HIGH NOON OF SILENCE

At noon the sun is always at its meridian. When the mornings are cloudy, though it is not dark, the sun is not visible. When it is cloudy at night, the darkness is more. Suppose it is cloudy until a quarter to twelve noon, and suddenly the clouds disappear at midday. When the sun shines, it will be the usual, bright midday sun. But there is a difference in the atmosphere. The sudden appearance of the sun after the clouds will prove pleasing and cheerful. But if clouds remain for a month, it will give rise to disgust, which would increase every day. When the clouds finally disappear, the disgust will also disappear. Everything will then look cheerful and fine, and the effect of the sun on the mind, heart and health will be very good.

Thus is the case with me. The clouds may disperse even at one minute to high noon, but in that one minute I feel greater disgust. Just as with a pregnant woman having birth pangs and feeling fed up until she delivers the child, I too feel greater disgust at the time clouds are dispersing. The woman knows that the child will be born in five minutes and she will be free of her troubles; still, at the moment she feels it is better to die. Just see the limits of disgust in these five minutes. My disgust is now nearing that pitch! How ridiculous it would be to ask the woman in labor to take a walk in the fresh air. She would reply that she knows all about what is going to happen to her, since she has already given birth to ten children. So he who has had experience of this sort of disgust knows it only too well
- Merwan Sheriar Irani


God must have written that.

The Big Vada

Imagine yourself walking into a fast food reasturant and order yourself a
"Vada-Pav" and a large coke.This day my freinds is not far behind Mumbai's favourite cheap snack would be reaching a mall near you as we speak.
For those who have never not been enlightened enough to have eaten one ,a Vada Pav(batter-fried mashed potato with bread & chutney) is the daily fast-food staple of millions of Maharashtrians and particular denizens of Bombay.
Back to the post on hand a company in Bombay is selling vada-paav(TM) under the brand of JumboKing , through seven stores all over Mumbai.Now it has been branded and TQMed to compete with McDonald's and is all set to take over the world. This is true reverse globalization-Here comes India!


Vada Pav Trivial

Mumbai?s favourite snack was born 35 years ago, when Ashok Vaidya, a snack seller outside Dadar station, decided to experiment. The combination of batata vada and split pav continues to be the city?s sledgehammer answer to the burger.

Just hoping the Vada Pav at your canteen, Chandralok Gardens improves from, tastless to edible.
Chandralok which if you translate into English means Moon People.Strange name don't you think. ?

 Posted by Hello

Being my usual trigger happy japanese photo-tourist self

Pardon my photography, but you've read it right the sign reads.
PLEASE DON'T FEED THE MONKEYS .THEY BREAK OUR TILES

I took this picture ,this year in Sri Lanka with the sole reason of publishing it in my blog.I found it pretty hilarious ,the first time I read it so I thought I'll be my usual trigger happy japanese photo-tourist self and take a picture. AND yes the monkeys do break their tiles I found that out at 2am in the morning (Yawn!!).

Sid if you're reading this I'm in Bombay, back on tues.
Yes you've heard right I'm in Bombay/Mumbai therefore my next post will have some Bombay masala or may be some of my Bombay dreams (bad pun I know).

Can you believe Bollywood (Indian film industry) ripped off an Adam Sandler movie.
Yes there's a Hindi version of Anger Management running around , I bet Mr. Sandler will see the humor in that. I'm not a connoisseur of Hindi movies I do see them (I don't how this related but I must tell you Quentin Tarintino Rocks).
I was forced into seeing it on the bus (read Neeta Volvo) with dolby surround sound and all(Picture of a Monkey(me) with hands on his ears).
Anyway it's called
Mujse Shaade Karoge (if you're don't know Hindi heres a fun exercise ,use it on the next person you know who knows Hindi).
Goodnight .


Posted by Hello

Awake , Awake Akshay Awake.

Eyes open, to the sound of tangling clocks, bells, and buzzers chimes, courtesy Pink Floyd's Time. This is my wake up play list that my computer randomly spits out at exactly 9am.
Yes I'm a late riser and I need my beauty sleep (which I need allot of, refer to profile picture to know why.).
Ticking away the moments
that make up the dull day
You fritter and waste the
hours in an off hand way


Sometimes time fails to wake me up, and I lie there on my bed dreaming I'm awake.
This happens 50% of the time therefore I rely on my fail-safe wake up protocol.
This song has the sole aim of waking you up.
Wake Up, THE DOORS.

Wake up!
You can’t remember where it was.
Had this dream stopped?
The snake was pale gold
Glazed & shrunken.
We were afraid to touch it.
The sheets were hot dead prisons.


After waking up I show signs of sleepiness by yawning and outstretching my hands above my head. There is theory going around that I'm never really awake, that and I'm perennially high. The second one is true.
I therefore walk to the bathroom, brush my teeth after which I continue towards the toilet pot to relieve myself; I’m suddenly woken up with a jerk and a tickle in my heart. It’s like kick starting a motorcycle.
I then stand in front of the mirror and this is how the mirror will describe me -

He's got, a slight cold and his nose is blocked so you can hear him sniffle his way through life. His face has turned a shade of greenish brown and his eyes are red and watery and his face has been chiseled in to a permanent frown.


Then my day takes a u-turn towards hell. I go to college and spend the day sleeping through a galaxy of lectures.
But sometimes I don't go college then I spend my time calculating the rpm of my ceiling fan which is so fun or I count the specks on my wall or I have a ball doubling 2s.

Doubling 2s is fun exercise you should try it.

You start with 2 and that becomes 4 8 16 32 64 128 .... you get the picture
on day a particularly uninspiring day I reached 524288.
You add 0 to that number you get a number of one my "great friends" please call that number , tell him I sent you.

Anyways enough rambling for the day.
It's raining again.
I don't like September RAIN.



A room with a view

if you were sitting where I'm sitting right now and you turn your head a 90 degrees to the right this is what you will see.In a few hours darkness will fall the light ,dissappear but most likely I'll still be here and this picture will never come back. The dry palms you see on the side are the home of my bat friends they make quiet a racket in the night.I won't be lying if I tell you I don't open my windows in the night.But know since the window is open ,might as well keep it open. Posted by Hello

My life in a nutshell

My life in a nutshell, going to college.Morning 10:30 traffic Law College Road listining to my ipod .
Boy ! I really love this picture .Notice the on coming motocycles that's signature Pune nightmare traffic. BTW for those who don't know this mode of public traffic this the internal view of a yellow and black Bajaj RE autorickshaw (read Rickety Rickshaw )
 Posted by Hello

Winds of Change . Posted by Hello

Caveat Reader

Caveat Reader, Readers Beware!!
Ok I'm not a Latin scholar or anything, the only Latin I leant during my schooling was
Perseverantia Et Fide Et Deo.
I know to most Indians it sounds like a spell out of Harry Potter.But it stands to mean simply "Try, Try till you succeed". I tried to live by that in school but look where it got me. Moving on.

