Monday, 28 October 2013

NARENDER MODIJI....ANOTHER HUGE SUCCESSFULL RALLY IN UDAIPUR RAJASTHAN..BHARAT MATA KI JAI..

Shri Narendra Modi addressed huge BJP gathering in Udaipur today. In his trademark style, he counted the failures of the Rajasthan state government and also attacked the Congress government at the Centre.
He said he was very amused with a flood of inauguration ceremonies in Rajasthan which even led to the disappearance of scissors from the market. “Panch saaltakjebkaatnewaale ribbon kaatnemeilage the” said Shri Modi.
Launching an attack on the Congress prince, Modiji said that whatever he spoke during his visit to Rajasthan was not even understood by the Congress members. He also said that the prince preaches secularism while there have been a plethora of incidents of communal violence under the Ashok Gehlot government in Rajasthan.Modiji also told how the Prince is trying to show a family drama to the Indian public instead of replying to the queries of the failures of the Congress Government.
Narendra Modi addresses massive public meeting in Udaipur.


Stepping up his attack on the Gehlot government, he explained how the Rajasthan Governor, the judiciary, NHRC & the Minority commission and even their own Prince do not trust the Rajasthan government. He asked the crowd, “Jissarkaar ko shehzade, governer, Human Right commission, judiciary, minority commission

sweekarnhikartakyauskorajasthanki janta sweekar karegi?”He got a reply in negative that clearly indicated the resentment among people against the Congress government in the state.
Further stepping up his attack on the Ministers of the Rajasthan government, he told that no woman in the state wants to go to a minister with her problems.
He also asked whether the Congress government has given details of its work? Instead they are scolding the BJP. They do not even care about the rising inflation. He tore into the Congress government’s inability to curb inflation and told how Jaggery was available at Rs 9 under the NDA rule while now it is available at Rs 50. Red chilly was available Rs 50, Rajma at Rs 28, Diesel at Rs 22 while all these things are now available at Rs 200, Rs 100 and Rs 60 respectively.
Elaborating more on the Congress’ misuse of CBi Modiji also explained how the Congress has deployed CBI against Shri GulabchandKataria and would also do it against Smt. Vasundhara Raje. He asked the government whether the CBI will be used in the same way against the Prime Minister against whom a senior bureaucrat has raised senior questions. He also told that if the same questions had been asked against a BJP leader, CBI would have been already unleashed on them.
Narendra Modi addresses massive public meeting in Udaipur.

Praising Smt Vasundhara Raje, he told how she had sleepless nights thinking of providing water to the water scarce regions of Rajasthan. He also told how she had tried her best to make Rajasthan a power surplus state but under the present Gehlot government there is darkness.
He ended his speech on the note of Congress Mukt Bharatand hoped that Rajasthan would be at the forefront of changing the fortunes of the country by throwing away the Congress from power.
Shri GulabchandKataria, a prominent BJP member of Rajasthan told about how the Gehlot government has indulged in rampant corruption and is allotting mines to the family members of the Chief Minister.

Smt Vasundhara Raje, former CM of Rajasthan and state BJP head, asked the people to get ready for a final war against the Congress and remove it for good. She explained how the Congress government has snatched away the dreams, future, jobs and food from the common public. She also retorted about how the Congress keeps on going back to the Gandhi Family to count its achievements and how those achievements are not even visible.

Saturday, 26 October 2013

SEX AS A TRADITION AND TRADE.......HOW MUCH RIGHT.

A lower caste community in Rajasthan and Madhya Pradesh, where young girls, often in their teens, engage in prostitution with the consent of the community.

                           Baithega kya?"                                Two kilometres along the four-lane Jaipur Highway outside Bharatpur, these two innocuous words denote an unambiguous, almost lilting, come-on to have sex. Batting eyelashes, imperceptibly meaningful nods help things along for the uninitiated.

"Sex hamara khandaani dhanda hai (Sex is our family business)," says Manju Thakur, 30, who's zealously protective of what to her is a lucrative livelihood. Diminutive but feisty, the sex worker is a Bedia, a lower caste community in Rajasthan and Madhya Pradesh, where young girls, often in their teens, engage in prostitution with the consent of the community.

Plying the only trade she knows from the profusely littered roadside near Bharatpur's Malaha village, Manju is a veteran. "I was just about 10 or 11 years old when my father, who is dead now, sent me to a well-off businessman in Dhaulpur," she says, appearing almost nostalgic recalling the Rs 10,000 her family received in exchange for her loss of virginity. "Twenty years ago, it was the maximum any girl was paid for here," she says also proudly informing you how "rich customers from Jaipur" still come by asking for her.

