Month: September 2022

  • Sacha Jafri focuses on the process of creation

    Sacha Jafri focuses on the process of creation

    I have worked for 25 years as a professional artist which is the beginning of fabulous journey. It gets interesting because it’s not about survival as an artist, it’s about trying to reconnect to different things…Sacha Jafri speaks with Tanya Banon

    The Next 50: World Heritage as a source of resilience, humanity, and innovation is the theme chosen by UNESCO to commemorate the 50th anniversary of the 1972 World Heritage Convention. This year’s celebration encourages people to consider how we should view our relationship with and responsibility for heritage in the face of escalating global challenges.

    Global Art Curator & Visionary Marcus Schaefer brings to life another ground breaking concept to exhibit Art, with one of the world’s most celebrated Artists, Sacha Jafri, at UNESCO Paris HQ. The UNESCO Headquarters Great Hall will host Sacha Jafri’s exhibition of World Heritage Sites, which will be presented as sculptures suspended from the ceiling using the fuselage from a retired Airbus A320-211 as his canvas.

    This upcycling project is in line with Schaefer’s desire to exhibit art outside of the traditional Gallery Space. For many years, this aeroplane flew across the globe carrying tourists to these locations. Now, instead of being scrapped, it has a new life as one of Jafri’s twelve sculptures honouring those same locations and continuing the voyage as an enduring legacy for the cultural heritage of our planet.

    Marcus Schaefer states, “Giving this aircraft – which connected the world for decades – a second life through pieces of Sacha’s Art Maze collection that have been created with the same objective, just feels like a further natural step into the right direction for me. I’ve always been passionate about touching and connecting people through art in unconventional ways. To shine a light on heritage sites around the world with this exhibition at the UNESCO headquarters in Paris is a great honour for us all.”

    Through his exhibition, UAE based British artist and philanthropist Jafri aims to inspire the general public with a new meaning of the love and appreciation of our colourful and fragile world, rooted in his conviction that reflections, dialogues, empathy and collaborative efforts are needed for its conservation and for a better future for the children of our world.

    Jafri, has been awarded by the UN for his humanitarian work and is regarded as one of the world’s most important living artists. Through his work, he aims to reconnect humanity to our cultural heritage, our ancestral past and the beauty that surrounds us within our natural world, as well as shine a light on the desperately needed conversations on sustainability, conservation, empathy, and compassion – his hope for a better future for our planet and all humanity. Speaking Sacha Jafri to get details on what inspires the artist to create his monumental works. Read Excerpts:

    Tell us about the Art maze?

    Jafri: Expanding this special collection to create more sculptural pieces onto the fuselage of an Airbus A320 has been a really exciting and meaningful process for me. Painting from the subconscious and in a deep meditative state I travelled to each place trying to capture the spirit and the soul of the site itself as well as the people that lived there; in a state of surrender, with purified intentions, aiming to tap into something greater than myself and encourage the viewer to find magic in the overfamiliar, to reconnect to themselves, each other, our creator, and ultimately to ‘The Soul of the Earth’.

    With this collection I hope to inspire the reconnection of Humanity through the natural beauty that surrounds us and the Heritage Sites of our World; linking us back to our cultural & ancestral past, our more empathetic and conscious present, and our inspired and hopeful future. With this collection of our most beloved UNESCO World Heritage Sites I hope to spark an electric shock that enters our souls, creating a trigger for us to unlearn everything we thought we knew and re-learn everything through the beauty of our natural world, and the purity of the hearts, minds, and souls of our children; I am hopeful for more conscious humanity, where poignant conversations can create the real action needed for the conservation and sustainability of a reunited planet.

    This project is very close to your heart, what does it mean create something that resonates with a global audience ?

    I have worked for 25 years as a professional artist which is the beginning of fabulous journey. It gets interesting because it’s not about survival as an artist, it’s about trying to reconnect to different things, to make your work relevant, exciting and magical, otherwise you are merely doing things that photographers do better. We have to try and find something special in our work, in our soul, in our spirit that will really connect with in a different way.

    Nowadays, particularly there is an entire machinery that works in the art world, what is the finished product, what it looks like, how it can be marketed and does it have a great story behind it, so that it can be brought into market and sold as a successful project. It involves dealers, collectors, consultants and the whole thing is made into a success and the artists loses his way and understanding of what the art is really all about.

    So I rather focus on the journey itself, the process of creation. I think about what one should do as an artist, to focus on how you live your life, how you can give back and create something meaningful; it’s only then something magical can happen. One has to learn to live with grace and gratitude and say “Thank You” for the moment in time you have borrowed. You have to surrender it and give back to the community and environment with grace, you have not created it but merely borrowed that moment from the universe.

    What does it mean to be an artist today ?


    Jafri: I think the key to being an artist is you have to realize that you have to first surrender, so that you can focus, which means treating everyone equally, whether its king of the country or a person from the streets, they all deserve the same love and respect. To live a life of grace.

    You have to keep reminding yourself that an artwork is not yours, you haven’t created it and merely borrowed it from a moment in time, and when you get that realisation it’s very beautiful thing. I think then the danger is if you engage the ego, like “Wow! Look what I did, what I made, I was amazing”; that’s when you stop living in grace, that’s when you will face an artistic block. There is no thing as a writer’s block or creator’s block, it’s just that you have stopped living a life of grace. So, I think that’s the very important thing to realise as an artist and focus on how to live your life.

