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Thursday, February 23, 2017

NCP chief Sharad Pawar completes 50 years of Parliamentary career

NCP chief Sharad Pawar completes 50 years of Parliamentary career
CAMIL PARKHE | Wednesday, 22 February 2017 AT 11:50 PM IST
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Pune: Former Union Minister and Nationalist Congress Party (NCP) Chief Sharad Pawar, one of the tallest political figures in the state for the past few decades,  completed 50 years of his Parliamentary career on Wednesday, February 22.

Fifty years ago on this day, Pawar was elected as a member of the State Legislative Assembly from Baramati constituency. Since then, he has been a public representative for five consecutive decades, serving Maharashtra and also the nation in various important positions.

Pawar was appointed as minister of state for home at the age of 32 years in 1972 and appointed a cabinet minister two years later. He became Maharashtra’s chief minister at the age of 38 in 1978 and to this date, he continues to hold the record of being the youngest chief minister of Maharashtra.

He was sworn as the state chief minister four times (1978, 1988, 1990 and 1993). He has also served as the leader of the opposition in the State Assembly.  >>Contd on P2

And aslo servged as defence minister in the PV Narasimha Rao government and as agriculture minister in the two terms of the UPA government. He was recently chosen for the Padma Vibhushan award.

While continuing with his political career,  Pawar has also been associated with various other fields including the cooperative movement, an educational body like the Rayat Shikshan Sanstha and cricket.

No other person in the state has had a varied types of interest in different spheres, a fact which has been acknowledged even by his critics.

One of the senior most politicians in the country, Pawar has been praised for his administrative skills, an in-depth knowledge of the issues he deals with and friendship with leaders cutting across the political barriers.

In a comment posted on social media on Wednesday, the NCP chief has remarked: “I have completed 50 years of my parliamentary career today. It was on this day, that I was elected by the people of Baramati as a member of Maharashtra Legislative Assembly with a thumping majority. Since then, I have got the opportunity to serve  uninterrupted as a member of the State Assembly, the Legislative Council, the Lok Sabha and the Rajya Sabha. I am grateful to the people in this regard. In the past 50 years, I have experienced many ups and downs and have faced many challenges as well. But, because of the strong support of the common masses and colleagues, I was able to work in the public life. Henceforth too, I will keep working for the development of labour class, farmers, women, workers, those neglected and the new generation. I would prefer to be in their debts for the entire life.”

Tuesday, February 21, 2017

Thailand govt affirms transformation-led investments

Thailand govt affirms transformation-led investments
CAMIL PARKHE | Monday, 20 February 2017 AT 12:18 PM IST
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Bangkok: The Thailand government has highlighted partnership and collaboration on both regional as well as global level, also public and private sectors, as the keys to materialise transformation and competitiveness with five investment
agendas in focus.

Thailand Prime Minister Gen Prayut Chan-ocha speaks to the audience during ‘Opportunity Thailand 2017’ seminar held by the Thailand Board of Investment in Bangkok.

In his speech at the opening of ‘Opportunity Thailand 2017’ seminar held by Thailand Board of Investment here on February 15, Thailand Prime Minister Gen. Prayut Chan-ocha told over 3,000 participants, “Amidst global changes and their impact on the economy of each country, Thailand has laid out a clear national development strategy for the next 20 years to enhance national competitiveness. We have achieved political and economic stability and we are ready to move further to get out of the middle-income trap. That can be achieved through the ‘burst from the inside’ strategy initiated by King Bhumibol Adulyadej, meaning using the inner strength to lead development.”

Deputy Prime Minister Somkid Jatusripitak also confirmed the government’s commitment to promoting collaboration and partnership. “It’s now time for partnership, not competition. As a country, we have to bring together strengths in different sectors to create a new value chain,” said the Deputy Prime Minister.

ST staffer attends Thailand initiative 
Sakal Times Assistant Editor Camil Parkhe was among the 62 journalists representing the print and electronics media from various parts of the world. Thailand Board of Investment had invited the international journalists to visit Thailand from February 13 to 18 as a part of 'Opportunity Thailand' initiative to witness various investment opportunities in the country.

Sakal Times was among the only five newspaper and industries federation agencies from India chosen by the Thailand government for the Thailand tour. 