Lingua franca
a medium of communication between peoples of different languages.


India has no one lingua franca . It's hard to home on to one language in a country where the people speak near a million. Unlike other in India the language spoken changes every 100 km and the dialect of the language spoken changes every 20Km.
Thus where such a large variation of language and dialect a "common language" a lingua franca is important. As there is diversity in ethnicity the first barrier for communication is one of 'people' to 'people’. Here there is a need for national language the "Rashtriya Bhasha" (national language). That is 'Hindi'.
Many atime when I have been on foreign soil people have asked me strange questions like -

Speaker - So you are Indian.
Akshay - Yes, It's appears so.
Speakers - Do you know how to speak Indian?

Let me interject here see there is no language called Indian. Thus no one can speak Indian.
Even though Hindi is the official national language, English is India's second lingua franca and then there are the others

Comming back to me my language skills which are appallingly bad and thus I gained profiency in only one.
I speak English.
Apalling Hindi.
Even more Apalling Marathi.
Can't Speak French (even after studying it for 2 years).
Can't Speak Punjabi which supposedly is my mother tongue.

Don't know you Mother Tongue ? ... Crime against Humanity ?


Most people India think it Pleasant conversation to dig deep into your personal life and history .
Most people ask you your name and surname then by looking at your name and surname they decipher what geographic corner of India you hail from and then logically decipher your age , education background , bank balance , caste and all this my asking you a series of very tough questions.
Most of the time , one thing leads to another and converstion leads to the following.

Person - Ok , you're Punjabi (person from the state of Punjab ,NW India).
Akshay - Yes I'm .
Person - Do you know Punjabi.
Akshay(dreading that question) - No actually I don't know punjabi.
Person (in disbelief) - But, it's your mother tongue !!!!
Akshay(getting pissed)- I know.
Person - You're parents never taught you ???
Akshay - NO

You get the picture. Not knowing your mother tongue is a serious crime.
As for of you my now thorougly bored by my rambling don't forget I warned you.
Caveat Reader.



Gmail For Free

As the Gmail debate rages on,privacy or no privacy , 1Gb of no 1Gb most will agree gmail is still in fashion , it's like the mail equivalent of the ipod.
Yes ,gmail give it you 1Gb but even rediff gives you same ,then what makes gmail click.
I think it is exclusivity that Gmail holds that makes the G capital.I found that gmail's "invitation only" enrollment process is the key to the attraction it still holds.It works like a pyramid scheme where only blogger members (owned by google) and those you are "invited" get their id @gmail.com and now there entire sites which cater to people who want gmail or those who want to barter a gmail invite for something ( read gmailswap.com).
I too bartered an invite for a postcard from Mexico City.
Anyway this being my 101st entry .. I thought I'll give away my 3 remaining gmail invites.
Thus for the first three lucky people who mail me at akshaym@gmail.com get the invites.

In other trends looks like amazon's A9.com is giving google a run for it's money.

Striker's Anonymous 1
Part 1
Monday the 6th of September.
Bombay , India.

Akshay is sitting at home and being the couch potato that he is ,is watching television . He is clicking away at the remote as if it where a game console of some type , channel surfing.
[A cellphone "rings" and "vibrates" on the wooden side table making an even stranger noise]
Akshay outstretches his hands and picks up the phone and talks into it like people usually do.
If you where present there you would have heard the following :

Akshay - Hello, Was sup in college?
Akshay - What!! MIT is on strike. You're joking right ?[in disbelief]
Akshay - No way ,All of Second Year Engineering !![in disbelief again]
Akshay - Police and all came , God this is simply unbelievable !
Akshay - Their demanding 34 grand back!! awesome !!![come on this is too good to be true]
Akshay - How come I always miss out on the fun?
Akshay - Yes I'm coming back to Poona tomorrow. See you in College. Ciao!

The next day...
Tuesday,7th of September.
Mumbai-Pune Expressway,India.


Times of India , Pune
- page 3 -
[Reads]
MIT students boycott class in protest against fee

PUNE: Close on the heels of engineering students from the Maharashtra Academy of Engineering, Alandi protesting against the "steep" fee structure, their counterparts at the Maharashtra Institute of Technology (MIT) at the Kothrud campus on Monday boycotted classes demanding an immediate refund of excess fees collected by the college management.
Over 300 students from the second year, who gathered in the college campus early ,Monday morning, said they will continue with their agitation till the management agrees to comply with the fee structure determined by the Shikshan Shulka Samiti headed by retired high court judge RA Jahagirdar, and refunds the excess amount already charged from them.



Clouds overcast,a blue Neeta Volvo bus yonder ,passes by you in a flash.
Little does our protagonist know that you are watching him as he sits on seat number 22 reading The Da Vinci Legacy (a da vinci code clone) which by the way for your information he is still reading.
As the bus moves closer to it's destination we switch locations to the Campus of Maharashtra Institute of Engineering , where the strike is entering it's second day .The Management has agreed to refund Rs.20,000 of the Rs.34,000 demanded by the students .The students refuse and the strike continues with sloganeering in high pitch.

1300hrs :
Akshay reaches the campuss greated by the shouts of a hundred of his fellow students.
They shout -
"Refund!!! Refund!!!"[as if it where a football chant]
followed by
"Ganapati Bapa Mooriya amche paise vaapas diya [Marathi]" (Give are money back)
In all the excitement and the adrenaline of the mob ,Akshay joins in the festivities,only to recieve a hundred missed calls form his mother asking him not to get involved.But Akshay being the stubborn buffoon that he is dives right in , you know what they say once you're wet might as well get drenched.


{to be contd}





I felt like Alice in Wonderland on Magic Mushrooms.


Went back to school today, it’s been three years .The feeling was strange to say the least .It was like meeting a old friend who you where once very accustomed to but now don't meet anymore .You remember all the good and bad times you shared and that nostalgia leaves you into a surreal place .

