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A literary piece for your magazine

Via: Anand Mahajan


To,

The Editor,


Literary magazine Quirk

Dear editor,

I send here a new work for your magazine. I have been  publishing short literary pieces since 2005, in Muse India, Chowk, and International Journal of Post colonial Literature. Some of my significant works are

- A Star Manqué (in Chowk, US)

- The Shattered World. (In Chowk)

- The Disappearances of a Woman (in Chowk)

- The Recluse (in Chowk)

- Superseded (in Muse India, India)

- Sons of the Soil (in IJPCL, India )

- The Second Immersion (IJPCL)

- The Third View (Selected Short Stories from Indo-Anglican Literature, India)

 

I hope this work, with its new style and highly magnetic literary contents, will be found fit to find its way to the readership of your magazine.

Thanking you,

Yours truly,

 

Anand Mahajan

102./23, Silver Oak apartments,

DLF phase 1, Qutab enclave, Gurgaon-122002 , India 

25/10/09

Cell : 9711415112

 

 

FESTIVAL OF A WITH DRAWER

 

An engineer, scientist, inventor and academic man, after 26 years of active life, was at this moment decidedly preparing to delete all his credentials and identities from the e- world, to step into an average profile settled life. He was terminating his betterment pursuits that continued for years on end, so this day he was decidedly sitting in the Internet cabin. He then started withdrawing his data from various national and international job sites one by one. He removed his ids, passwords, and resumes in his mixed pain and reinforced determination as these details being erased had 20 years old roots; the software would repeatedly ask “ Are you sure?”,  he would overlook and press yes. In about an hour or so, he had withdrawn himself from the e- world; impeccable blocks of his identity fell off the e sphere as cancelled
tickets. Had the Internet services been manned, the operators would have remembered this event and watched for few days the voids created by claiming back the now unusable superior material of his data. Have you ever travelled in
Bombay locals if you been to Bombay? Commuters of a compartment know all others in their vicinity as they have been seeing the same faces for decades together. It is hard for them to believe that certain seats in front of them occupied by same so well familiar people for decades of their train travel are going vacant for initial few stations now for the last few days. Then they gradually believe that the seats have been permanently vacated.

 

He had done the above after a long hunt for ensconcing nicely in his profession. During these months of unbroken efforts, he would see blankly aged people and people about his own age. These moments of blank observations would send chills in his heart. He would envy people in seventies and would become scared as well at sight of people in fifties. He would envy old men because like them, he had no enthusiasm to linger till his fragile old years. He would be afraid of younger men because his average, hackneyed   resources and loneliness would torment him if he lived beyond a limit. He would sit at a bench at the solitary railway station of this town of Himachal, and would look at two taps of drinking water. One of the taps, faulty, would remain open all the time.
Adjacent tap was OK. People would come and ignoring faulty tap would open the good one with their filthy hands. The one open all the time was better off that way, he would think. Sooner or latter the all time open tap would run dry; but it would never be turned by filthy hands.  

 

He tired of his unsuccessful attempts in Metros, had been living in this Himachal town for last two months. This time monsoon had deceived the hopes of everybody.

 

The monsoon months had gone dry this year as never before; complete absence of rains  had killed crops, mounted costs of food grain; unfading  heat had infused disability into the systems of cities, towns, and villages to maintain supply of basic needs like drinking water and electricity. Then there was global slowdown already inflicting stings on life to drain away energy. Masses would think that it was all set for the doomsday. So human beings had now resigned and approved sickness of nature and fate. Then without a hint, the life on this part of earth negotiated a U turn and there were rains allover. Rains- softening, overflowing, cooling, inundating, raising hopes for next plantation, solving problems of water and electricity. Like an American science fiction, forces to destroy and sicken nature were overcome. Gods of
nature like the medics awakened  at a last moment were trying medicine after medicine in the form of continued downpour without caring for stock and variety.  They had to cure this sick part of the earth, come what may.

