KARNATAKA: ARTS & CRAFTS / MUSIC: Indian Institute of Science’s (IISc) Classical Music Group ‘Geetanjali’ is 150 members strong and to perform ‘The Myriad Colours of Indian Music’

The classical music wing was started by Geeta in 2015. She is a Hindustani singer. Her husband is a faculty member at IISc. She holds music classes at her home, which is located on the IISc campus.

Research scholars and faculty members of the Indian Institute of Science (IISc) will put up a 90-minute music show on their campus next week.

The show is called ‘The myriad colours of Indian music’ and will be held on the sidelines of ‘The International Conference on Fracture Mechanics of Concrete and Concrete Structures’. “A lot of foreign delegates come to IISc for conferences. We want to give them a glimpse of Indian music,” says Geeta Ananth, who has conceptualised the show.

The performance will be a mix of Hindustani and Carnatic music, Kannada bhavageethe, folk songs, bhajans, ghazals and other genres. A folk dance is also scheduled.

These research scholars and faculty members are part of Geetanjali, the classical music wing of the institutes’s Music Club.

The classical music wing was started by Geeta in 2015. She is a Hindustani singer. Her husband is a faculty member at IISc. She holds music classes at her home, which is located on the IISc campus.

Explaining why she started Geetanjali, she says, “There was no forum to promote classical music and showcase talent on the campus.”

The group has more than 150 members now and the music classes have become a stress-buster for students, she shares.

The group will perform alongside professional artistes like Raghavendra Nakod, Niranjan Hegde and Surya Upadhyaya.

 ‘The myriad colours of Indian music’ on September 11, 6.30 pm, at J N Tata Auditorium, C V Raman Road. Entry free.

source/content: deccan herald.com (headline edited)

INTERNATIONAL / NATIONAL & KARNATAKA: GLOBAL HEALTH & PHARMAEUTICALS: Biocon Chief Kiran Mazumdar-Shaw Appointed Member of Court of Regents at Royal College of Surgeons of Edinburgh

Biocon Ltd and Biocon Biologics Ltd Executive Chairperson Kiran Mazumdar-Shaw has been appointed as Regent of the Royal College of Surgeons of Edinburgh (RCSed), a Biocon release said on Thursday.

On her appointment as the latest member to the College’s Court of Regents, Mazumdar-Shaw said: “I am humbled and deeply honoured to be appointed Regent of the Royal College of Surgeons Edinburgh. As the oldest surgical college in the world with just under 30,000 members in 100 countries, the RCSed has been championing the highest standards of surgical and dental practice by providing high quality medical education. I look forward to contributing to the College’s mission and advancing the frontiers of surgical excellence.”

The Court of Regents comprises a group of distinguished and accomplished individuals in their field who provide the college with advice and expertise.

The Royal College of Surgeons of Edinburgh is a prestigious Scottish medical association which was founded in 1505 by Royal Charter granted from King James IV. It is the oldest surgical colleges in the world with nearly 30,000 members in 100 countries, and about half of them are from overseas, touching every stage of the career path from medical students to consultants.

source/content: daijiworld.com (headline edited)

KARNATAKA /NATIONAL & INTERNATIONAL: COTO: Woman-only Social Media App. – A Safe Space for Women created by Bengaluru’s Aparna Acharekar, Co-Founder

This Independence Day, the co-founder of a women-only social media app, speaks about preserving freedom of expression for women, preventing online hate and maintaining the app’s identity.

Scrolling through social media these days, one cannot miss instances of hate – from homophobia to casteism, threats to slander, it comes in all forms. But women face an overwhelming share of that hate.

This Independence Day, the co-founder of a women-only social media app, speaks about preserving freedom of expression for women, preventing online hate and maintaining the app’s identity to ensure it doesn’t share the fate that befell Twitter.

In an attempt to curb this problem and to provide a safe space for women on the internet, Aparna Acharekar co-founded the women-only social app Coto (short for come together).

“The idea came from women facing harassment. We noticed that the more a woman expressed her thoughts online, the more hate she got. This was especially true for women influencers and celebrities. Not just here in India. We have data that shows this pattern across the world. We wanted to create a space where women would be able to ask questions and express themselves without inhibitions,” shares Acharekar, who has over two decades of experience in content creation. 