Today, 6th September is celebrated in India as Teachers day, a day where students everywhere pay tribute to their gurus and being in Bombay I decided to visit school for old times sake. I thought it would be nice to share some of my thoughts and feelings on the visit.
Firstly as I mentioned it was kind of surreal . On the drive there I had this feeling at the bottom of my stomach , the kind of feeling you get in a school bus or when you don’t know anything in your applied mechanics paper.

nostalgia.
A bittersweet longing for things, persons, or situations of the past.


Walking through the countless corridors ,the opens halls and emptily filled classrooms it was like sleep walking into the past .My first observation was that everything looked smaller .It was like someone had drawn a box around place with their mouse and did a 2x zoom-out .Was it that everything had grown smaller or was it that I had grown bigger or was it a little of both ?
For any reason beyond my microscopic intellect I felt like Alice in Wonderland on Magic Mushrooms.
Moving on

The question was why where all the girls who where also visiting dressed in the summer prep line?
All of them flaunting it in their “Mango Addict:” T-shirts. Consumer Nation I tell you.
Not that I’m complaining .
Bohemian Rhapsody playing in my head followed my radiohead’s There There .


Things Change

The More things change ,the more they stay the same. Things have changed so much but in my head there just the same . Same old same old.
It’s typical isn’t it.

Ending where I began ,I went back to school but I came back.




BitTorrent taking P2P by Storm

Hello ,from a bruised and battered me.
Had to stay home today and miss out on college and the quiz at Ferguson because of my swollen leg.
So I'm stranded at home all alone as usual,
this really sucks.

I found this awesomely new P2P client called BitTorrent .
Kazaa's days are numbered ,this software is simply to great to be true and did I mention fast.
BitTorrent a brain child of Bram Cohen , better known for CodeVille .
Bittorrent has a very efficient mechanism which gives its edge over Kazaa and it's also very simple to use.
It's works on a process called Swarming where a file is broken up into several parts for easy circulation.
To start sharing a certain file , a .torrent file is created by a user which is spread by the usual method.
Anyway it's just such a great client .
I use the one called Bitspirit.
which can be download at www.lanspirit.com

Note --- I'm so sorry for all these typos

Cobras in small outdated Italian Cars with Schumacher at the wheel??.


On a personal note , I nearly died today.
This the second or so time in these many weeks.
I was Caught from behind by a Fiat 118 Ne and then was dragged across the gravelly road with my skin run through a sort of paper shredder.
A very FUN experience.
On a happier note I'm alive with no bones broken .
I bet this is a CIA / ISI / KGB / Mossad name the agency ,
sponsored conspiracy against me.
First cobras, then small outdated Italian Cars
What next Cobra's in small outdated Italian Cars with Schumacher at the wheel??.
Actually thats a little two Kill Billish.
I live to survive another day!!


First Cobras


Most people must have heard of Rudyard Kipling and no I would not pretend to be him just to make my blog more readable.
That would kind of be like my freind H.G Wells who is reachable at H.G Wells Represents.
The only reason I'm reminded of Mr. Kipling is a Book he once wrote.
More speciffically a story from The Jungle Book , Rikki Tikki Tavi.
Why Riki Tikki Tavi ??
A good question, dear reader .For the answer we must jump into a stort incident which happened to me a week before yesterday.
I was driving into the cul de sac I call home, parking at my regualar spot ,right at the end of the dead end by the heap of collected dead foliage.A place not blessed with proper lighting in the night but a place blessed with a silence that comes with darkness.The time, being rather late to be coming back from college as it is ,the excuse drama practice.
I rode in with my headlight blazing easing off the corner accellerating steadily and than breaking till I gently glided to a stop at the end.
Getting off my bike , I stand there face to face with a snake .
No ordinary snake I remind you ,a cobra.
He stood there gawking at me with his magical eyes , time stopped ,my nuerons screeming for a response form my now panicing mind.
Looking at the this beauty of a snake , don't get me wrong I don't particularily adore snakes but just looking at this awesome specimen of nature made a strange feeling of awe overcame me.
And then there was fear,
dude this snake could do serious harm to me , I have seen all the documentaries and the collective national geographic/discovery channel in my head was telling me to
back up , nice and simple... Nice Cobra Nice Cobra and a occasional down boy as he was hissing in a calm and somewhat seductive manner.

So I backed off slowly at first and then I ran , I ran till I reached my gate
Happy to live and tell the tail without the help of any anti-vemon..
Anyway the story isn't over .
Then the next day when I decide to park my scooter on a differrent spot guess who I meet ,a mongoose.A rather large rodent like creature with a long bush tapering tail.

I found this very interesting ,
Forgive me I just a city boy a boy who is not used to wildlife around his own sanctuary, forgive the pun.Thing is nothing has changed I still stay in technically a city of 4 million people , Pune but I still share my yard with a Mongoose and a Cobra and many other nocturnal inhabitants I haven't had a pleasure of meeting (these include bats).
Thus to end and draw a connection , I have my very own Ricki Ticki Tavi ..
But I prefer to call him just Ricki.

What I feel about Indo-Pak Reunification


What I think on reunification really doesn't really matter. My microscopic thoughts will never make a difference.
But after listening to the sometimes redundant reasoning to 52 different speakers on the topic I'm bound to have a perspective idea on the matter.
Most will dismiss the idea on it's face value, stating mutual distrust , religion and sometimes even hate..
For example when I told one person in my class that ,I was speaking against Indo-Pak Reunification... He was went on an Anti-Pak spree saying.
"Woh Salle Pakistanis" (Those Pakistanis >> where "Salle" is a derogatory word)
I know he did not mean it's just the media in both the countries spread this mutual mistrust.Thus it's almost cool to bash the other country.Degrade them on each others national television ,it's a sort of entertainment,it the perennial coffee table conversation everyday people have , all segments of society.

The thing is people are fickle minded and their thoughts on subjects change like a compass changes direction.
And there is one thing I can say with certainty that things that seem impossible today will become possibilities tomorrow.


The same is the case with the "India - Pakistan" relationship ,these two countries were one in 1947,before partition (for those who don't know the history here's a link
Partition of India)
and hopefully can become one in the future burying their past differences.

Who would have predicted in 1944 that Europe would stand united as the largest bloc of countries going into the 22nd Century?
It would have been just a dream a dream of a few.
A dream they worked on and brought to reality the same is the case with India Pakistan Reunification .
It is just a dream ,but if we work on it CAN become a reality.


