Wednesday, May 31, 2006

Ajeet and Sari arrive in Oulu

Our dear friend from Tampere, Prof. Ajeet Mathur, and his colleague, Sari Joutsimäki, arrived yesterday around noon to take part in a discussion with foreigners who have some business interests.

I met them at the station.

The Pendelino from Helsinki, the superfast train, arrived half an hour late. If we had more time before our next engagement, Ajeet would probably have taken issue as you have to pay much higher rates for tickets on the Pendelino!


Ajeet, Sari and myself at
the Thai Pailin Restaurant


We went to lunch at The Thai Pailin Restaurant to what was a great buffet.

I will cover the business discussion in a separate posting.

Tuesday, May 30, 2006

Kannan fëtes Hannu (and me!)

Sunday was an incredibly busy day. We had our regular CHAFF meeting which was attended by so many that we were packed like sardines in the Thai Pailin Restaurant.


Kannan Balaram, our "villager" from Pondicherry,
an example of a true Indian, simple and honest.


However, in the evening, I returned to the Restaurant as I was invited to a party hosted by Kannan for his fellow students and some of his staff members. Present, beside Kannan and myself, were his Head of the Business Engineering Course, Hannu Päätalo, and colleagues Erpo Kiviniemi, Mikko Koljonen, Ville Kummu, Virpi Mehtala and Elizabeth Wang.

Mikko and I have met before when I covered the playing of snow rugby in Oulu, the northern-most Rugby Club in the world.

Kannan hosts a party at the Thai pailin Restaurant
Kannan hosts a party at the Thai Pailin Restaurant


Kannan thanks Hannu Päätalo
Kannan thanks Hannu Päätalo for his good leadership during the course.
Erpo and Mikko listen.


Kannan thanked those present for being so helpful and co-operative during the time he was in Oulu. He fêted his Professor, Hannu Päätalo, and complimented him on the excellent design of the course. He said that when he was searching for possible locations to go to study, the Oulu course stood out as it was especially meant for engineers needing a deeper introduction to Business practices from the viewpoint of engineers.


Virpi and Beth (from Phillipines)



Ville with some other guests


In the process Kannan left his script and also honoured me for "helping" him settle down in Oulu. He gave me a beautiful bouquet of flowers as a tribute.

In my response I told those assembled I was greatly honoured by Kannan's tribute, but, in my opinion, I had done nothing but recognise that this young man from a humble village in Pondicherry was someone of outstanding and incredible talent. In the six months that he was here he not only worked to successfully complete his course, he obtained a doctoral position at the University of Oulu AND he obtained a doctoral position in the Helsinki University of Technology. Besides this, obtained a full time position in the cream construction project in Finland - the largest Civil Engineering project in progress in this country, as a Site Engineer. The fifth nuclear power plant will see such immense new technologies introduced into the project to safegaurad it from all forms of external attacks, natural and man-made, that Kannan will become one of the top in the field of safety in construction engineering in a short time.

Kannan and JM
Kannan and me at a CHAFF meeting in January 2006


I also introduced the audience to how Kannan got to meet up with me - the Chaff meetings geared to help Finns and Foreigners when they really need help.

Kannan has done Indians proud by his behaviour and vcharacter, and especially his simple village life honesty. This has endeared him to everyone whom he has come into contact with, and Annikki and I are no exception. We feel honoured that he is our friend.

Thank you, dear friend.

Monday, May 29, 2006

Physics takes a turn in Oulu

We may live in a high tech city, but I never thought that Physics would go upside down here in Oulu.

Saturday was a rainy day. We had a few thunder showers and quite a bit of lightning. As Kannan was driving me near the Oulu river, I noticed a streak of lightning very close to us, and the reaction was not the usual fast dissipation of the lightning fork.

I wondered why that was.

I forgot the matter, although I did say in passing to Kannan that the lightning must have struck quite close to us.

In the evening, Unnop of the Pailin Restaurant rang me and said that the lightning had caused the his card swiping machine to burn out. Luckily, the service engineer came and fixed it. It was only then they knew that it was the transformer and not the machine that had been damaged.

When they looked around they did not seem to find any place the lightning had struck but they saw something most strange.

The birch tree next to the door of the adjacent department store was burnt from the bottom up causing the tree to split along the centre.

It was not as if the lightning had hit the tree at the top, but it had hit the ground, causing mud to be thrown out of the ground and the tree to be split the reverse way - upwards.

The tree had split right through. A close examination of the second picture will show the crack down the centre on the reverrse side to the burn.

When I reached home, Annikki had some interesting comments to read me from our local newspaper. It was reported that lightning had struck the ground in parking lot, travelled along a tarmac, crept into a car and thrown the plastic bumper away from the car and damaged the electricals in two adjacent cars. Also, the lightning had travelled along the tarmac and thrown up grass from the nearby lawn.

