Sunday, August 27, 2006

I am being bombarded!

(Cross-posted on the Seventh Heaven Blog and the Kooler Talk (Web Version) Blog.)

Sorry, sorry, sorry. I am not missing. I am quite well. I am not very busy. I have just been lazing away my summer which is unusally hot. You can read more about this on my main blog.


Ashok (Tony) Jaitly.


I got an interesting email from my Stephanian/Cathedralite friend - Cathedralite 57er / Stephanian 61er Ashok Jaitly, more commonly known to all of us as Tony.



From: ashok jaitly
Date: Aug 23, 2006 4:07 PM
Subject: Touching Base
To: Jacob Matthan
Cc: HS Uberoi

Dear Jacob,

Hope all is well with you and the family.

Apologies for not being in touch for a long time.

However,some news that you would be glad to hear - my book 'St.Stephen's College - A History' was launched on 2nd August at the Maurya Sheraton here in Delhi. There was a gathering of about 300, mostly Stephanians, and a good time was had by all ! The atmosphere was very special with the kind of warmth and fraternity that you would expect from such a crowd of old College types particularly with the wine flowing-you can trust Stephs!

Rahul Bajaj released the book with Amin Saheb, Mani Shanker Aiyar and Bunker Roy reminiscing about their memories.Roshan Seth and my wife, Sabina, read a few extracts from the book which, I was relieved to hear,were well received.Incidentally,the book seems to be doing quite well at the bookstands although, for the life of me, I cannot imagine who would want to read about SSC other than our lot.

It would also please you to know that the book talks about Kooler Talk including your blogsite. !

I would love to get a copy across to you but how I know not !

One question from your recent blog -who was the Savage House captain of 1956 who came to St.Stephen's. As far as I recall I was the only one from the '56 batch in School to come to College that year - AND I would have you know I was Wilson House Captain - Savage? Can you even imagine ?!

Do get back. Warmest best wishes,

Tony
Details of the book written by Tony:
Author : Ashok Jaitly
Now : Rs.395 [For Delivery in India]
Publisher: Roli Books
ISBN: 8174364439

ABOUT THE BOOK:

St. Stephens College, which celebrated its 125th Anniversary in 2006, has a special niche amongst educational institutions of excellence, not only in Delhi but also all over India. Apart from its revered internal traditions, the College has also been an integral part of the social and structural changes that have taken place in the nation. And it has been the school for a long and impressive alumni list which includes sportspersons, writers, poets, actors, journalists, entrepreneurs, politicians, bureaucrats, ambassadors, techno-crats and corporate executives.

This volume, written by Ashok Jaitly, a former student, traces the history of the College from its original conception by the Cambridge Mission as an institution for higher education in 1881, through the travails of the freedom struggle, Partition, Independence and into the present world of relentless academic pressures, sporting compulsions and ever expanding opportunities.

During all these turbulent and exciting years, St. Stephens College has stood firm for certain fundamental values which celebrate cosmopolitanism, pluralism, a degree of iconoclasm along with an immense enjoyment of learning in the widest sense."Mahatma Gandhi or plain Mr Gandhi as he was then, first came to St. Stephens early in 1915... On the persuasion of... C.F. Andrews who was then the Vice Principal, he stayed in the house of Principal Rudra which continued to be his Delhi abode for several years. The Burra Sahibs house thus became the rendezvous for important national leaders like Rabindranath Tagore, Madan Mohan Malviya, Gopal Krishna Gokhale, Maulana Abul Kalam Azad and Surendra Nath Banerjee... It was here that Gandhiji, perhaps for the first time, enunciated his doctrine of non-violent non-cooperation or Satyagraha... It was here that Tagore completed his English translation of Gitanjali. And it was here that the pact between the Congress and the Khilafat Movement was sealed.

