Monday, January 31, 2005

JANA SANKSHEMA SAMITI - Tsunami activities till last week

JANA SANKSHEMA SAMITI-VIJAYAWADA.

You know right from the very first hour of tsunami RSS plunged into service. Till today JSS&RSS distributed:

1). Nets 14167kgs worth Rs 59 lakhs.
2). No of villages served 21
3). No of families benefited 10,000
4). No of meetings held 14 places
5). No of volunteers involved 800(continuously 300).
6). family kits in 25 villages about 4000 kits worth Rs 600 each total: 24lakhs
7). Medical services: 6 medical vans for first 10 days served in 50 villages

Further requirment:-

1). Nets 15000kgs costs nearly another Rs 63 lakhs
2). For new boats&engines nearly Rs 50 lakhs
3). Community halls proposed in 10 villages nearly Rs 30 lakhs

Address: JANA SSANKSHEMA AMITI, Madhava Sadhan, Kaleswara Rao Road, Vijaywada-524 002, Andhra Pradesh, Phone # :08662435199,Cell:98490 48859 Our site address www.sevabharathi.org . and online account number Guntur swift code:- IOBAINBB088, Chennai swift code:-IOBAINBB001. Connect to A/c Jana Sankshema Samithi, SB A/c No:-13455, At IOB Governorpet Vijaawada-520 002.

Sunday, January 30, 2005

Seva Bharathi as on Jan.20, 2005

Handing over of the first phase of the temporary
shelters to the inhabitants of Keechankuppam on
20.01.05

http://sevabharathi.org/tsunami_report20jan.htm

Background:

Seva Bharathi, Tamilnadu in association with the volunteers of the RSS and associate organizations immediately entered the affected areas within hours of the Tsunami attack. In some areas the volunteers plunged into relief work even while there was a severe threat of a second Tsunami attack.

Seva Bharathi, a nationalist service organization, which had undertaken such big tasks earlier in the quake hit areas of Latur (Maharashtra), Uttarkasi (UP), Punjab and Gujarat is the Indian arm of Sewa International, an international NGO.

Relief works:

On 26 th , the day of the attack, the relief work was carried through out the night. All the deceased bodies were removed and disposed off in co-ordination with the Governmental relief team. Initially on 27 th and 28 th the concentration was mainly on identification of bodies and handing them over to their relatives. The relief activities were carried out in co-operation with the Revenue, Police and Health department officials.

More than 60 doctors, (24 from Karnataka) split into teams of 8 conducted Medical camps in all the coastal villages and the Relief Camps till 16.01.05. Medical service was also rendered to the non Tsunami affected area to prevent out-break of epidemics. Since then, a permanent medical centre has started functioning from Neela South Street, mainly for treating the Tsunami affected people though other patients are also entertained.

The following is the details of the relief work carried out in various villages

Sl. No Description No of Villages

1. Affected villages 73

2. Gathering Information 63

3. Disposal of Dead Bodies 27 (1798 bodies)

4. Medical Aid 58 (15,000 beneficiaries)

5. Distribution of Food 33

6. House hold items distribution 73

7. Counseling 20

8. Atma Shanthi Prayer / Shrartham 66

9. Entertainment for children 29
(story telling, games)


List of food and other materials distributed in the
Nagapattinam District as on 20.01.2005

Sl. No Items Quantity

1. Rice 903 tonnes

2. Dhal 6500 kgs

3. Vegetables 16,000 kgs

4. Milk powder 1,800 kgs

5. Bread & Biscuit 2.17 lakhs packets

6. Drinking water (Mineral water) 3.65 lakhs packets of 250 ml

7. Dress material 1.4 lakhs pieces

8. Bed sheets 9,600 pieces

9. Mats 18,000 pieces

10. Cooking Stove 3,400 pieces

11. Cooking utensils 7,300 pieces



Total value of the materials distribute (including medicines): Rs.2,61,33,000 (Rs.2.61 crores)

The relief materials were collected by our volunteers from various parts of India and sent them to the base camp at Nagapattinam. The medicines were supplied mainly from the states of Rajasthan and Karnataka.