 

He would be woken out of his sleep at nights because of his dreams. He would sit recovering for sometime; but little would he gain. Then he would read his Hanuman Chalisa and let the words of the powerful prayer sink into his scared soul; as if he were falling down a precipitous cliff and the words of the potent prayer would each become a redoubtable spring which would take the impact of his fall.

 

This night he was feeling much better after the prayer. He came near the front room’s window and sat there. The downpour could still be heard that had continued into 3rd unabated rainy day on this day. Sometimes dry monsoon and sometimes this!

 

Then at 4 AM, the rains had stopped a bit but the valley was allover laden with white clouds. The white invisibility outside was suddenly broken by loudspeaker of a temple somewhere down in the well of the valley. It was, however, something tangible. The prayer’s words pervaded the entire white ether of clouds in a split second, like a rolled carpet covers in acceleration the entire cleaned up white tiled floor of a big room in a jiffy.

 

Not all the time he had suffered here. This was a large flat, and only 1 or 2 % of the space was covered with his belongings. Earlier he used to live clumsily in his flats with floor space covered mostly by the furniture and machines.  He turned on the sports TV channel. A F1 speed car race was being shown. Presently a tyro rich rider rammed the high cost car into the bulwark running along the race track as if it were not a race of professionals. The car was reduced to unusable scrap with everything destroyed. Rescue team people rushed to the spot and remained bent examining the fate of the rider. After some 5 minutes of their examination, the rider-totally unhurt- rose in complete ease and stepped outside the confused mass of metal. Not even a scratch appeared bothering him with any pain. He recalled the boy next door who in his wrath
over some denial by his parents tore his text book vigorously. He tore it repeatedly and could destroy all pages but one that had hard plastic reinforcement.

 

This day- one day past Diwali festival - he returned to Himachal to say his goodbye to the hilly town he had been living in for the last three months. He was in professional line for 26 years now and each year a dull Diwali came which he sometimes not even celebrated. Now he was at the end of his career with all dreams of a big career having been curtailed. He was sick, withered and wilted from tragedies and only now here was this coveted Diwali in this hilly town. The hill town people, mostly shopkeepers had spent no efforts to make the already beautiful hill town remarkably enchanting at extents with colorful lighting and expensive fireworks he had never seen before. The town looked like a hilly lass stepping into most beautiful year of her youth and wearing ornaments that won’t look more beautiful on any other women on earth.
He, in his hardest time, enjoyed Diwali for the first time in years. I know a man who lived all his life in city flats that had shining big diameter expensive pipes in his Kitchen. Never had a forced discharge of soft and fresh water come in those taps of his kitchen. Then when he switched into a small house in a hilly town, there he found gushing crystal clear water into small sink of his kitchen from the thin capillary like pipeline that descended in a serpentine route from somewhere and opened into the sink of his kitchen. 

 

He was traveling in the toy train this day to exit these idyllic  hilly swathes weaved  with clumps of variety of unbelievable  pulchritude in their natural symmetry. He had penned only a part of it and got it published for reading of people allover the outside world but there was a lot more undone; and he was leaving it incomplete. It appeared the hilly swathes, the small towns with tiny houses perched on hillocks, the streams of crystal clears water, the drifting pieces of clouds just next to the trundling train were all looking at him with blaming eyes for his shying away from his work to describe all of  them  to the world of business and concrete away from here. Swaying  of the trees threw little volumes  of cold fresh air inside the windows of the train, and he, tired by traveling from style="COLOR: black">Delhi to Himachal,  snoozed a bit. By a whistle of the train, his snooze and his dream were both broken in the same moment ; in the dream he saw a lad who had practiced a lot at breaking piles of hard bricks by hand to take part in a tournament; in the tournament however, he could not go beyond the second round; there were so many bricks in the pile in the third round to be broken by hand; the lad had broken only two of them with the ones below the top two intact. 