Most would agree that it could only have been idle minds busy in some devilish workshop which gave birth to Kooler Talk, the first purely student run rag aimed at providing an avenue for budding and froost - College slang for frustrated - Stephanian writers who could not find solace in the sedate pages of The Stephanian magazine. Sarwar Lateef, Roshan Seth and Peter Tubby Philip were the intrepid perpetrators of this plot way back in 1960... To add respectability luminaries such as Kamalesh Sharma, Shankar Menon, Swaminathan Aiyar, Montek Singh Ahluwalia and Inderjit Badhwar were co-opted onto the editorial board while poor, unknowing Rev R.I. Shankland was persuaded to act as the figurehead editor.

About the Author:

Ashok Tony Jaitly was at St. Stephens College from 1958-61 where he studied Economics (classmates say, in exception), played football and badminton (teammates say, on occasion), was active in the Shakespeare Society (theatre-mates say, with trepi-dation), indulged in sundry other activities (conspirators assert, without hesitation) and made many lifelong friends. After completing his Economics tripos from Cambridge University in 1964, he was selected for the Indian Administrative Service and served in Jammu and Kashmir and with the Government of India on several interesting and important assignments, including a few which evoked some controversy. He retired as Chief Secretary, Jammu and Kashmir after a record tenure of more than five years, from 1996-2002. Currently working as a Distinguished Fellow at The Energy and Resources Institute (TERI) in New Delhi on rural development issues, his primary concerns are water, rural energy and decentralized governance.
Some important points to note:

Tony has done me a great honour by including the reference to this blogsite and my Kooler Talk (Web Version) in his book. Thanks Tony.

Rahul, now a Rajya Sabha member, like Tony and me, is also a Cathedralite / Stephanian - 54er from Cathedral and 57er from Stephania!

Tony was not a 56er but a 57er. The 56er Savage House Captain who was also a Stephanian was my elder brother. The 58er Savage House Captain to join Stephen's was Peter Philip (also known as Tubby). I was the 59er Savage House Captain that joined Stephen's.

In the personal addendum Tony added that he is almost clear healthwise - for which I am greatly relieved.

I hope a Stephanian / Cathedralite passing through Delhi en route to Oulu will pick up a few copies (at my cost, please) and bring them to me. Do not want to deprive the author of his royalties!! :-)

Now the next thing Tony has to do is write a similar book about us Cathedralites - then the Seventh Heaven Blog may get some publicity. :-)

This week in perspective

A great week for weather here in Oulu, but many emotional ups and downs.

As Joanna, Samuel and Daniel were leaving for Newcastle on Wednesday morning, on Tuesday evening Annikki and I asked Joanna and family over for dinner where we got in stuff we thought each one liked best.

I brought the great food that Tingting has introduced me to, Chilli Beef and Chilli Tofu from Ravintola Hai Long (I have a card written in Chinese of what to order) which is prepared especially by the restaurant for the Chinese audience! I brought the fabulous Pailin glass noodle salad (vegetarian) which is made from noodles made from beans (carbohydrate free). This spicy salad is especially loved by Annikki and me. As Joanna is on a sort of low carbohydrate diet, I brought Pailin's great tossed salad that Annikki thinks is really great. The kids wanted egg fried rice from the Royal Garden as Samu says they use a different soya sauce when making this dish. Tony enjoyed everything on offer as he patted his stomach lovingly after the meal!

All enjoyed the food and ate their fill.



When we had finished at around 10:30 pm, Pailin and Unnop closed their restaurant early to come to say goodbye to Joanna and they brought her a lovely gift, the carved soap made by the outstanding Thai artist, Ann.



The real down feeling was the departure of Joanna and her two boys as they will not be back for almost a year. They left last Wednesday and it was difficult for me to hold back the tears to see them go. Maybe one gets more physically emotional as one grows older!



It is always difficult to catch Joanna's face in a photograph with her long hair.

Oulu is a small airport serving just around 120000 people. But what I saw at the airport really appalled me and convinced me that Bush and Blair are the biggest terrorist idiots in this world and have destabilised this world.