Seva Bharathi has installed a mineral water plant in Nagapattinam to provide safe drinking water for the city . This plant is supplying 20,000 litres of pure drinking water free of cost to the affected people everyday. However, people from all walks of life including the police, the army, fire service men, and electricity board employees took water from this plant.

Trained woman volunteers visited all the affected villages and provided trauma herapy and counseling services. On the 16 th day, poojas and rituals were performed for the deceased and around 1200 women volunteers from the districts of Trichy, Thanjavur, and Thiruvarur participated in the function.

Rehabilitation Activities:

We are constructing 1200 houses for providing temporary shelter to the inhabitants of Keechankuppam village, the worst affected village in the state.

A comprehensive study was conducted to ascertain the volume of damage in the villages and to understand the requirements of the people for bringing them back to
normalcy.

More than 2000 volunteers including 300 women, Doctors, Engineers, Advocates, Auditors took part in the relief and rehabilitation activities. The relief and rehabilitation activities were carried out through the services of our volunteers who averaged 200 on any single day.

All the activities of Seva Bharathi were done with full cooperation of the Government authorities.

Evangelism in the garb of Relief Work

Evangelism in the garb of Relief Work

http://vivekajyoti.blogspot.com/

‘Dinamalar’, Chennai

The proselytizers are taking undue advantage of the predicament of the Tsunami victims in the coastal areas of south India.

In the Tamil Nadu coastal villages of Mayiladthurai and Nagapattinam, the Tsunami victims are lured by the Christian missionaries for conversion. They are luring the villagers with cash incentives and with promise to bear lifetime education expenses of their children. These missionaries are also trying to convert the villagers en mass through village resolution passed by the village president.

A coastal village called Thirumullai Vasal situated near Sirgazhi Taluk of Tamil Nadu, has 55 fishermen families. These families have lost their entire belongings in the recent Tsunami. They are now accommodated in the Government school at Thirumullai Vasal. The members of a Christian organization by name “United Bethel Trust” of Coimbatore have already met these fishermen families twice. The Trust President, an Indian, by name Andrew Augustin, belonging to the Pentecostal Mission, is presently living in the USA. After the devastation of the Tsunami, he visited the above village and promised the affected fishermen every help and assistance. He also gathered from these families all the required information about the loss of their belongings etc. and where they want the new houses to be built, and further details about them.

On Jan. 18, 05, the members of the United Bethel Trust again went to the Government Scholl at Thirumullai Vasal and collected further details about the requirements of the fishermen families accommodated there. They also conducted Gospel meetings and prayed for the welfare of these families. These families felt there was nothing wrong in receiving help from this organization.

In this way, in several coastal villages of Tamil Nadu, these missionaries are lure the villagers under the pretext of relief work and convert them to Christianity. Also, taking advantage of the delayed Government relief work for the fishermen, the members of the above Trust divide the people in the name of caste and creed, thereby creating misgivings among them, with a view to covert them.

Wednesday, January 26, 2005

No need for photos or TV shots - S. Gurumurthy

No need for photos or TV shots
Wednesday January 26 2005 07:48 IST
S Gurumurthy

NGOs here and NGOs in the West operate in two different worlds. But here too they seek the same space as their counterparts in the West. Let us see the difference. The NGOs evolved in the West as substitutes for neighbourhood communities that have almost vanished in the atomised and impersonal West. But many NGOs from the West operate globally. They are no simple instruments of service when they set foot on the Rest. They constitute the cultural and political thrust of the West on the Rest.