The Indian delegation was led by Kanokporn Chotipal,  Director and Consul (Investment), Thailand Board of Investment, Mumbai. The other Indian journalists delegates were  Amiti Sen, Nivedita Mukherjee and Rajesh Rai from New Delhi, Pratik Ghosh from Mumbai, and Hari Kumar Maddi from Visakhapatnam.

Monday, February 6, 2017

Thailand to host meet to woo global investors

Thailand to host meet to woo global investors
CAMIL PARKHE | Monday, 6 February 2017 AT 01:04 PM IST              
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PUNE: Thailand Board of Investment will organise an international seminar ‘Opportunity Thailand 2017’ in Bangkok on February 15 to promote investment opportunities in Thailand and share with the global community the Thailand 4.0 model driven by value-based economy.

The seminar is expected to be attended by over 2,500 investors, a statement issued here said. 

According to Hirunya Suchinai, Secretary General of the Board of Investment Thailand (BOI), Thailand Prime Minister General Prayut Chan-o-cha will preside over the seminar and deliver a keynote speech on ‘Thailand 4.0 Means Opportunity Thailand’.

Key speakers at the seminar, include Deputy Prime Minister Dr Somkid Jatusripitak, Minister attached to the Prime Minister Office Dr. Suvit Maesincee and Industry Minister Dr Uttama Savanayana.

The seminar will include sessions on various industries including aerospace, automation and robotics and medical devices, with key speakers in such respective sectors.

According to Thai government’s 4.0 model, 10 new target industries have been identified as the New Engines of Growth to transform the country into a regional innovation hub through the use of creativity, advanced technology, research and development and human resource development.

Some of the new engine of growth industries are next-generation automotive, smart electronics, digital, affluent medical and wellness tourism, agricultural and biotechnology, food for the future, aerospace, automation and robotics.

Thailand Board of Investment has planned roadshows in Thailand and abroad in order to attract new investment.

The  Board of Investment delegations will also visit Singapore, India, South Korea, the US, Germany, Sweden and Japan to attract investors to Thailand.

Monday, October 10, 2016

Church call for Special prayer for peace and safety on borders

Special prayer for peace and safety on borders
CAMIL PARKHE | Monday, 10 October 2016 AT 11:24 AM IST
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PUNE: The Catholic Bishops Conference of India (CBCI) has called for a day of prayer all over the country on Sunday, October 16, in view of the ongoing religious events of various communities and the ‘extraordinary challenges’ on the country’s borders.

The CBCI is the apex body of the Catholic Church in the country.

CBCI President Cardinal Baselios Cleemis has issued a circular to the church hierarchy in the country, asking them to conduct special religious services for the nation on October 16.

Cardinal Cleemis in his circular has referred to Dasara festival on October 11, Muharram, a day of special significance to the Muslims, on October 12, and the birth of Guru Granth commemorated by the Sikhs on October 20 and the forthcoming Diwali festival.

“Amidst all these festivals, our beloved country is going through extraordinary challenges especially on its borders. The Catholic church prays for our beloved country, for justice, peace, prosperity and welfare, harmony and unity,” Cardinal Cleemis said.

While urging the church leaders to conduct special liturgies and prayers for the nation on this day, the CBCI President has also invited people of goodwill to join in praying for the country.

“May every place of worship chime with prayers for our beloved nation, its leaders and its people,” the cardinal has said.

Wednesday, July 20, 2016

Mar Thoma Syrian Church okays cremation for clergy

Mar Thoma Syrian Church okays cremation for clergy
Reporters Name | CAMIL PARKHE | Wednesday, 20 July 2016 AT 12:00 AM IST
    

http://goo.gl/dPO8aa
Pune: Mar Thoma Syrian Church, which claims its 2,000-year-old tradition from St Thomas, one of the 12 apostles of Jesus Christ, has permitted cremation of bodies of its clergy.

The departure from the church’s tradition of burying the dead is due to shortage of space for burials.

A circular issued by the Mar Thoma Syrian Church, having its headquarters at Thiruvalla in Kerala, said that the burial will be permitted only after the final rites service is completed at the church. The mortal remains after the cremation have to be later buried in either the family vault or single vault.

Although cremation of a practising Christian person is not a rare occurrence, this is for the first time that a policy decision on cremation has been taken by a Church authority.

Pune Bishop Thomas Dabre has welcomed the move, stating that the practice of cremation is eco-friendly and it is not against the Church’s doctrines.

