Thursday, June 24, 2010

Youth from Maoist heartland could head for Bayern Munich

A talented young footballer from West Bengal's Maoist-hit West Midnapore district may soon find himself in Germany, training with the famed Bayern Munich club, thanks to a police initiative to lure away the youth of the area from the rebels.

The lucky youngster would be chosen from among tribal teams set to represent various rebel-affected areas in a club-level soccer tourney at Lalgarh next month.

The tournament's best player would be sent to Bayern Munich, with the state police bearing the entire cost, said Director General of Police Bhupinder Singh.

The decision was taken to dissuade the youth from falling prey to the Maoists' attempts to induct them in their militant wing - Peoples' Liberation Guerrilla Army (PLGA). Unemployed youth are getting drawn to the rebels not for any ideological reasons, but for the monthly Rs 3,000 offered to them, Singh said.

"The tournament will begin sometime next month with eight local clubs participating. The tournament's best footballer will be sent to Germany for training at Bayern Munich club," the police chief said.

"The tournament would have been held much earlier, but we could not organise it because of the increasing Maoist menace in recent times," he added.

"The superintendent of police, West Midapore will arrange the tournament. The clubs slated to participate and the grounds for holding the matches have been identified," Singh said.

A senior police officer of West Midnapore said that last year, a football tournament was held among tribal youth in the area. A picnic for the participating teams and police personnel was also arranged after the final. The tournament was organised by the police to win the hearts of tribal youth and gain their confidence.

This year, the tournament will be organised on a bigger scale. The prize money will go up and several measures will be taken to popularise the game among the tribal youth.

The officer said intelligence reports suggest that the Maoists have initiated a recruitment drive to strengthen their militant wing after suffering recent setbacks.

"They are trying to bring more local youth to their training camps. So to dissuade the youth from treading the Maoist path, the tournament will be organised in the area," said the officer.

Read more at: http://bit.ly/bhVkJ3

Wednesday, June 23, 2010

Youth Readership Survey, India: Some Trends

How much and what is the Indian youth reading? For answering this question the National Book Trust (NBT) in India undertook a readership survey among the youth of the country. The survey was conducted by the National Council of Applied Economic Research in 2009. According to Bipin Chandra, Chairman of NBT, “We often say that youngsters these days just don’t read much. In order to really assess the situation, we are conducting a national readership survey amongst the youth to see how much they read and what do they read.”

Some findings of the survey were carried in a news report by the Financial Express in February. Before sharing these results, a few words about the objectives of the survey. The survey aimed at preparing a detailed demographic profile of the Indian youth (13-35 years) according to sex, age, level of education, occupation and other socio-economic characteristics. It was also expected to explore the usage pattern of various information sources, in the print and electronic media in terms of accessibility, frequency, time spent, place of exposure etc. It was an attempt to understand the readership status, reading habits and preferences of the Indian youth.
According to the Financial Express, The survey—with a sample of over 3,11,431 literate youth (1,02,021 rural and 2,09,410 urban) covering 432 villages in 207 districts as rural and 753 urban blocks in 199 towns as urban—is a first-of-its-kind exercise aimed at providing an objective understanding of the media consumption, reading habits and preferences of literate Indian youth.

Survey results, reported in the Financial Express, are:

1. India’s youth population grew at over 2% to 459 million in 2009 from 390 million in the 2001 census, while the literate youth population grew at a more rapid 2.5% to 333 million from 273 million. Growth was faster inurban India (3.15% a year) than in rural India (2.11%)

2. Of the country’s total youth population of 459 million, literate youth constitute around three-fourths, numbering 333 million. Literate youth in rural India number 207 million (62.1% of the total) and 126 million (or, 37.9%) in urban areas. A large proportion, over 41%, is in the older 25-35 age group, followed by teenagers (36.7%), with the rest in the 20-24 age bracket (22.1%).

3. Almost three-fourths (73%) of literate youth in the country are from schedule castes (22.7%), schedule tribes (9.8%) and other backward classes (40.3%), according to the survey. Currently, caste-based reservation in educational institutes stands at 15% for SCs, 7.5% for STs and 27% for OBCs.