    How do you try and live your life?

    Jafri: I have realised that my work should have some humanity, through my journey I have realised that my work is pretty average if I wasn’t connecting to a humanitarian course. Something that can help others or reconnect or unite people and inspire someone somewhere. I want my work to be beautiful and therefore I have to connect humanity somewhere and then something great happens. If you can understand on how to focus to live your life as an artist, ways to purify and question your intentions every moment, then you have got something powerful and special, because with time our intentions have become so questionable, so gender filled, so financial driven, so egoistic and all about me, that you end up becoming static.

    During and after Covid, I realised, there was a beautiful window to reconnect and actually do something for the future of humanity as a conscious change, and what I realised is the power intention, that it doesn’t matter what we do or what we create, what matters is the intention we do it with.

    What did you learn through your time in Africa with Nelson Mandela?

    Jafri: So that’s really how it all started, I have worked with Nelson Mandela in South Africa and the Foundation, close to children and spent the last four years of his life next to him. It was an extraordinary experience and I learnt a lot. I think if we can’t remind of ourselves to live in humility, then we can become and create great things, this is what I learned from Mandela, and the other thing I leant from him is that from darkness comes the light.

    You are all set to be the first artist to display his work on the moon, share with us some details?


    Jafri: It’s the 50th anniversary of NASA’s landing on the moon in 1972. I was asked by them to create a work that would go up with NASA’s project to the moon, in what is actually Jeff Bezos’s rocket. The art work has to be able to sustain itself under all the weather, geographical and temperature conditions on the moon.

    My reservation initially was why are we spending billions and billions of dollars on exploration into space when we really need to look after our own planet, why are we spending this ridiculous amount of money on these missions. But I realised its going to happen anyway and so I tried to make this an opportunity to give back and benefit the world. So there is this plate that has been created which can stand all the environment pressures on the moon on which is a heart with two fingers which symbolises reconnection. There will then be an NFT sale of these hearts being emitted into the metaverse and from these NFT hearts I’m hoping to raise billions of dollars to then help humanity on earth. All the proceeds of the NFT will be put to a good cause and charitable use.

    There is another mission to the moon with Elon Musk where celebrated artist Jeff Koons is sending his artwork up to the moon. So really its a race, and well as much as I’d like be the first artist whose work is on the moon, we’ll just have to wait and watch.

    The Art Maze was introduced earlier this year on the renowned Burj Al Arab Helipad in Dubai. Due to popular demand, the exhibition was extended, making this the longest closure in the Helipad’s history.

    As part of UNESCO’s inclusive celebration of “The Next 50,” “The Art Maze World Tour,” in conjunction with UNESCO, is well under way on its epic trip to all four corners of the globe. The latest piece in The Art Maze Collection by Jafri, “Sagarmartha National Park,” was launched on Mount Everest in Kathmandu in April as part of the World Tour. It was the first painting to be unveiled on Mount Everest.

    The most prestigious art galleries in the world have previously displayed Sacha Jafri’s paintings alongside those of Picasso, Warhol, Hockney, Matisse, Dali, Miro, Koons, Jacometti, Kiefer, Kandinsky, and Pollock, to name a few.

    Michael Croft, Head of Office at UNESCO: “UNESCO, in partnership with The Art Maze and the unveiling of Sacha Jafri’s New Collection, reinforces its mission of promoting inclusive, interdisciplinary dialogues related to heritage conservation, sustainable tourism, and the challenges World Heritage Sites face in the context of climate change, as part of UNESCO’s ‘The Next 50’ dialogues.

    It is our great pleasure to host this incredible exhibition from one of the world’s most exciting and poignant artists, Sacha Jafri, his ‘World Heritage Sites Collection’ celebrates our world and all that needs to be sustained, preserved and adored, celebrating our 50th Anniversary of the 1972 World Heritage Sites Convention here in Paris, this will help bring new eyes to UNESCO’s work and shine a light on our vision for ‘The Next 50’. We are particularly delighted to add one of Jafri’s pieces from his Heritage Site’s Collection, his stunning depiction of ‘Notre Dame’ painted on a cut fuselage from an Airbus A320, to our collection of Museum-Works; alongside Picasso, Miro, Henry Moore, and Giacometti, amongst other great Modernist Artists here at UNESCO.”

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  • Zimbabwe, UAE register wins  at ICC Women’s T20 WC Qualifier

    Zimbabwe, UAE register wins  at ICC Women’s T20 WC Qualifier

    In the run chase, Thailand put on a 76-run opening stand with Nannapat Koncharoenkai and Natthakan Chantham playing some crisp strokes and giving Thailand a strong platform…reports Asian Lite News

    Zimbabwe beat Thailand by seven runs in a close game while UAE and USA played out a thriller, with the former winning off the last ball in the ICC Women’s T20 World Cup Qualifier 2022, here on Sunday.

    Put in to bat, Zimbabwe’s top four got starts, but couldn’t go big as Zimbabwe posted a below-par total on board.

    Sharne Mayers and Kelis Ndhlovu put on an impressive opening stand of 46 runs before the former was dismissed. Chipo Mugeri-Tiripano gave Zimbabwe some much-needed acceleration with a 27-ball 39. Zimbabwe put on 118/6 eventually, a total that proved to be less than sufficient.

    In the run chase, Thailand put on a 76-run opening stand with Nannapat Koncharoenkai and Natthakan Chantham playing some crisp strokes and giving Thailand a strong platform.