The weather expert had commented that although there has never been a case of anyone travelling in a car being hurt by lightning, he came to a conclusion that it was not due to the rubber tyres. He compared the case of the protection being provided by rubber boots when lightning strikes near a person wearing these boots.

Sadly, the weather man should have stuck to commenting on the weather and not about rubber technology. The two cases are vastly different.

Rubber shoes are insulators protecting a light charge from affecting the wearer. The tyres of a car have a high amount of carbon black, making it a conductive mass which ensures that any charge is dissipated to the ground. That is why people travelling in a car are not affected by lightning as the lightning tries to find the shortest way to dissipate the energy.

In this particular case, the conductive tyres permitted the charge to enter the car through the tyres and then blew off the insulating plastic which developed the opposite charge to the metal body which was charged by the lightning.

Physics certainly took a beating today in Oulu!

Saturday, May 27, 2006

Annikki has night prowlers

Friday night.

I went to bed at my usual time - around midnight. Annikki was still working in the garden. She must have finished well past midnight, had her night snack (a Thai Sweet Chilli Wrap from the Pailin Restaurant) and was just washing up the dishes when she saw smiling faces in the garden waving at her through the kitchen window!

Pailin at Kampitie

Pailin at Kampitie


It was Pailin and Unnop. After closing their restaurant they decided to tiptoe into the Kampitie garden to see how it was developing.

Bath tub gets a new lease of life
Bath tub gets a new lease of life


Annikki went out and showed them some of the new beauty spots she has created.

After they left, Annikki had her bath and was just planning to get to bed around 2 am, when Kannan arrived from Rauma. He was surprised to see Annikki still awake! I had left the cellar door open for him, so he could get to bed in the room in the cellar.

So the second prowler got a bed for the night!

This article from 1930's is worth reading

(Cross-posted on my Jacob's Politics Blog.)

On the Mike Malloy Liberal Talk Show this morning I heard him mention a web site which had an article which is worh reading. (Mike Malloy is the No. 1 Talk Show Host in the US - he offers no solutions, but he tells THE UNVARNISHED TRUTH. I listen to him daily between 5 am and 8 am Tuesday to Saturday here in Finland.))

Major General Smedley Butler (1881 - 1940)

Major General Smedley Butler (1881 - 1940)


Written by Major General (United States Marine Corps [Retired]) Smedley Darlington Butler (1881 - 1940), who served his country and was awarded two congressional medals of honor, for capture of Vera Cruz, Mexico, 1914, for capture of Ft. Riviere, Haiti, 1917 and the Distinguished service medal, 1919, he wrote this book WAR IS A RACKET in 1935.

War is a racket - published 1935
WAR IS A RACKET - published 1935


For more information about the late Major General, please also read the Wikipedia entry about him. The following is an excerpt from the Wikipedia entry:

Butler was known for his outspoken lectures against war profiteering and what he viewed as nascent fascism in the United States. His book War is a Racket(1935) presents a highly critical view of the profit motive behind warfare. Between 1935 and 1937, Butler served as a spokesman for the American League Against War and Fascism, which was considered by many to be communist dominated[5], and gave numerous speeches to the Communist Party USA in the 1930s, as well as to pacifist groups.[6] The following, from "the non-Marxist, socialist Common Sense magazine"[7] in 1935, is one of his most widely quoted statements:

I spent 33 years and four months in active military service and during that period I spent most of my time as a high class muscle man for Big Business, for Wall Street and the bankers. In short, I was a racketeer, a gangster for capitalism. I helped make Mexico and especially Tampico safe for American oil interests in 1914. I helped make Haiti and Cuba a decent place for the National City Bank boys to collect revenues in. I helped in the raping of half a dozen Central American republics for the benefit of Wall Street. I helped purify Nicaragua for the International Banking House of Brown Brothers in 1902–1912. I brought light to the Dominican Republic for the American sugar interests in 1916. I helped make Honduras right for the American fruit companies in 1903. In China in 1927 I helped see to it that Standard Oil went on its way unmolested.


As I listened to the 50 minute interview of Arundhati Roy (you can either read the transcript or listen to the interview online - I did the latter) by Amy Goodman of Democracy Now, I realised how much this young lady has matured from a one novel writer to become one of the leading and sincere activists against corporate power, not only in the developed world but also India, where the political, bureaucratic and judicial system, as well as the mainstream media has fallen victim to fascism. Nothing could be more relevant today as witnessed by the behaviour of the Bush and Blair Administrations as well as the Manmohan Singh Administration than what this Major General wrote over 71 years ago.

Friday, May 26, 2006

Malayala Manorama journalist irks Roman Catholic Church

Malayala Manorama is the largest circulating newspaper in India and it is where, as a child, I got my grounding as a journalist and an editor under the tutelage of my grandfather, the late K. C. Mammen Mappilai.

