Friday, September 19, 2008

Madras Day - Quiz

The Madras week celebration ends with an English Quiz on Madras ie Chennai on the final day, the Sunday succeeding Aug, 22, the Madras founding day. This used to be a general quiz and open to all with spot registration.

The previous day, the Tamil Medium Schools in Chennai will have Quiz Programme in the afternoon. The winning School will get a Rolling Shield and individual prizes.

This year the Tamil quiz took place on 23 rd Aug, Saturday at Srinivasa Sastri Hall in Luz. Around 20 Schools took part in prelims including some corporation schools.
6 teams were selected for final.

The questions were neither very tough nor very easy. Raja Muthiah and Rani Meiyammai
tied for the first place and finally Rani Meiyammai won the first prize.

This quiz programmes are conducted exclusively by Mylapore Times, a weekly neighbourhood newspaper, published by Mr.Vincent D’souza.










Earlier there was a power point presentation competition on Heritage of Chennai for Schools on 19.08.08 at the same venue, Sastri Hall. There were 20 participating schools. The effort the students had taken to document the history was praiseworthy and it is immaterial which school won the prize. But it was unfortunate that there was only one entry in Tamil and even that could not be projected due to non availability of font.

Mr. Vincent, while addressing the students, gave some useful tips to improve and also said that there is another 1 year time to plan and do the document in the best possible way in the year 2009, which will fall on 18th Aug ,2009.

I have a request to Mr. Vincent. All English medium students have the background, facility and exposure to do these kinds of things. But the Tamil medium schools, when I was talking to them, were not even aware of such a competition. Where was the problem?
Can Mylapore Times take some extra effort to involve them? The students of these schools are from middle and lower middle class families, some even from the families of servant maids, labourers, small vendors, hawkers ect. They need to be supported and encouraged. There is 1 year time to ponder over this.



Let us now move on to the grand finale, the Madras Quiz in English open to public on 24.08.08. This was arranged in Gokale Hall in Karpagambal Nagar, Mylapore.
The prelims was for teams of two, either students, senior citizens or any age group falling under general category. The questions were a bit tough, may be because the organizers planned to filter at prelim stage itself.

The final 6 teams included one ladies team and another senior citizens team.

There were 12 rounds with 6 questions in each round.

The finals started at around 3.30 on the Sunday afternoon.

The entire hall with 200 odd people (a little bit cramped, but no problem) of assorted age group was fully charged.

The questions, some simple, some tough, some thought provoking, some yielding to wild guess kept the audience and the fighting teams at the edge of their seats.

The quiz master Mr. Vincent D’souza kept everyone tuned and the ambiance light hearted, informal and a feast to the brains.

The teams were almost equally poised, but of course the first and second teams had slight edge over others throughout.

The senior citizens Mrs. & Mr. Ganesan came 4th and were highly appreciated by the crowd.

Again it is not the question of winner or runner. It is the participation that counts.

For more than 2 hours time Mr. Vincent and his Mylapore Times team gave the public an intellectual entertainment as the finale of Madras Week.

The spark may gather momentum in the coming years, who knows one day the Government may declare a holiday on 22nd Aug. for Madras, ie Chennai residents.

Sunday, September 14, 2008

Madras Day - Walking Tours

Madras Day, rather Madras week celebrations this year had many heritage walks or walking tours in its agenda.
Two tours which had their appearance for the first time in the week long events schedule, I wish to share with you here.

Walking tours: The unique walk of this year was the Photo walk led by Mr.Chandrachoodan Gopalakrishnan. I attended the Triplicane walk which started on a Saturday morning from the famed Sri Parthasarathy Temple. We 10 ladies, (6 of the group above 50) thought we will be briefed about the basics of Photography and the locations to be chosen. But strange, Mr. Chandrachoodan categorically said it is a street walk and so no strings attached. Well, me a freedom lover, enjoyed clicking whatever impressed me on the four roads by the side of the tank. As 23rd Aug was Gokulashtami day fruit and flower vendors had started coming up on the four streets. Colourful idols of Lord Krishna of different sizes occupied the street, meant for sale



The ‘Aum Janata’ on the road was very enthusiastic and gave poses for 50 odd people with camera on hand. Apart from people in activity we shoot old buildings, temples, landmarks etc. There was an agraharam by the side of Bharathiar Memorial with a mantap at the centre. Houses with tiled roof tops in natural surroundings with clean air was a relief from the hustle outside on main road

We came to the main road which ‘Kannagi’ will be directing with her index finger, and from there to beach road. Presidency College, PWD, other Government Departments, we passed by where we could capture some wonderful architecture of British era.
We reached Ezhilagam and could see the newly renovated Senate House at Madras University. We were denied permission to take photos inside. We disbursed by 10.10 from there.