    Ndhlovu eventually broke the stand by dismissing Chantham, and added two more wickets to her tally to put pressure on Thailand. Reduced to 92/4, the onus was on skipper Naruemol Chaiwai to take Thailand home with the required run rate soaring.

    In the end, the target proved to be a bit away as Zimbabwe won by seven runs after a good final over from Nomvelo Sibanda.

    UAE v USA

    Chasing 118 for a win, UAE openers Esha Oza and Theertha Satish put on a half-century stand, but the duo was dismissed in quick succession as USA came back into the contest.

    With the middle-order unable to keep up with the rate, USA were in with a chance to register their first win in the tournament.

    Khushi Sharma was run out for 23 in the penultimate over and USA were favourites to win the contest, with UAE still more than 10 runs away from a win. But Natasha Cherriath and Samaira Dharnidharka held their nerve in the final over as UAE made 11 runs to win the game and the tournament on a high.

    Brief scores:

    ZIMW 118/6 in 20 overs beat THAIW 111-6 in 20 overs by 7 runs

    USAW 117/3 in 20 overs lost to UAEW 118/5 in 20 overs by 5 wickets

    ALSO READ-Kipchoge breaks own world record to win 2022 Berlin marathon

  • KISS gets prestigious UNESCO prize for mother tongue-based learning

    KISS gets prestigious UNESCO prize for mother tongue-based learning

    The educational initiative at KISS comprises a school, a college and a university founded with the objective of providing food, education and empowerment to indigenous children…reports Asian Lite News

    Kalinga Institute of Social Sciences (KISS), Bhubaneswar has won the prestigious UNESCO King Sejong Literacy Prize 2022 for its outstanding literacy programme based on the recommendations of an international jury.

    The UNESCO King Sejong Literacy Prize is sponsored by the Government of the Republic of Korea and recognizes contributions to mother language-based literacy development. KISS has received the award in the category of ‘Mother Tongue Based Multilingual Education programme’. The award carries an endowment of US USD 20,000, a medal and a diploma. KISS is a constituent of the KIIT Group of Institutions.

    KISS, the largest institute for the indigenous students in the world, is credited with the adoption of innovative pedagogies as learning tools and bringing about a perceptible change in the socio-economic lives of the indigenous population through education. This recognition also brings the state of Odisha to prominence on the world map for its efforts at changing the education ecosystem. Moreover, it is also a big day of celebration for indigenous communities as it is truly an award for them.

    KISS is a not-for-profit organisation headquartered in Bhubaneswar, Odisha, India. It was established in 1992-93 by well-known educationist Dr Achyuta Samanta to empower the indigenous population through education. It is a fully free residential educational institution that provides holistic education, comprehensive skilling and sports empowerment.

    The educational initiative at KISS comprises a school, a college and a university founded with the objective of providing food, education and empowerment to indigenous children.

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  • Muslim Forums Support Ban on PFI

    Muslim Forums Support Ban on PFI

    India’s prominent Muslim organisations support the arrests of leaders of Ppular Front of India and calls for its ban. Maulana Shahabuddin Razvi Barelvi, the President of All India Muslim Jamaat,  said the raids have made it clear that the PFI has been “involved in communal riots in various states across the country.” “I urge all Sunni, Sufi, and Barelvi Muslims not to keep any relation with this organisation,” he added. “It has sole aim and objective of promoting enmity and disrupt the religious harmony between different comunities on the basis of inter-faith and equanimity.” … A special report by Mumtaz Usman

    Maulana Shahabuddin Razvi, the President of All India Muslim Jamaat on 24 September called the Popular Front of India (PFI) a “radical group”, urging the Muslim community to stay away from it, and calling for the central government to impose a ban on the organization. Earlier on 22 September, law enforcement agencies in India led by the National Investigation Agency (NIA) carried out searches in 15 states across the country, arresting 106 workers of PFI, including its chairman O M A Salam, for alleged support to terrorist activities.

    According to a report published in Indian Express, 93 locations were searched in 15 states, including 39 in Kerala, 16 in Tamil Nadu, 12 in Karnataka, and 7 in Andhra Pradesh. Searches were carried out in Uttar Pradesh, Rajasthan, Delhi, Madhya Pradesh, Telengana, Assam, Goa, West Bengal and Manipur. In a published statement, the NIA had said that these searches were carried out ‘at the houses and offices of the top PFI leaders and members in connection with five cases filed against the organization’. The agency had received ‘continued inputs and evidence that the PFI leaders and cadres were involved in the funding of terrorism and terrorist activities’ including organizing camps for arms training and radicalizing individuals to join banned outfits.

    Maulana Shahabuddin Razvi Barelvi, President of All India Muslim Jamaat, in a statement emphasised that the raids have made it clear that the PFI has been “involved in communal riots in various states across the country.” “That’s why, I urge all Sunni, Sufi, and Barelvi Muslims not to keep any relation with this organisation,” he added. “It has sole aim and objective of promoting enmity and disrupt the religious harmony between different comunities on the basis of inter-faith and equanimity.”

    The leader of the Barelvi sect, which has its roots in Uttar Pradesh’s Bareilly, also called for the central government to enforce an immediate ban on such organizations to protect the unity and integrity of the country. Maulana Barelvi also supported the action carried out by the government to combat terror activities across India.