See a current example. Invited by the tsunami disaster, an NGO team from the US landed in Chennai a couple of weeks ago. How? By an exclusive Boeing 747 plane claimed to be one of the two of its kind. The other being the US President’s! This NGO looks for ’sinners’ belonging to other religions to ‘harvest’ them for its religion. It came here with celebrities, a world champion in boxing and a Miss World runner-up, so that it is not lost in the overcrowded NGO bazaar. The team drove to Thazhangudam, a tsunami-affected village in Tamil Nadu. It declared a charity of Rs 4,000 crores for the 10 affected countries over the next 45 days. ‘Others make empty promises,’ it mocked. Its mission: adoption of children orphaned by tsunami. Obviously, it did not know that parents and not children have been orphaned by tsunami, which has killed children more than the old.

It felt sad that the ‘‘TN Chief Minister did not come to receive them.’’ ‘‘A Chandrababu Naidu would have done that,’’ it moaned. NGOs like this, backed by huge global funds, are ever in search of disasters. In the West everything is organised, including their religion. So are their NGOs. Excelling even corporates in PR they build brands. Similar, but smaller, versions of such NGOs have been imported into India in the last few decades. In normal times they monopolise the metro pages of newspapers and occupy their front pages in times of disaster. The have offices in metros. Led by modern, articulate, sometimes media-space seeking socialites, they are adept in publicity. Liaise with governments and officials. Monopolise all visible spaces. So they access high value cheques from the rich and aid from the state. This is how the western NGO model has created a perception that all non-government activity is ‘NGO’ work.

These NGOs mask the work of neighbourhood communities, the real social safety net in India, from visibility. The neighbour community is part of Indian life and tradition. It is organic. Not organised to attract attention. This organic quality naturally, and informally, manifests in a crisis. It has no PR, no face or brand. They quarrel like families, but they also unite in a crisis. Their quarrels are highlighted to brand them as too antiquated for modernity. But they unite, which happens whenever they have to handle a crisis, to work together based on the very relations which makes them quarrel, but that is never highlighted.

See an example of its auto response to emergencies. A whole village turned up to save hundreds caught in a train smash at Khanna in Punjab, fed thousands for days who came in search of their kin and safeguarded all the properties of the accident victims and handed over all their jewellery and cash to the local collector. This is organic society spontaneously responding. NGOs are needed to link unconnected individuals, not organic societies. This made news thanks to some enterprising media men. Otherwise, it would have gone totally unnoticed like all organic responses.

Even the ongoing tsunami relief work is mostly managed by volunteers mobilised from local and neighbourhood communities. Most organisations act more as catalysts through their local work and volunteers. The story is the same whether it is in Port Blair and elsewhere in the Andamans, or Nagapattinam and Kanyakumari in Tamil Nadu, or in Kollam or in Alapuzha in Kerala. In the Andamans, 110 relief camps with over 21,000 victims are mainly managed by neighbourhood communities and initiatives. The local RSS and affiliates, some Marwari Yuva Manch, Dweep Youth Club and other local communities, and some local Christian missionary groups are the catalysts to neighbourhood mobilisation. Many communities have thrown open their schools and marriage halls for the victims and provided food instantly. It is mostly local and neighbourhood manpower mobilised by local leadership, supplemented by distant supply line help.

The same is the case in Kerala. Out of 26 relief camps in Kollam, the Seva Bharati, an RSS outfit, maintains 14, mostly through local RSS workers. In Alapuzha, all 14 relief camps housing 40,000 affected, is maintained by Seva Bharati again with the RSS workers mobilised from neighbourhood. In Tamil Nadu, Seva Bharati has its presence in 168 out of the 258 affected villages in the coast line again mobilising local RSS and associate manpower. They have buried or cremated some 2,500 decomposed bodies, more than a fourth of the dead. The RSS in Tamil Nadu has mobilised over 2,000 volunteers mostly from neighbourhood. They run 15 main relief centres assisted by 50 satellite centres maintaining the supply line.