The internet provides people with the luxury of anonymity. But some take advantage of this luxury to masquerade themselves in many ways. So, how does Coto ensure no one abuses the app? “We have various ways of verifying users. We use reliable and effective social recognition systems to ensure someone isn’t falsifying their identity. We also used two-factor authentication and if someone wishes to, they can opt to enter their Aadhaar details (other government ID data for people in other countries). We have taken ample steps to ensure that only women and transwomen get access to our app,” she explains. 

coto has been live since January 2023 and surprisingly the app hasn’t recorded any instance of hate or abuse, largely due to its content moderation practices.

“First, there is an AI-level moderation, which picks derogatory works or inappropriate words. Inappropriate words or context, in our case, are very different from what you find on other social media. On a women-only app, when somebody uses the word breast or vagina, those words are not flagged off as inappropriate. Secondly, communities moderate their content and their members. So community members can report to, and escalate to admins of every community, pretty much like on a WhatsApp group. So if there is anything that is not contextual to the community or may be harmful to the community, the creators themselves moderate it. The platform does not unless their complaint has escalated,” she says. 

coto comes with an identity – to create a space for women online. So, what are their plans to ensure the identity remains intact and doesn’t eventually lose itself, something that has plagued other social media apps over the years? “We believe social media should be decentralised. Women who come to coto and set up their communities are given coto tokens/gains. It essentially means that a large part of the platform will be owned by the community creators and members.” Regarding plans of expanding, Acharekar elaborates, “Presently our largest user base is in India and Egypt. But the application is available globally. We are soon planning on launching in Indonesia.”

source/content: newindianexpress.com (headline edited)

KARNATAKA: ARTS & CULTURE / RELIGION: Puttur’s Aparna Kodankeri Writes Hindu Scripture Bhagavad Gita in Tulu Script

Many books are being written in Tulu language and script in order to further strengthen the demand to add Tulu language to the Eighth Schedule of the Indian Constitution. In a similar attempt, a Puttur native woman has written Bhagavad Gita in Tulu and Kannada scripts.

Aparna Kodankeri, a resident of Kodankeri near Narigmogaru in Puttur, is the woman who has done this unique achievement. She is a Bharatnatyam expert too.

Aparna translated Bhagavad Gita, a part of Mahabharata, which is the Hindu religious book using Tulu script. The book was released recently by Sri Vidyaprasannatheertha Swamiji of Subramanya Math in the presence of scholar Laxmeesha Tholpady and Ananda Theertha Sagri of Subramanya math Vedavyasa research centre.

Aparna, who was at home during the Covid pandemic, started writing in Tulu script which was taught to her by her brother Mukund.

Aparna says, “I felt while writing why Bhagavad Gita taught by Sri Krishna should not be written in Tulu language and script. I have written the summary and teaching of 18 Shlokas of Bhagavad Gita in Tulu and Kannada scripts as I found that writing in Tulu will make the book and teachings closer to heart of Tulu speaking people.”

source/content: daijiworld.com (headline edited)

NATIONAL: KARNATAKA: National Handloom Day: Lambani Tribal Women Weave Dreams of better Future

With rampant poverty, alcoholic husbands and the sword of migration hanging over their heads, the Lambani community women of Arakeri have recently found a new lease of life in age-old art.

Adorned in ivory bangles up to her arms and clothes with sparkling bits of mirror work, 30-year-old Sunanda Jadhav of the nomadic Lambani community in Karnataka’s Vijayapura carries off her traditional attire with grace and embroiders exquisite designs on fabric effortlessly.

Jhadav, a single mother to four young children, is among 60 odd women working with Banjara Kasuti — an all-woman NGO working to revive the age-old textile art.

Their lives and livelihood, up till a few years ago, were hanging by a thread.

Rampant poverty, alcoholic husbands and the sword of migration — in search of back-breaking jobs in agriculture or construction — hanging over their heads, the Lambani community women of the nondescript village of Arakeri have recently found a new lease of life in the age-old art.

This year is ushering in a new hope for them.

Armed with confidence, skill and some hard-earned money, these women are now weaving the threads to a brighter future for themselves and perhaps, their dying traditional art.

Not for nothing, a shy and quiet Jhadav, hesitant to take most questions, parrots the names of various geometric-pattern Lambani stitches — from ‘Kilan’, ‘Vella’ to ‘Pote’ and ‘Nakra’ — with great aplomb on cue.

“My husband abandoned me and our four children nine years ago. With nowhere to go, I came to Banjara Kasuti in October 2017. It is because of this job that I am somehow able to feed my children and fund their education. Everything I know of Lambani art, I learnt it here,” she uttered as her fingers adeptly sewed stitches on a mirror-embellished black patch.