4. Awareness of government flagship social schemes like the National Rural Employment Guarantee Scheme and Sarva Shiksha Abhiyan is higher among rural youth compared to city dwellers.

5. Television emerges as the biggest media, with over 77% of the 333 million literate, or 259 million, youth exposed to it. Newspapers too are able to maintain their dominance, with over half (53%) of all literate youth, or 177 million, exposed to them. But in terms of preferred media for news & current affairs, newspapers win hands down, with around two-thirds (63.4%) selecting them compared with just a third (22.2%) for television.

6. Book readers (non-syllabus) number around 83 million (25% of literate youth), of which 39 million are in urban areas and 44 million in rural India.

7. Television emerges the biggest engager, with average time spent a day at over 97 minutes. Radio (61 minutes), magazines (44 minutes) and newspapers (32 minutes) lag far behind. Though the Internet reaches fewer than 4% of all youth (8% in urban areas), time spent with the medium is proportionately higher at over an hour a day (70 minutes), reflecting the medium’s stickiness.

8. Newspapers and the Internet share a high out-of-home exposure. Around half of all youth get to read a newspaper outside their homes, with shops/cafes/restaurants and neighbors as chief access points. Around two-thirds accessed the internet at cyber cafes and/or the workplace.

Detailed statistics of the survey are available at the special issue of the Financial Express.

Going through the survey results, I came across something interesting. When asked by the survey, about the motivation behind reading leisure books, only 18.8% said they were encouraged by their parents. If the NBT’s plan to make all youths in the age group of 15-25 active readers by 2025 is to be realized, parents have to be made aware of the benefits of reading. Moreover, use of the internet as a source of information remains abysmally poor in India.

http://bit.ly/8YZeaZ

FOOTBALL AND / OR CRICKET?

Cricket is a habit but football now has a greater aspiration value attached due to its intensity, unique style and global flavour


FOOTBALL AND / OR CRICKET?

Initially, there was a small set of audience who understood the game at its fundamentals & there were opinion leaders in the conversations about sports. The first set has slowly caught onto the superficial knowledge about the game, the players, teams, their expensive acquisitions & lifestyles. Football lovers are a small but a growing set in campuses — especially with FIFA around the corner.

RONALDO OR DHONI - Who sells

Better?

Surprisingly, we did not find a definite answer because it comes down to category and brand specifics. A Dhoni would any day sell a Cola or a mobile service to an Indian youth better than Ronaldo. But when it came to products with high aspiration attached to it like expensive watches, imported cars, vacation destinations & other luxury items — the footballer's endorsement certainly adds more weight. On probing deeper we realised that the average young cricket lover connects better with the cricketers at the grassroot level whereas as a football fan, he would look to the players on the TV screen with a huge price tag attached.

WATCHING THE GAME

Unlike Cricket, watching a football game for most is more about the drink — beer. ManU VS Arsenal arguments, the ambience, cheering & shouting with friends rather than paying attention to the subtle nuances of the game. A Mumbaikar will not have the same passion for ManU as he would have for Mumbai Indians, but will still spend more money to buy a pass at a pub to see a football match rather than watch it at home. But having said that, very few football fans would cancel their engagements or leave office early just to watch a tournament like they would do for Cricket.

DOES FOOTBALL MAKE A GOOD

PROPERTY FOR ADVERTISERS?

Students remembered very few of the ads or sponsor brand activities. The one's they recollect were mainly that of sports brands like Nike. This is because their focus & attention on-screen during commercials is lesser. However, football does make an interesting platform for off-screen engagement especially at key touch points where they go to watch the matches. If effectively used, there could be innovative activities done at these spaces around the tournament as the activation would be inclusive, therefore strengthening recall.



Publication: The Economic Times Mumbai;Date: Jun 9, 2010;Section: Brand Equity;Page: 26

Tuesday, June 22, 2010

The objectification of the youth

Roused by Gandhi’s call for civil disobedience in 1930, a thirteen-year-old girl named Rani Gaidilieu raised the banner of rebellion against colonialism in Nagaland. The English put her in prison in 1932, and it was only in 1947 that the government of free India released her, along with encomiums from Nehru. If senior journalists in India are to be believed, we can no longer produce another Rani Gaidilieu, leave alone a Nehru. Here are two examples, one from NDTV and the other from Outlook.