Mata Amritanandamayi Math, Art of Living Foundation headed by Sri Sri Ravishankar and Isha Foundation headed by Satguru Jaggi Vasudev could mobilise thousands volunteers from neighbourhood for relief work. So did the AIM for Seva founded by Swami Dayananda Saraswathi and Ramakrishna Mission whose relief work too was manned by a huge volunteer force from neighbourhood. Many local community outfits, caste organisations, local churches, mosques have motivated and mobilised thousands of volunteers for relief work. So it is the local and neighbourhood initiative that rose to the occasion, with distant help supplementing.

But these initiatives are off the TV screen and outside the lenses of the cameramen of the media. Unlike ‘NGOs’ the media is familiar with, they are not organised. None of them have spokesmen or media attache to highlight their work. With the result the amorphous ‘NGOs’ grab all credit as the media keeps repeating ‘NGOs are doing excellent work’. It is the organised, globally funded, metro-based, PR branded NGOs, operating from star hotels and air-conditioned offices and driving around in slick cars whose interviews, TV bites, photos are visible.

The volunteers from neighbourhood work and disperse after the relief is provided. They are not invited or motivated by photos or TV shots. Nor do they know how to handle the media or publicise their work. But the NGOs need photos and TV shots to publicise their work, to raise funds and increase their turnover. They need disasters to build their brands. In the process the real work of the unorganised local social network is masked by the media bias in favour of organised and publicity savvy NGOs. The central government made us proud by saying ’no’ to foreign doles for the tsunami disaster. Why not say ’no’ at least to foreign NGOs and their affiliates here who have global design?

Writer’s email: comment@gurumurthy.net

Monday, January 24, 2005

TSUNAMI REHABILITATION INITIATIVE (TRI)

TSUNAMI REHABILITATION INITIATIVE (TRI)

No C-8, Vasanth Apartments, No 40, CPR Road,

Alwarpet Chennai – 18

Ph: 044-30909535 email – info@triindia.org



A body to coordinate and network the important social service organisations [NGOs] engaged in Tsunami disaster relief and rehabilitation work has been formed at Chennai. The coordinating body has been named as Tsunami Rehabilitation Initiative [TRI]. The decision to form TRI was taken at a meeting held in Chennai on Saturday, January 8, 2005 in which Swami Dayananda Saraswathi, Swami Gautamananda, and Satguru Jaggi Vasudev guided the deliberations.

The leading NGOs who have become the first members of the coordinating body are: Sri Ramakrishna Mission, AIM for Seva, Mata Amritanandamayi Math, Chinmaya Mission, Art of Living Foundation, ISKCON, Isha Foundation, Swaminarayan Sampradaya, Seva Bharati and Vivekananda Kendra. The coordinating body will have as patrons Swami Gautamananda, President, Ramakrishna Mission, Chennai, Swami Dayananda Saraswathi of Arsha Vidhya Gurukulam, Mata Amritanandamayi, the head of the Amritanandamayi Math, Satguru Jaggi Vasudev, the head of Isha Foundation and Sri Sri Ravishankar the head of Art of Living foundation. More than 10,000 volunteers of the member organizations, many of them qualified doctors, psychiatrists, trauma therapists and other specialists, are involved in the relief and rehabilitation work in all the affected places in Tamil Nadu, Andhra Pradesh, Kerala, Andaman and Sri Lanka.

The purpose of this co-ordinating and networking effort is to ensure proper distribution and co-ordination of the delivery of rehabilitation work among different NGOs which have become the first members and such other organizations as would net work with the TRI in future. TRI will contact different NGOs, which have no sectarian or sectional motive or extra territorial interests, for networking with them. TRI will also integrate the work of the different service organizations so that the collective and coordinated work of all the service organizations ensures most effective and unduplicated delivery of the rehabilitation work. By networking and coordinating the different NGOs, it will be possible to use their resources to the optimum level and partly unburden the government, the tough task of coordinating the voluntary work.