The other walk, which also introduced for the first time was Mount Road Walk on 24 th Aug, i.e Sunday, led by Mr. Vincent D’souza one of the key organizers of Madras Day celebrations from the first year, 2004.

We assembled at The Hindu Office at Mount Road by 7.30 in the morning. Being a Sunday, all commercial establishments were closed and we could have a look at the heritage buildings. The intricacies were still preserved in some, namely the Mail building, the P ORR & sons and a nearby building with creepers on the wall and a metal staircase in front, India Silk House, Albot Medical shop in the ground floor of an ancient building,
and also the J E Letoille medical shop near by.

Mr. D’souza gave lots of information and vivid description of the Mount Road Junction where now Anna Statue stands. We could imagine The Hindu Office function at 100, Mount road with Sri Krishna Bhavan and Coronation Darbar Hotels functioning in full swing nearby. How the high society people of yester years combined entertainment, shopping, and refreshments, all in one particular place, that is, Mount Road. He threw light on the famed New Elphinstone theatre, Jaffers Ice Cream parlour and the boxing shows that used to take place, also the private theatre inside the Mount Road Post Office building, which is still preserved and the Philatelic bureau is functioning there now.

We crossed over and came to Musee Musicals where there used to be a Chinese restaurant it seems. We passed the famous Bhuhari Hotel, equally popular was Bilal on the opposite side near Darga.

We halted at the Bharat Insurance Building and were stunned. Though the renovation work is being undertaken whether the grandeur will be preserved is a million dollar question. The Higginbothams book stores is still a treat to our eyes.

The entire row had heritage buildings, like Southern Railway Booking Office, SBI, VST Motors etc. We could also see a small entrance to a Mosque in between these. We visited Murray’s Auction Stores also and finally Agarchand Mansion.

We went up the two storey building and had a fantastic view of the Mount Road Spencer junction.
The tour roughly took 2 hours. Mr. D’souza, who is ever young at heart, could spread the same spirit among the walkers with his torrential speech and no one wanted to miss even a single word.

The Madras day celebrations this year have spread widely this year and north Madras participation is significant.

In the coming years it may grow in geometric proportion and the take-off is going to be very colourful gigantic.
Kudos to the brain behind Mr.Vincent D’souza
(Vincent D'souza in Agarchand Mansion IInd Floor Corridor- Picture)

Madras Day - Lecture series



Hearty congratulations to the organizers for having successfully conducted yet another Madras Week from 17.08.08 to 24.08.08.
There were around 60 events this time spread over a wide area of Madras ie Chennai.Here I write about few events that took place in South Madras.

The lecture series :
I Would like to mention about the two lectures that took place in Chamiers, one ‘ Some lesser known temples of Madras ‘ by Chitra Madhavan and the other ‘The Parsis of Madras’ by Zarin Mistry.

Chira Madhavan, being a research scholar could authentically give details like the period, history, location, stala purna, architecture etc of all the temples she presented. Some very rare like Kodandaramar Temple at Vunamanjeri, a village near Vandalur still preserving its rustic beauty and Temple at Madambakkam under the care of ASI. The audience remained spell bound.


Zarin Mistry, not a historian, not a regular in giving lectures, but sounded very natural and fluent. As introduction she gave the history of Zorastrians, their migration to Gujarat first, then to Royapuram, Madras as traders. She gave the list of famous Parsis who made a mark in the history of Madras., like Mary Clubwala of Guild of Service, Dinshaw Tehrani, audiographer, Minoo K.Belgamwala of motor sports, to name a few.The audience participation was excellent and the entire process was very informal.

If I compare Chitra’s lec to Kanchipuram intricate Pattu saree, Zarin’s was a beautiful cotton saree, well starched and worn gracefully. Both had the real grandeur and charm.

The walking Tours and Quiz programmes will follow in the next posts

Vinayaka Chathurthy


I invoke the grace and blessings of Vigna Vinayaka and start postings in my Blog V Vyu (We View).

Vinayaka is believed to be the Lord of Wisdom, Writing and Willpower and hence he will guide me and show me a smooth path without obstacles.

There are many stories on Lord Vinayaka. But here I highlight only one. The story of winning the mango fruit from his father Lord Shiva. The entire episode was to stress that wisdom is more fruitful than hasty action. Vinayaka, having the smallest creature as his vahanam could have been faster in circumambulating the world with his Athmabala. But he preferred to use his intellect. Here we also salute Lord Muruga who allows Vinayaka to win so that it can be established that his elder brother is a Gyani.

So let us view positive things in life.
( I wrote this article on Vinayaka Chathurthy day i.e 3.09.08)