These long queues which must be being replicated in every airport around the world is just plain stupid!! Remember the number of planes that were being turned around in the air ever since the latest security alert!! They have made life more difficult, more expensive and totally inefficient - and, of course, these two terrorists are not subjected to the controls they have imposed on innocent people around the globe!

On Thursday it was time to take Annikki's mother in for her time at the Old People's Home. From there it was straight to the flea markets.



After a quick visit home, Annikki was off to the beach to collect more stones.



It was surprising to see so few people enjoying a great evening on the beach.



I took some snaps of the sunset - 21:05 now.

Friday was also flea market day followed by an early evening visit to the beach to collect more stones. No sunset to observe today as we went quite early.





I was shocked to see that even the evergreens are burning up this summer.



Plenty of seagulls were around the shoreline. The water line has receeded this summer by over a couple of metres!

On Saturday I went to see Soda play for the Tervarit Reds (instead of the Blacks). Although they lost 3-1, Soda played one of the best games that I have seen him play. He missed a couple of goals by a hair's breadth. He was outstanding in passing the ball to his team-mates and also getting in a lot of tackles - something he had been scared to do till yesterday. His fitness has improved leaps and bounds but he still needs to go for his morning jog and also control his eating habits as they are plain dangerous for a young sportsperson.

I did not have my camera, but I took some great shots using Pailin's camera. I will upload them when Unnop sends them to me.

I will have a good puzzle next week. Still no-one has sent in the Matricies formats used to solve Einstein's puzzle.

Sunday, August 20, 2006

Solution to the Einstein Puzzle

It is only our Brazilian friend who turned up with the answer to the puzzle of two weeks ago.

You have to be a lover of matrix formats to have solved this one.

Our Malayaisn respondent used a different methodolgy, unusual, but it yielded the right answer. Great work Roshin.

If you like playing Sudko, you would have loved trying to solve this puzzle.



















yellow blue red green white
Norwegian Dane Brit German Swede
water tea milk coffee beer
Dunhill Blend Pall Mall Prince Bluemasters
cats horse birds FISH dog
So the German had the Fish.

Kertstin, our German wizard, was on holiday - I am sure she would have turned up the right answer. :-)

But we now have another German wizzy in our midst - Nicole, and she is unbelieveably fast at solving these types puzzles - but she too has been on holiday last week.

Must be something in what the German kids drink!!

I will give you another brain teaser next week - digest this one till then.

Saturday is also Day for Sports

Ever since childhood days Saturday was always a day to take part in sports. Now that I have reached an age where active involvement with sports on field is not for me, my involvement continues in many other ways. This last Saturday was no exception.


Tervarit Reds in a Group Huddle before the game.


Soda, who plays regularly for the Tervarit Blacks, was invited to play for the Reds, a slightly senior team to the one he plays for. I decided to take some time to see how he would fare.


A piercing scream and Soda is DOWN.


He played quite well except that three minutes before half time he fell down with a piercing scream - he had pulled a muscle on his calf.


Thai friends Yut and Khim share Soda's pain off the field.


This, from my long history of playing sports, is the common downfall of a player who refuses to take care of his personal fitness training as jogging and normal muscle strengthening exercises, a bad diet combined with bad resting habits. It is trifecta. It is obvious that in this fast western life-style that the young boy from Thailand with enormous talent has got used to, is also the beginning of his downfall as a possibly great sportsperson.

It is possible to cover up these "injuries" a couple of times. But soon it will become evident to the coaches and talent scouts that the boy is not really serious about his sports as he prefers the fast life associated with running around as a youngster in the town of Oulu.

The choice however is his and only his to make!

That is sad as I have watched this enormously talented youngster being overtaken in calibre on the field by many young Finns who make up for their lack of natural talent by a dedication to their personal health and their personal fitness.

It is really decision time for this youngster - as no one is going to sponsor an injured horse, however much the talent points in his direction.


Samu at his training session.