The Malayalam version of the 'Da Vinci Code' novel, which is a work of fiction, translated by a Malayala Manorama journalist from Delhi, Jomy Thomas, and R. Gopikishnan of Mangalam, has proven a great hit, raising the ire of the Roman Catholic Church in Kerala.

The book has been published by a company called DC Books and the limited first edition was sold out on release.

The owners of the Malayala Manorama are Orthodox Syrian Christians. Although they are not in any way associated with the publication of the book, the fact that one of their journalists is in the limelight for translating it, may raise some eyebrows.

The Roman Catholic church says the film will hurt the religious sentiments of the Christian community.

The timing of the release of the Malayalam version with the release of the film and the controversy associated with it, has undoubtedly helped the book become a hit.

The Malayalam version of the book is priced at Euro 4 (Rs. 200).

Thursday, May 25, 2006

How to survive a Heart Attack when ALONE

(Cross-posted on the Chaff Blog, the Cathedralite Seventh Heaven Blog and the Stephanian Kooler Talk Blog.)

I must thank Naval patel, a 49er from my old school, me being a 59er, having passed out in 1959, for this important post.

USEFUL TO EVERY ONE AND MAY BE FOR OTHERS AS HELP EVERYONE MUST KNOW THIS



Let's say it's 6.15 pm and you're going home (alone of course), after an unusually hard day on the job. You are really tired, upset and frustrated.

Suddenly you start experiencing severe pain in your chest that starts to radiate out into your arm and up into your jaw.

You are about five miles from the hospital nearest your home. Unfortunately, you don't know if you will be able to make it that far.

You have been trained in CPR, but the guy that taught the course did not tell you how to perform it on yourself.

HOW TO SURVIVE A HEART ATTACK WHEN ALONE

Since many people are alone when they suffer a heart attack, without help, the person whose heart is beating improperly and who begins to feel faint, has only about 10 seconds left before losing consciousness.

However, these victims can help themselves by coughing repeatedly and very vigorously. A deep breath should be taken before each cough, and the cough must be deep and prolonged, as when producing sputum from deep inside the chest. A breath and a cough must be repeated about every two seconds without let-up until help arrives, or until the heart is felt to be beating normally again.

Deep breaths get oxygen into the lungs and coughing movements squeeze the heart and keep the blood circulating. The squeezing pressure on the heart also helps it regain normal rhythm.

In this way, heart attack victims can get to a hospital.

Tell as many other people as possible about this. It could save their lives!!

A cardiologist says If everyone who gets this information and then sends it to 10 people, you can bet that we will save at least one life.


Please pass on this information to all your contacts.

Wednesday, May 24, 2006

Dare to think the unthought unknown?

(Cross-posted on the Chaff Blog, the Cathedralite Seventh Heaven Blog and the Stephanian Kooler Talk Blog.)


Prof Ajeet Mathur has been a friend for over the 10 years he has been in Finland. Ajeet is like a younger brother to Annikki and me, and we love him dearly. Like me, although considerably younger to me, he is a Cathedralite from Cathedral and John Connon School, Mumbai, and also a graduate from St. Stephen's College, Delhi. Like me, he married a Finn, and ended up in Finland. We are the Alumni in Finland for both those institutions, so we have 100% attendance at our reunions.

However, the similarity ends there.

Ajeet is a brilliant professor with immense industrial hands-on experience. He is a prolific writer and his philosophical mind can analyse any situation down to, not just the ground, but deep into the roots. His education skills are seen to be believed as he holds his students in rapt attention. We jointly authored a paper on e-Governance a couple of years ago where he took my mundane and boring facts and turned it into a paper that even had the Indian President, Abdul Kalam, look at "us" in awe!

Many years ago Annikki and friends started a small venture called Aivoairut Oy. Annikki was one of the Board Members. Because of the involvement of members of the Board in many other creative pursuits, the company has been doing just enough to stay alive during the intervening period.


Arne Nystedt, Managing Director of Aivoairut Oy,
Annikki and Ajeet in Kampitie


Arriving in last Friday's post was the first major publishing effort of this company, a book edited by Ajeet called "Dare to think the unthought unknown?"



Dare to think the unthought known?


International Perspectives on Group Relations
Edited by Ajeet N. Mathur
Price: EUR 38 + postage
Publisher: Airoairut Oy, PL 836, FIN-33101 TAMPERE, FINLAND,

This volume, a collective international endeavour, brings together twelve influential scholars and practitioners in group relations. New ways are presented of managing oneself in groups and for the design of management processes. Developments in group dynamics and social innovations are explored at the cutting edge of practices in a variety of settings: families, schools, local governance councils, factories, hospitals, trade unions, prisons, business enterprises, research institutions, religious organisations, higher education institutions, voluntary work and international organisations. Issues are raised for consideration and interpretation about the hidden life of organisations and institutional processes. Novel ideas include suggestions for educators and consultants on group relations training and experiential learning methods. Problems that arise in teams relevant for persons in expert roles or management, administrative or governance responsibilities in private and public systems are discussed. New approaches for working with groups address unique challenges and opportunities that individuals face in stressful roles during turbulent times. This is an important book for anyone trying to understand small and large group behaviour to engage effectively with the politics of relatedness.