Lambani art, for the unversed, is a form of textile embellishment practised by the Lambani or the Banjara community, a nomadic group inhabiting several states of India, including Rajasthan, Gujarat and Karnataka.

It involves an elaborate use of colourful threads, stitching of mirrors, decorative beads, small cowries shells and even low denomination coins and a rich array of stitch patterns on loosely woven fabric.

According to the 2011 Census, the population of Karnataka’s Lambani tribe, listed as a Scheduled Caste community, stood at about 12.68 lakh.

The money they make, Rs 250 per day, might seem like loose change to city-dwellers but to these women, it means “financial independence” and “self-reliance”.

Asha Patil, who founded Banjara Kasuti in 2017 with Seema Kishore, said money in their pockets ensures that the women are no more reliant on their husbands for their well-being.

“Earlier, some of these women would embroider these Lamabani patches at home and their husbands would sell them on beaches of Goa or flea markets in nearby towns. That way, the money always remained with the husbands. Now, the money is with the women and as a result, the decision on how to use that money is theirs. In many households, this newfound financial independence is giving women their well-deserved seat at the table,” Patil told PTI.

Besides money, the opportunity of escaping harsh field jobs in the scorching heat of Vijayapura — also called the ‘Jaisalmer of Karnataka’ due to its hot weather — for the safe environs of home or well-equipped centres of Banjara Kasuti is lucrative enough for these Lambani women to pick up the thread and needle and save their art from an existential threat.

For 32-year-old Kavita Rathore, this is the “best job” available in her village as she can share a laugh, shed tears and even indulge in the occasional gossip with other women of her age while creating the “best-in-class” Lambani art.

Her favourite is the ‘Tera Dora’ stitch, and given a chance, she would like to sew something for her favourite singer Himesh Reshammiya.

“We are allowed to work from home also. But I make it a point to come here and do the six-hour shifts and go home only for lunch breaks. This is a good distraction from household chores, plus there is always someone to help if you get stuck somewhere,” Rathore, who recently stitched a ‘Phetiya Kanchali’ — the traditional outfit of Lambani women — for her mother-in-law, said.

Though founded in 2017, it was only in October 2022 that the NGO entered the market with its line of apparel and bags ranging from Rs 1,200 to 10,000.

It has showcased products in five exhibitions, four in Bengaluru and one in Mangaluru, and is already in talks with Dastkar, a prominent organisation working to support traditional Indian craftspeople, for collaboration and furthering the business.

Happy with the response in the market so far, Kishore, a diploma holder in fashion designing, admitted the “immense competition” from cheap machine-made goods they face and urged people to realise what might be a “fashion statement” for them is the “livelihood” of these artisans.

The NGO aims to scale its workforce to 100-150 artisans this year or latest by March 2024.

“These artisans are in dire need of our support. We all have to take care of them and the fading Lambani art form. Machines can take over the world but we, human beings, too need to live, right? Please save the planet and these artisans,” Kishore said, adding that Banjara Kasauti would soon come out with its home furnishing collection as well.

And the Lambani women know the truth rather too well, which is why most of them, even after earning their bread and butter from this traditional art, don’t want their children to take it up.

The irony was not lost on Patil and Kishore, even though the duo are hopeful that their stitch in time would save both the Lambani art and the tribe.

National Handloom Day is observed on August 7 every year to pay tribute to the handloom-weaving community of India and highlight the contribution of this sector to the socio-economic development of the country.

source/content: newindianexpress.com (headline edited)

NATIONAL & KARNATAKA: Shobha Rao Smilemaker’s latest video ‘Six Decades in Incredible India’ released

After her video about Memorable Mangalore became viral last year, local resident and soft skills trainer Shobha Rao Smilemaker released a new video, this time about India.

On the occasion of her 60th birthday, the video called ‘Six Decades in Incredible India’ was released among friends and family on her Shobha Smilemaker YouTube channel.

The delightful video gives a pictorial glimpse about her travels across almost all of the 28 states and 8 union territories of India, and still she says one lifetime is not enough to experience the different corners of India.

source/content: daijiworld.com (headline edited)

KARNATAKA: BUSINESS & ECONOMY: Bolas Agro Pvt Ltd. receives’Karnataka State Exports Excellence Award 2021′ for Udupi District

Bolas Agro Pvt. Ltd., Karkala, a manufacturer specialised in dry fruits and nuts, has received the Karnataka State Exports Excellence Award 2021 for Udupi district.

