. “If you eat one Brahmi leaf, one basil leaf and one neem leaf every morning, you will stay away from all the diseases,” he says.

There are thousands of wild elephants in these hills, though we see none. Leopards also prowl the highlands, and king cobras, the world’s largest venomous snake, come in XL sizes here. The biggest one discovered to date was 8m long.

A Malabar flying frog. Picture: Alamy
A Malabar flying frog. Picture: Alamy

Above us, flying lizards, frogs and squirrels have adapted to life in the treetops. Frogs thrive in the annual six-month monsoon, from May to October. The Malabar gliding frog is just one of more than 40 species, which include dancing frogs and purple frogs. Mushrooms are abundant too, including a fluorescent green fungus that switches on and off like a light. Only four of the 400 types are edible and Kodava children are taught to tell them apart from an early age.

We trace the boundary of a sacred grove where a temple dedicated to the fearsome Kali, goddess of destruction, protects the wilderness from trespassers.

These devara kadu, or “forests of the gods”, were once common across India but succumbed gradually to agriculture and development. They persist in the south, particularly in Kerala and Coorg, where, says Pradhan, “we value the importance of the wildlife and forests because they give us food, oxygen and rainfall”. He opens my eyes to Coorg’s charmed surroundings. After dinners I sit outside my jungle house in the blackness as fireflies blink brightly all around me.

Insect orchestras with frog percussion sections serenade me to sleep each night. The sweet song of the Nilgiri coucal and the dirge of the tone-deaf Malabar whistling thrush wake me at sunrise.

On the last morning, bags packed and waiting for a jeep to collect me, I’m taking one last, deep draught of my surroundings when something crashes into the tangle of branches outside my windows. I step closer to see what it is and stand eye-to-eye with a Malabar pied hornbill. It looks as shocked as I do to find itself so close to such an exotic creature, and stays frozen in a bid to blend into its surroundings. This is not easy when you are a large black bird with an enormous yellow bill and casque, so we just stand there, staring at each other, in a fitting farewell to an adventure defined by unexpected wonders.

Kendall Hill was a guest of Adventure World Travel and Taj Madikeri Resort & Spa.

In the Know

Adventure World Travel tailors holidays, from flights to accommodation and experiences. Its 11-night South India itinerary from Chennai to Bangalore via Tanjore, Hyderabad, Bekal and Coorg includes stays at members of the luxury Taj Hotels group, breakfasts, internal flights, tours and activities, all transfers and sightseeing by minibus. From $7295 a person twin-share.

Singapore Airlines has excellent connections between eight Australian cities and South India, flying to Chennai, Bengaluru, Hyderabad and Kochi via Singapore.

• adventureworld.com.au

• tajhotels.com

• singaporeair.com
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source: http://www.theaustralian.com.au / The Weekend Australian / Home> Travel / by Kendall Hill / August 31st, 2019