    In a report published in the Print, several Muslim organisations observed that “PFI and other such ‘Salafi Wahhabi’ outfits want to trick them (Muslim youths) against the basic ideology of Sufi majority population of the country but this situation is not in the interest of Islam, country and humanity”.

    According to a tweet in Hindi by the Muslim Students’ Organisation of India (MSO), a student and youth body of Muslims for the promotion of Sufism and inclusive India, these organisations expressed their faith in the judicial system, law, and Constitution of the country.

    Organisations such as Tanzeem Ulema-e-Islam, Kul Hind Markazi Imam Council and MSO have said in their statements that if the recent spate of actions were taken for compliance of law and prevention of terrorism, then everyone should be patient on it,” according to another tweet cited in the same report.

    The organisations said that the charges of murder, violence and possession of weapons were serious and that it is a point of concern for the Muslims of the country. They also called the charge against PFI of brainwashing the youth with Salafi Wahhabi ideology was a matter of concern for all Muslims of India. Muslims should help the country in its pursuit of peace and stability, said another tweet by the same organization.

    Speaking to Outlook magazine, Mohammad Kunhi, Karnataka state secretary of Jamaat-e-Islami said, “they (PFI) are pushing Muslims to a corner. They communalise every issue and find a Hindu–Muslim angle in it”. The hijab issue is a case in point. A Mangalore-based Muslim advocate and businessman underlined that the PFI converted the issue into “a binary that one could not escape”. He told Outlook that “the PFI completely eroded the space for any negotiation and made it a pro- or against-Islam issue.” 

    Muzaffar Assadi, a political science professor at Mysore University, believes that the modus operandi of the PFI is a major cause for concern. “There is indoctrination, there is a feeling that we alone provide you physical security,” Assadi says. “They have sneaked into different structures of power—publications, intelligence wings and are strong on campuses”, he said.

    Earlier, PFI was founded in 2006 with the avowed objective of the socio-economic advancement of Muslims in the country but soon came under the radar of various investigative agencies. In 2010, it was said to be involved in the chopping of the hand of a college professor in Kerala for allegedly hurting Muslim religious sentiments through a question paper he had set.

    The organisation also came under scrutiny in Kerala for the disappearance of some people from the state to join the terrorist outfit Islamic State in Afghanistan and Syria. The leaders of the organisation regularly travel to the middle east for raising funds the donations received by the outfit were examined by central agencies. Incidentally, the Kerala government had in 2012 banned the freedom parades organised by the PFI.

    In October 2017, the Ministry of Home Affairs held several meetings to decide whether the outfit should be banned or not. On May 8, 2018, the Enforcement Directorate booked PFI under criminal charges of money laundering for its alleged links with terror activities and funding. In 2018, the Jharkhand government banned the outfit in the state, though the ban had to be lifted later following court orders. A PIL filed in Madras High Court in 2018 sought direction to the Tamil Nadu government to ban PFI, calling it a “radical” outfit (carrying out) activities aimed at disturbing peace and harmony of the country. The Karnataka government in August 2020 had been considering a proposal to ban PFI and its political arm SDPI.

    The Popular Front of India is a very dangerous establishment. It has more than 16 fronts, masks — mask of human rights, mask of rehabilitation, mask of being a student organisation, it takes the form of a political party. But its whole aim is to destabilise India. Any individual or institution that supports it out of vested interest can directly jeopardise the peace, serenity and harmony for the humanity in general and security and sovereignty of the nation in particular.

  • Navratri fasting special recipes to cook at home

    Navratri fasting special recipes to cook at home

    With the Navratri festival just around the corner, try this Navratri fasting special recipes that you can easily create at home for guests or relish by yourself. Singhade ke ate ki kadhi & Rajgira ki Poori recipe by Chef Rajeev Kumar, Executive Sous Chef, The Westin Goa.

    Singhade ke ate ki kadhi & Rajgira ki PooriSINGHADE KE ATE KI KADHI

    Ingredients

    1/2 cup plain yoghurt

    1 tablespoon Singhare ka atta

    1/2 teaspoon Red chili powder

    Rock salt (sendha namak) to taste

    a pinch Sugar

    1 cup Water

    1 tablespoon Cilantro or coriander leaves chopped finely

    For Tempering:

    1 tablespoon Oil or ghee

    1/2 teaspoon Cumin seeds

    1 Dried red chilies

    6-7 Curry leaves

    Instructions

    Take yogurt, singhare ka atta, rock salt, red chili powder and sugar in a bowl. Whisk it really well until yogurt is smooth.

    Now add water and whisk again to mix.

    Take this mixture into a saucepan and turn the heat on medium. Keep stirring very frequently until it comes to a simmer to avoid curdling. And let it simmer for 5-8 minutes or until thickens.

    At the end of the simmering process, heat the oil/ghee in a small pan on medium heat. Once hot add cumin seeds and let them sizzle a bit.

    Then add dried red chili and curry leaves, fry for 30-40 seconds.

    Immediately add this tempering to the simmering kadhi and mix well.

    Lastly, garnish with chopped cilantro.

    Ingredients

    Rajgira flour 1 cup

    Potatoes boiled and peeled 2-3 medium

    Ginger-green chilli paste 3 teaspoons

    Fresh coriander leaves chopped 1 tablespoon

    Rock salt (sendha namak) to taste

    Ghee 2 tablespoons + to deep fry

    Method

    Grate potatoes into a bowl. Add ginger-green chilli paste, coriander leaves and rock salt and mix well. Add rajgira flour, little by little, mix and knead into a stiff dough. Add ghee and knead again. Set aside for 10-15 minutes.