Last year when news of terrorists in a busy shopping complex in Delhi was breaking, Star News was airing its popular talk show We The People. There is a perception, Barkha Dutt declared to the audience, that the urban Indian youth is "disconnected from the realities of India". "Do you read newspapers?" she asked Ayaan and Aman Ali Bangash, who have come to be known more as ‘star kids’ than as exponents of the sarod. "If not in print then at least on the Net," they said, leaving Dutt almost disappointed.

She asked: Why have the young lost the spirit of rebellion? They haven’t, said a young lady, adding that she ‘rebelled’ by taking up a non-conformist career in music. But what Dutt had meant by rebellion was the Amitabh Bachchan-type Angry Young Man stuff.

So the award-winning journalist came to on more familiar territory. Do the youth think about their country? Why don’t urban metropolitan youth want to join politics? The implication seemed to be that you cannot ‘think about your country’ without joining politics. A JNU sociologist gave an equally banal answer: politics has come to be associated with crime and corruption... The picture of the Indian teenager that Dutt had in mind was of a consumerist urban animal, living in a cocooned society that is busy eating McDonald’s burgers, freaking out with pals, and enacting an American Desi of sorts in Greater Kailash II.

Another journalist aired similar views, this time bolstered with ‘evidence’. Imaginatively titledUngratefuls, the story by Pramila N. Phatarphekar in an Independence Day special issue of Outlook, tried to find "Gen Next’s ground reality". In this endeavour, 'Outlook reporters in Mumbai, Delhi, Chennai and Bangalore went out and had a chat'. An excerpt:

MUMBAI: A bunch of girls outside St Xavier’s College. What makes it interesting is that these are students of History, free right now and tanking up on sandwiches between lectures.

Outlook: "What was the whole deal in this Quit India Movement?" (They repeat the words Quit India Movement among themselves.) Then, Rosemary: "We don't know exactly but there is a lot of Gandhi in that." Outlook: "Why did it all start?" Elan: "No idea."

Not a single interviewee in the four cities could answer such questions as: Have you heard of the RSS? Is Zail Singh dead or alive? What’s the Quit India Movement all about? Is Muslim League a football tournament? How many years did the British rule us? What language is our anthem written in? The article ended with an expectedly pessimistic note: "Maybe it should be Gen Next after Next we should be thinking about now. For our ‘80s babies may have grown up to nothing besides the challenge of Thums Up."

The story was incredulous enough to invite several readers’ attention, many of whom belonged to the much misunderstood ‘Gen Next’ (the phrase has begun to sound cheap). The letters page berated the story for exaggeration. One undergraduate student of journalism, named Trupthi Basavaraj, said the article indulged in baseless generalisations. "If we seem so hopeless," she asked, "why was there a reduction in the use of firecrackers last Diwali? Why did the youth on Independence Day distribute and wear white ribbons in protest against communal violence? Walk into any school with a decent teaching faculty and ask them who Gandhiji was or what the Quit India movement represented and they will be able to provide you with an answer. You have not only misrepresented youth but also assumed that our previous generation knows so much more than we do…"

Objectification of the youth

The two anecdotes, one from television and the other from print, are examples of the objectification of the youth in the media. This happens all the time: in films, television, newspapers and magazines. Be it advertising or journalism, cinema or the Ekta Kapoor serials, the media is loath to represent the young as real people with real concerns. Even news channels now reflect this as Pretty Young Things (PYTs) replace serious, experienced journalists on the newsreader’s desk. The newsreader’s good looks are more important than his or her ability to put the right questions to the correspondent in Baghdad. The "MTV generation" is not for real. The phrase should actually be regarded as a euphemism for the collective image of the youth that various media leave in your subconscious.

What is objectification of the youth? To borrow from Dhiraj Singh, a print journalist, it is "The musicvideofication of life, where too much time and energy is expended on being sexually attractive and very little on what wannabe beauty queens in India routinely call, with a dash of irony, ‘inner beauty’." This is not the reality for a majority of the youth, just a façade that the media presents.