Directors of the company Rajat Kamath Bola and Anjani Kamath received the award at a ceremony organised by the Karnataka State Export Excellence Awards Committee at the Vidhana Soudha in Bengaluru recently in the presence of Chief Minister Siddaramaiah and Deputy Chief Minister D.K. Shivakumar, a company release said.

“This recognition fuels our passion to explore new horizons, innovate, and contribute further to the world of exports. We vow to continue our pursuit of excellence, upholding the highest standards in the industry and delivering the finest quality products,” Mr. Rajat Kamath said on the occasion.

source/content; thehindu.com (headline edited)

NATIONAL: Mysuru’s Deia Urs Selected to Represent India at 10th Shitoryu Karate Do Intl. Championship, Jakarta

Mysuru’s Deia Urs won gold medal in the Senior Female Individual Kata at the 26th National Karate Championship organised by All India Shitoryu Karate Do Union (AISKU) at St. Philomena’s College Indoor Stadium in city recently.

She will now be representing India at the 10th Shitoryu Karate Do International Championship to be held at Jakarta, Indonesia, in September this year.

Around 800 karatekas all over the country had taken part in the National Championship. In the pool of 15 participants, Deia Urs entered the finals by securing highest points (24.50) along with Agnes Ashlyn of Kerala (23.80), Varsha of Hyderabad (23.50), Samiksha of Tamil Nadu (22.00), Sahana or Maharashtra (22.00) and R. Greeshma (21.90). 

In the finals, Deia Urs held on to her top position and won the gold medal by securing 25.10 as against her opponent Agnes Ashlyn’s 24.80 who took the silver. The bronze was shared by Varsha & Samiksha with 23.90 & 23.50 scores respectively.

This is the second time Deia Urs will representing India at Shitoryu International Championships. At the APSKF Championship held at Jakarata in 2018, Deia had won a Bronze medal.

Deia Urs, who is doing her Master’s in Journalism & Mass Communication in Manasagangothri, University of Mysore, holds 4th Degree Black Belt in Karate (Shitoryu). She is trained by her father B.S. Srinath Urs. Both practice under AISKU & AKSKA President Kyoshi C.S. Arun Machaiah.

source/content: starofmysore.com (headline edited)

NATIONAL: Jenicia Lobo bags Gold at National level Open Karate Tournament

Jenicia Lobo of Shankerpura (Pangla parish) bagged the gold medal at the recently held national level karate championship.

The karate national level open tournament ‘High Five Championship – 2023’ was held from July 15 and 16 at Rajangana Krishna Math Temple, Udupi.

Jenicia attempted both in KUMITE event and KATA event categories (brown belt) and managed to bag 3rd place in KUMITE and 1st place in KATA category.

She will be participating in the international karate championship to be held in Shivamogga on August 5 and 6.

In the previous years she has won gold, silver and bronze medals in several district, state and national level karate events.

Jenicia was recently felicitated by St John’s parish, Shankerpura for her excellent performance in the national level karate tournament.

She is currently pursuing her BA degree at the girls’ college in Udupi and intends to pursue IAS (civil service).

She is the daughter of Joseph Lobo and Neema Lobo of Shankerpura. Joseph Lobo has been recognized by many associations for his role in agricultural field, nursery etc.

source/content: daijiworld.com (headline edited)

SOUTH INDIA: KARNATAKA: ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE (AI): Meet Soundarya, South India’s First AI News Presenter by Kannada News Channel ‘Power TV’

The channel will also experiment with various news shows, featuring the new AI presenter, Soundarya.

As Artificial Intelligence (AI) news presenters started entering into the Indian TV news industry, Kannada channel Power TV launched south India’s first AI news presenter. The management named the AI presenter Soundarya and on Tuesday, the first news show was rolled out, featuring her.

In the first show, Soundarya introduced self by saying, “Hello everyone. AI is leaving its footprint in every industry, and it has entered the TV news industry as well. A few of me colleagues (AI news presenters) started presenting news in some of the channels in north India. I am Soundarya, south India’s first robotic anchor by Power TV.” The channel will also experiment with various news shows, featuring the new AI presenter, Soundarya.

A few other channels in the country too have come up with their own AI powered news presenters.

Recently, an Odia channel called OTV launched state’s first AI news presenter Lisa. Lisa took the internet by storm after the flawless news presentation in both English and Odia impressed many people.

In March, India Today group launched country’s first AI news presenter Sana for their Hindi channel Aaj Tak.

Though there is a long way to go for the seamless AI news presenters to take over the human news presenters, the AI enthusiasts are calling it an interesting development in Indian TV journalism.

source/content: hindustantimes.com (headlines edited)