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Amended IT Act comes into effect

Via: Prashant Iyengar

http://www.business-standard.com/india/printpage.php?autono=374538&tp=
Amended IT Act comes into effect
BS Reporter / New Delhi October 28, 2009, 0:37 IST

Aimed at tightening procedures and safeguards to monitor and intercept
data to prevent cybercrimes, the Information Technology (Amendment)
Act, 2008, became effective today. The Act was passed by both the
Houses of Parliament in December last year and was notified in
February this year.

Besides monitoring and interception, the amended Act also deals with
the appointment of Indian Computer Emergency Response Team, which
deals with computer security and situations arising from cyber
attacks.

“A rapid increase in the use of computer and internet has given rise
to new forms of crimes like sending offensive emails and multimedia
messages, child pornography, cyberterrorism, publishing sexually
explicit materials in electronic form, video voyeurism, e-commerce
frauds like cheating by personation etc. So, penal provisions were
required to be included in the Information Technology Act, 2000,” the
government said in a statement today.

When floated for public feedback this May, the draft amendments
(particularly Section 69A) had stirred up a hornets’ nest. Critics
argued that the amendments gave the government blanket power to block
news portals and other sites for ‘offensive’ content and could be
abused.

The government, under Section 69A of the amended IT Act, can “block
public access of any information generated, transmitted, received,
stored or hosted in a computer resource” in the interest of
sovereignty or integrity of India; defence of India; security of the
state; friendly relations with foreign states; public order; and to
prevent incitement to the commission of any cognisable offence
relating to the above.

These orders will be carried out by government-appointed officers, not
below the rank of a joint secretary. Critics, however, argue that
these rules could end up violating the rights of internet users and
companies if not implemented in a “fair and just” manner.

“With the advent of these rules, authorised agencies within the
government now have greater administrative power. However, adequate
due process should be followed in ensuring that exercise of such power
does not impinge on privacy or freedom of speech and expression of
citizens,” said Suhaan Mukerji, principal associate of law firm
Amarchand & Mangaldas.

“It is a comprehensive Act and lawyers will now have to learn and use
technology. Besides, it will also open a lot of litigation and the
rules will decide the litigation. Moreover, crime that was not taken
seriously will get court redressal,” said Vijay Mukhi, e-security
expert and consultant at DSK Legal.

The Information Technology Act was enacted in 2000 with a view to
provide legal recognition to e-commerce and e-transactions, to
facilitate e-governance and prevent computer-based crimes. “However,
because attack vectors are changing everyday, the IT Act can’t be
static,” added Mukhi.

“There would be certain security practices that are prescribed by the
rules. The adjudicating officers can only decide on the civil issues,”
explained Data Security Council of India Chairman Shyamal Ghosh. The
government, under Section 70B of the IT Act, has appointed ICERT to
monitor offences under the Act.
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Tinker.Solder.Tap: A Graphic Novel

Via: Jeebesh

http://www.sarai.net/publications/occasional/tinker-solder-tap

(Free Download)

We live in a tumultuous media environment. There is widespread confusion, uncertainty and awe at the inventiveness of the thousands of people in media networks who innovate, copy, tinker, recycle, produce, remix and relay. The protagonists of Tinker.Solder.Tap bring alive the ways in which the relationship between life and the media has been re-scripted in the various neighbourhoods of our cities. The story begins in the mid-80s, when a man returns home with an object called a VCR. The chain of effects that follows transforms irreversibly the social life of the neighbourhood and its reverberations can be felt all over the world.

Produced and Designed at the Sarai Media Lab

Text: Bhagwati Prasad
Graphics: Amitabh Kumar
Translation and Editing: Shveta Sarda
Additional Research: Rakesh Kumar Singh, Lokesh
Pencilling sequential comic pages: Raja Pocket Books (Raj Comics)
Design and Cover: Amitabh Kumar

Published by
The Sarai Programme
Centre for the Study of Developing Societies
29, Rajpur Road, Delhi 110054, India
Tel: (+91) 11 2394 2199 Fax: (+91) 11 2394 3450
Email: dak@sarai.net
www.sarai.net
Delhi 2009

Any part of this book may be reproduced in any form without the prior written permission
of the publishers for educational and non-commercial use. The authors and publishers
would, however, like to be informed.