This is not to single out youth channels. The so-called Page Three supplements, which are considered to be the bane of Indian journalism, do the same thing, making the problem much worse. It is their self-avowed aim to cater to young readers and as such fulfil a demand. You are told that since young readers are not interested in a drought or a political party’s electoral successes, you need something else to keep them interested in your paper. And that something else is all that is sexy: scantily clad models and gossip about Tom Cruise’s latest crush. Also agony aunt columns that trivialise readers’ problems (with inspiration from "MTV Loveline") and profiles of public figures that never question, that are never critical: they are just exercises in PR.

The media is unconsciously desensitising society towards the youth. If you don’t find too many people protesting against this, it is because objectification of the youth is far subtler than, say, objectification of women. It has made it unfashionable for youngsters to be intellectual. It pressurises them to conform to a stereotype of being ‘cool, young and happening’ (a Page Three editor used that phrase when she refused to accept a serious article from me). As Bipasha Basu said in an interview, "If you are not sexy, you are boring." ‘Sexy’ here is not just about how you look, but also how you think and who you are.

Not just teenagers, even the pre-teens are victims of objectification of a more direct kind. Children, acknowledged to be high-spending consumers, are rarely presented as individuals in their own right. In Pinki Virani’s Bitter Chocolate, she writes that children are more visible in the media than ever before, and they are increasingly represented as attractive objects, "at times — particularly in the case of female children — as objects of desire". This is seen most often in advertising. Virani writes: "A little girl in an off-the-shoulder black velvet dress and ringlets, dancing in Bollywood film heroine style, frontally, for the camera, may even appear cute to some viewers. But this objectified representation of the little girl mimicking an adult object of desire is to me objectionable... Such modes of representation also begin to set the benchmark for the way little girls dress... wearing more and more inappropriate clothes."

Surveying the facts

The raison d’etre of Page Threeism — the driving force behind youth objectification — is giving readers ‘what they want’. However, media planners and channel executives seem to have decided on their own what their young audiences want. When MTV came to India, for instance, it was wholly about contemporary Western music — that’s what highly Westernised Indian guys and gals want, they thought. But when their ratings stagnated after a time, it took a market research survey for them to discover that young India wanted contemporary Indian ‘pop’ and film music as well.

Media planners are similarly wrong when they say that young readers and audiences want only non-serious content. If this were true, the India Today Group’s youth magazine, Teens Today, would have been a roaring success. It had all the elements of a yuppie culture that the media says has arrived. But Teens Today had to close down. There wasn’t a market large enough to sustain it.

In contrast, if you look at the National Readership Survey (NRS) 2002, India’s largest selling magazine is Saras Salil of the Delhi Press Publications, selling a whopping 63 lakh copies every fortnight. And what exactly is Saras Salil all about? It’s a B-Grade youth magazine in Hindi that comes for as little as four rupees. The first issue of April 2003, for instance, talks about the budget (‘the government is looting the poor...’) and politics (‘the BJP’s fortunes aren’t getting any better...’). Serious leftist stuff, along with short stories and features on issues like child marriage and child labour. Of course there’s covert sex, because the readers are adolescents, but that’s only towards the end. Teens Today, music channels and the Page Three supplements presume that having fun and intellectual stimulation are mutually exclusive. But Saras Salil knows better.

Some would argue that the perception of Indian youth as IBCD’s (Indian Born Confused Desis) applies only to urban metropolitan youth, and Saras Salil’s readership comes mainly from villages and small towns, from the kind of people who are disparagingly dismissed as HMT’s or Hindi Medium Types. Proving this incorrect is a 1999 India Today-ORG MARG survey, conducted to ascertain the "mind of the young voter" on the eve of general elections. Amongst the findings was that youth in rural areas are less interested in politics and current affairs than their urban counterparts for the simple reason that literacy levels are lower in rural areas.

Other findings showed that the youth still have a very conservative outlook. 81 per cent preferred arranged marriages to love marriages, and 84 per cent wanted to marry within their community; 66 per cent said married women shouldn’t work.