Certum est, quia impossibile est

(It is certain because it is impossible)
-Tertullian (c. 160-c. 230)



"I do not know where family doctors acquired illegibly perplexing handwriting nevertheless, extraordinary pharmaceutical intellectuality counterbalancing indecipherability, transcendentalizes intercommunications' incomprehensibleness"?

This is the longest sentence in English language in which the Nth word contains N letters [I guess, the shortest such sentence is "I am."]

Indo-Pak Reunification .
In my mind the former is just a Dream. A Dream based on fantasy not on fact.
A Castle in the sky. You may want something to happen but it does not necessary translate into it happening.

Esteemed Judges and this most recptive August Audience.
I Akshay , from Maharashtra Institute of Technology speak against the topic.

To further my argument that Indo-Pak reunification is not possible I will delve in four conditions I feel are required for a successful reunification and in doing so I will show how these conditions simply don't exist in the present scenario and how they may not exist in the future.
Unlike the many most my colleagues who have spoken before I'm not going to indulge myself in mere Anti-Pakistan rhetoric instead mention hard fact.

The first condition , which I feel is an absolute necessity for the case of reunification to be drawn out is Peace.

I bet that know one in the audience would describe the relationship India and Pakistan share to be "Friendly".

Far From it..

In the 57 years of existence of both these nations the situation has oscillated from brief periods of calm to border disputes, open war, cold war,diplomatic blockades ,insurgency to even a Nuclear armchair.

Let me also remind you that India and Pakistan have been at war thrice.
The first being in 1961 .
Then again in 1971.
And as recently as 1999 in the Kargil conflict.
There are still underlying issues which are thorns in the peace process and with no proper composite dialogue being shared between the two nations I see these issues to remain largely unresolved.
Without the prevalence of Peace I feel the case for reunification is grim.
Far from grim it is highly unlikely.

Moving on .
The existence of an visionary leadership is required to use the case .
Let us take the example of Germany where Gorbachev took the real iniative reunite both East and West Germany.
India and Pakistan lack such an Enlightened Government.
Pakistan is head my a Military dictator as President who is hiding behind a pseudo-democratic government.
India is not far behind. India with rampant corruption and bureaucratic red tapism is not exactly a prime example of good governance.
With such unimaginative governments ,the case for reunification is unlikely to be pushed.
Let me remind you that Indo-Pak reunification is not a small triviality it requires a true iniative.. Which is lacked on both sides.

Let us look at prevailing Social Condition , the world has seen a hardening on religious lines.
The same is the case in India Pakistan ,
In Pakistan there is small section of society,certain cleric peddling hardline , extreme views who are spreading hate on the basis of religion..
In India with the existence with the existence of religious hardliners like the BajRang Dal the picture is quiet the same.
Reunification will further complicate the already complex religious equations thus leading to strain on India's secular Fabric causing only more communal violence.
This in my mind would have disastrous effect , a disastrous effect we cannot afford.
Thus making reunification a impossibility.

Summing up I would like to say the case for reunification is like a skeleton .
A body with no mass , no flesh.
Thus should be dismissed as impossible.

Ending
toady is the 41st Anniversary of Martin Luther King's speech.
I have a dream.

I too have a dream
a dream where India and Pakistan co-exist in Peace.

The only difference between my dream and that for reunification is that mine is closer to reality.
Thank you.

[Note---- Sadly I didn't qualify for the next stage... by the way this speech does not reflect my views on the issues.. those will be cleared up next time]



I'm going be speaking at the "L N Birla National Debate" regional elims... I know scary shit...
Anyway the topic being "Indo-Pak Reunification : A possibility"
I speak against the Topic.
To tell you the truth in the heart of hearts I really would want it to happen..
Anyway as of tomorrow I going to drown my feeling in a shit load of rhetoric..
I will post both my speech up tomorrow with full run through of day's the happenings .
Anyway wish me and my partner Akshad best of luck,.

The following things went wrong bc they just went wrong.

1> Potholes and PMT buses,
damn if potholes aren't bad enough if you get both Potholes and PMT buses
together you get a recipe for disaster and before you know it ,you just got yourself creamed in a shit load of muddy water.Can anybody explain why PMT buses travel in packs , and does the Pune Municipal Transport Corporation actually go to lengths to layer them with dirt???
Anyways looks like I would always have to do battle on roads of Pune in such adverse conditions ...

2>Pune Traffic Police
Guess what , I just gave my first officially (unofficial) bribe yesterday.And my second bribe followed a few minutes later.
How many times have you come across the phrase Corruption is a way of life in India,
Many a time I guess.
and yesterday I experienced it first hand.
The first being at a normal traffic junction where your ever smiling, slightly obese ,white uniformed, mamu(cop in punieri) calls pulls you over for no particular reason and ask you for a PUC(pollution under control) not furnishing one charges you a 100RS fine and gives you no ticket which is in result a "BRIBE" , on asking for one (receipt) he say it's chai pani a paisa (money for tea and a snack)..
BTW for purely academic interest I only had 100rs in my wallet ,,
Therefore I drive away , light walleted very light walletted.
The thing is that at the next signal guess what happens!!!!!!!!!!!!!
Another cop pulls me over , again for no apparent reason or fault of mine.
And again asks me to furnish a PUC certificate. At this point I'm all frustrated with hands in my air telling him what just happens and the show him the fact I have ZERO money in my wallet...
Anyways after several many levels of negations ,which including me telling him I knew the nephew of the Mumbai Commissioner and that I'm distantly related to an IPS(Indian Police Services) Officer that he will lets me go ,but on One condition that I pay him Rs 100.
To which I protested removing wallet .
"Mere Pass Koi paise nahi hai" (I don't have any money)

To which he replied .
"Pur ap ke pass HDFC ATM card tho hai , dekho waha ek atm hai" [pointing to my ATM CARD]
(But you do have ATM card , look there's a ATM)

Looks like If corruption is a way of life I'm learning fast.





