FLASH NEWS: தனது நோபல் பரிசை டிரம்ப்பிடம் வழங்கிய வெனிசுலா எதிர்க்கட்சித் தலைவர் ***** இஸ்ரேலில் வாழும் இந்தியர்கள் பாதுகாப்பாக இருக்க வேண்டும் - தூதரகம் அறிவுறுத்தல் ***** போராட்டக்காரர்களை தூக்கில் போடும் திட்டம் எதுவும் இல்லை: ஈரான் அறிவிப்பு ***** ஈரான்: போராட்டத்தில் 3,428 பேர் பலி; 10 ஆயிரம் பேர் கைது ***** 75 நாடுகளுக்கு அமெரிக்க விசா வழங்கும் நடவடிக்கை நிறுத்தம்: டிரம்ப் நிர்வாகம் கட்டுப்பாடு ***** அமெரிக்காவின் பாதுகாப்பிற்கு கிரீன்லாந்து அவசியம் - டிரம்ப் ***** ‘ஈழத்தமிழர்கள் மீது நிகழ்த்தப்பட்ட பாலியல் குற்றங்களுக்கு இன்னும் நீதி கிடைக்கவில்லை’ - ஐ.நா. அறிக்கை ***** திபெத், மியான்மரில் 2 நாட்களில் அடுத்தடுத்து நிலநடுக்கங்கள்; மக்கள் அச்சம் ***** ஈரானை தாக்கினால் கடும் விளைவுகளை சந்திக்க நேரிடும்: அமெரிக்காவுக்கு ரஷியா எச்சரிக்கை ***** "இனி சீண்டினால்.." - சீனாவுக்கு ஜப்பான் ஓபன் வார்னிங் ***** ஈரானுடன் வர்த்தகம் செய்யும் நாடுகளுக்கு 25 சதவீத வரி; டிரம்ப் அறிவிப்பால் அதிர்ச்சி ***** இலங்கையில் இந்தியா நிதி உதவியில் கட்டப்பட்ட முதல் ‘பெய்லி' பாலம் திறப்பு ***** மனைவி மெலிண்டாவுக்கு ஜீவனாம்சமாக ரூ.71,100 கோடி வழங்கினார் பில்கேட்ஸ் ***** உக்ரைன் மீது ரஷியா ஒரே வாரத்தில் 1,100 டிரோன்கள் தாக்குதல்: ஜெலன்ஸ்கி குற்றச்சாட்டு ***** உற்பத்தி, தொழில்நுட்பத்தில் கவனம் செலுத்துங்கள்; புதிய தொழில் நிறுவனங்களுக்கு பிரதமர் மோடி வேண்டுகோள் ***** சட்டவிரோத வாக்கி-டாக்கி விற்பனை; மெட்டா, அமேசான் உள்ளிட்ட நிறுவனங்களுக்கு மத்திய அரசு அபராதம் ***** “திருக்குறளை அனைவரும் படிக்க வேண்டும்” - பிரதமர் மோடி ***** கேரளாவில் வாக்காளர் பட்டியலில் இருந்து நீக்கப்பட்ட பெயர்களை வெளியிட வேண்டும்: சுப்ரீம் கோர்ட்டு அறிவுறுத்தல் ***** ‘வளர்ச்சியடைந்த இந்தியாவை உருவாக்குவதில் அடுத்த 20 ஆண்டுகள் மிக முக்கியமானவை’ - ஜனாதிபதி திரவுபதி முர்மு ***** நடுவானில் தொழில்நுட்பக் கோளாறு; சிங்கப்பூர் புறப்பட்ட ஏர் இந்தியா விமானம் டெல்லி திரும்பியது ***** காஷ்மீரில் வாட்டி எடுக்கும் குளிர்; ஸ்ரீநகரில் -5.2 டிகிரி வெப்பநிலை பதிவு *****

Saturday, July 7, 2018

Unheard Echoes: How A Bangalore Restaurant Is Unique With Its Differently-Abled Staff



06.07.2018

A passing display board by the new-age hotel reads odd: ‘Sign language spoken here­’. At the entrance of this food joint in an upscale Bangalore locality welcomes a host of differently-abledstaff. They escort the guests warmly to their table. The well-lit interiors are full of inspirational quotes; the centrepiece features a tree-like structure that adds to the cosiness of the ambience. Welcome to Koramangala’s Echoes restaurant that is b­eing run by a 16-member team who are speech- and hearing-impaired.