A majority said they’d vote for the BJP, and sure, Vajpayee came to power. Television and newspapers were their prime source of political information. 90 per cent said they would serve the country in case of war, 58 per cent said economic liberalisation was the right step, although 84 per cent condoned protectionism. 65 per cent wanted reservations to go and 79 per cent said they wouldn’t settle abroad even if they were given a chance to do so. Yet the image of the youth that the media presents is diametrically opposite of these attitudes.

In a Hindustan Times education supplement I once saw a story about books being ‘back in fashion’ amongst teenagers. The story must have been more of a self-discovery for the reporter rather than an essay on youth trends, because the India Today-ORG MARG survey also said 67 per cent of those surveyed were ‘interested’ in books!

More recently, a Hindustan Times-commissioned survey by Taylor Nelson Sofres (TNS) Mode in five metros, made similar findings (HT Sunday Magazine, 3 February 2003). The survey was conducted among young men and women between 16 and 24 years of age. Self-styled journalists talk about lack of role models in society to inspire the youth, but a third of the respondents listed their own parents as role models. Family bonding was important for 84 per cent. This is a generation brought up on cable TV no doubt, but their favourite was Star Plus, followed by Discovery and Nat Geo, leaving the music channels in the third spot. Other findings included an inclination towards religion and the lack of any such thing as a ‘sexual revolution’ that the media would have us believe is already here.

Women remain more housebound than men and gender biases still prevail. A career in teaching is especially popular with women but overall, according to the survey, the traditional doctor-engineer-MBA kind of careers rule the roost. This is contrary to the yuppie image, which suggests that everyone is taking up ‘sexy’ careers like modelling, films, television, and fashion designing. The reality, in fact, is that youngsters wanting to take up unconventional careers face considerable obstacles of acceptance by family and friends. Support for them should ideally come, say, from the education and career supplements by highlighting the opportunities in an unconventional career. But these supplements tend to focus on the IAS-IIM-IIT-PMT circuit because that is what brings in the ads from coaching institutes.

Youngsters anxious about the non-IIT/PMT careers turn to the Internet as a recourse. Indeed, the new media is one medium that does not objectify the youth. Being interactive by nature, it leaves ample room for individuality. As psychiatric counselling remains unthinkable for many, they turn to chat rooms with their problems. Email lists and blogs, websites and search engines make sure that there is no high-profile newspaper manager deciding for you what you want.

The politics of being young

The ‘clinching’ argument of those who see the 80’s babies as a lost generation is that they aren’t ‘interested in politics’. If by being uninterested in politics one means they don’t want to join politics, sure, that’s true. A lack of interest in politics is attributed to disillusionment with the performance of politicians. As the JNU sociologist said with banality in We The People: politics has come to be associated with crime and corruption. Yet, if this was true, a majority would have been disillusioned with the future of India? Not quite. They are happily Hindustani: 70 per cent in the HT-TNS Mode survey said they believed in the promise of a bright future in this country, 39 per cent of them fervently so.

In fact, politics as a career is not very attractive anywhere in the world for the simple reason that it’s not easy being a politician: for one, there is no job security.

On the other hand, if by being uninterested in politics one means they don’t keep in touch with what’s happening in the world or that they aren’t responsible citizens, this is false. The HT-TNS Mode survey, for instance, says: "Young urban Indians are concerned about many issues — communalism, corruption, Kashmir..." The India Today-ORG MARG survey found that a number of young voters had strong views on several political questions: from liberalisation to nuclearisation, from the use of religion in politics to whether a foreign-born person should be allowed to become prime minister, they had a view on everything. More significantly, a good 82 per cent said they would cast their vote in the imminent general elections. (75 per cent of the minority who did not intend to vote listed their reason as the absence of their names from the voters’ list.) The magazine observed: "Interestingly, the apathy displayed by upper-class voters on polling day was not in evidence among the youth." So who’s uninterested in politics, the youth or their previous generations?

