I start a new series to test your mental agility.
If you like the idea, do email me!
Here is a drawing to start with!
Hint: Something I use frequently which accurately describes Bush and Blair!
Annikki and Jacob Matthan live in Oulu, Finland. Annikki is a Finn, Jacob an Indian. They are the founders of the Findians Movement way back in 1967. Both are now retired. They have been married for 57 years. This blog is an account of their lives and thoughts as reminiscenced through Annikki's and Jacob's eyes.
Today is 5 years since Annikki's father, Matti Reinikka, passed on.
At the Santa Claus Sports Institute in Lapland, a group of elderly Finns leap around on climbing frames, swinging on the swings and bouncing on a see-saw that is more of a people launcher than anything I remember from my days on the playground.
It is the latest Finnish wheeze to get people more active......
May I request all of you to say a special prayer for the father of Rana Jacob in Calgary.
Dr. J. Samuel, known to all of us as Sam, is 76, and is not keeping too well in Ernakulam.
Dr. Samuel is the second son of Maliyakal Kurian Jacob, the youngest brother of my grandfather Dewan Bahadur Kuriyan Matthan.
Rana is his eldest son and is married to Beena. They live in Calgary, Canada.
Their daughter Nidhi was recently married.
Dr. Samuel had his 3rd heart attack and was in a bad shape last week.
But, the Grace of God was on him and saved his life.
He was in the Amritamiya Hospital and has now been discharged.
Since Dr. Samuel suffers from high BP and is a diabetic, further invasive treatments have now been kept in suspense.
Please join Annikki and me in praying for our uncle to keep him safe, and also for his children, Rana and Reena, in this hour of their need for comfort.
I must thank an Indian, Abhay Bulsari from South West Finland, living in the city of Turku, who runs a company called AB Nonlinear Solutions Oy, for pointing out this news item from BBC World 'lukewarm to India's role'.
This is a study of how different countries view other countries.
What drew Abhay's attention was the views of Finns about India. Only 27% of Finns view India positively and 44% view the country negatively.
Luckily, the business community in Finalnd today does not hold this view as there is rapid expansion now of Finnish companies starting to use Indian expertise and also use it as an outsourcing point. Two recruitment centres are expected to be opened in India to bring competent Indian scientific and engineering staff to Finland.
14 years ago this would have been unthinkable. When I first pointed out in the first issue of Findians Briefings, way back in 1992, that Texas Instruments had opened a centre in Bangalore with a direct sattelite link to Houstan, Texas, in 1984, not many Finns thought this was a good idea!
But the history of this bad image goes back much further. In 1975, I had identified Finnish technologies ideally suited for India. I approached a company and also explained to them, as engineering costs in Finland were high, maybe they could work with one of the larger and well established Indian Engineering Consulting companies, to capture the huge Indian market.
I was laughed out of the room - competent Indian Engineering skill?
India got the same technology from a French company.
Another example was when I asked the largest Finnish Sauna manufacturer to quote for the large volume of saunas required by the expanding 5-star hotels opening all over India. I got a negative response. I alerted a Swedish company. For the next 10 years almost every sauna sold in India was from a Swedish manufacturer.
A short while after this happened the Finnish company came running after me as to whether it would be possible to reopen the opportunity as their Brazilian market had suddenly dried up.
Prof. Ajeet Mathur, in his treatise "Finland - India Economic Relations - A Twinning Study of Trade and Investment Potential" published in 1998, pointed out the enormous potential. But again, the Finns have been slow to act and have missed most of the action, thereby not getting much of the deal as other countries capitalised on.
With Amma, Deepak Chopra and a few other leading Indians making waves in Finland, a few films and songs getting shown on Finnish television, the huge advertising campaign of "Incredible India" of BBC World, some inroads of a better perception of India is very slowly taking root amongst the general public.
But the business community realised that they have been losing out. They are desperately trying to expand opportunities in India, as otherwise their international shareholders may start asking uncomfortable questions.
Abhay was of the view that we should alert the Indian Embassy about this.
In my opinion, Finns are the losers if they do not wake up.
So let us not rock the boat.
The Rotary Team from the Oulu District met up with Satish Abraham, a cousin of mine, when they were hosted by the Rotary Club of Kottayam.
Here are some great pictures sent to me by Satish. Satish is the one standing on the left in the first picture.
We brought Hilja home today.
We used the wheelchair and an Invalid Taxi, which is subsidized for her.
To bring Annikki and her home it cost just Euro 2.40, whereas a normal taxi trip would haver cost Euro 21!
There are many pictures that are captured during a normal winter. But the one below is one that Annikki wanted me to capture.
This is a picture of a sheet of snow sliding off a plastic roof.
It happened because the ambient temperature rose causing the snow to melt at the interface with the plastic and start to slide down, slowly.
But then the temperature obviously went down sharply, freezing the sheet of snow - half slid off the roof.
With the Christmas lights still in place, and untouchable because of the snow sheet, this looks really exciting during the evening sunset.