Present day Malaha (also known locally as Pachhi ka Nagla or 'bird village'), has more than a hundred Bedia women engaged in sex work. Often revealingly attired, with heavily made-up faces, accentuated by bright crimson or purple lipstick, they stand about beckoning potential clients. The imposing concrete flyover that bifurcated the Bedia basti in 2005 hasn't affected the trade. This is perhaps the only place in Rajasthan where more motorists forsake the convenience of the flyover, taking the potholed side-roads instead to stop by or simply get a closer look at the daily spectacle.

"Dhanda chokha hai (Business is good)," Manju smiles reapplying her lipstick in anticipation of another temporary suitor. Manju and her sisters Nisha, 25, and Reshma, 24, as well as their 20-year-old bua (aunt) Chandani support a family of 40 including five brothers, their wives, their children and a brood of offspring from the trade. "I tried hard to get them to marry," says Saroj, Manju's 50-year-old mother. But none of the girls would even consider what each one of them saw as a lifetime of domestic drudgery.

The men vehemently protest allegations that their bound-by-tradition women are forced to accept sex work as their only vocation. "Zabardasti ka nahi, raazi ka sauda hai ye (There is no force, this is by consent)," insists Vijender, 37, who thrives on the earnings of six sisters and two aunts. The pot-bellied brother claims that in keeping with the community's tradition, each of his sisters were asked to choose: "Har ek se poochha gaya tha, dhanda karogi ya shaadi (Each one was asked if she wanted marriage or to enter the sex trade)," he says.

Manju and Nisha's 39-year-old brother Lakhan concurs. It's been more than a good living for him: A shining new motorcycle and a Scorpio SUV that he plies as a cab, but only when he chooses to. "Let the government give me a decent job, I'll forbid my sisters from sex work," Lakhan promises. In the background both sisters smirk at the notion.

"Shaadi toh barbadi hai (Marriage leads to ruin)," Nisha quotes a distinctly patriarchal proverb. Bedia wives are usually not part of the dhanda (sex work) and spend their lives cooking, cleaning, washing and serving the needs of the men, the children and their 'working' sisters-in-laws. "Being a housewife is like being a mule," says Nisha who grew up aware of both the independence and seemingly infinite spending power her 'working' aunts enjoyed and the toilsome routine her own mother was condemned to.

Nisha admits, hesitantly, that she started out as a full-time sex worker when she was just 14. Ten years on, she earns between Rs 1,200 and Rs 2,000 from a single day's work-10 to 20 times the government approved wage of Rs 149. This entails sex with six to 10 men. On good days, such as during the festival season or closer to workers' monthly paydays, the take-home could easily double, she adds.

The 'tricks of the trade' are hardly a secret for teenage girls who have watched sisters and aunts engage in furtive, 10-minute sexual encounters behind cursorily strung bedsheets on the roadside. "Squawking loudly to call my brothers when a customer became unruly was my only real sex education. The rest of the stuff came naturally," Manju says.

But not every Bedia sex worker has the going so good. Fifty feet from Manju and Nisha's house washed in terracotta hues, Kaali (name changed) struggles to make ends meet. Diagnosed with hiv two years ago, she continues to solicit customers. "I know no other work and my brothers are too young to support me," explains the 30-year-old, hastily adding that now she "never has sex without a condom."

"The notion of choice in relation to the work of women who are poor is problematic. The distinction between 'forced' and 'voluntarily' sex work where the gamut of choices is non-existent is the reality of most marginalised women," says Jyoti Sanghera, 57, founding member of the Bangkok-based Global Alliance Against Trafficking in Women (GAATW).

Into his second tenure in the district, better known as the location of one of the world's best-kept bird sanctuaries, Bharatpur's 34-year-old Collector Niraj Kumar Pawan has become something of a Robin Hood among the Bedia villagers. The hands-on civil servant is the first government representative to have gained the community's confidence in recognising that "brute police force cannot turn people away from centuries old tradition".

Eight years ago, just months after his predecessors in the district administration tried literally to drive the Bedi's into the ground by setting their basti at Malaha on fire, Pawan got the government to sanction the first and only school for Bedia children. Still only a difficult-to-decipher foundation amidst the dense undergrowth fringing the Bharatpur bird sanctuary, the promise of the school has evidently inspired residents.