The disconnect, therefore, is not between the urban youth and ‘the realities of India’ but between the media and the youth. ‘Disconnect’ here is a euphemism for generation gap. The mindsets and personalities of the ‘80s babies have been shaped by the ‘90s - the decade when they became teenagers, a decade of tremendous societal change in India and the world. It is thus inevitable that the ‘40s, ‘50s, ‘60s and ‘70s babies are not able to understand the present generation.

The eighties was a decade of transition, of caste clashes and the coming of the ‘information age’. In 1991 as India changed track towards free enterprise, it was India’s second independence, the beginning of the decade which shaped the minds of the ‘80s babies. The economy was freed from much of the state control. As things started moving, a million mutinies resulted in imparting the new generation a strong sense of individualism. They didn’t grow up with history, but they grew up to the challenge of an ever-so-competitive future.

This has made them less political than the previous generations. It should be a matter of celebration, not dismay, that they are a little detached from politics. Too much politics has a vulgarising effect. Media planners are unable to understand these generational changes and jump to baseless conclusions about ‘the 80’s babies’. This is how the report on the HT-TNS Mode survey ended: "Disenchantment with politics is high. But then so is idealism and a belief in family values. This is a generation that is equally at home with Kyunki Saas Bhi Kabhi Bahu Thi and MTV. Above all, it’s a generation that believes in India and the promise that it holds out. All things considered, that’s cause for cheer."

What is not a reason for cheer, however, is that the media misunderstands the urban youth, under-estimates their intelligence, ignores their concerns, and objectifies them.

http://www.indiatogether.org/2003/may/med-youth.htm


Friday, June 4, 2010

Youngsters can have a say in new youth policy

The state government has invited suggestions from young people to draft the state’s youth policy.

The suggestions, which might be included in the policy, should be sent through emails or they should be faxed to the sports and youth affairs section before June 7.

The policy based on the 2003 National Youth Policy is meant for the age group of 13 to 35 years, which comprises almost 40 per cent of the state’s population. Focus will be on issues like employment, education counselling, youth commission formation, among others.

“We have formed a committee of 50 people from different backgrounds who will be involved in forming the policy. But it is only after we get suggestions from the youth and youth-based NGOs on the aspects that are to be included in the policy that we can go ahead with it,” said N.B. Mote, deputy director of sports and youth affairs.

Along with the suggestions, there are public meetings planned for the youth to participate in and give their views.

The draft policy also proposes formation of district youth development centres to function like a single-window information system on employment opportunities, various career-oriented courses, health facilities and others.

It also puts a special focus on gender, tribal youth, dropouts and handicapped youth.


http://bit.ly/97XYLp

The youth forex

Karunika Kardak, a first-year student at St Xavier’s College, is biting her fingernails in anticipation. Once she gets her acceptance letter, she will begin packing for Madrid to study at the Comillas Pontifical University as an exchange student.

“It’s an experience of a lifetime. People I asked for advice told me that what I’ll learn in another country will be more than what I’ll get to learn at home,” she said.

However, several challenges are in store for her. “Since I’m a vegetarian, I’ll have to cook for myself. Also, I’ve never lived alone.” The 18-year-old plans to rent an apartment and is looking forward to experience a new culture on her own. “I want to visit the Prado museum in Madrid and also travel across Europe.”

Today, students are keener to venture far from home in the pursuit of knowledge, experience and novelty.

“Exchange programmes give a lot of exposure to students,” said Dr Kirti Narain, principal of Jai Hind College, which has tied up with University of Ontario, Nottingham Trent University in the UK and Frazer Valley, Vancouver. About 28 students have participated in the three exchange programmes with two Canadian students coming to study at Jai Hind.

Geomara Fernandez, 25, an exchange student from the Amsterdam Fashion Institute, has been in Mumbai since January for a four-month stint at the National Institute of Fashion Technology, Navi Mumbai. “I wanted to learn more about the fashion industry outside the Netherlands. Indian clothes and fashion are really interesting. Everything here is so colourful.”

Fernandez thinks it’s important to learn about different countries and to work with people of different mindsets. She has been learning Hindi, travelling in the local trains and acquiring a taste for Indian food, which she had at first found “very heavy, spicy and different.”