Yesterday evening, Annikki and I had a great deal of difficulty in choosing which restaurant to celebrate our wedding anniversary. With so many friends in the restuarant business, we love the food of the restaurants that we frequent. The Royal Garden, New Bombay, Goreme, Pailin, Flavour Palace, Suola Aito, etc., etc...
Finally, since it was the Chinese New Year eve, the year of the Dog, we decided on Chinese. Annikki chose Michelle and Willy's restaurant, the Royal Garden, as she had not been there for quite a while (see below).
We did not pre-reserve or inform them that we were coming.
We found te restaurant quite quiet. They had a new waitress whom we had not seen before - a Punjabi girl, Ami. Her husband had been looking for a job in Oulu as a bartender, but not finding one had gone to Helsinki. Extremely pleasant girl.
We ordered Peking Soup, frittered chicken, fried beef with extra garlic and ginger, and the frittered banana with ice cream. Having determined that the cook was the Calcutta boy, Francis, we asked him to ensure that the garlic and ginger were a bit more than usual.
Most of my adult life I have been waking up at hours between 3:30 am and 6:00 am as there are so many things to do and only 24 hours to do it in!
But this morning, our 39th wedding anniversary, I woke up ONLY at 10 am!
Being a Saturday, with both Annikki's mother, Hilja, and son, Mika, away over this weekend, my mind just stayed in slumberland.
I woke up with a feeling of what a great life I have had.
For a moment I even did not care what pResident Bush is doing to his people and the world. I missed my favourite radio programme, Mike Malloy (I will listen to it from the archives).
There have been many ups and downs in our 39 years of marriage, but always on issues outside of the two of us.
We have always been there for each other.
That was the feeling I had when I opened my eyes.
I let Annikki sleep on - she sorely needs the rest.
When I went to bed she was busy looking after the goldfish.
28th January has been a landmark day for all the last 39 years. 3 and 9 are supposedly my lucky numbers according to many numerologists who have offered their advice to me.
I hold no quarter for palmistry or numerology since 28th January has been a great day from 1 to 38 and 39 is going to be the same.
Annikki and I were married at Shrewsbury St. Mary's Church in 1967, 39 years ago.
And we have a great marriage and we are looking forward to 39 more such great years.
Viewed from our flat, where the only furniture we had was a wine barrel and a bed, is the church where we were married.
KOTTAYAM: The former Catholicos of the East and Malankara Metropolitan Baselius Mar Thoma Mathews II passed away on Thursday at the Catholicate Palace here where he was leading a retired life since November last. The end came at 5.20 p.m.
He was 91.
Annikki and I went visiting today. It was Annikki's sister's 60th birthday.
Aino (pronounced as "I Know") and Annikki set out to see the world together as friends, 44 years ago. It was I that split up the team.
Aino returned to Finland and is now married to a childhood friend, Kauko Kujala.
I have started a new blog - CHAFF, which stands for Chamber of Assistance for Finns and Foreigners.
CHAFF is still not an official body. We still have not finalised our logo.
With the explosive support we are getting, it looks possible that this may soon become a full-fledged Chamber, just as a Chamber of Commerce and Industry.
I am looking to get a dynamic youthful team of individuals from a broad spectrum of countries together to run this organisation.
Today, we were offered a place where we could have our regular Sunday Chamber Meetings.
This is a major breakthrough, much more than the founders thought when we started this informal group.
By Thursday the temperature had dropped and it was sure we were going to have a cold weekend. With the ambient temperature of -31 C and a wind speed of 11 metres per second (light wind) the temperature, after adjusting the wind chill factor, was around -47 C.
Matti, the animation whizzzkid, sent me couple of great photos of a very cold view of the Finnish forest.
On my CHAFF blog I put out a warning about being exposed to this degree of cold. For the uninitiated it could be positively disastrous.
Our cat, Iitu, certainly decided it was better to watch her fish on her TV aquarium rather than venture out into the cold.
I went out on Saturday and grabbed us a few yummy Thai Sweet Chilli Wraps.
They are delicious, light and I devoured mine pronto.
And then I got an email from cousin Anand in Chennai, who saw a TV programme there where it was said that it is so cold in Finland that people are having cold water baths to improve their blood circulation.
What I was doing was nothing so sensational (or stupid!). I was trying to heat our home to get it warmer!! The Russians have lopped off part of the power supply to Finland. I was busy last evening adding more heat to the house using our wood furnace to complement the night storage heating system which heats the house and also provides us with running hot water all through the day. Good thing we saved that antique burner when the renovation was done a couple of years ago.
The cold weather is rapidly moving across Finland.
That we had to take Annikki's mother to the Old People's Home on Wednesday was a daunting thought, thinking of how we struggled for over an hour to bring her in the last time we brought her home.
I had been to the Disabled Person's Equipment Centre and reported our problem. They arrived yesterday morning with a wheelchair so that we could take her in and out of the house in a wheelchair rather than make her walk down the few stairs.