It has been a successful enterprise they have been operating for over a year now. Each table comes with an embedded ‘bell-switch’. Press it, and a light glows. The staffer promptly walks up to the customer’s table and hands over the menu. Each dish has a code. All that the diner needs once the requirements are clear is to just fill up the slip with the dish code while mentioning the quantity—and pass it on to the bearer.

For the record, Echoes serves not just Indian food. In fact, customers visit there also to taste the American, Continental, Italian and Chinese items they serve. The inclusive model, of course, has been a matter of particular interest to several foodies in the bustling IT city, which has Koramangala having developed on its southeastern part since the 1990s owing to a technology boom that has brought in hordes of immigrants from across the country and even abroad. Today, the largely residential locality with its broad boulevards has consequently developed as a commercial hub as well. Not surprisingly, Koramangala is cosmopolitan—and thus has the advantage of getting visitors of varied cultures.

“It is a pretty seamless experience and very convenient,” says Abrar, a diner at Echoes, least keen to spell his second name. “The staff here is ever-smiling, courteous. That enables them score a point against their swankier counterparts, where customers at times are met with indifference if not grim hospitality.”

To enhance customer experience, Echoes has each of its table bearing a list of requests in a ‘table calendar’ format. It features suggestions such as “Water please”, “Clear the table”, “Call the manager”, “Bill please”.

Young Karthik Sagiraju is a co-owner of the restaurant that began functioning in March 2017. “We cater to special request from our customers,” the 26-year-old entrepreneur tells Outlook. “They usually write it down in the customisation column of the order slip. If that does not work, the staff provides the customers with pen and paper, where they can specify what they want.”

All the staff at this hotel come from an educated and professionally-trained background; it’s only that their differently-abled status have often posed challenges to them as employees at other establishments in the hospitality segment. Earlier some of them were working at petrol stations, or as cleaning staff, points out Karthik. “We felt that the warmth of their personality is lost behind such scenes. Here, they are in charge of the whole job; hence they successfully run the show,” he adds. “They are happy to work amidst a set of people they can relate to. While not working, they have a lot of fun and mingle with each like members of a family.”

It was a chance interaction with a hearing- and speech-impaired friend that drew Karthik and his friends to throw open the concept of such a restaurant. Naresh, who is now a waiter at Echoes, had then confided with Kartik that he was unable to work at the place he was employed and was feeling left out. “It was difficult to work in a place where you know people are different from yourself. I felt like the odd one out,” he adds. “When you have such feeling, it is difficult to stick around for long.”

Sympathetic to such friends, Kartik, along with friends Arjun Nadimpalli, Akash Raju and Girish Raju, chipped in to invest and open a restaurant. “We thought we’d create a workplace where the differently-abled are in a majority so that they can feel more comfortable,” Kartik says. Currently, Echoes has ensured that all the differently-abled alone do the work of all the 16 front-end staff, including that of the waiters and the managers.

For now, restaurant is planning to start another mission: home-delivery service. The owners are exploring the option to see if the differently-abled can participate in such an operation as well.The restaurant has 24 regular staffers engaged in cleaning and cooking. But the owners of Echoes want to ensure that they take over the entire operation, including the cooking department. “In fact, we did earlier have a couple of cooks with hearing and speech impairment, but they had some communication gap with the other cooks in the team,” Kartik says. “We are trying to reconstitute such a team again.”

Medical college wants govt to aid scheme for hearing impairment

Faridkot, July 4
To mitigate deafness using surgical and cochlear implants besides providing hearing aid to rehabilitate the patients, the Department of Otolaryngology (ENT) at Guru Gobind Singh Medical College and Hospital (GGSMCH), Faridkot, has provided as many as 250 hearing aid costing approximately Rs 20.5 lakh in recent times, said Dr Jai Lal, professor and head of the department.

Because of the awareness created about the problem, the ENT Department at GGSMCH is attracting an increasing number of patients. “We have requested the government to provide more hearing aid. All this is being done under the Rashtriya Bal Suraksha Karyakaram Scheme,” said Dr Jai Lal.