I published a new blog today... it called Photo Freezer .... please do visit check out some of the pictures...
Akshay

life of
an
insomniac





22th century
Date-10th JANUARY
Time-0119 hours
LOCATION -unknown
I find my
self in strange place, a closed
living quarters , the room is spinning around me and I'am in the
centre .. in the corner there appears to be a bed which has been
adequately camouflaged by a deluge of books .... two tables appear to
my right with descriptions closer to dingy and sombre , the first
table is under the shadow of a large book shelf looming high over
the floor and dominating the wall scape ........Accompanying the table
in loneliness , is a chair and a white board .....The white board is
filled with strange cryptograms decipherable to many but read by none ..
The second table is a table disguised as a cabinet ....the contents
of which cage a computer.......and what looks like a telephone .
Two doors leave and enter the room opening any one of which
unleashes great cacophony on any living thing within it's perimeter..
Through the window one sees a large tower standing high like a tower
of jenga blocks ......car rush bye in the darkness..and in boredom i
write for i get no sleep .. for i sleep not for i live the life of
an
insomniac

ILLUSIONS BITE
The wind blows through my hair , as I stand and wait..
people walk by.
Slaves to the monotonous madness we call life.
Staring at the fleeting sky
I wonder. As day turns to darkness..blue to black.
Stars , I see unchanged,as thier light travelles millions of years to meet my eyes.
I still wonder Why?Why? are we slaves to this cyst, this farce of
surrealism, when we can just stand and stare and enjoy the beauty of
nothingness.

I'm Left-Handed.I write with my left.I'm a Lefty.
Gauche!

It's liking living in a mirror.
Most people in the world hold their pen,their paintbrush,their guitar their violin with their "right-hand" ,but few may have realized that it is possible to write or do things the other way around.
If you look into the mirror and comb your hair, or brush your teeth, the mirror shows you my context of thought.The case is that I write and do most my daily chores and jobs with my left hand.Writing with your the left is different from writing with your right, but the output (this hard to believe for some) is the same.Right-handed people, hold their pens between their thumb and their index fingers in anticlockwise sense and write in a left to right sense.I do the same but , I just hold the pen with my left and the pen is in the clockwise sense.
Living In India , a country where symbolism and signs are taken pretty seriously, magnifies theentire "lefty-thing" all together. Shopkeepers to Rickshaw-wallas to Priests have not excepted money if I offer them it with my left hand.Not to mention , each time I sign my name somewhere , I'm bound to get one of those left comments, the most common being "Aap kaise likhte ho..."("How do you write ??)or "How do you hold the pen" or "How do manage to hold the pen like that""Does effect your writing speed in exams??" the list goes on..Some people imitate the way I HOLD the pen(using their right hand) and snicker behind my back.
I should have got used it by now, and I have.
But the phenomenon goes far , it give me a view in people a front row seat in the psyche human mind.
People who are differrent ,people who are not in herd,people with differrent experiences are looked at differrently then the demographic. The picked up and put into a pigeon-hole.
Nomeclature is important for humans.
A - "Do you watch Cricket?"
If your response is for example is
B- "No"
then if A watches Cricket..
the response you'll get wil be
A - " Why ??"
but if the responds to the underlined question differrently and says
B - "Yes , I watch Cricket"
you'l get a more favourable response
A - "Great , did you see India play yesterday, Sachin was awesome"
Basically our freind , A is trying to sort B into a common pigeonhole. If he gets a positive response he stereotypes him and places him under "Cricket Watching".
But if gets a negative response , our freind A will try to find out Why , he can't understand why .
The same thing happens in Racial stereo-typing, but things can get far more hairly here.

The same thing happens to right handed people when they see a left-hand person writing .
They don't seem to understand why people need to write with their left when they can do with their right, and they ask why ??

the next time you see somebody looking ,doing ,feeling
differrently look in to the mirror, for he/she is just your mirror
image.


Sometimes I am not purely able to concentrate on the task on hand and my mind wavers like the free wind.. Bouncing about from place to place from topic to topic and it all ends up in giving me a headache , like the one I'm having now.
I wonder if this happens to everybody .. How the hell do they still manage to put up that placid face when a War is waging inside .

"Feelings, whether of compassion or irritation, should be welcomed,recognized, and treated on an absolutely equal basis; because both areourselves. The tangerine I am eating is me. The mustard greens I amplanting are me. I plant with all my heart and mind. I clean thisteapot with the kind of attention I would have were I giving the babyBuddha or Jesus a bath. Nothing should be treated more carefully thananything else. In mindfulness, compassion, irritation, mustard greenplant, and teapot are all sacred."

 
Kiss the World
 
I got this touching and thought provoking piece today. Thought I shouldshare it with you.