Samu with his Newcastle United shirt bearing No. 9,
Alan Shearer's number, in a passing session with his team-mate.


The ideal opposite is my other grandson young Samu, who makes up his game by an enormous dedication to the sport of football and his involvement with training, come hell or high water. He follows the careers of all the football greats and tries to emulate many of their feats.

That is dedication!

The excitement on-field was increased as Soda's keys to his cycle, the house and his locker, were lost on the playing field. I took his cycle home in my car after trying to find the keys on the miles of green turf - unsuccessfully.

Luckily, someone found the key bunch and turned it in to the groundsman, and Soda's dad and I collected it from him on Sunday morning!

Saturday afternoon was also Rugby Day, as the Oulu team was playing against the lead Finnish side from Helsinki.

Rugby is a great sport. It is far more exciting top watch than football. The player and referee involvement at each stage is intense.

Although the Oulu side played well, for most part they were defending their goal, and the Helsinki side marched through victorious 27 points to 5.


For the uninitiated, a Rugby Ball!



Helsinki player rises gigh to take possession of the throw-in.



This time it is Oulu's turn to jump high.



Half-time pep talk from the Oulu coach.
Captain Jarmo Stoor listens carefully!



Not a Group Huddle - a fierce Scrum Down!


I do hope Oulu finds some new players as some of their players are recovering from injuries or are playing injured!



However, well done Oulu - I will be there at your home games to support you. I see more and more poeple turning out to support this sport and our Oulu team.

Friday, August 18, 2006

Yes, I am a proud grandfather!

I have three grandchildren, and many grandchildren who have adopted Annikki and me as their grandparents - so we are proud of the achievements of all of our grandchildren. We are also very sad when something goes awry with any of them.

Kannan dressed as a "superstar".


Last weekend, our very good friend, Kannan Balaram, who lives in South Finland in a town called Rauma, visited Oulu to meet our daughter Joanna and her family. She too, loved him just as we love this amazing young man. When we visited her home, Kannan was very busy with his camera. I downloaded the pictures to my computer.


One of the shots of Daniel from Kannan's collection.


I have set up a separate web page called Daniel meets Kannan which is a fascinating study of an evening with one of our grandchildren.

Hope you enjoy it.

On to another topic....

The world is very very small.

Joanna is leaving next Wednesday back to Newcastle for continuing her medical studies. Unfortunately, Tony, her husband cannot travel and be there continuously as he did last year. So Joanna was on the hunt for an au pair, a young Finnish girl wanting to study English who could help her look after the two children - Samuel and Daniel.

Through a friend she met a young girl, Anni. Joanna and her family were to meet with her family on Monday to finalise the details.


Kannan's friend, Anna-Maaria Lukka.


On Sunday morning, before Kannan met Joanna, he went to visit a classmate of his, Anna-Maaria Lukka, from the Business course that he had attended in Oulu last year.


Anni with a younger brother and sister.


Guess what? Yes, Kannan's friend was the young girl's cousin and they live together in a small commune in south Oulu

Kannan met this lovely girl who loves children and finds looking after them totally natural.

Both Annikki and I are so happy that Joanna has such a lovely girl to be with her and especially one who loves children and is experienced in looking after them. We hope she will spend her time improving her English, as that is the primary reason for her taking a year off from her high school to go to Newcastle with Joanna.

Thanks to Kannan for the nice photograph of Anni who will go to England next week, one day after Joanna (they could not get tickets for the same flight).

Bon Voyage to all of you.

Both Annikki and I are already awaiting their speedy return in a year's time.

Monday, August 14, 2006

Thai culture in Oulu

(Cross-posted on the CHAFF Blog.)

The sleepy town of Oulu has never seen such rich culture from the Orient as it did yesterday, and I was proud to be a part of it.



The Thai people who live in Oulu who have been busy building a tradition of Thai food, brought much of the heritage in the form of food, music and dance, as well as their reverance to their religion (Buddhism) and their Monarchy to Oulu yesterday.