Speaking to Sakal Times, Bishop Dabre said, “As per the centuries-old Christian tradition, the dead were buried and not cremated. In 18th and 19th centuries, cremation was banned in the church as it was said to be inconsistent with the Church’s belief in resurrection of the dead. However this view has been changed now and resurrection is perceived as spiritual and not physical. Therefore, now if requested by relatives, the Church permits cremation of bodies of the faithful.”

Bishop Dabre said that in Pune too some Christians were cremated after securing the necessary permission from the Church authorities. 

Tuesday, April 12, 2016

Preface ‘Contribution of Christian Missionaries in India’

‘Contribution of Christian Missionaries in India’
Written by Camil Parkhe
Published by Gujarat Sahitya Prakash,
Post Box No 70, Anand, 388 001
Gujarat, India

Foreword byAnosh Malekar
Assistant Editor,
The Indian Express (Pune edition)


Email: booksgsp@gmail.com
First Published in 2007

ISBN 978 81 8937 36 2



PREFACE
by Author Camil parkhe

I was introduced to the missionary way of life for the first time when I was a primary school student. I was then studying in third standard in St. Teresa Boys School at Haregaon in Ahmednagar district of Maharashtra. In the 1960s, European priests were working in most of the mission centres in Ahmednagar district, as was the case in other parts of India. Most of these European priests were in their middle ages. Fr. Hubert Sixt, a strict disciplinarian, was the head of this rural primary school and Fr. Richard Wasserer was the local parish priest. Their personalities and nature differed. Children from the school and the hostel were friendly with Fr. Wasserer who was slightly elder among the two.

St. Teresa Boys School in those days was housed in rows of rooms with tiled roofs and small verandah. The local parish also owned a farm where a water tank was just constructed. Every morning, all of us staying at the school hostel would attend the holy mass in the church. The school would open at around 7.30 a m. Fr. Wasserer would take us hostelites to the water tank for a swim before the break of the dawn. Water was of course used to be warm at that time. Most of us hostelites took their first lessons in swimming there. Fr. Wasserer would help us to overcome the fear of water. Once when such swimming session was in progress, one of the walls of the tank got washed away and water gushed out, along with the children and the priest. Fortunately nobody was hurt.

The personality of Fr. Sixt was altogether different. The school students and hostelites were scared of this priest who had a German shepherd as his pet. However when any of the hostelites fell ill or got injured while playing, they would experience the care and affection of this priest. Fr. Sixt, a German who was drafted into the Nazi Medical Corps during the Second World War would personally examine the boys and give them medicines. If required, he also used to administer injections. The children dreaded the burning sensation experienced while applying iodine on fresh bleeding wounds or the injection needle. I think this fear had contributed to a great extent in creating fear about Fr. Sixt in our minds.

My two elder brothers were also in the same school and hostel. Children from nearby Ekwadi, Donwadi, Teenwadi (Wadi means hamlet in Marathi) and Undirgaon studied in the school. The lodging and boarding fee per hostelite was Rs five per month. Nonetheless, many of the parents found it difficult to pay even this small fee in time. However, Fr Sixt never admonished or expelled any hostelite for not paying the fees.

Today, Christian priests and nuns are running schools in several towns and villages of Ahmednagar district and also in the neighbouring Pune, Aurangabad, Nashik and Beed districts. But during those days, a large number of local Christian students from Shrirampur, Rahuri and neighbouring talukas in the district completed primary education in St. Teresa schools for Boys and Girls at Haregaon and shifted to Dnyanmata School and St. Mary's School at Sangamner in the same district for the secondary education.

At both places, they were accommodated in the hostels. Poverty was the major reason why people kept their children in these hostels. Besides, most of these students would have not continued their education had they remained with their families in the villages. The atmosphere in their families or villages was not education-friendly. The entire Catholic mission centres in Ahmednagar district then were founded and run by the Jesuits, the priests belonging the Society of Jesus.
Ahmednagar and Aurangabad districts are among the areas in Maharashtra where there is a sizeable number of Christians - Catholics and Protestants. The grandparents or great grandparents of these people had embraced Christianity in the 19th century.
After appearing for the matriculation examination from Dnyanmata or even before that, many students used to join St. Joseph Technical Institute in Pune, which was also run by the Jesuits. Fr Ivo Meyer who founded the St Luke's Hospital (also called as German Hospital) in Shrirampur was later director at this institute. The students who hailed from outside Pune stayed in the institute's hostel and acquired diplomas in various courses like turner, fitter, and wireman. The institute during those days provided trained skilled workmen to Pune’s reputed industrial units including the Tata Motors, Bajaj Auto and Greaves. Most of these students were interviewed at the St Joseph institute's campus itself and recruited by these companies for various posts.

