Tagore challenges all even today: Ananthmurthy

September 30, 2011

murthi

Manipal, September 30: Rabindranath Tagore is relevant even today to all writers as the writers do struggle with the ideas of ''satta'' (reality) and ''eccha'' (desire) in the process of writing,'' opined renowned litterateur and Jnanapeetha awardee Dr U R Ananthmurthy.

Delivering the keynote address on the occasion of Rabindra Utsav organised by Manipal Institute of Communication in association with Ministry of Culture, Government of India, to mark the 150th birth anniversary of Rabindranath Tagore here on Thursday, Ananthmurthy said Tagore is someone who challenges all even today.

Tagore intervenes with Gandhi and he was highly influenced by the Spanish poet Neruda. Tagore was a patriotic and not a nationalist. Tagore was suspicious of nationalism. He envisaged the model of India as the site of civilisation rather than viewing it as country.

Unlike Gandhi, he was not a revivalist, rather Tagore was revisionist. Whereas Gandhi was revivalist. Tagore was more consciously modernised than Gandhi. Gandhi and Tagore are still in struggle against each other and they need to be studied together.

Ananthmurthy said Gora, the volume authored by Tagore is a fundamental text for all Indians in understanding equality, he added.

He said hunger for equality, hunger for modernity and hunger of new spirituality that goes beyond the conventional religion was the three great hungers of 20th century that charged the history of times. These three hungers were charged by intelligentsia and also the common masses. All the three hungers have roots in equality and self respect.

Hunger is a kind of urge in people that is both subjective and also historically objective.

During the times of Tagore, writers in western countries with deepest desires had political reservations not shared by the common masses unlike in India where it was shared by the common masses. Tagore influenced various other Indian languages through inspired translators. Great writers begin with emptiness as happened with Tagore.

Driving oneself to that point of nothing to say will bring out something. It applies to all fields like music, writing, mathematics and so on. Writing in English language had one advantage where the writer need not had to mention the area, caste or religion to which he belongs, he added.

Stating that Karnataka had major impact of Bengal rather than the neighbouring states, Ananthmurthy said it was the British rule and Hindu renaissance that made differences in Bengal.

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News Network
June 3,2020

Bengaluru, Jun 3: Lack of awareness on rail travel norms led to a tense situation on a Karnataka train as a female passenger was forced to disembark midway after her fellow passengers raised a hue and cry on seeing her knuckle stamped, mistaking it for a quarantine stamp, an official said on Tuesday.

"Many passengers on the train with the woman raised a hue and cry on seeing her stamped and complained to the TTE. She was later disembarked at Tumkur," a South Western Railway (SWR) zone official said.

The woman was travelling from Bengaluru to Belagavi as a transit passenger. Her status as such a passenger was stamped on her knuckle.

However, after some time, her fellow passengers observed her stamped hand and misunderstood that she was violating the quarantine norms.

Without realising that she was just a transit passenger who will be quarantined on reaching her destination, they created pandemonium and complained to the travelling ticket inspector.

"Following the public pressure, she was forcibly disembarked in Tumkur station," said the official.

Incidentally, the railways allows transit passengers to travel.

The official said the TTE would not have been aware of the rules and must have yielded to the passengers' pressure.

Later, the woman was allowed to board another train and reach her destination, the official said.

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News Network
June 17,2020

Mangaluru, Jun 17: The first chartered flight repatriating Indians stranded at Kuwait for months landed at the international airport here.

The Jazeera Airways flight privately booked by the Keralites and coastal Kannadigas living in the Arab country had left sometime in the afternoon with 160 passengers on board.

The flight also carried the mortal remains of Sathish Kochu Shetty (45), who died in a fire tragedy at a refinery in Kuwait on June 14.

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News Network
April 2,2020

Bidar, Apr 2: Karnataka Health Minister B Sriramulu on Thursday confirmed that 11 people out of 27 in Bidar, who had participated in Tablighi Jamaat at Delhi's Nizamuddin Markat have been tested positive for COVID-19.

Speaking to news agency, Karnataka Health Minister said, "We are monitoring 362 people who had attended Nizamuddin Markaz in Delhi. Out of 27 people from Bidar who had attended, 11 have tested positive for COVID-19, while results of 16 others are awaited. Total positive cases in the state are 121."
Meanwhile, Tablighi Jamaat's Maulana Saad has stated that he will fully support the government in its fight against the coronavirus.

This comes soon after an FIR was registered against him in connection with the religious gathering organised in Markaz Nizamuddin area of the national capital.

A huge religious gathering was held at the Markaz building in Nizamuddin between March 13-15, the event came into the spotlight after multiple coronavirus cases were confirmed amongst those who attended the event held in mid-March.

An FIR has been registered against Tablighi Jamaat head Maulana Saad and others under the Epidemic Disease Act 1897 in Delhi.
A total of 2,361 people were brought out from the Markaz in a joint operation by authorities which lasted for over 36 hours, following which the South Delhi Municipal Corporation had carried out a sanitisation of the premises and nearby area.

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