TRI will interface with the government and also the media so as to expedite the rehabilitation work. TRI believes that this kind of coordination among the NGOs will also assist the authorities in ensuring proper planning and expedite the delivery of rehabilitation work. The rehabilitation work planned for the future will also include trauma relief, psychiatric care and other counseling work, besides housing and provision of fishing infrastructure. TRI will persuade the different NGOs to adopt all affected villages and assist the authorities in choosing the most genuine NGOs as agencies for delivery of the rehabilitation. The office of TRI will issue periodic reports on the work done by the member organizations and other organizations which network with TRI for the information of the public.

The TRI appeals to all NGOs and other service organizations engaged in Tsunami Rehabilitation work to network with TRI so that the collective and integrated position of the NGOs through TRI leads to efficient and expedited rehabilitation services.

TRI is functioning from 10/01/2005 and its telephone No. is 044-30909535 and E-mail Id is info@triindia.org



For further details Contact:

P.S.Manikandan

Coordinator

Mobile: 94433-65731

Phone: 044-2836 1049, 2836 0243

Email: manidevakar@yahoo.com

Conversion attempts in the time of grief

http://in.rediff.com/news/2005/jan/24shoba.htm

Shobha Warrier in Nagapattinam | January 24, 2005 15:45 IST
Last Updated: January 24, 2005 16:17 IST


When I entered one of the rows of temporary shelters built for tsunami victims in Pattancherry village in Nagapattinam, I witnessed a minor scuffle in a corner.

Some inmates had surrounded a Christian priest and two nuns, and a war of words was going on.

"We are Hindus and we want to live as Hindus. Why do you want to convert us?" some young men shouted at the missionaries.

The priest said, "We are not here to convert people. We were only offering prayers for your peace of mind."

But flashing some pamphlets distributed among them by the three, the inmates snorted, "What does this mean?"

The priest had no answer.

"Why do you enter our houses and pray?," they asked. "Your nuns do this when our women are alone at home. We know how to pray."

The young men were extremely furious. The priest was unruffled. But the nuns were shaken by the sudden surge of animosity from the muscular men.

The scuffle went on till the three were forced to leave the place.

Day two:

As I was visiting the areas close to the sea that were badly affected by the tsunami waves, I saw another angry scene outside another temple in another village.

Police jeeps were seen parked outside the temple in Samandapettai. So was a van.

Villagers were complaining to the police about a missionary group to which the van belonged.

They said the group had taken away to another place their belongings and the relief they had got from nongovernmental organisations and the government, which they had kept inside the temple, because they refused to listen to its missionaries.

"They want to try their luck at some other place. Since we resisted, they took away our things. We won't allow this to happen," they said. "Why don't you arrest all of them?" the villagers asked the police.

The villagers' torrent of angry words continued. "We have lost everything to the sea. They said they would help us if we followed their religion. What logic is this? Are they here to help us or change our religion?" The police couldn't cool their tempers.

The group said it did not take away the belongings of the villagers and insisted that the contents inside the van belonged to it.

That evening, some villagers came with the news that the police had arrested the priest they had confronted the previous day. Apparently some angry villagers had gheraoed him, and forced the police to arrest him.

"He shouldn't be doing this when we are grieving, when we are suffering. Everything has its time and place," a villager said.

When I wanted to talk to the panchayat president and locals of the Karakkalmedu village at Karaikkal, they called me inside the village temple. That was where they met outsiders. The temple has become the centre of activity in the village.

Before we started talking, one of them opened the door to the sanctum sanctorum and pointed to a mark left by the strong tsunami waves. They told me that water stopped at the feet of their deity and then receded. "We might have suffered, but our Goddess saved us."

This belief had taken the villagers all the more closer to their deity.

"That is why it hurts us when others come and tell us that it was because of our God and our belief that we suffered. We won't let anyone exploit us when we are down," the panchayat members asserted.

Monday, January 17, 2005

Relief and rehabilitation activities of Seva Bharathi

Estimated cost of the rehabiliation work to be under taken by Seva Bharathi in Tsunami hit villages.