    Divide the dough into small equal portions and roll into balls. Place each ball on a greased plastic sheet and gently pat into a puri.

    Deep-fry puris in hot oil, one by one, till puffed up and golden. Drain on absorbent paper

    Navratra Special Recipes by Swapnadeep Mukherjee, Head Chef, The Metropolitan Hotel & Spa

    Navratri Jeera Cookies

    Ingredients:

    Butter

    Sugar

    Kuttu Atta

    Salt (Sendha)

    Cumin seeds

    Method:

    Mix cream butter and sugar together till light and fluffy

    Sieve Kuttu flour and mix salt

    Lightly roast cumin seeds and add salt to the flour and mix

    Fold flour mix into creamed butter gradually. Let it stand between 1-4 degree C for 60 minutes

    Preheat oven to 180 degree centigrade. Roll cookie mix and cut into desired shape.

    Bake at 180 degree centigrade for 15-20 mins. Enjoy them during your navratras!

    NAVRATRA PINEAPPLE COOKIES

    Ingredients:

    Butter (unsalted)

    Sugar

    Kuttu Atta

    Candied Pineapple (chopped)

    Method:

    Mix cream butter and sugar together till light and fluffy

    Sieve Kuttu flour

    Fold flour into creamed butter gradually, add chopped pineapple. Let it stand at 1-4 degree centigrade for 60 minutes

    Preheat oven to 180 degree centigrade.Roll cookie mix and cut into desired shape.

    Bake at 180 degree centigrade for 15-20 mins. Enjoy!

    KIWI KI BARFI

    Ingredients:

    For Kiwi Sauce:

    Ripened Kiwis peeled, crushed/finely chopped

    Sugar

    For Barfi:

    Chenna

    Full cream milk

    Milk Powder

    Cardamom Powder

    Slivered almonds, pistachios & saffron strand (to garnish)

    Sugar

    Method:

    In a heavy bottom pan, combine kiwi and sugar. Cook till it reaches the thick sauce consistency. Take it off the stove and keep it aside.

    In another pan, combine full cream milk, milk powder, saffron and chenna and cook till it starts thickening, stir intermittently to avoid burning.

    Add cooked kiwi, cardamom powder and sugar. Cook till thickens and leaves the pan to form soft dough. Take it off the heat.

    Spread it on a greased thali, tray or cake tin. Allow it to cool completely till set. Refrigerate. Cut in desired shape & garnish!

    Navratri Special Recipes(IANSLIFE)

    LAUKI KA HALWA

    Ingredients:

    Lauki (Bottle gourd)

    Desi Ghee

    Khoya danedar(Reduced milk)

    Green Cardamoms (powder)

    Almond chopped

    Cashew nut chopped

    Method

    Rinse, peel and grate the lauki and remove the center portion. Heat ghee in a heavy pan on medium flame

    Add the grated lauki in ghee and mix well. Cook lauki on medium flame

    Continue stirring until the moisture evaporates. Add sugar and saute till laukihalwa turns thick

    Add khoya and keep stirring to avoid burning. Check consistency of the halwa as per your taste and switch off the flame. Add nuts and cardamom powder, mix well and serve hot or cold.

    MELON n MINT COLD SOUP

    Ingredients:

    Sugar Melon

    Mint

    Lemon juice

    Sendha Salt

    Method

    Wash and peel melons and remove the seeds and pulp. Cut dices and put in a blender and add mint leaves and blend to a puree

    Strain through a coarse strainer and add lemon juice and adjust the seasoning by adding salt. Refrigerate and serve chilled in shot glass and enjoy Navratra special cold soup.

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  • Kipchoge breaks own world record to win 2022 Berlin marathon

    Kipchoge breaks own world record to win 2022 Berlin marathon

    With 15km to go it was down to Kipchoge and his unstoppable mind majestically pounding the streets of Berlin, breaking an occasional smile, chasing his second world record in five years…reports Asian Lite News

    Kenyan long-distance runner and double Olympic champion Eliud Kipchoge on Sunday shattered his own world record, with a time of 2:01:09 to win the Berlin marathon.

    It’s the second time that Kipchoge has set the official men’s world record at the race in the German capital. His previous best in an official 42.2km race was 2:01:39 set on the same course in 2018.

    The Ethiopian pair of Guye Adola and Andamlak Belihu, were the only brave athletes who stayed with Kipchoge’s blistering pace until the 10km point of the men’s race, which they crossed in 28:23, well within the world record target.

    But Adola, the 2021 winner, soon fell off the pace set by Kipchoge’s preferred pacemaking duo of Moses Koech and Noah Kipkemboi as they approached the 14km point. They reached the halfway mark in 59:51 well within their pre-race target of 60:50 and 96 seconds faster than he ran when he broke the world record at the same course in 2018.

    It was down to Kipchoge and Belihu at the 25km after dropping off the last pacer, at which point the 37-year-old began to gradually pull away from the Ethiopian.

    With 15km to go it was down to Kipchoge and his unstoppable mind majestically pounding the streets of Berlin, breaking an occasional smile, chasing his second world record in five years.