This work is part of the project, “Social and Material Life of Media Piracy” of Sarai-CSDS
and Alternative Law Forum (Bangalore) supported by International Development Research
Centre (IDRC), Canada .

ISBN 9788190585316
Published by the Director, CSDS.
Printed by Impress, New Delhi
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Open source software can save India $2 bn

Via: =?UTF-8?B?TmlzaGFudCB8IOCkqOCkv+CktuCkvuCkgeCkpA==?=

Open source software can save India $2 bn
[http://www.business-standard.com/india/news/open-source-software-can-save-india-2-bn/369858/]
Leslie D`Monte / New Delhi September 12, 2009, 0:18 IST

As Indian consumers and enterprises evaluate the option of upgrading
to Microsoft’s much-touted operating system (OS) Windows 7, to be
officially launched on October 22, the free and open source software
(FOSS) community has fired yet another salvo at proprietary software.

In the year 2010, if FOSS is adopted at 50 per cent levels across the
economy, India can save around $2 billion (around Rs 9,800 crore),
suggests a study conducted by the Indian Institute of
Management-Bangalore. Even a very conservative estimate, notes the
study, pegs the cost savings for use of FOSS on servers as an
operating system or as an application at Rs 138 crore in 2010.

Moreover, anti-virus software sales in 2010 is likely to touch Rs
2,000 crore. This entire amount is a cost that can be avoided if FOSS
products are adopted.

For instance, based on the projected sales of personal computers
(desktops and notebooks), the study indicates that even if 50 per cent
desktops are fitted with a FOSS operating system, the savings will be
Rs 985 crore; if 70 per cent have FOSS, the savings will rise to
around Rs 1,380 crore. The study, done with help from professors of
the Indian Institute of Technology, Mumbai, covered 20 organisations
that have adopted FOSS.

Examples of cost savings with FOSS abound in the Indian context,
asserts Prof Rahul De of the IIM-Bangalore who conducted the study.
For instance, the Life Corporation of India, which — with an IT
infrastructure of 3,500 servers and 30,000 desktops — saved about Rs
42 crore by adopting FOSS.

Intangible benefits include ability to experiment with new
technologies, says De. The IT@School project of Kerala replaced
Windows software with FOSS on 50,000 desktops in schools across the
state. Tangible benefits amounted to Rs 49 crore.

“The study indicates that FOSS is now mainstream, and being used
successfully by commercial enterprises,” notes De. He maintains that
the study was conducted independently, though it was sponsored by Red
Hat — a commercial Linux vendor and competitor of Microsoft.

Pallavi Kathuria, director, server business group of Microsoft India,
counters that the total cost of ownership (TCO) is lower for its
software products.

“IDC in its study estimates that, on an average, 68 per cent of a
three-year TCO consists of staffing and training costs, and another 15
per cent of TCO consists of expenses related to downtime. Acquisition
costs for software turn out to be just a fraction of TCO, averaging
only about 7 per cent of the total cost over three years,” explains
Kathuria.

A study by Wipro Technologies, notes Kathuria, reveals “...that
servers running Windows are 13-33 per cent less costly and require
29-56 per cent less IT labour to patch than similar systems running
open source software”. According to internal research, she adds,
“...almost 60 per cent of open source-related vendors are utilising
traditional commercial licensing strategies to generate revenue from
open source software”.

Prof De does not agree. He insists that “...it's the initial
acquisition cost that makes a difference”.

The IIM-B study has only highlighted the debate of open source
software versus proprietary software. It was only late last month that
64 educational institutes across Maharashtra, including the Tata
Institute of Social Sciences (TISS) and the Homi Bhabha Centre for
Science Education, protested against the state government’s MoU with
Microsoft India, wherein the software major will set up three IT
academies and train government school teachers on ICTs.