Special thanks to the two dynamic people who organised this event - Unnop and Pailin. Unnop is the owner of the Pailin Restaurant located in the Kasarmi area in the shadow of Intiö.

The event was held to celebrate the birthday of the Thai Queen. This has been made synonymous to Mother's Day in Thailand.

The present Thai Monarchy is the longest surviving one in the world. They are loved and respected by the people of Thailand as they stand for love and affection of the people of that great country. Thailand is a democracy, but even the most radical of politicians accept the will of the Monarch as they know he uses wisdom and not political greed when he makes a suggestion.



Finnmatkat, who are one of Finland's leading travel agencies were present to inform about the new direct Oulu to Thailand flights that are being introduced this December.



Artist Rakchanok Pöllänen (née Phunsawat) from Kanchanaburi, wife of Petri Pöllanen, showed the art of vegetable and soap carving with many examples of her work on display. The master carver, Unnop, held the audience spellbound as he carved a watermelon.



There was an exqiuisite performance of Thai dancing by a bevy of beautiful Thai ladies.



And Omena, a Thai beauty, showed the audience how lithe she was as she swayed to the great music played by three young Thai musicians, Khim Surasit Munkmeesri (base guitar, right), Soda (Thai guitar) and Chanyut Nongbua (not seen in this picture).



And the audience of Thais, Finns and other nationalities joined in the dancing to the haunting music.





The exhibition of the art and tradition associated with Thai boxing also was truly eye-stopping as the two teenage boys, Khim Surasit Munkmeesri and Chanyut Ningbua (son of June Bunchuen Koskela), went through the paces of a typical fight.



Hostess Pailin performed better than any professional crooner and the audience rose and cheered her rendition of many Thai favourites as Omena showed that you need not be dressed wth finery to perform a Thai dance!



Inside the restaurant the Thai Buddhist Monk gave darshan to the people and talked to the audience of unity and moral strength.

Several Chaff participants turned up as we had made this the CHAFF meeting for this week.



CHAFF founder Bill Zhang from China was present.



As also was co-founder Kamutaza Tembo from Zambia.



And several expressed their interest in coming to future CHAFF meetings like this beautiful and intelligent Chinese doll, Annie.


Gizela from Germany and Aruna from India.



Kaija from Finland and Usman from Africa.



Kannan came all the way from Rauma to attend.



A cross-section of the huge audience.






The audience represented the entire spectrum of the cosmopolitan life of Oulu from Finns of all ages to people from all corners of the globe bring both colour and a feeling of love and unity to the entire event.



Four local youngsters watched proceedings from afar as we went and asked them to join in!

Many people helped to make this event a grand success.



Rin flew in from Helsinki to help his longtime friend, Unnop, with the arrangements and the cooking.



Jarmo, who has lived in Thailand and learnt to be a Monk acted as the Master of Ceremonies and did yoeman service.





Esa who has just moved into the area near the restaurant not only helped in making the arrangements and cleaning the tables as early as 4.30 in the morning, but he also ran a sausage fry stall!







Rakchanok and Petri Pöllänen, seen relaxing here after the event, were the real stalwarts behind this event as they even brought the special T-Shirts from Thailand and also the traditional musical instruments that were used by the musicians.



The signing of the get-well message to the King of Thailand who is recuperating after an operation was a feature of the event. The book containing the signatures will leave for Thailand on the 27th of this month.

It is sad that some people who did nothing to organise or set up this festival tried to hi-jack the credit to themselves. Credit goes to the people named above and a few more who really dedicated themselves to the success of this event without any thought of making a profit of the proceedings. But others tried to use this event to make a bit of money out of it. That is sad, BUT LUCKILY THEY DID NOT SUCCEED IN THEIR EFFORTS.

As more pictures reach me I will post them on the blog. The pictures above are mainly courtesy of Kannan and also Unnop and Pailin who used Kannan's camera to take some of the shots.