    At 35km, he was over one minute within his world record pace but slowed slightly and with 2km to go he was nearly 36 seconds faster than his 2018 winning time. As he tackled the last kilometre on his way to winning his 17th marathon of 19 starts, Kipchoge’s face lit up, delighted that he had again defied human limits.

    He crossed the finish line for his fourth win in Berlin, with the official time clocked at 2 hours, 1 minute, and 9 seconds, punching his fists in the air before hugging coach Patrick Sang, as the world celebrated another remarkable feat by the greatest ever marathoner.

    This was his second marathon this year after winning the Tokyo Marathon in March. He is also the first human to run the distance in under two-hours, when he did so in specialist conditions for an unofficial event, an olympics.com report said.

    “I was planning to go 60:50, but my legs were running very fast and I thought let me just try to run 2:00 hours flat. But I am happy with the performance,” Kipchoge said after the race.

    “It was tough as the first half was really very fast.We went too fast and it takes energy from the muscle,” he admitted of the second half of Sundays’ run.

    The ace runner also spoke about his future. “There is still more in my legs and I hope the future is great. The mind is thinking wise, the body is still absorbing the training and racings,” he said.

    ALSO READ-Zayed Charity Marathon 2022 to take place in Alexandria

  • Netflix India unveils busy calendar

    Netflix India unveils busy calendar

    Based on ex-spy Amar Bhushan’s espionage thriller ‘Escape to Nowhere’, Vishal Bhardwaj’s much-awaited film ‘Khufiya’ has a formidable star cast that includes Tabu, Ali Fazal, Wamiqa Gabbi and Ashish Vidyarthi.

    From ‘The Family Man’ hitmakers Raj Nidimoru and Krishna D.K. unspooling the small-town dark comedy ‘Guns & Gulabs’ set in the 1990s, starring Dulquer Salmaan and Rajkummar Rao, to a soup-slurping Manoj Bajpayee in ‘Soup’, to Nayanthara’s fairytale wedding and the uncle-nephew duo Venkatesh and Rana Daggubati uniting on screen as father and son in ‘Rana Naidu’, Netflix unveiled quite a formidable lineup for its Indian subscribers at a global fan event on Saturday.

    Presented by comedian Zakir Khan and popular actress Prajakta Koli, Tudum India showcased the series and films lined up for release in the coming weeks and months. These included:

    Monica, O My Darling


    With a title that pays tribute to the unforgettable R.D. Burman-Asha Bhosale number picturised on a unctuous Helen (‘Piya Tu Ab to Aja’ from ‘Caravan’, 1971), the Vasant Bala-directed neo-noir movie with Huma Qureshi and Rajkummar Rao is a whodunit that wades through lust, blackmail, betrayal, blood, and “some robots crushing human skulls”.

    Rana Naidu

    Uncle-nephew duo Venkatesh and Rana Daggubati appear as father and son in the series ‘Rana Naidu’, which is set in Mumbai. The story is about a fixer who does the dirty work for the city’s most powerful people, but the drama unfolds when his father is unexpectedly released from prison, setting off a chain of events that could change everything. The series also features Surveen Chawla, Sushant Singh, Abhishek Banerjee, Suchitra Pillai, Gaurav Chopra and Ashish Vidyarthi.

    Khufiya

    Based on ex-spy Amar Bhushan’s espionage thriller ‘Escape to Nowhere’, Vishal Bhardwaj’s much-awaited film ‘Khufiya’ has a formidable star cast that includes Tabu, Ali Fazal, Wamiqa Gabbi and Ashish Vidyarthi.

    Class


    The show follows a sudden change in dynamics at the upscale Hampton International, when three new students from starkly different backgrounds enroll for a new term and shake up the status quo. The high-school drama, which may seem like an Indian version of ‘Euphoria’, stars Gurfateh Pirzada, Anjali Sivaraman, Ayesha Kanga, Cyaawal Singh, Chintan Rach, Chayan Chopra, Madhyama Segal, Moses Koul, Naina Bhan, Piyush Khati and Zeyn Shaw.

    Scoop

    Based on ‘Behind The Bars In Byculla: My Days In Prison’, a book by journalist Jigna Vora, who was charged with abetting the daylight murder of a crime journalist that shook Mumbai, ‘Scoop’ traces the journey of Jagruti Pathak, a fictional character based on the writer. An ambitious crime journalist, Jagruti’s world comes crashing down when she’s charged with the murder of a fellow journalist, and the truth is quietly buried as she waits out a trial. Directed by Hansal Mehta, ‘Scoop’ will see Karishma Tanna, Mohammad Zeeshan Ayyub, Harman Baweja, Deven Bhojani, Tannishtha Chatterjee, Tejasvini Kolhapure, Shikha Talsania, Tanmay Dhanania and Inayat Sood in key roles.

    Qala.

    Qala

    Haunting, powerful and also rich with excellent music, Qala, set in the 1930s and late 1940s, is the story of the young eponymous playback singer. It’s about her tragic past and how it catches up with her, causing her to unravel at the peak of her hard-won success. Directed by Anvitaa Dutt, ‘Qala’ stars Triptii Dimri, Swastika Mukherjee, Babil Khan and Amit Sial.

    Kathal

    Of course, not all true crime involves murder. A light-hearted film based on a true incident, it starts with a local politician’s prized jackfruits (kathal) going missing. The bizarre case falls into the lap of a young and earnest police officer, played by Sanya Malhotra. ‘Kathal’ marks the directorial debut of Yashowardhan Mishra.