“It is against basic pedagogical principles to hand over these basic
educational processes of teacher professional development and
curriculum design, to a private technology vendor (read Microsoft)
whose core competency is in writing software products and whose main
interest is in creating mass markets for its software products,” read
the protest letter which was addressed to the Government of
Maharashtra.

“If we take up IT literacy programmes, we can only teach software that
we know. I do not see anything wrong in this,” counters Kathuri,
adding: “We do not compete with open source but with commercial open
source vendors,” insists Kathuria.

But the debate refuses to die.

It was only this July that IT majors like IBM, Sun Microsystems and
Red Hat shot letters to industry bodies — Nasscom (for software) and
MAIT (for hardware) — and the Department of Information Technology,
protesting over the inclusion of clauses which allow for ‘multiple
standards’ and ‘royalty on software’ versus a ‘single’ standard and
‘free’ software.

And there has never been a more intense global industry debate over
‘open standards’. On the one hand is Microsoft’s Office Open XML
(OOXML) file format backed by Apple, Novell, Wipro, Infosys, TCS and
Nasscom. On the other is the Open Document Format, supported by the
likes of IBM, Sun Microsystems, Red Hat, Google, the Department of
Information Technology, National Informatics Centre, CDAC, IIT-Mumbai
and IIM-Ahmedabad.

States such as Delhi, Kerala and others from the North-East are heavy
adopters of ODF file formats which are open and free (excluding
maintenance and support).

India recently maintained its earlier stance of ‘No’ to the software
major’s OOXML (but which has been accepted by the International
Organisation for Standardisation as an international standard). ODF
proponents oppose OOXML on the grounds that 'multiple standards' are
not good, while Microsoft argues that OOXML — a recognised standard by
ECMA International too — is a response to evolving technology formats
in line with continual evolving technology systems.

The debate, conclude analysts, appears to be a proxy for product
competition in the marketplace.
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Groups urge EU to block Oracle's plan to buy Sun

Via: =?UTF-8?B?TmlzaGFudCB8IOCkqOCkv+CktuCkvuCkgeCkpA==?=

Groups urge EU to block Oracle's plan to buy Sun


BRUSSELS, Oct 20 (Reuters) - EU regulators should block Oracle Corp's
(ORCL.O) plan to buy open source database MySQL via its takeover of
Sun Microsystems Inc (JAVA.O), as Oracle may hinder MySQL's
development, two technology and consumer groups said.

The European Commission, which polices competition in the 27-country
European Union, is probing world No. 2 software maker Oracle's $7
billion takeover of Sun, with a decision expected by Nov. 19 on
whether to approve the deal. [ID:nL3508980]

The EU executive said last month it was concerned the acquisition
could hinder competition in the database market and it wanted to make
sure alternatives would continue to be available to users.

In a letter to Competition Commissioner Neelie Kroes dated Oct. 19,
digital civil liberties organisation Open Rights Group,
non-governmental intellectual property organisation Knowledge Ecology
International and software developer Richard Stallman said they shared
the same concerns.

"If Oracle is allowed to acquire MySQL, it will predictably limit the
development of the functionality and performance of the MySQL software
platform, leading to profound harm to those who use MySQL software to
power applications," they wrote. They said Oracle was likely to
protect its core product, the Oracle proprietary database, from losing
market share and shrinking licensing fees at the expense of MySQL.

Knowledge Ecology International (KEI) is an independent legal
organisation that lobbies for free software in government, open access
for the Internet and social issues. Stallman is the creator of GNU, a
widely used free operating system.

MySQL creator Michael Widenius urged Oracle on Monday to commit to
selling MySQL in order to resolve antitrust concerns.[ID:nLJ715578]

MySQL, which competes mainly against Microsoft Corp's (MSFT.O) SQL
Server, is used to run websites operated by companies including Google
(GOOG.O), Facebook and Amazon.com (AMZN.O). Its main customers are
small and mid-sized businesses.