Whether you be an individual living in isolation or a person in constant contact with a huge cross-section of people, this book is one for you. Once I picked it up I could not put it down. It is 250+ pages of sheer ecstasy, as Ajeet, along with 11 other brilliant minds take apart the words of the scholar Gouranga P. Chattopadhyay (M.Sc., D.Phil, (Calcutta University), FRAI (London), FASC & T (West Bengal), FAISA (Melbourne), Professor Emeritus of Academy of HRD & CEO, Chattopadhyay Associates: Organisation Consultants &Personal Counsellors.) who proposed a few years ago that spirituality may be used to overcome hate and to understand our lives better. The other contributors are Alaistair Bain, Allan Shafer, Anil K. Sen Gupta, Bruce Irvine, Colin Quine, Jane Chapman, John Bazalgette, Sally Eastoe, Sari Joustimäki, Susan Long and Shelley Ostroff.

Approaching group relations from a series of different angles with a series of conversations, never before published, this book is historic in that every sentence is deep in meaning. It is impossible to review this book without virtually quoting every printed line.

The authors differ from each other on various dimensions. Seven men, five women, six nationalities, from five continents, twelve professions. But two things are in common - all have been students of group relations and they have all known and worked with Gouranga Chattopdhyay.

In the first chapter written by Ajeet, he says

"Groups are created, sustained and accepted not because they are necessary evil residues of the group mentality. Without groups, complex transactions of society that require open systems, porous boundaries and the bridging of frictions of space, time, technology, task and sentinece to enable flows of goods, services, capital, people and ideas would not be possible."


Ajeet is explaining what life and after-life could be all about. Whether it be a pack of wolves or a flock of sheep, these principles hold good, although this book is limited to homo sapiens!

May I suggest you get hold of this book as it will not only change your life but it will open up an entirely new world to you that you never knew existed.

Ajeet will be chairing a group discusssion in Oulu next week geared for foreign business owners and investors to share their experiences. His skill in group discussions will become obvious to all attending. (Contact me if you want to take part in this event.)

Thank you, Ajeet, for giving birth to this book, which Annikki and I will treasure.

Tuesday, May 23, 2006

By the skin of my teeth...,

Last Monday, 15th May, I had an inkling that all was not well in the worldwide money and share markets. I had noted a slight but significant fall in the entire group of mutual funds where I have my small long term pension savings. It was not as if one or two of the funds were dropping, but all of them were showing the same signs.

The pension amount is not very much, but enough to give me a small additional pension to my state pension in a couple of years.

When I went into this private pension saving system many years ago, the stocks fell so that my initial investment was actually almost halved. But, I stayed in the funds and over the last 3 years the value first equalled and went above my initial investment.

So, at this juncture, when I am about to cash in on this pension, I did not want to take a chance, as I am not going to wait another 4 to 5 years to recover any substantial losses.

As I looked a little deeper into the world markets last Monday evening, I saw in the figures around the globe that something radical was happening in the share markets. First thing on Tuesday morning, I called my financial adviser in my bank and asked her to move my whole pension funds into a safe fixed interest account. Since I have had this pension fund for many years, I can transfer freely without incurring any cost.

I was out the whole day, so when my adviser called Annikki, she said that if she did not hear from me by 15:00 hours she would carry out my instructions.

I got home after 15:00 and found an email from her telling me that she had executed my request. Luckily, I had not had a chance to reconsider my decision.

The following week has seen share markets around the world in a nose-dive, with trading on the Mumbai exchange being halted for a period yesterday after the BSE fell 1100 points from above 10,800 - but it seemed to have recovered 654 points during the day. (I do not have any investment in the Indian share market.)

During the last week Helsinki fell 12.5%, Frankfurt fell by 9.1%, Tokyo fell by 8.3%, and Paris by 7.9%. London fell by 7.8% while New York fell by 4.9% but I had moved out of all UK and US Stocks and Shares as a protest after these Governments illegally invaded and occupied Iraq.

It is interesting to see how the OMX Helsinki behaved since last Monday:

Monday: 9400
Tuesday: 9400 (Here is when I moved from the market to fixed interest)
Wednesday: 9800 (+400 from Tuesday)
Thursday: 9500 (+100 from Tuesday)
Friday: 9600 (+200 from Tuesday)
Saturday: 9000 (-400 from Tuesday)
Sunday: 8400 (-1000 from Tuesday)


I had stopped the loss of my small investment by the skin of my teeth.

As my present investment value is above what I originally invested, and although I will get just 2.5% p.a. return, it is better than a possible 30% loss which I see ahead in the general fund market!