    Soup

    Billed as “a one-of-a-kind thriller” directed by Abhishek Chaubey, ‘Soup’ follows chef Swathi Shetty as she cooks up a master plan to replace her husband with her lover. But when a bumbling local inspector and a squad of villainous meddlers get involved, her plans could go cold before she knows it. ‘Soup’ stars Manoj Bajpayee, Konkona Sensharma, and South Indian actors Nasser, Sayaji Shinde and Lal.

    CAT

    After ‘Jogi’, here’s a web series that takes viewers back to the days of militancy in Punjab and its aftermath. ‘CAT’ is about a former civilian informant, played by Randeep Hooda, who is forced to become one again to save the life of his brother, which forces him to come to terms with his dark past. Bringing together a powerful trio, ‘CAT’ has been directed by Balwinder Singh Janjua, Rupinder Chahal and Jimmy Singh.

    Chor Nikal Ke Bhaga

    Starring Yami Gautam, Sunny Kaushal and Sharad Kelkar, this adrenaline-loaded film is about a flight attendant and her business partner on a mission to steal diamonds and free themselves from the clutches of a loan shark. At 40,000 feet in the air, the heist goes horribly wrong and turns into a hostage situation. Chaos ensues.

    Nayanthara: Beyond the Fairy Tale

    Nayanthara.

    There’s nothing fictional about this one. This special is about one of the most intensely private but wildly popular superstars, Nayanthara, who recently got married in a fairytale wedding to filmmaker Vignesh Shivan. It gives viewers an all-access peek into their lives, marriage and beyond. Ace filmmaker Gautam Vasudevan dons the role of director for the special.

    Guns & Gulaabs

    Directed by Raj & DK, it’s a genre-bending dark comedy set in a small town in the 1090s. It promises to deliver a heady mix of “love, crime and a ton of mid-’90s nostalgia”. ‘Guns & Gulaabs’ stars Dulquer Salman, Rajkummar Rao, Adarsh Gourav, TJ Bhanu and Gulshan Devaiah.

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  • Boat capsizes in B’desh, death toll reaches 32

    Boat capsizes in B’desh, death toll reaches 32

    According to the official, the jam-packed boat, carrying some 100 passengers, capsized on Sunday afternoon…reports Asian Lite News

    The number of deaths due to a boat capsize in Bangladesh’s Karatoya river has increased 32 on Monday, with more than 30 people still unaccounted for, a senior police official said.

    The official told Xinhua news agency that seven more bodies were retrieved from the river in Panchagarh district, 468 km away from the capital Dhaka.

    According to the official, the jam-packed boat, carrying some 100 passengers, capsized on Sunday afternoon.

    “Another seven bodies were recovered on Monday morning, which brings the total death toll to 32 from 25 on Sunday,” the official told Xinhua.

    “A search operation is still underway for the missing people,” he said, adding that the boat had been dragged to the bank.

    The police official said rescuers had been working against a strong current and choppy river waters.

    “The boat sank due to overloading,” he added.

    Ferry and boat disasters are common in Bangladesh.

    Ferries are still a key means of transport in the South Asian country and most of them are often overcrowded.

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  • Clinton says ‘democracy is fragile right now’

    Clinton says ‘democracy is fragile right now’

    The former president was joined by Tom Hanks, chef-philanthropist Jose Andres and moderator Chelsea Clinton in an hour-long conversation…reports Asian Lite News

    Former President Bill Clinton believes that “democracy is fragile right now”, and, says ‘Variety’, he spoke candidly on Saturday at A+E Networks and the History Channel’s History Talks about the issues “tearing us apart”.

    “What’s more important? Our common humanity or differences?” Clinton mused. “And what works better to build the kind of future we all want? Does cooperation work better, or is everything a zero-sum game?”

    He answered the rhetorical question by saying, “Life is not a zero-sum game. Football is a zero-sum game — I’ve already watched one game today. I hope it’s not true, but it may be true that saving our democracy is just a zero-sum game because democracy is fragile right now.”

    The former president was joined by Tom Hanks, chef-philanthropist Jose Andres and moderator Chelsea Clinton in an hour-long conversation. They spoke at length about their humanitarian efforts, as well as their hopes and concerns about the outlook of the country, spoke ‘Variety’.

    Chelsea made one thing clear — young people alone should not be responsible for the future of the world. “I loathe the framing that young people are going to save us,” she said. “With all due respect, what the f**k are adults doing?”

    As the audience cheered, an aghast Hanks mouthed: “She said ‘f**k’.”

    Hanks, speaking with the reverence and authority of a history professor, said that educating people about true historical events can help to get the public to care about — and advocate for — important causes in their own community.

    But being a storyteller is a responsibility that comes with great power, he said. In short, according to ‘Variety’, he doesn’t support artistes who feel inclined to bend, bow or break from reality.

    “I do non-fiction entertainment,” noted Hanks, who has played real-life figures such as Captain Phillips, Mr Rogers, Walt Disney and Captain Sully Sullenberger on screen. “[It’s] the best of entertainment because that comes with a degree of education.”

    But while adapting stories for movies, TV, podcasts or documentaries, Hanks said there’s an obligation to ensure the truth doesn’t end up getting “crowded out” at the expense of telling a good tale.

    “When we come across inconvenient facts that we don’t want to talk about because it may take away from the purity of a protagonist … I say, ‘Oh, what you want to do is alternative history. You want to have an alternative fact’.”