Analysts said the regulatory delay could hurt Sun, the No. 4 maker of
computer servers, as rivals Hewlett-Packard Co (HPQ.N) and IBM (IBM.N)
offer incentives to woo Sun customers.

http://www.reuters.com/article/idUSLK36840720091020
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“Living people declared dead”

Via: Prashant Iyengar

http://www.thehindu.com/2009/10/23/stories/2009102359660300.htm Back

Other States

“Living people declared dead”

Reveals RTI query in Uttar Pradesh

Lucknow: One man’s Right to Information (RTI) application has led to
the Uttar Pradesh land consolidation department admitting on Thursday
that living people were declared dead in its records due to
irregularities.

The matter came to light when Lal Bihari, a man who had been declared
dead, sought the records through the RTI Act.

“I was declared dead in the records and all my land was grabbed by the
influential people of my village using forged documents,” Mr. Bihari,
a native of Hardoi district, said here.

“After making numerous efforts to prove myself alive, I decided to
file an RTI application to expose the scam.”

However, Mr. Bihari was provided details of only 20 such ‘dead’ people.

“I had asked for the details of all such living ‘dead’ people in the
state, but the department only provided me the details of 20 people in
10 districts,” Mr. Bihari said.

“There are thousands of such cases across the state and the department
has just completed its formality by providing me the details of only
10 districts,” Mr. Bihari claimed.

Deputy director of the Chakbandi Department Ashok Chandra said, “We
have provided Mr. Bihari with the details of Unnao, Hardoi, Lucknow,
Azamgarh, Muzaffarnagar, Siddharthanagar, Kannauj, Barabanki, Faizabad
and Rampur districts.

“There may be more such cases and we are looking into the matter.”- IANS

© Copyright 2000 - 2009 The Hindu
 Permalink

Over 11,000 obscene call complaints

Via: Prashant Iyengar

http://www.thehindu.com/2009/10/20/stories/2009102059010400.htm Back

New Delhi

Over 11,000 obscene call complaints

New Delhi: Delhi Police has received over 11,000 complaints from women
that they have got objectionable calls or SMS in the last ten months.
A total of 11,027 calls were received at the ‘Anti-Obscene Calls Cell’
set up by Delhi Police’s Crime Branch between December 20, 2008 and
October 15 this year.

“Of these complaints, action has been taken in 10,130 cases,” Delhi
Police Commissioner Y. S. Dadwal told reporters here. Women can
complain about such calls on a toll-free helpline 1096 or call
011-27894455. They can SMS the complaint to 0-9911135446, fax to
011-27292523 or email to acp-sit-dl@nic.in.

© Copyright 2000 - 2009 The Hindu
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Meeting in the Memory of K. Balagopal- Fri 16th October (5 pm) at Ashirvad

Via: siddharth narrain

Dear All,

There will be a meeting in memory of human rights activist and lawyer, K. Balagopal. Balagopal, who was an inspiration to many in the civil liberties and human rights movement in India, died of a cardiac arrest  on October 8th.


Balagopal was the  founder member of Andhra Pradesh Civil Liberties Committee (APCLC) and
later of Human Rights Forum. ,He  was also an advocate who fought
several cases to obtain justice for the poor without charge. Known for
his principled stands and sharp legal mind, he lived and worked with
utmost simplicity and commitment—a comrade and a friend whose loss is
irreparable. Balagopal was known across the country for his profound scholarship and, more than that, fearless activism in the arena of human rights covering a wide range of issues.

Please forward this email to others who might be interested in coming.


There will also be a screening of a short film put together by Deepa Dhanraj from interviews conducted with Balagopal over the years.