Warm Sunday, Sweltering Monday

We continue to enjoy a very early onset of summer, although we did have a light snowfall a few days ago.

Reindeer has found its place in the greenhouse

The reindeer has found its resting place for summer in the greenhouse.

Kampitie new plantings 1

Kampitie new plantings 2

Several new plantings have been settled in by Annikki.



Annikki is working round the clock, such as repairing the pergola. She is a real monkey when it comes to getting things done. I just stand and watch, and take photographs! :-)



The flowers are arriving in different strategic places.



The fishing nets at the beachside are now in place.



The umbrella now provides some much needed shade from the hot sun.

On the whole I can safely predict that the Kampitie garden is going to be even better this year than last, and that may be an understatement, as Annikki has some exciting plans on paper!

Sunday, May 21, 2006

Dead bird on Oulu thoroughfare

Usually, when an animal is dead on a major thoroughfare, it is reduced to pulp by the passing cars in a matter of a few minutes, or at the most an hour.

Yesterday, the main road linking the north of Oulu to the south had a dead bird, in the smack centre of the road. I noted it on my first drive through about noon, but I was surprised to find it still intact and lying in the centre of the this busy road, even as late as 6 pm. I had passed it a couple of times during the day, and took care not to run over it.

Why?

My first thought when I had seen this bird in the middle of the street was that, if it was an animal which had died from bird flu, I did not want the infection on my tyres. So, I was particularly careful to avoid running over it.

It occurred to me that almost all the motortists that passed that spot, and there must have been several thousands of us, yesterday, must have had the same thought cross their minds.

Unfortunately, as it was a busy thoroughfare, I could not snap a photograph of the bird in the middle of the street.

I wonder if anyone called the police or the health authorities to come on check on it?

It is very very unusual for a dead bird to be lying for many hours in the middle of a busy road in the centre of Oulu.

Not in my 22 years here have I had this experience.

Shocked! Finnish entry wins EUROVISION Song Contest

Both Annikki and I are absolutely shocked and horrified that the Finnish entry won the Eurovision Song Contest a few minutes ago. It certainly looks as if the outlandish is what people like. I know many who appreciate the music of Lordi, but I am not one of them!

Lordi

The Finnish "horror rock" band Lordi who dress in monster costumes pulled off a surprise win at the 51st Eurovision Song Contest in Athens. Lordi's masks, armour and jets of flame attracted widespread attention before the contest - but many thought they were too outlandish to win.

Usually Finns get just a couple of votes or sometimes none at all. European viewers voted for Lordi's song "Hard Rock Hallelujah" in a show that is normally associated with catchy pop and big ballads. Russia came second with Dima Bilan's Never Let You Go.

The band members wear scary masks, which they refuse to take off, and the lead singer wields a chain-saw. Finnish online chatrooms are full of comments from people concerned about Finnish reputation. Some Finns asked President Halonento intervene.

But Lordi was a people's choice: their hit got more than 42% of the votes cast by televoting in the Finnish final. Lordi, which has been influenced by the American hard rock band Kiss and its lead singer Gene Simmons, has not escaped allegations of links with Satanism.

Rumours have been fuelled by the group's refusal to give television interviews, to take off their masks or reveal their real names.

But in other media interviews, the rockers have stressed their tongue-in-cheek attitude to entertainment. As if to prove the point, they had a hit in Finland with a song called "The Devil Is A Loser".

Coming from Arctic Lapland, not very far from where we live, Lordi became a phenomenon in Finland with a platinum-selling debut album, Get Heavy, in 2002. Their compilation album "The Monster Show" has been released in more than 20 countries.

What is world coming to when people need such horror shows to make their lives complete?

Saturday, May 20, 2006

More than a month till Midsummer?

(Cross-posted on the Chaff Blog.)

The sun shone brightly today. As I stepped out into the garden, Annikki's flowers on those old steps were truly magnificent.



As I drove through the city, a pony and buggy parked, with children buzzing around, certainly told me that there was a feeling of summer here.

Pony and Buggy

Anyone for a Buggy ride?


And as I went further, the Doggy offering sweets and a balloon to an old lady outside of the Fleamarket run by the Red Cross set the atmosphere for a great day.

Doggy with aweets and balloons
Doggy with sweets and balloons


I picked up Dr. Sebastian and Tingting from the University. Tingting cooked us a great Chinese meal at the Pailin Restaurant as she continues to teach Pailin how to make good Chinese grub. Tingting had to rush off as she was flying to China in the afternoon, but not before she picked my brains clean to sort out the next stage of her fast upwardly mobile career!

I took Dr. Sebastian around the City Centre which was alive with activities. It was the day of the Oulu Marathon which was run around the City starting and ending near the Market Place at the City Library. Thousands of watchers lined the route. The car parks were all full, and I was very lucky to get a parking place right in the city centre.