    Andres got the crowd cheering as he delivered an impassioned, rousing plea for the government to treat food as a national security issue. His charity, World Central Kitchen, a food relief operation, has donated hundreds of millions of meals to people and communities in need.

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  • Canada struggles to restore power after storm

    Canada struggles to restore power after storm

    Defense Minister Anita Anand said troops would help remove fallen trees, restore transportation links and do whatever else is required for as long as it takes. She didn’t specify how many troops would be deployed…reports Asian Lite News

    Hundreds of thousands of people in Atlantic Canada remained without power Sunday and officials said they found the body of a woman swept into the sea after former Hurricane Fiona swept away houses, stripped off roofs and blocked roads across the country’s Atlantic provinces.

    After surging north from the Caribbean, Fiona came ashore before dawn Saturday as a post-tropical cyclone, battering Nova Scotia, Prince Edward Island, Newfoundland and Quebec with hurricane-strength winds, rains and waves.

    Defense Minister Anita Anand said troops would help remove fallen trees, restore transportation links and do whatever else is required for as long as it takes. She didn’t specify how many troops would be deployed.

    Fiona was blamed for at least five deaths in the Caribbean, and one death in Canada. Authorities found the body of a 73-year-old woman in the water who was missing in Channel-Port Aux Basques, a town on the southern coast of Newfoundland.

    Police said the woman inside her residence moments before a wave struck the home Saturday morning, tearing away a portion of the basement. The Royal Canadian Mounted Police said in a release on social media that with assistance from the Canadian Coast Guard, as other rescue teams her body woman was recovered late Sunday afternoon.

    Police said the woman was last seen inside the residence moments before a wave struck the home Saturday morning, tearing away a portion of the basement.

    As of Sunday, more than 252,000 Nova Scotia Power customers and over 82,000 Maritime Electric customers in the province of Prince Edward Island — about 95 percent of the total — remained in the dark. So were more than 20,600 homes and businesses in New Brunswick.

    More than 415,000 Nova Scotia Power customers — about 80 percent in the province of almost 1 million people — had been affected by outages Saturday.

    Utility companies say it could be days before the lights are back on for everyone.

    Cape Breton Regional Municipality Mayor Amanda McDougall said Sunday that over 200 people were in temporary shelters. Over 70 roads were completely inaccessible in her region. She said she couldn’t count the number of homes damaged in her own neighborhood.

    She said it was critical for the military to arrive and help clear debris, noting that the road to the airport is inaccessible and the tower has significant damage.

    McDougall said it is amazing there are no injuries.

    “People listened to the warnings and did what they were supposed to do and this was the result,” she said

    Prince Edward Island Premier Dennis King said that over 100 military personnel would arrive Sunday to assist in recovery efforts. Schools will be closed Monday and Tuesday. He said many bridges are destroyed.

    “The magnitude and severity of the damage is beyond anything that we’ve seen in our province’s history,” King said, and that it would take a “herculean effort by thousands of people” to recover over the coming days and weeks.

    Kim Griffin, a spokeswoman for Prince Edward Island’s electricity provider, said it would likely take “many days” to restore power across the island. She added that she was “terrified” that people could be injured or killed by downed power lines as they tried to clean up the storm damage.

    Entire structures were washed into the sea as raging surf pounded Port Aux Basques, Newfoundland.

    “This is not a one-day situation where we can all go back to normal,” Mayor Brian Button said on social media. Unfortunately, this is going to take days, it could take weeks, it could take months in some cases.”

    Much of the town of 4,000 had been evacuated and Button said asked for patience as officials identify where and when people can safely go home. He noted that some residents are showing up at barricades angry and wanting to return.

    In Puerto Rico, too, officials were still struggling to grasp the scope of damage and to repair the devastation caused when Fiona hit the US territory a week ago.

    As of Sunday, about 45 percent of Puerto Rico’s 1.47 million power customers remained in the dark, and 20 percent of 1.3 million water customers had no service as workers struggled to reach submerged power substations and fix downed lines.

    Gas stations, grocery stores and other businesses had temporarily shut down due to lack of fuel for generators: The National Guard first dispatched fuel to hospitals and other critical infrastructure.

    “We’re starting from scratch,” said Carmen Rivera as she and her wife mopped up water and threw away their damaged appliances, adding to piles of rotting furniture and soggy mattresses lining their street in Toa Baja, which had flooded.

    Officials across Eastern Canada also were assessing the scope of damage caused by the storm, which had moved inland over southeastern Quebec.

    Mike Savage, mayor of Halifax, said the roof of an apartment building collapsed in Nova Scotia’s biggest city and officials had moved 100 people to an evacuation center. He said no one was seriously hurt.

    The Canadian Hurricane Center tweeted that Fiona had the lowest pressure — a key sign of storm strength — ever recorded for a storm making landfall in Canada.

    “We’re getting more severe storms more frequently,” said Prime Minister Justin Trudeau, who said more resilient infrastructure is needed to withstand extreme weather events.

    Peter MacKay, a former foreign and defense minister who lives in Nova Scotia, said he had never seen anything to match Fiona, with winds raging through the night and into the afternoon.

    “We had put everything we could out of harm’s way, but the house got hammered pretty hard. Lost lots of shingles, heavy water damage in ceilings, walls, our deck is destroyed. A garage that I was building blew away,” MacKay said.

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