These young Christians whose parents or grandparents were erstwhile dalits (belonging to the erstwhile untouchable communities) and had no social or financial capabilities to take up graduation or post graduation courses. The Haregaon-Sangamner-Pune route proved very beneficial to these youngsters and their community as it led to their social and economical upward mobility. The number of Christian youths from Ahmednagar district who took this route is enormous. This path was followed by at least two generations. The financial status of the Christian families from Ahmednagar district, which migrated to Pune in search of greener pastures in this manner, is far better than those who lived behind.

This progress was possible only due to financial and psychological support offered by the missionaries to this otherwise neglected community. Although before their conversion, these Christians belonged to the erstwhile untouchable Mahar and other castes, they have been deprived of their right to reservations for education and jobs due to their conversion to Christianity. Ironically, reservations and other benefits are extended to their dalit family members and other relatives who embrace either Buddhism or Sikhism and others who have continued to be Hindus.

With their limited resources, missionaries have enabled this community to be self-reliant and succeeded in granting them social status. Jesus Christ has said that ‘Man does not live by bread alone’ but these missionaries made efforts to ensure that this poor community secured their bread as well. A majority of Christians in India belong to the erstwhile Scheduled Castes and Scheduled Tribes. I have referred to the example of the missionary work in Ahmednagar district only to illustrate the contribution of Christian missionaries to the progress of the underprivileged sections of society. The missionaries have given a similar helping hand to economically and socially backward Christians and also others in different parts of India.

There are thousands of schools, colleges, hospitals, dispensaries, orphanages and other institutions run by Christian missionaries in India. A large number of persons belonging to the so-called cream of the society and working in various fields are the alumni of these Christian institutions. A majority of the beneficiaries of all these institutions are, of course, non-Christians. The reason being, these institutions are open to persons of all religions and castes. The Christians studying in a majority of these institutions may be hardly one or two per cent. The alumni of these institutions include the present President of India, Dr. A P J Abdul Kalam and several veterans from different walks of life.

The contribution made by Christian missionaries especially in the educational and social fields is noteworthy. It is often alleged that Christian missionaries make use of these institutions to lure or compel the students and others to convert to Christianity. The millions of non-Christians who have been educated in the missionary educational institutions and others who have availed of services in other Christian institutions only can vouch whether the allegation holds good. If the allegation were true, the number of Christians in the country would have increased manifold during the past century.
Missionaries offered free education and medical services in remote parts of the country both before and after Independence. They have never taken into consideration the caste or religion of the beneficiaries. The term ‘missionary spirit’ now has become synonymous to selfless and dedicated service even in Indian languages.

While carrying out their routine work, the Christian missionaries in the past five centuries have contributed a great deal simultaneously in the fields of literature, social awakening, education and medical services in various States. This book however refers to the life and work of only a few missionaries. There are also many missionaries who have now gone into oblivion despite rendering great service to society. A majority of these European who toiled in the drought-prone Ahmednagar district for several years have found the final resting place at the cemetery in Sangamner town. A souvenir released by the Nashik diocese to commemorate the 150 years of evangelisation by German Jesuits in western India contained the list of Catholic priests and nuns who worked at these mission centres. Fr Joe Ubelmesser from Germany who said that he was adding the list to the German Jesuits archives in his message had rightly said that 'sometimes the cemeteries are containing more history than many books.'

While doing research on this project, I have learnt about the commendable service given by several Catholic and Protestant missionaries. My only regret is that it was not possible to write about all of them in this small book.

Camil Parkhe

April 2007

Monday, April 11, 2016

Camil Parkhe with his book Maharashtra Charitrakosh Times of India news

Camil Parkhe with his book Maharashtra Charitrakosh

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PUNE: When a man burns the midnight oil for four years and painstakingly compiles biographies of 1,244 Maharashtrians, between the years 1800 to 2000, it is time to doff one's hat in appreciation. Times of India staffer Camil Parkhe is the
"Atre's book was pure magic, as it covered every aspect of Maharashtra, be it the people, society, religion, politics and literature, in his inimitable humorous style. I learnt more about Maharashtra through this book, than from many other volumes put together."
The Times of India 2001-01-01