Address by Subroto Bagchi, Chief Operating Officer, MindTree Consulting tothe Class of 2006 at the Indian Institute of Management, Bangalore ondefining success. July 2nd 2004
I was the last child of a small-time government servant, in a family offivebrothers. My earliest memory of my father is as that of a DistrictEmployment Officer in Koraput, Orissa. It was and remains as back of beyondas you can imagine. There was no electricity; no primary school nearby andwater did not flow out of a tap. As a result, I did not go to school untilthe age of eight; I was home-schooled. My father used to get transferredevery year. The family belongings fit into the back of a jeep – so thefamily moved from place to place and, without any trouble, my Mother wouldset up an establishment and get us going. Raised by a widow who had come asa refugee from the then East Bengal, she was a matriculate when she marriedmy Father. My parents set the foundation of my life and the value systemwhich makes me what I am today and largely defines what success means to metoday.
As District Employment Officer, my father was given a jeep by thegovernment. There was no garage in the Office, so the jeep was parked inourhouse. My father refused to use it to commute to the office. He told usthatthe jeep is an expensive resource given by the government – he reiteratedtous that it was not 'his jeep' but the government's jeep. Insisting that hewould use it only to tour the interiors, he would walk to his office onnormal days. He also made sure that we never sat in the government jeep –wecould sit in it only when it was stationary. That was our early childhoodlesson in governance – a lesson that corporate managers learn the hard way,some never do.
The driver of the jeep was treated with respect due to any other member ofmy Father's office. As small children, we were taught not to call him byhisname. We had to use the suffix 'dada' whenever we were to refer to him inpublic or private. When I grew up to own a car and a driver by the name ofRaju was appointed – I repeated the lesson to my two small daughters. Theyhave, as a result, grown up to call Raju, 'Raju Uncle' – very differentfrommany of their friends who refer to their family drivers as 'my driver'.WhenI hear that term from a school- or college-going person, I cringe. To me,the lesson was significant – you treat small people with more respect thanhow you treat big people. It is more important to respect your subordinatesthan your superiors.
Our day used to start with the family huddling around my Mother's chulha –an earthen fire place she would build at each place of posting where shewould cook for the family. There was no gas, nor electrical stoves. Themorning routine started with tea. As the brew was served, Father would askus to read aloud the editorial page of The Statesman's 'muffosil' edition –delivered one day late. We did not understand much of what we were reading.But the ritual was meant for us to know that the world was larger thanKoraput district and the English I speak today, despite having studied inanOriya medium school, has to do with that routine. After reading thenewspaper aloud, we were told to fold it neatly. Father taught us a simplelesson. He used to say, "You should leave your newspaper and your toilet,the way you expect to find it". That lesson was about showing considerationto others. Business begins and ends with that simple precept.
Being small children, we were always enamored with advertisements in thenewspaper for transistor radios – we did not have one. We saw other peoplehaving radios in their homes and each time there was an advertisement ofPhilips, Murphy or Bush radios, we would ask Father when we could get one.Each time, my Father would reply that we did not need one because healreadyhad five radios – alluding to his five sons. We also did not have a houseofour own and would occasionally ask Father as to when, like others, we wouldlive in our own house. He would give a similar reply, "We do not need ahouse of our own. I already own five houses". His replies did not gladdenour hearts in that instant. Nonetheless, we learnt that it is important notto measure personal success and sense of well being through materialpossessions.
Government houses seldom came with fences. Mother and I collected twigs andbuilt a small fence. After lunch, my Mother would never sleep. She wouldtake her kitchen utensils and with those she and I would dig the rocky,white ant infested surrounding. We planted flowering bushes. The white antsdestroyed them. My mother brought ash from her chulha and mixed it in theearth and we planted the seedlings all over again. This time, they bloomed.At that time, my father's transfer order came. A few neighbors told mymother why she was taking so much pain to beautify a government house, whyshe was planting seeds that would only benefit the next occupant. My motherreplied that it did not matter to her that she would not see the flowers infull bloom. She said, "I have to create a bloom in a desert and whenever Iam given a new place, I must leave it more beautiful than what I hadinherited". That was my first lesson in success. It is not about what youcreate for yourself, it is what you leave behind that defines success.
My mother began developing a cataract in her eyes when I was very small. Atthat time, the eldest among my brothers got a teaching job at theUniversityin Bhubaneswar and had to prepare for the civil services examination. So,itwas decided that my Mother would move to cook for him and, as herappendage,I had to move too. For the first time in my life, I saw electricity inhomesand water coming out of a tap. It was around 1965 and the country was goingto war with Pakistan. My mother was having problems reading and in anycase,being Bengali, she did not know the Oriya script. So, in addition to mydaily chores, my job was to read her the local newspaper – end to end. Thatcreated in me a sense of connectedness with a larger world. I began takinginterest in many different things. While reading out news about the war, Ifelt that I was fighting the war myself. She and I discussed the daily newsand built a bond with the larger universe. In it, we became part of alargerreality. Till date, I measure my success in terms of that sense of largerconnectedness.
Meanwhile, the war raged and India was fighting on both fronts. Lal BahadurShastri, the then Prime Minster, coined the term "Jai Jawan, Jai Kishan"andgalvanized the nation in to patriotic fervor. Other than reading out thenewspaper to my mother, I had no clue about how I could be part of theaction. So, after reading her the newspaper, every day I would land up nearthe University's water tank, which served the community. I would spendhoursunder it, imagining that there could be spies who would come to poison thewater and I had to watch for them. I would daydream about catching one andhow the next day, I would be featured in the newspaper. Unfortunately forme, the spies at war ignored the sleepy town of Bhubaneswar and I never gota chance to catch one in action. Yet, that act unlocked my imagination.Imagination is everything. If we can imagine a future, we can create it, ifwe can create that future, others will live in it. That is the essence ofsuccess.
Over the next few years, my mother's eyesight dimmed but in me she createdalarger vision, a vision with which I continue to see the world and, Isense,through my eyes, she was seeing too. As the next few years unfolded, hervision deteriorated and she was operated for cataract. I remember, when shereturned after her operation and she saw my face clearly for the firsttime,she was astonished. She said, "Oh my God, I did not know you were so fair".I remain mighty pleased with that adulation even till date. Within weeks ofgetting her sight back, she developed a corneal ulcer and, overnight,becameblind in both eyes. That was 1969. She died in 2002. In all those 32 yearsof living with blindness, she never complained about her fate even once.Curious to know what she saw with blind eyes, I asked her once if she seesdarkness. She replied, "No, I do not see darkness. I only see light evenwith my eyes closed". Until she was eighty years of age, she did hermorningyoga everyday, swept her own room and washed her own clothes. To me,successis about the sense of independence; it is about not seeing the world butseeing the light.
Over the many intervening years, I grew up, studied, joined the industryandbegan to carve my life's own journey. I began my life as a clerk in agovernment office, went on to become a Management Trainee with the DCMgroupand eventually found my life's calling with the IT industry when fourthgeneration computers came to India in 1981. Life took me places – I workedwith outstanding people, challenging assignments and traveled all over theworld. In 1992, while I was posted in the US, I learnt that my father,living a retired life with my eldest brother, had suffered a third degreeburn injury and was admitted in the Safderjung Hospital in Delhi. I flewback to attend to him – he remained for a few days in critical stage,bandaged from neck to toe. The Safderjung Hospital is a cockroach infested,dirty, inhuman place. The overworked, under-resourced sisters in the burnward are both victims and perpetrators of dehumanized life at its worst.Onemorning, while attending to my Father, I realized that the blood bottle wasempty and fearing that air would go into his vein, I asked the attendingnurse to change it. She bluntly told me to do it myself. In that horribletheater of death, I was in pain and frustration and anger. Finally when sherelented and came, my Father opened his eyes and murmured to her, "Why haveyou not gone home yet?" Here was a man on his deathbed but more concernedabout the overworked nurse than his own state. I was stunned at his stoicself. There I learnt that there is no limit to how concerned you can be foranother human being and what is the limit of inclusion you can create. Myfather died the next day.
He was a man whose success was defined by his principles, his frugality,hisuniversalism and his sense of inclusion. Above all, he taught me thatsuccess is your ability to rise above your discomfort, whatever may be yourcurrent state. You can, if you want, raise your consciousness above yourimmediate surroundings. Success is not about building material comforts –the transistor that he never could buy or the house that he never owned.Hissuccess was about the legacy he left, the memetic continuity of his idealsthat grew beyond the smallness of a ill-paid, unrecognized governmentservant's world.
My father was a fervent believer in the British Raj. He sincerely doubtedthe capability of the post-independence Indian political parties to governthe country. To him, the lowering of the Union Jack was a sad event. MyMother was the exact opposite. When Subhash Bose quit the Indian NationalCongress and came to Dacca, my mother, then a schoolgirl, garlanded him.Shelearnt to spin khadi and joined an underground movement that trained her inusing daggers and swords. Consequently, our household saw diversity in thepolitical outlook of the two. On major issues concerning the world, the OldMan and the Old Lady had differing opinions. In them, we learnt the powerofdisagreements, of dialogue and the essence of living with diversity inthinking. Success is not about the ability to create a definitive dogmaticend state; it is about the unfolding of thought processes, of dialogue andcontinuum.
Two years back, at the age of eighty-two, Mother had a paralytic stroke andwas lying in a government hospital in Bhubaneswar. I flew down from the USwhere I was serving my second stint, to see her. I spent two weeks with herin the hospital as she remained in a paralytic state. She was neithergetting better nor moving on. Eventually I had to return to work. Whileleaving her behind, I kissed her face. In that paralytic state and agarbledvoice, she said, "Why are you kissing me, go kiss the world." Her river wasnearing its journey, at the confluence of life and death, this woman whocame to India as a refugee, raised by a widowed Mother, no more educatedthan high school, married to an anonymous government servant whose lastsalary was Rupees Three Hundred, robbed of her eyesight by fate and crownedby adversity – was telling me to go and kiss the world!
Success to me is about Vision. It is the ability to rise above theimmediacyof pain. It is about imagination. It is about sensitivity to small people.It is about building inclusion. It is about connectedness to a larger worldexistence. It is about personal tenacity. It is about giving back more tolife than you take out of it. It is about creating extra-ordinary successwith ordinary lives.
Thank you very much; I wish you good luck and Godspeed. Go, kiss the world.
[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]