“Exchange programmes give students exposure to foreign education, infrastructure and way of teaching,” said Dr. Suhas Pednekar, principal of Ramnarain Ruia College, which has this year, tied up with the University of Ontario and the University of Valparaiso.

“It definitely makes you more independent,” said Poorva Karkare, 21, who went to Switzerland as an exchange student in Class 11. Not knowing German made things difficult. At the Kanton Schule Wetzikon, where Karkare studied, all subjects were taught in German, so she had to grow familiar with German terms in physics and chemistry. “The teaching was different from India. There were fewer students, so we got more personal attention. I had already studied many of the things they were learning. But they teach everything in a lot of depth.”

Apart from fluency in German, her biggest gain she said was the experience of living abroad. “You’d usually go to Switzerland as a tourist. But it was a different to live in a small village where everyone knew each other. People say that the Swiss are very cold, but everyone was friendly and I’m still in touch with them.”


http://www.hindustantimes.com/The-youth-forex/Article1-550982.aspx

Thursday, June 3, 2010

Bihar boy's story of rags to radio star

The rollercoaster ride to success of an illiterate Bihar youth, who launched a radio station and promoted social messages on polio, AIDS and other issues but was arrested for illegally running it, has found place in school textbooks.

The story of Raghav, in his mid-20s, and his 'Raghav Radio' has been published by the National Council of Educational Research and Training (NCERT) in its book Bharat Mein Samajik Parivartan Evam Vikas(Social change and development in India) for Class 12.

The book describes Raghav as a role model for development in society. It highlights his struggle and the difficulties he faced after starting 'Raghav Radio' in Mansoorpur village in Vaishali district.

Raghav, who currently works as the project head of a community radio station in Rajasthan's Ajmer district, told IANS over the phone that his "story in the NCERT book will inspire people, particularly the youths, to make a difference in society".

The book mentions Raghav as being born in a family of agricultural labourers who were too poor to provide him with education.

It was in 2004 that Raghav, who had an electronics repair shop at Gudri Bazar near Mansoorpur and loved to tinker with old equipment, stumbled upon the innovative idea of launching a radio station.

With the old tools and gadgets that he had stored over the years, he launched his radio station that very soon became a hit with the villagers.

The station operated like a community radio service in Muzaffarpur, Vaishali and Saran districts, providing local news and views in the local dialect.

Apart from Hindi songs and news, it provided information about crime in the area, programmes on AIDS awareness, polio eradication, literacy initiatives and news about missing people as well as on local functions and festivals. And all that free of cost.

The media highlighted his story and he became very popular. The union communications ministry took notice too -- but that was to be his undoing.

In 2006, the ministry sought a report on the legality of the private radio station. Raghav did not possess an operating licence as he was too poor to pay the licence fee and too naive to understand that it was illegal.

'Raghav Radio' closed down. The district authorities said it was closed for violating the Indian Telegraphs Act.

The government held him an offender and arrested him for a brief period but for people residing in and around Mansoorpur village, he was a hero.

Later, many NGOs came forward to help him and gave him vocational training.

Impressed by his talent and struggle, the Barefoot College at Tilonia in Rajasthan, run by Bunker Roy, appointed him the head of Barefoot Community Radio Station, the first of its kind in Rajasthan.

The radio service caters to the educational, development and socio-cultural needs of the local community in a radius of six to 10 kilometres through indigenously created broadcast programming.

From an ordinary illiterate youth to becoming someone who has the ability to inspire people through his simple deeds, Raghav has indeed come a long way. And the mission to inform and educate continues.

http://ibnlive.in.com/news/bihar-boys-story-of-rags-to-radio-star/116797-3.html?from=trending

Arjun Vajpai: Youngest Indian to Climb Mount Everest!

It has been commonly said and heard many a times, “Where There Is A Will, There Is A Way!” This has been proved yet again by Arjun Vajpai who is all of 16 years of age. The expedition projects the strength of the human spirit and mind. This is a lesson taught by a young school going teenage boy about will, determination and hard work.

This remarkable journey of Arjun would not have been possible without his father’s advice. He told his son that the time would come when the body would give up and freeze and at that time, the mind must take over for the power of mind is limitless.