"My girl's future will be different," says Riya, a 35-year-old sex worker whose diligent daily duty is to get 11-year-old Archana, her only daughter, to school. The doting mom however has no qualms about her own life: "I must always do the dhanda but my girl will have a real choice," she says.

Pawan believes education will equip Bedia girls with the never-before alternative of "being able to make an informed choice". Amidst objections against pucca constructions within 500 m of the bird sanctuary, the open-air Bedia school is set to enter a Rs 4.5-lakh prefabricated premises that stops short of contravening environmental safeguards. "They will soon have proper schoolrooms," he promises.

The collector's repeated interventions in Malaha and neighbouring Bagdari village, where some Bedias moved following the expansion of the Jaipur Highway in 2005, have persuaded key changes within the community. "Girls below 18 no longer engage in sex work," Pawan claims, amid rumours about fresh bidding for the initiation of two teenagers. Compared to the Rs 10,000 that Manju's family got 20 years ago, the current going price for 'teenage virgins', insiders say, could range between Rs 1.5 lakh and Rs 2 lakh, which is half the bride price a Bedia girl commands if she chooses to marry instead.

In their 15-bigha settlement outside Bagdari, Bedias face their worst fate: Forced to survive without electricity or water, their children remain segregated in the village school and the upper caste sarpanch refuses to endorse applications for voters' identity or Adhaar cards. "We have been rendered outcasts in our own country," says Ravi Kumar, 29, who struggles on the meagre earnings from a corrugated steel sheet shop at the entrance of the settlement.

Both Kumar and his 60-year-old mother Leelawati acknowledge that the community wouldn't be able to survive but for the lucrative incomes their young women make from sex work. "The (upper caste) villagers wilfully discriminate against our children and yet line up to sleep with our girls and even demand discounts," says the shopkeeper.

One concrete wall of the 20 ft underpass below the Malaha flyover bears a telling advert: "Pyar ka ek anmol taufa'-Freedom 5. Paanch saal tak pregnancy se tension free." The Bedia women are amused. "Children are good," they say. "Girls will earn more money and boys will be their protectors."


Wednesday, 23 October 2013

BADDI....HIGH VALLEY APARTMENTS..COMFORTABLE LIVING WITH LUXURY.





If a person pays 5 lakh from his savings and take 15 lakh loan for which EMI comes nearly 15000 ,10000 would be rental income and 3000 tax saving on home loan so net effective payment is 2000 p. m. which is the main beauty of this project which a person can't find anywhere .
Unique Investment Opportunity in Real Estate Project. Continuing with the same trend we are sending you a great opportunity for you to own a Newly built 2BHK Ready to move Spacious Flat in only Rs. 19.90 Lacs (@ Rs. 1768/- Per Sq Ft) in High Valley Apartments at Baddi.

The Project is located in a pollution free environment with a lot of greenery and flowers along with a beautiful landscaped park. It has an excellent view of the Shivalik hills. It is ideally located with easy access for the persons working in Baddi, Barotiwala and Jharmajari.



The 2 BHK Flat (Drawing-Dinning, Kitchen, Two Bedroom with attached toilets and Three balconies) is fully finished with · Modular Kitchen · Complete Woodwork with completed cupboards · Covered Individual Car Parking · Gated Security · Huge Park with Swings for Children to Play · Expected Rental Income is Rs 10,000/= per month. ·







Loan is available from leading banks.

Saturday, 19 October 2013

LEAF STONE..... UPCOMING LUXURY FLATS IN ZIRAKPUR AND DERABASSI..

Leafstone is upcoming Luxury apartment in Zirakpur and Derabassi
Mission
We aim build better communities. Communities that help initiate development of society in most balance way.
Company Overview
MD Builders & Developers, a young and contemporary real estate company functions with the aim of creating industry milestones. Providing a home in the right ambience is an obsession at MD Builders & Developers. The company has strong emphasis on integrity, reliability, competitive pricing and timely completion. We provide supreme quality at an affordable price along with beauty and comfort.






Ranging from designs, materials and construction methods to technology and management techniques, we look for new and better ways to help our customers achieve their dream home that have exceptional overall quality and value.
Description
A new neighbourhood as it takes shape is all set to redefine contemporary urban living in Zirakpur. Leaf Stone Zirakpur is an elegant compilation of the finest set of high-rise residences that are a perfect blend of comfort and convenience. Ambitious, iconic & dynamic, these residential towers provide a unique mix of style and perfection.