Particular; No of Units; Cost / Unit Rs; Total Rs

Construction of Temporary Houses; 3,250.00; 12,000.00; 39,000,000.00
Fishing nets and accessories; 3,000.00; 3,000.00; 9,000,000.00
New Boats; 300.00; 100,000.00; 30,000,000.00
Repair Charge; 1,000.00; 15,000.00; 15,000,000.00
Miscellaneous expenses; 7,000,000.00
Total; 100,000,000.00

Price List of Fishing Nets;

Area; Quantity; Price / Set Rs;
Cuddalore 0.20 - 38 - 150; 15 Kg net + accessories; 9,135.00
Pulicat 0.20 - 34 - 150; 15 Kg net + accessories; 9,285.00
Mahabalipuram 0.20 - 34 - 150; 15 Kg net + accessories; 9,285.00
Nagai/ Tharangambadi 0.2 - 38 - 200; 15 Kg net + accessories; 9,135.00
Chidambaram 0.20 - 38 - 200; 15 Kg net + accessories; 9,135.00
Pondicherry 0.20 - 38 -150; 15 Kg net + accessories; 9,135.00

Total Villages affected: 258

Total Familes affected: 1Lakh (approx)

Brochures of Sevabharathi: Details can be had from www.sevabharathitn.org

80 G Tax exemption: DIT (E) No. 2 (345) 99-00

Shop detail:
Chidambaram Fishnets Pvt Ltd.,
New No: 12, Old No: 2 Bharathi nagar Second Street,
T Nagar,
Chennai - 17
Ph: 91-44-2834 1170, 71, 72
Fax: 91-44-2834 1173
Email: cfn@eth.net





Tsunami relief activities:


http://www.sevabharathi.org/tsunami_presentation.htm






Rastriya Swayamsevaka Sangha, A.P.

Productive Servieces picked up speed by RSS and JSS (15th January and
16th January report) :-

1) Sri Swamy Venkatesh ji Maharaj of Madanapalli and RSS distributed
a family kit of Rs.1,000 each were distributed to 260 families
in Patha Pattapu Palem of Koduru Mandalam. Avula Tirupati of MSS and
Sri Ramadandu RSS participated. Total worth Rs.2,60,000/-.

16th January :-

1) In Krishna puram Village of Indukuru Pet Mandalam of Nellore
District for 450 Fisher man, fishing nets of Rs.1,000/- (2Kg) were
distributed by Yogada Satsangsangha of Ranchi and JSS Sri Swamy
Krishnananda giri ji, Sri Balakrishna Reddy ji, Sri Koduru Jayaram
President participated. Total worth Rs.4,50,000/-.

2) In Venkateswara Palem T.P.Gudur Mandalam for 150 Fisher man, 5Kg's
of net cost Rs.1,500/- were distributed to 110 Fisher man. Total
worth Rs.16,500/-. Apart from nets family kit of Rs.500/- were also
distributed. Total worth Rs.75,000/-.

3) In Nelaturu Palem, Muthukuru Mandalam a family kit containing 17
House hold items of costs Rs.1,000/- each were distributed to 360
families. Total worth Rs.3,60,000/- with Tera Pantha Sampradaya,
Hyderabad and JSS.

4) In Arakonda Palem Village for 40 families family kit of Rs.1,000/-
each were distributed by JSS & RSS. Total worth Rs.40,000/-.

Donate one net (Rs.10,000/-) help
one family

Address: JANA SANKSHEMA SAMITI, Madhava Sadhan, Kaleswara Rao Road,
Vijaywada-524 002, Andhra Pradesh, Phone # :08662435199,Cell:98490
48859 Our site address www.sevabharathi.org. and online account
number Guntur swift code:- IOBAINBB088, Chennai swift code:-
IOBAINBB001. Connect to A/c Jana Sankshema Samithi, SB A/c No:-13455,
At IOB Governorpet Vijaawada-520 002.