Oulu Marathon in progress.
Running past the Oulu City Library.


There was an event organised in the Youth House in Oulu called NUKU. It was called "Marketing of Possibilities" and several Non-Governmental Agencies (NGOs) had small stands to explain what there goals were to the public.


Amnesty International stand manned by friends.
Fumi is the tall Japanese lady on the left of the picture.


The Amnesty International table was well manned and of great interest to many. I met several friends around the table including Ville and Fumi. Dr. Sebastian was taken aback to know that he was well known as so many people who met him knew him as he had been featutred on this blog.

As we walked around we met several friends, but sadly, with each of the NGOs cramped together in such a small space, it was certainly not very possible for them to be demonstrative of their work and their achievements. I was happy to note that the Women's Empowerment group had a large and well organised and captivating show and I had the chance to meet Mervi Heikkinen, something which should have happened many many months ago!

Dr. Sebastian plastered against a World Comics poster
Dr. Sebastian plastered against a World Comics poster.


World Comics of India is having an exhibition at the NUKU, but with all the NGOs stands plastered against the walls, it was not possible to have a view of what was on display, although we did see some Hindi comics splattered around. I managed to paste Dr. Sebastian against a poster of the Indian Express newspaper!

There was so much going on. It seemed totally confused with all the hubbub. I hope that future events will have more order so that visitors, like me, can get more out of the event.

From there we went to the CHAFF meeting at Pailin Restaurant and met with Kerstin.

Soda was there and he had just learnt a very serious lesson to listen to what his parents tell him. His cycle had been robbed - because, despite their several warnings, he had not bothered to lock it. His mother was very distraught. I reassured her that Soda would have learnt a lesson through this incident. I told Soda that now he had no cycle, he would now have no option but to jog to his training sessions and around the town.

Soda is certainly going to miss his cycle, but then, as they say you live and, hopefully, you learn!

Dr. Sebastian and me enjoying the sunshine at the Pailin Restaurant
Dr. Sebastian and me enjoying the sunshine at the Pailin Restaurant


Soda managed to catch this picture of Dr. Sebastian and me relaxing in the great sunshine which crowned most of this day. Although, the minute the sun went behind the clouds, we were all rudely reminded that summer was not quite here, as all had to rush to don their coats to keep warm!

As I drove Dr. Sebastian back to the University, after Pailin had armed him with a special Thai Sweet Chilli Wrap for his dinner, coming out of the Oulu Cathedral were finely togged people. They had just finished taking part in the convocation for Doctorates. They were certainly dressed in a lot of finery!

End of the Convocation for Doctorates in Oulu
End of the Convocation for Doctorates in Oulu


And so ended another great pre-summer day!

Asia Seminar

Yesterday I thought I would get educated and went to a seminar organised by The Finnish Foreign Ministry about South East Asia. There was an excellent talk by Dr. Gladys Savolainen, a lady from the Phillipines who is married to a Finn, who spoke about the work being done by a Finnish Agency in the Quant-Tri region. Quang-Tri was a major region of the war waged by America against the Vietnamese and there is still much work in progress in clearing the area of mines and unexploded ammunition.


Dr. Savolainen talks watched by Mr. Matti Pullinen (Foreign Ministry) and Mirä Käkönen (Helsinki University)


The achievements of the project were quite impressive but I was not happy to hear one statement in the introduction that in the process of moving to a market economy, co-operatives were being dismantled.

After the talk, I expressed my opinion that there were all sorts of co-operatives and it was the Anand Co-opeative started by Ramon Magsaysay Awardee Dr. Verghese Kurian who revolutionised Milk Production in India, with Operation Flood and the White Revolution, which made India the largest milk producer in the world during the last 50 years.

These are some of the awards bestowed on Jollychayan. Awards for his contribution to the dairy industry through the co-operative system, are not only in India but also overseas:
1963 Ramon Magsaysay Award for Community Leadership
1965 Padma Shri
1966 Padma Bhushan (from President Sarvepalli Radhakrishnan)
1986 Krishi Ratna Award (by the President of India)
1986 Wateler Peace Prize Award (of Carnegie Foundation )
1989 World Food Prize Laureate
1993 International Person of the Year (by the World Dairy Expo, Madison, Wisconsin, USA)
1999 Padma Vibhushan



Dr. Verghese Kurian (Jollychayan) relaxing with his brother-in-law, former world YMCA President Mr. K. M. Philip (Peelukuttychayan, my late mother's elder brother, now 94) at my nieces's wedding in 1999)


The most ridiculous question of the event came from top Oulu politician (Social Democrat) who asked one of the speakers what Finland tax-payers got out of doing this work in the far east. Obviously Liisa Jaakonsaari, who is a former school classmate of Annikki, does not know the meaning of the word "AID" if she is looking for "returns" for Finland out of this work!