Venue: Ashirvad, no. 30,  St Mark's Road Cross


Date: October 16th (Friday)

Time: 5pm to 7pm (tea will be served at 4:30 pm)


In solidarity,
Siddharth

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SARD : French attempt at finding another solution for artist income and free creation on the Internet

Via: Philippe Langlois

SARD in french mean "Society for Acceptation and Repartition of
Donations" and is a solution where internet users and organizations
donate voluntarily some money to one artist or a group of artist
(through this SARD).
The SARD takes care of splitting the money between several artists if
needed, process the payment and offer Artist a central point for
collecting donation money.

There is a monopoly in France to the SACEM organization and other
same organizations (called SPRD) which forbids any other entity of
collecting rights fees for artists. Thus, that forbids new business
model and new income models for artists.

SARD is not at all managing rights or collecting money for them, but
is based on the more Internet-like notion of "gift" and "donation".
This way, SARD does not fall in the monopoly of these SPRDs and
creates a new avenue for many other SARD-like entities to be created.

We're in the process of building this SARD, you can follow it (mostly
in french) on:
http://www.sard-info.org/

Best,
Philippe.
 Permalink

Fwd: Humanizing Management : An appeal

Via: "Aravali Institute of Management"

 













Date: Thu, 8 Oct 2009 01:19:18 -0700 (PDT)

From: "Prof. G..P. Rao" <gpraospandanfhv@yahoo.com>

Subject: Humanising Management : An appeal.

To: aryav@sancharnet.in, satish@winsomegroup.com, bmljain@gmail.com

Cc: amitasrivastava123@yahoo.com





HUMANIZING MANAGEMENT : AN APPEAL

 

This is an appeal to philanthropreneurs and others involved and interested in
the orientation of values in management education and profession.

 

This appeal emanates from a small group of industrial organizations, management
institutions and individuals constituting Spandan, an NGO wedded to
propagation and inculcation of select human values as integral to work ethics
and culture in an organization. The assumption and experience is that such an
integration enables the organization achieve an optimal balance between Results
and Relations. Such an integration over a period of time leads in developing,
what can be called as, Functionally Humane Organization, with due emphasis
being accorded to Results (Functionality) and Relations (Humaneness). The role
of an institution like Spandan, it is submitted, is to facilitate the
institutions and their management develop themselves as
functionally humane human systems.

 

Spandan has happened to evolve over a period of time a process and an
approach to address the issue. The process is called 3 D Process of
Inculcation of Values comprising Diagnosis, Discovery and Development as the
three basic components of the process. The Values are, however, anchored to the
Mission of the
organization and suitably dovetailed with other functional areas and social
fabric of the organization.





The approach is called Spandan approach. 'Spandan', a word in Sanskrit, denotes
'heartbeat', 'vibration', 'pulsation' and 'echo'. The message is that a manager
should develop such sensitivity towards his work group, organization
and human beings in general. Such sensitivity emanates only from a set of
beliefs and assumptions a person has towards others. One such belief
a person must possess is in the innate divinity, basic goodness and
intrinsic altruism in human beings. The role of institutions like Spandan, as
mentioned, is to facilitate the management and organizations go through the
process of humanizing by themselves.

 

The task is important. We have, however, come to believe that the task of
propagation and inculcation of values in management through interface between
management education and profession is formidable enough to call for
cooperation and support from like minded institutions and individuals in
general and philanthropreneurs in particular.. Hence, this appeal.

 

What exactly we are looking for is an institutional framework, support and base
for carrying out the task at hand. The essential components for the said
framework are:





A. Infrastructure - academic and administrative; and,





B. A team of facilitators to be identified, inducted, trained and
made part of the Spandan Core Group.





“A” could be made available. But investment on human
capital in the form of Facilitators “B” is a must.





These are ideas which are understandably only suggestive. Depending upon the
responses of cooperation, support and/or proposals for partnership,
further discussions and deliberations can follow.

 

I do hope that this appeal generates comments, feedback and suggestions
for furthering the noble cause undertaken by Spandan.

 

Looking forward for favourable responses to the appeal,

 

Cordially,

 

G. P. Rao

Founder Chairman

Spandan, Noida, India

(Mobile: 0-93502-47866.)



 














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