Tuesday, January 11, 2005

politics of aid by AID - supporting communist party

From: "Prahalad Appaji"
Date: Sat, 08 Jan 2005 18:18:19 +0000
Subject: MUST READ - politics of aid by AID - supporting communist party

Friends,

Out of ignorance, I think I have made a mistake supporting AID's efforts ( AID is Association for India's Development ) in Tsunami relief. Few years ago AID was embroiled in controversy when one of it's leaders Sandeep Pandey attended a Naxalites conference ( yes, the same movement which is slaughtering 10s all over India ) and encouraged that COMMUNIST parties should strengthen. When the world is moving towards democracies this is insane. Unfortunately he is linked to ASHA too. Yes, more about him @ http://geocities.com/enemiesofbharat/sandeeppandey.html

The core issue NOW is this: One Balaji Sampath, the relief coordinator in Chennai is diverting funds to DYFI and SFI. Both are communist outfits. DYFI is the youth wing of CPI ( Communist Party of India ). Here's the link for all the proof : http://www.geocities.com/aid_india_info/AID_DOC.html. When this AID-DYFI link was found out AID website removed all references to DYFI, now you won't find it's mention from the daily dispatches coming from Tamil Nadu. Read that story below - a chameleon behavior indeed!!!

I never contributed to ASHA and henceforth will desist from contributing to AID too. I do not want to fund either Naxalism or Communism or vested interests sympathetic to Pakistan - even indirectly after knowing these.

More about this:

Removing the Communist link
There has been mention in Sulekha Newshopper that AID India is a charity that uses DYFI for its work. DYFI is the youth wing of the Communist Party of India (Marxist). To look for this, I scanned the AID India website and there was no mention of DYFI anywhere. So for example if you look at the despatch from Chennai you get to read

After the initial shock and chaos, we are now quite well organized to handle the relief efforts. A number of organizations have started working together to handle the relief work - AID, TNSF, Pondicherry Science Forum, Vidyarambam, Pratham and the PHM Organizations. We have formed a quick informal coalition to coordinate this work. As of now the state level coordination is being done from the AID-India office in Gopalapuram Chennai. [Update from Chennai-III]

But then if you look at the cached page from Google, you see that the word DYFI was taken out from the same paragraph.

After the initial shock and chaos, we are now quite well organized to handle the relief efforts. A number of organizations have started working together to handle the relief work - AID, TNSF, Pondicherry Science Forum, DYFI, Vidyarambam, Pratham and the PHM Organizations. We have formed a quick informal coalition to coordinate this work. As of now the state level coordination is being done from the AID-India office in Gopalapuram Chennai.[ Update from Chennai-III (cached version)]

The same editing is seen in the Update from Chennai and its cached version.

Why is AID India removing this DYFI word from all its documents ? Is it because they are no longer working with them or are they trying to remove the Communist link or are they supressing information ? Can anyone from AID India answer ?

From various reports I have been reading they seem to be doing excellent job on the ground and seem to have very little overhead.


Update:

AID India, an organisation I can’t praise highly enough for their unflagging relief work in the state, have taken a pragmatic approach, tying up with anyone who shares their vision and work ethic. They have adopted two villages in this area, Pudupettai and Pudukubbam, in association with DYFI and another group called SFI – Students Federation of India. One of their coordinators, Muthu Kumar, showed me a document all the team leaders have been given, the text of an email from their leader in Tamil Nadu, Balaji Sampath.[Despatches 19: The three levels of public aid]

Both DYFI and SFI are Communist organizations. ( source: http://www.varnam.org/blog/archives/2005/01/removing_the_co.html )



Thursday, January 06, 2005

volunteering/ visiting relief activities at Nagapatnam

Namaste.

Persons interested in volunteering the relief work with Sewa Bharati can go to Nagapatnam. The can contact any of the following persons:

Sri P.M. Nagarajan 098424 14422

Sri Parameshwaran 098948 46958

or

Sri Shivarajan 098425 66315

You may give this information to any body willing to volunteer or visit the activities going on there (to have first hand information). Kindly inform Sri Dinesh Kamath at 94482 84621 before going.

Regards