Time Travel
----------------------------------------------------------------Imagine one moment you're walking on the road , let's say it morning and it's a somewhat dull and sultry July morning (kind of like today).You're walking to the bus stop or to the train station or to catch a rickshaw or just on your morning stroll.The sky like I said before is a dull grey .Ignoring it you walk on whiffing the morning breeze , with a hurried motion of your legs.The next moment as you laying your next step you find your self lying naked on a cold tiled floor..You're heads to spin and yourthrobs as you try to get up . A streak of fear overtakes you and a question resonates in your head ,
Where the hell are you?
May be you're in a under time ,in another place
The debate on time travel, is now pretty old now , it mainly constitutes whether one, if it is possible in the first place , second ,if is possible is possible for humans to travel into the past or into the future, and lastly if it is possible for humans to time travel has it been done?
Anyway to end , I would like you think ..If time travel is possible , and you travel back in time and meet your grandfather before father has been conceived and you kill him , will you cease to exist or is it possible in the first place.This called the Grandfather's Paradox.But if you see we're all time travelers , in the forward direction..because every seconds takes you in the future.Have a nice ride,thats all I can say

Rickety Rickshaw

This is originally carried on my other blog PUNE BLOGGING ;the blog that is Pune , India

Our three wheeler freind , the black and yellow Rickshaw (actually comes in an assortment of colours).
This transport of millions is not exactly what I call the breakfast of champions.Yet,the auto-rickshaw is India's most used urban transport.
When I came to Pune a year ago, I found few transport options to get from point A to point B .. Let's face it , Pune like many other growing Indian cities has a public transport problem.
Yes there is the Pune City Bus system (PMT) ,but there is one major problem with it all the busses go either to Swargate or to Corporation. Therefore if you get from to your destintion you have to via either Swargate or Corporation , which can be a tad irritating when your destination is in the other direction.
Therefore my choice of Public Transport The Rickety Rickhaw.
Actually most of the world's auto-rickshaws are made in Pune , by a company called Bajaj Auto.
A rickshaw ride constitutes first finding one .You will most likely find one at most Pune Nakas.There you'll probably find the 150cc 4stroke beast in the colours of the tiger.The anatomy of the rickshaw both exterior and interior greatly varies from city to city in India. For example ricks in bombay are fitted with extensive 1000watt sub-woofers hi-fi systems with makes them moving bose speakers, punching the latest the Hindi hits one after the other. Who needs FM RADIO,thus bombay rick embodies the city and the pune rick embodies pune , a more quieter and sleepier city.
What do you mean by quieter and sleepier ? The classic example to the fact is that all shops (except the bussiness like marwadis) close form 2:30 pm to 4pm for their "Afternoon Siesta" , now you know why I said sleepier.
Thus the Pune Ricks are simpler looking with plain more elgent interior.Our freind the rickshaw walla , bhau (brother) to you and me sits in the rickshaw cab , reading yesterday's edition of Sakal (Pune's most read daily).
After supplying Bhau with your destination and on him agreeing to it where off with the ring of the tarrif meter.The streets of Pune like many another Indian city can be chaotic and sometimes hellisly gushing with traffic (cycles,lunas,scooters,motor-bikes,PMT busses,cars,trucks,rickshaws,the occassional cow or stray dog and of course pedestrians.)The rides starts as the he power ups his 150 cc 4 stroke engine zips out with sound that yout grandfathers vespa may have made.
Piercing to traffic , ricks are perfect modes of urban transport in heavily populated cities which have sometimes bad road conditions in diverse weather .
Once you are finished you have calculate the tarrif , from the metre ..which most of the time is governed by a complexed mathematical quation.
In Pune it is X*6 - (absX - 2)
,where X is meter reading.
There for if you metre reading is let's say 3.20
You multiply by six and minus it from the differrence of two
Thus the fare is 18 rs (20 paise) but we round it off to 18 rs..

I hope you've enjoyed my ride in the rikety rickshaw.


Colombo Continued Picture
Akshay


Kollupitiya
Akshay

Colombo Continued !!


Galle face road , is Colombo's equivalent of Marine Drive .But it's a little differrent the long and elegant sea-facing boulevard , is graciously fronted by a long green esplanade ,used by the tourists and locals alike for walking and enjoying the sights and sounds of the Indian ocean.Also did I mention it's also used as cricket ground, and in the morning it doubles as a coaching centre for young enthusiasts of the sport. So all in all Galle road is Shivaji Park meets Marine Drive , in strictly bombay terms that is.