While Arjun Vajpai will be the youngest Indian to ever climb Mount Everest, he was overtaken immediately by a 13 year old American boy who went on to become the youngest to track the Mount Everest. But Arjun’s achievement outshines any others because he belongs to a middle class family. More so, he achieved all this without any support from our very own Government of India.

In India, individual sports, adventure and athletics get no priority. Arjun collected all his funds from friends, family and NGO’s to make his dream come true. Even media disappoints in its coverage and obsession with cricket. The news that “Sahara” won the cricket team sponsorship rights finds mention on the front page of majority of the newspapers. The fact that a 16 year old conquered the Everest finds mention in inner insignificant pages. There are “excusers” and “achievers” and it is clear that Arjun Vajpai is an achiever.

Agreed that India is a cricket frenzy nation but isn’t it up to the Indian Government to ensure equal funds to all sports and athletics and promote them in balance? Here is the joy of one boy who is happy with his own achievement and doesn’t seem to seek any form media attention, yet it does arise many questions on the credibility and the stand taken by the media.

There are those who dream and those who turn them into reality. Arjun definitely belongs to the latter. And he has reached the top most point on this planet where he got an opportunity to view the sun rise and the earth curve around him. I am sure it must have been marvelous watching the sight which only few are destined to see!

Yet this achievement has not taken over the boy’s head. He is still humble to accept that Jordan Romero, the 13 year old American has become the youngest in the world to climb the Everest. Arjun does not believe in any competition. So, the next step for the brave Arjun Vajpai is trekking the highest peaks in each of the seven continents.

Bravo Arjun, you make us feel proud and again prove the virtues and importance of hard work, determination, patience and above all being humble in success. Congratulations on this journey on becoming a leader in time to come. At 16 years, this is only a beginning.

http://blog.abhinav.com/arjun-vajpai-youngest-indian-to-climb-mount-everest/

Wednesday, June 2, 2010

Kashmiri Youth Shouldn't Be Stereotyped: Faesal

He may have topped this year's civil services exam but Shah Faesal feels his achievement will be realised only when stereotypes associated with Kashmiri youth are done away with and they are able to overcome their "identity crisis".

The 27-year-old, who became the first Kashmiri to top the civil services exam, said some kind of an "identity" is imposed on people from Kashmir and they are "pushed to the wall" due to misconceptions by people in the country and their dreams have been "curtailed" and "axed".

"One person topping the civil services is not an achievement. What about the seven lakh educated youth in the state? When will they be able to realise their dreams? When some kind of an identity is imposed on people from youth, he is pushed towards the wall," he said at a felicitation programme organised by the PHD Chamber of Commerce.

"My achievement will be realised only when those stereotypes and prejudices are done away with."

Faesal hails from the remote village of Lolab valley in Kupwara district and graduate in medicine from Sher- i-Kashmir Medical College.

He said millions of Kashmiri youth want a space in the mainstream to contribute to the development of the nation.

"Whenever a youth from Kashmir goes to any metro in the country, they brand him. They tell you are a Kashmiri, you are a Muslim, you are a separatist and then you are a terrorist. This should change," Faesal, whose father was killed by militants in 2002, said.

He also appealed to IT and BPO sector to come and invest in the Kashmir Valley as the climate is conducive for setting up such companies and also given the fluency in English the youths there have got.

"We have the required human resources and Kashmiri youths are well-versed in English language. But unfortunately, nothing has happened. How long do we wait? When will the circumstances improve? Politics and violence are there, but life has to go on," he said.

The medicine graduate, who will soon take up civil services training, said the misprision that "whoever goes to Kashmir will get killed" should change.

"I have been shuttling from Delhi to Kashmir for the past several years and no one killed me. And not that everyone in Kashmir is killed. Business people should come and invest in Kashmir," he said.

He also termed as "absolutely illogical" and "unjustified" if somebody asks a Kashmiri to to prove his loyalty to the nation.

"These things should go. Kashmiri youths want a space in the mainstream to contribute to the development of the nation," he said.

news.outlookindia.com | Kashmiri Youth Shouldn't Be Stereotyped: Faesal