Thursday, May 18, 2006

Annikki rolls up her sleeves

As soon as her mother was in the Old People's Home for her "interval care", Annikki has got down to work to get the Kampitie garden into shape.

Annikki at work

Annikki at work


She transformed this old front steps of Kampitie



into this decor piece in a corner of the garden



All with a few hours of solid hard work.

The first summer flowers have now appeared in the garden.

First summer flowers in Kampitie
First summer flowers in Kampitie


Looks like we are going to bathed in a glorious summer thanks to the effort of Annikki and her love for the garden.

Wednesday, May 17, 2006

Change of programme

Yesterday I had a phone call late evening, which meant my programme for today had to be re-tuned. The call was from an old friend, Päivi Kytömäki, who introduced Smitha, one of the group of people sponsored by Rotary India to visit the Rotary District of north Finland under a Rotary Fellowship.

Päivi Kytömäki

Päivi Kytömäki


Smitha from Kottayam, Kerala
Smitha from Kottayam, Kerala


Smitha (Elizabeth Thomas), and a group of five others from India, had arrived in Finland more than 3 weeks ago. She had asked Tapon, the owner of the Indian Restaurant in Oulu, how she could contact Annikki and me. Tapon could not find my phone number in his mobile. She asked several Roatarians, but it seems none of them had heard of me, except one, Heino Holappa, who had taken a similar Finnish group to India.

(Smitha is married to the cousin of the wife (Vimla) of my second cousin, Satish Abraham, who lives in Kottayam. Smitha works in Kottayam in an IT company as a Content Organiser. Smitha is also the daughter of one of India's leading hematologists, now retired,who used to be associated with King's College Hospital in London.))

But Heino did not have my phone number.

Smitha arrived in Oulu back from a trip around the north of Finland on Saturday. Her stay in Oulu was being hosted by a Rotarian lady who is a member of one of the local Rotary Clubs.

When Smitha visited the office of her hostess, Päivi Kyötimäki, the head of the library at the University of Oulu, she saw the calendar of Annikki's cake designs on Päivi's table. Excited, she asked Päivi whether she knew us, and before you could say "buzz bumble bee", Päivi was on the line to me and I fixed to meet with Smitha today. (Päivi and I have been friends for over 16 years.)

Tapon had told Smitha that there were only about 5 or 6 Indians in Oulu. To disprove this, after showing her the excellent Zoology and Geology Museums in the University, I took her to meet the two Indian researchers in my old Microelectronics Laboratory. Luckily both Krishna (from Andhra Pradesh) and Dr. Sebastian (from Trivandrum) were in. (There are about 75 Indians in Oulu.)

Dr. Sebastian, Smitha and Krishna
Dr. Sebastian, Smitha and Krishna in the
Oulu University Microelectronics Laboratory


On our way out we met another Bangladeshi, Hallal, a researcher in Telecommunications, who was one of the first students who worked for me about 12 years ago.

We had a quiet buffet lunch at the Thai Pailin Restaurant. Then I dropped Smitha off at Kaleva, the local newspaper, where they had an official event. I picked her up after about two and half hours and then took her home. There Annikki and Smitha discussed many subjects and Smitha saw some of Annikki's art.

Then we went shopping to get some small stuff Smitha had seen in our garden.


Annikki and Smitha in the local greenhouse flower shop


We also took her to a Fleamarket to show her where Annikki gets some of the great things we have at home. After that we took her to the Nallikari Beach to show her yet another beauty spot of Oulu.

Smitha and Annikki at Nallikari beach

Smitha and Annikki at Nallikari beach
Smitha and Annikki at Nallikari Beach


After a hectic day we dropped Smitha off at her hosts. We found that it really is a small world as Päivi's daughter's boyfriend is a student associated with a Computer Gaming Project in Oulu University being headed by our son-in-law, Tony. He has just submitted his thesis for his master's degree. Also, Päivi had been talking to Tony in Newcastle just today about including one of his projects on Computer Gaming in the Book Fair which is being held in Oulu in a June.

Although Annikki had spoken to Päivi about 16 years ago, she had not met her till today. Päivi recalled the advice that Annikki gave her when she had talked to her about what to do when going to India - "Go there with an empty suitcase!" And it seems Päivi has been following this advice for the ten or more visits she has made to India since then.

We are glad that we could share some quality time with Smitha. Sadly, I could not use my Malayalam which has deteriorated from bad to virtually useless over the last 5 years!

Monday, May 15, 2006

I know it was Mother's Day

I know yesterday was Mother's Day, but I thought I would throw in this photograph taken of me by my protégé, Soda.

JM by Soda 14th may 2006

JM by Soda 14th May 2006


While I was talking to this young lad yesterday, I happened to discuss how decisions about him, when he grows up, would have to be made by his agent. His absolute honest and quick reply was "But, you are my agent!"