However, they discovered that using the wheelchair would not be so easy. They have organised for the building department experts to come in and evaluate how best to modify the stairs at the entrance into the house so that we can wheel her in and out comfortably.
Annikki had her mother ready by around 15:00 hours. We decided to try and walk her out as usual. The situation soon became one of great panic. We had to give up. We had her sit in the wheelchair and we sat down and thought. Annikki was sweating profusely and even had to change her shirt, which was something considering the ambient temperature was -20 C.
We decided we would call an Invalid Taxi to take Hilja to the Home. That sort of solved the problem as taxi drivers in Finland know exactly how to handle whheelchairs in difficult situations.
We were so tired that Annikki gave up her traditional visit to the Fleamarket after dropping her mother.
Today the temperature was around -27 C.
I posted a warning to our foreign friends in Oulu on my CHAFF blog.
In the evening today I took Annikki on her round of her favourite fleamarkets.
Usually I sit in the car and wait for her. This time it was far to cold to wait in the car. So I popped into the fleamarket and carried one of the 3 books by Alex Alexander that I had received today.
George Chandy and C. Chandy are two children of Administrator K. Chandy, one of the two well-known Malayali families who served the Mysore Maharaja. The other was my grandfather, Dewan Bahadur Kuriyan Matthan, also known around Mysore and Kerala as Mysore Matthan.
I know quite a bit about the history of the Kuriyan Matthan family in Mysore (which became Karnataka), but someone has posed a question about the equally famous K. Chandy family of Mysore.
Both K. Chandy and Mysore Matthan graduated from Madras Christian College, K. Chandy being one year ahead of Mysore Matthan. Both sat the Indian Civil Service Examination. K. Chandy, in his year, came first and joined the Mysore Civil Service. A year later Mysore Matthan followed him into the Mysore Civil Service. Both of them excelled and set the seeds for the Malayalis to enter into various walks of like in the then Mysore State.
I received this email from someone in the US:
Hi,
I'm Yorjai Chandy.
My brother Yohann and I are sons of George Sagman Chandy.
G S Chandy and Mammen George Chandy [his brother] are sons of Mr Chandy [Mysore Electricity and Telephones] who had several siblings.
The only names I remember are Commisioner C Chandy, Johnny Chandy [Railways] and Aunty Susy Varghese.
Question: The names seem familiar. Is there somewhere that I fit in the family? Is this family connected with my family?
Thank you for the information,
Yorjai
The temperature in Oulu is dropping and dropping and ......
Yesterday, the thermometer itself was not that low - only around -15 to 17 C. But there was a strong wind which cut through even the warmest of clothing. The chill factor made the temperature feel around -22 C.
Today, the temperature is really -22 C. The temperature for tomorrow is expected to be -27 C.
Luckily, there are no important meetings scheduled in the next few days, so we do not have to go out into the harsh and bitter cold unnecessarily.
But, today we have to take Annikki's mother to the Old People's Home for her "interval care" so that Annikki and I can recharge our batteries! Both of us are dreading that trip later today.
Our new neighbours at Kampitie 6 A are in the spirit of Annikki. The young lady put up a snow rabbit in their garden.
Annikki is waiting for snowman making climate, when the snow is a bit wet and sticky, so that make her creations for this year!
The goldfish are thriving, the 2 remaining small ones born last year (out of 6) in the outside pond, now safely in their own smaller traditional aquarium. The larger ones have grown enormous as can be seen from this picture.
in 3 weeks!
When Annikki's mother is at home, Annikki just does not have the opportunity to step out of the house.
But this Sunday was special.
There are few people in Chennai that I look up to - and the onethat is at the top of the pack is Georgie (K. George), the former Technical Director of MRF Ltd.
Today he celebrates his 74th birthday after retiring from a glorious career in the company that he built alongside his brother-in-law, K. M. Mammen Mappillai (Kochappachen).
He appears to be a calm and sedate fellow, but he has always been a great fun and frolic maker.
After we left India we did not hear much of him.
Suddenly, out of the blue, after his retirement from MRF, he appeared in our email, and since then he has been the constant source of information as to what is happening around the scenes in India.
Georgie's association with me was from the 50's when he was studying in Bangalore and stayed at the St. Joseph's College Hostel on Lalbagh Road, just opposite where we lived. I had numerous friends in the hostel where I used to go to eat Masala Dosai in the college canteen.
When Kochappachen started to build the tyre factory, he brought in Georgie as the Plant Engineer, and with his quiet diplomacy and hard work he built the great team that allowed MRF to become the Nro. 1 tyre company in India and the 7th largest tyre company in the world.
In addition to seeing him regularly at MRF, I also used to meet up with him at the Rotary meetings - he was in another Madras Club to mine, so we used to meet at different clubs when trying to ensure our weekly attendance.
I wish I had a picture of him to put on the blog. He has avoided being in my camera frame as he has always been the quiet person in the background.
Please join me in wishing this wonderful person, a good friend, a VERY VERY HAPPY 74th Birthday.