So if you ever land up in Colombo,here one pick I should send your way, even though it may sound a little strange .
You should visit Kollupitiya Station in Colombo.
Why visit a station you may ask??
The answer is , I found to be one of the most unique stations I have ever visited .
Kollupitiya ,a station part of the Colombo mass transit local train system is on Galle Road again and the unique thing about it is just a stone throw away from the sea .. & The main track is on the beach.
Also a good is way to see Colombo by rail if you take a short train ride fro Kollupitiya to Colombo Fort station to get to see the City in it's true sense.As you glide by the Indian Ocean over and over the backwaters of Colombo Dutch past. And did I mention it quiet inexpensive it cost about One Sri Lankan Rupee per kilometre.
Note---
Just to put it into perspective One Sri Lankan rupee is 50 paise.Therefore 1 SL rupee is equal to 1 CENT.






Taj Samudra , Colombo Posted by Hello

Auyobowan Posted by Hello

Day 1 - Escape to Colombo -

(date posted as 20th June)
The Sun had already risen from its holiday in the east , as the flight UL142 touched down on sunny and blue skyed Colombo morning. The time 6:20 am . I found myself 6hrs ahead of ,having succesfully evaded the Mumbai rains (Yeah!!).
On the tarmac of Bandaranaike International Airport , looking at the sky, a refreshing breeze blew by gently ,soothing my senses . This was Sri Lanka saying Ayubowan to me , What a sweet welcome to the Emerald isle.

Formalities over , I was on my a way in taxi to our hotel , The Taj Samudra.The drive was though long was interesting , as it was my virst view of Sri Lanka at work. The traffic like India was sometimes hectic , even at 7 am. Our driver driving speedily throught the narrow Airport-Colombo roads overtaking Tata busses ,while locals dotting the streets doing their saturday morning
shopping .
The driver , told us "Sir ,you lucky not working day otherwise traffic lots , long time to go Colombo".
Buddhist viharas strung up on both sides ..colonial bungalows , bakeries .

On reaching Colombo , You could here the glorious roar of the Indian Ocean as she worked herself to a high tide , and the shiny two World Trade centres in the background reflected the sun ,like glazed glass prisms.

I'm back!!!!!!!!
Yes of know I'm home from Serendib.
More on the holliday tomorrow , I couldn't update it in Sri Lanka bc of various reasons ... but don't worry about it you get it soon enough

Here my proposed itenary to the Blessed Island (Sri Lanka)-
Day 1 *20th* Colombo




Day 2 *21th*
Colombo / Kandy
Mode of Transport-
(Intercity Express Colombo) (07.00)--reaches Kandy----(09.30)
(AM) Have late breakfast and leave for Kandy, the city
beautifully located on the shores of a lake and a cultural
sanctuary where ancient ways of life, arts & crafts still
survive. It is also the home of the "Buddha Tooth",
rescued from the flames of his cremation and Sri Lanka's
most cherished relic.
(PM) Do sightseeing tour of Kandy, visiting the city, botanic
gardens, the temple of the Tooth and the upper lake.
Evening : Observe a memorable cultural pageant which
will be followed by a "fire walking" show


Day 3 *22th*
Kandy / Nuwara Eliya (“Noo-ra-i-lie-a”)
Transport -- Options- (distance 70 km-- terrain -- GHATS)
1.car/van from Kandy . aprox price --- Rs1000
2.Inter-city bus (a.c exp) ---RS 50
3 Train to Nanu Oya and catch the catch a taxi (about Rs125) or bus (about Rs15).

Places of Interest .
^The Tea Factory Hotel
^World's End
^Laboukelle Tea Factory

Stay in "Nuwara Eliya"

Day 4 *23th*
Note -- Should leave Nuwara Eliya as early as possible.preferably around 5 am

Nuwara Eliya / Kandy via Matale (spice gardens) / Dambulla / Sigiriya
(70 km) (26km) (47km) (24km)

Total distance ------ 167km estimated time 4 to 5 hrs

Mode of Transport -- Most likely to be rented van / bus.
Stay at Sigiriya/Dambulla


Note -----
Deciding which of the two ancient capitals Polonnaruwa or Anuradhapura - is the more impressive is a tough call.
Anuradhapura is much older and its ruins cover a greater expanse of land. Polonnaruwa is much more recent - although it was built more than a millennium ago
- and is also better preserved.Also Polonnaruwa is closer to Sigiriya than Anuradhapura
---thus two options

Day 5 *25th* (Option 1)
Distance -------(26 km)
Polonnaruwa
ancient Sinhalese city

day trip... back to sigiriya/Dambulla

Day 5 *25th* (Option 2)
Anuradhapura
(82km)
This sacred city was established around a cutting from the 'tree of enlightenment', the Buddha's fig tree, brought there in the 3rd century B.C. by Sanghamitta, the founder of an order of Buddhist nuns. Anuradhapura, a Ceylonese political and religious capital that flourished for 1,300 years, was abandoned after an invasion in 993. Hidden away in dense jungle for many years, the splendid site, with its palaces, monasteries and monuments, is now accessible once again.
Stay in Anuradhapura ...

Day 6 *26TH*
Return to Colombo and return home

From the map it clear I going to visit Colombo , the capital of cource and hikkaduva and galle to the south and sigiriya , dambulla and kandy to the north ... more on the locations later Posted by Hello

Trivial MATTERS goes to Sri Lanka
Sicily is Italy's football ,just like Sri Lanka is teardrop rolling down India's face. Think Sri Lanka and it conjures up vivid images of lush tea plantations, and palm-fringed beaches. May be even the picture of the civil conflict in the North of the country , or even a pictures a great cricketing nation.Read Muralitharan and Jayasuriya.
All in all images of Sri Lanka envisage paradise , the garden of eden , the emerald isle and alot more.
Now you wonder whar baits my mind to direct my visor to Sri Lanka. Well the answer is quiet simple , I'm going to
Sri Lanka.
Therefore Trivial Matters will be put in travel gear for the next few days ...
Trivial Matters goes to Sri Lanka.
More on the following /\later
-

These following are Members of the Security Council
China
Permanent Member


France
Permanent Member

Germany
31 December 2004


Pakistan
31 December 2004


Philippines
31 December 2005


Romania
31 December 2005


Russian Federation
Permanent Member


Spain
31 December 2004

United Kingdom
Permanent Member


United States
Permanent Member


Algeria
31 December 2005

Angola
31 December 2004

Benin
31 December 2005

Brazil
31 December 2005

Don't you think they're missing a country?? A country with a population of 1,065,070,607 a GDP of $3.022 trillion .
Why is India a Memeber of the UN security council ??
The answer baffles me.