He is maturing so fast that I am finding it impossible to keep up with his talents and his poweress in so many spheres. The decision as to whether he is going to be a professional sportsperson or a professional muscian is excruciating. Either could be right or wrong. Both require dedication and immense hard work on his part, and last week I witnessed how dedicated he is to BOTH these fields. To choose one over the other is painful, not only for himself, but all of us who love this young man so much.

I only wish Soda was living in a country which helped people of such immense talent mature along the lines of their skills!

Coming back to Mother's Day, Annikki wanted me to get flowers for her mother. Her sister, Anneli, had also sent money from the southern town of Masala to get flowers on her behalf.

There was a special sale at a local garden shop, so I went and purchased, what I thought was nice selection on behalf of all our children for Annikki and for her mother. (This was in addition to the carefully marked list that she had made for me with pictures of the flowers!)

In addition, Annikki's other sister, Aino, sent a lovely bunch of flowers for her mother.

Usually, whatever I buy is not much appreciated as I have quite horrible choice. For years and years Annikki has styled my hair, bought my shirts and even my undergarments, as I can never be trusted to buy anything correctly.

I was rudely shocked as Annikki's appeciation when opened the front door and saw me carrying in this great bunch of colourful flowers.

Äiti and Iitu with the Mother's day flowers at kampitie
Multi-great grandmother Iitu (now 15 cat years), great-grandmother Äiti, grandmother Annikki, share these flowers


Later, when I returned from the Chaff Meeting, I bore a turtle from Pailin, who has adopted Annikki as her mother. (It is amazing how many people seem to have adopted us - later that evening I had a Skype call from Rauma (in south west Finland) from where Kannan, who has also adopted Annikki as his mother, sent her heartfelt wishes to her for Mother's Day!) Annikki was so thrilled to receive this beautiful gift, she could hardly contain her joy.

Brick turtle shares the table with the squeaking one!
Brick turtle shares the table with the squeaking one!


Annikki already has a place for it reserved in the Kampitie garden. It is going to have a entertaining life out there in the Finnish sunshine.

Sunday, May 14, 2006

Nobel Peace Prize...

(Cross-posted on the Oulu Chaff Blog.)

Two weeks ago I was greeted by this gentleman as a long lost friend because he was reading this blog.

Arpad Hamos

Arpad Hamos


I really enjoyed his company.

When I opened my email INBOX today morning, the first post I saw was with this

Nobel Peace Prize Certificate of Arpad Hamos
Nobel Peace Prize Certificate of Arpad Hamos


I am sure all of you will join me in sharing in the joy of our dear friend Ildikó, at this great honour bestowed on her father Arpad and his colleagues at the IAEA.

(Ildikó - Annikki and I hope that we do not have to wait 30 years till you get yours to keep that family tradition going!)

Yesterday afternoon Ilari, Antti, Ildikó and I went on a trip to Raahe, about 75 km from Oulu. Ilari and Antti are in the process of starting an Association of Finnish-Armenian interests. Antti had said that there was a great restaurant in Raahe which served Armenian food.

So off we went.

Ararat Restaurant in Raahe
Ararat Restaurant in Raahe


When I saw this sign it revived memories of when Annikki and I were flying to India and suddenly both of us noticed the huge formation of an ark on top of a mountain, visble from a height of 10000 metres. That was the ark on top of Mount Ararat. It was an experience neither of us will ever forget, not from any Biblical sense, but the sheer enormity of the sight below us.

The Ararat Restaurant is owned by a delightful Armenian couple, Samvel and Gohar Zakarian.

Samvel and Gohar Zakrian
Samvel and Gohar Zakrian


Ilari spoke a few magic words of the Armenian language that he knows. The floodgates of true friendship and hospitality opened from Gohar. We learnt the story of this family which runs this restaurant.

Gohar Zakrian
Gohar Zakrian


Samvel is a Highway Engineer but because of the wonderful work policies in Finland, he is now reduced to running this restaurant. His wife is a qualified nurse, but now she has to work as a waitress. Their eldest son, 22, is stuck in St. Petersburg as he cannot be reunited with his parents in Finland because of the stupid EU and Finnish rules on family reunification! A person above the age of 18 obviously does not need to be reunited with his family!

The saddness in the heart of this mother was so evident, even through her smiling face.

Their second son, aged 14, was with them in Raahe and was in school. I wondered what tremendous upheavals in his life he was facing in this hostile Finnish environment.

But despite all this saddness, they have truly worked hard to set up this small and beautiful business. Antti and Ildikó ordered the Armenian Shaslik which was based on the filet of chicken. Ilari ordered the Lula Kebab with fried potatoes, while I ordered a version of the Pitakebab which is called Shaverma based on grilled chicken with salad and the special pita bread.

The food was excellent. The service was great and anyone visiting this small town should make it a point to drop in and eat at this resataurant and share a few special moments with this special couple from Armenia. A joy worth keeping in one's memory bank.