With modern amenities and infrastructure it has close proximity to NH-64, International Airport, Railway station and commercial hubs. Spread over 4 Acres of carefully crafted landscape the complex is a marvel of design, replete with lavish towers that recommend variety of living space to the residents.

The premium residences are available in a choice of 2 & 3 bedroom homes. Every home in Leaf Stone Zirakpur has been created with your needs in mind, with spacious living room, large windows that allow maximum natural light and present stunning views of the landscape around. With only 4 apartments on each floor, you can be rest assured of your privacy. Each home affords itself with a secure car park as well.

Imagine an iconic central plaza, just a few steps across your home - the club house at Leaf Stone Zirakpur is the perfect place to entertain your family with a range of facilities like kids' play area, swimming pool, gymnasium and several outdoor sports facilities. Apart from the superior facilities of the clubhouse, there are malls, shopping areas in the near vicinity, all offering a convenient and comfortable lifestyle.

SHARAD PURNIMA...........WORSHIPPING OF GODDESS LUXMI...TO GET WEALTH,HEALTH AND PROPSPERITY.

The Sharad Purnima or Kojaagari Purnima or Kumar Purnima is a harvest festival celebrated on the full moon day of the Hindu lunar month of Ashvin (September–October). The marks the end of rainy season. This is a traditional celebration of the moon and is also called the Kaumudi celebration, Kaumudi meaning moonlight.



At night, goddess Lakshmi is worshiped and night vigil is observed. According to a folk-tale, once a king fell on evil days, and was in great financial straits, but then his queen observed this fast and night vigil, and worshiped the goddess of wealth, Laxmi. Consequently, they were blessed by the goddess and they regained their prosperity.

It is also believed that on this day as moon and the earth are very close to each other, the moon rays have certain healing properties of nourishing the body and the soul

Saturday, 12 October 2013

SANJEEVANI BOOTI....THE BEST MEDICINE FOR HEALING,AS USED FOR LIFE SAVING OF LAXMANJI,BROUGHT BY LORD HANUMANJI

Sanjivani Booti – which Lord Hanuman brought to save the life of Lord Ram's brother Lakshman – is being researched upon by scientists for its survival instincts. Sanjeevani means ‘one that infuses life.’ The Sanjeevani plant is well known for its medicinal properties and is mentioned in Ayurveda and other ancient texts.
National Botanical Research Institute (NBRI) is trying to identify the gene that helps Sanjivani Booti to survive severe droughts. The plant existed before 300 million years and comes under a group of plants which were the first vascular plants on earth.
When there is no moisture the plant curls up and assumes the form of a brown crust. Sanjivani Booti regains its original form when it comes in contact with water or moisture. The plant is found throughout India and it grows in rocks and arid lands



scientists are drawing inspiration from the Ramayana, to find a way to make crops drought-resistant. In the Ramayana, Hanuman was asked to look for the Sanjeevani herb that was reputed to have magical curative properties — it was believed to even bring the dead back to life — to treat Lakshman who lay unconscious on the battlefield. Unable to identify the herb, Hanuman simply uprooted an entire Himalayan mountain and delivered it in time to revive the mortally wounded Lakshman. Indian scientists are today studying the potential of the mythical 'herb of immortality'— the invincible Sanjeevani booti — to understand its survival quality that enables it to live without water. In the absence of water, the herb dries up like any other plant but with a difference — it does not die. Once it comes in contact with water, it gets revived in a matter of hours, and its curative properties remain intact. What makes the plant survive for more than 300 years? Scientists at the National Botanical Research Institute (NBRI) are looking for answers. A five-year programme designed by the NBRI will research the Sanjeevani's gene profile to identify the gene or group of genes that is responsible for the plant's resistance to drought and capacity to survive for long in punishing conditions. Through genetic engineering, crop biotechnologists have been making headway in reducing vulnerability of cotton, corn and even soya to pests. If the Sanjeevani's survival gene is identified and injected into rice and wheat varieties, they could well turn out to be drought-resistant. This would enable food crops in India to develop a 'natural'resistance to drought, thereby forever changing agriculture dynamics. So far, the Sanjeevani herb has been used by tribals with some success in treating diseases like jaundice, heat stroke, kidney infection, diarrhoea and venereal disease. If the herb were found to contain the blueprint for crop survival, it would be a bonanza for Indian agriculture, including future returns from patents and knowledge-sharing. With future wars projected to be fought over water, Sanjeevani's DNA could hold the answer to growing threat .

NAVRATRI......9 DAYS OF WORSHIPPING GODDESS DURGA...SEVENTH DAY COMES OF MAA KAAL RATRI..

The seventh of the nine nights of the Navratri is dedicated to Kaalratri, the most fearsome of all avatars. Kaalratri’s name derives from Kaal, meaning time, and Ratri, meaning night.

Kaalratri removes ignorance and destroys the darkness. She has four arms and wields a cleaver and a torch in two of them. Her remaining two hands promise to provide and to protect.


Demonic entities, ghosts, evil spirits all flee from her presence. Kaalratri rides a donkey and blesses the devotee who does not fear her. Her three eyes as well as her nostrils release fire and energy.




Yogis and Sadhus meditate upon her on the seventh day of the Navratri to awaken powers and siddhis. Kaalratri, who killed the bloodborn demon Raktabeej, endows her devotees with calm and courage.

Wednesday, 9 October 2013

NAVRATRI......9 DAYS OF WORSHIPPING GODDESS DURGA..5TH DAY DEDICATED TO MAA SKANDA MATA

The fifth DAY of the goddess Durga worshipped on Navratri panchmi is ‘Skanda Mata’, the mother of Skanda Kumar or Lord Kartikeya Lord Kartikeya was chosen by devtas as their commander in chief in the war against the demons.  She usually holds Lord Skanda in his infant form and a lotus in her right hand which is slightly raised upwards. She has four arms, three eyes and a bright complexion, depicted seated on a lotus flower in her idol and therefore is called as Padamasani. The left arm of the goddess is in a pose to grant boons with grace to her devotees. Skandmata is the daughter of Himalaya and is also worshipped in the form of Parvati, Maheshwari or Mata Gauri.


Legend says that once a great demon Tarkasur did extreme penance. He pleased Brahmaji with his devotion. When Lord Bhrama appeared – he asked for a boon to become immortal. Brahmaji told him that no one can escape death as it is already destined for everyone who takes birth on this earth.  Tarkasur, being clever, thought Lord Shiva will never get married and asked for the death by the son of Lord Shiva. The boon was granted. Considering himself to be invincible, he started tormenting the people on the earth. All the devtas went before Lord Shiva and requested him to get married. Shiva agreed to get married to Goddess Parvati. Parvati then gave birth to Lord Kartikeya or Skand Kumar after marriage who demolished Tarkasur. Skandmata laid the foundation of mother son relationship. The devotees get immense love and affection from the goddess who devotes her in this manifestation.

Tuesday, 8 October 2013

NAVRATRI....NINE DAYS OF WORSHIPING GODDESS...FOURTH DAY OF MAA KUSHMANDA.

Mata Kushmanda is worshipped on the fourth day of Navratri. She shines brightly with a laughing face in all ten directions as the Sun. She controls the whole solar system. In her eight hands, she holds several types of weapons in six hands and a rosary and a lotus in remaining hands. She rides on lion. She likes offerings of ‘Kumhde’, hence her name ‘Kushmanda’ has become popular.








Sunday, 6 October 2013

SUSHMA GREEN VISTA.....A LUXURY 2 BHK SOCIETY.A LEISURE TO LIVE.

2 BHK Flats in

SUSHMA Green Vista is a modern 

residential community designed as a 

nurturing refuge from the bustle of the 

city. A refreshing oasis where residents 

enjoy peace of mind comforts of home 

and blissfully serene environment. 




SUSHMA Green Vista located in 

SUSHMA 

SQUARE, Zirakpur has a spacious area 

of 

1,276 sq ft. These two bedroom 

apartments are a delight for people who 

aspire to live in luxury. The sprawling 

living room, intimate bedrooms, an all 

purpose utility store, scintillating 

bathrooms and spacious modular 

kitchen, all are hallmarks of SUSHMA 

Green Vista apartments. Even the 

landscaped garden in the project is 

created for you to open upto nature and 

rejuvenate yourself every day. 

Walled Complex to facilitate 24 Hours 

gated Security

Earthquake Resistant RCC Framed 

Structure

Maximum green area.

Modern Elevators with Gen-Set Back-Up

Arrangement for 24 Hours Water Supply

Well-Planned Individual Car Parking

Modular kitchen

Complete wood work in rooms

G+11 Multistory Apartments

Club Facility

Wi-Fi Zone