Two months back, the GGSMCH became the first hospital in Punjab to implant free cochlear surgery when these electronic devices, costing over Rs 20 lakh, were implanted in two children belonging to low income families.

A cochlear implant (CI) provides a sense of sound to a person with severe to profound sensorneural hearing loss in both ears.

The cochlear surgeries have been performed free of cost at the GGSMCH under the scheme — Assistance to Disabled Persons (ADIP) —- sponsored by the Department of Empowerment of Persons with Disabilities, Union Ministry of Social Justice and Empowerment, said Dr Lal.

“We are hopeful of strengthening the ENT department after Dr Gurbaksh Singh, a faculty member in the department, was selected for a super-specialty programme at a top medical institute in Britain,” said Dr Deepak Bhatti, principal, GGSMCH.

A team of doctors from the Medway NHS Trust in the United Kingdom, visited Baba Farid University of Health Sciences, Faridkot, on April 19 this year to select the candidates. Dr Gubaksh Singh was one of them.

No seat for visually, hearing challenged in medical colleges


06.07.2018
New Delhi: In a shocking development, it has come to notice that the Rights of Persons with Disabilities Act, 2016 -- a new and reformed legislation -- is not proving helpful for students with visual impairment and hearing impairment in fulfilling their dreams of becoming a doctor. According to the latest report, the Ministry of Health and Family Welfare (MoHFW) has accepted the recommendations of Medical Council of India (MCI) to not allow admission of students with 40 per cent visual and hearing impairments.

It must be noted that students with such type of disabilities were treated as general category students prior to coming into force new Act and were debarred from pursuing MBBS degrees in medical colleges. As per the new Act, disability has been defined based on an evolving and dynamic concept and types of disabilities have been increased from existing 7 to 21, including low-vision and blindness.

Thursday, July 5, 2018

‘Profoundly deaf ’ Aaradhya can now hear, thanks to Cochlear implants

Aaradhya used to utter some words that sounded like ‘amma’, giving her parents the false impression she could hear. However, as time passed, the parents noticed something wrong
04.07.2018
KOCHI: Aaradhya was two years old when her parents Vimesh and Geethu noticed she had hearing problems. The little one used to neither respond to the sound of their voice nor react to sudden loud noises.

All that has changed. And Aaradhya has doctors at Lourdes Hospital in Kochi to thank for it.

For it was the team of doctors of the hospital, who, led by Dr George Kuruvilla Thamarappally, performed a bilateral cochlear implant on Aaradhya – aged three years and diagnosed as ‘profoundly deaf’ – using the latest ‘HiRes Ultra Cochlear Implant’ from Advanced Bionics, a global leader in cochlear implant innovation.

Aaradhya used to utter some words that sounded like ‘amma’, giving her parents the false impression she could hear. However, as time passed, Vimesh, an employee at the Kochi airport, and Geethu, a housewife hailing from Nedumbassery, started noticing all was not right with their daughter. It was then they decided to seek medical help.

Post the implant, Aaradhya reacted with wonder and amazement as the HiRes Ultra Cochlear Implant was switched on in the presence of her parents.Dr George Kuruvilla, consultant ENT surgeon, Lourdes Hospital, Kochi, said four out of every 1,000 children in India were born with congenital hearing loss.

“If not treated early, many of the children grow up to be deaf and fail to develop critical speech, language and communication skills as a result. In Aaradhya’s case, she would have developed the ability to speak much earlier had she been screened for hearing deficiency at birth,” he said.

“Unlike most western countries, it is estimated in India seven out of 10 newborns are not tested for hearing loss. Screening for hearing at birth is crucial for timely treatment as it helps children with hearing deficiency grow up on par with their hearing peers,” he said. Even one-year-old children can HiRes Ultra Cochlear Implants, which is crucial to language development in children which generally takes place between ages one and three.

“Unlike hearing aids which make sounds louder, cochlear implants bypass the damaged hair cells of the inner ear to supply sound signals to the brain and are beneficial to people who have severe to profound hearing loss in both ears. The cochlear implants transmit sounds to the hearing nerve, enabling them to hear,” said Tarun Thomas K, director and chief audiologist, Shalom Speech and Hearing Clinic.

Wednesday, July 4, 2018

Vellore Institute of Technology students raise funds to aid deaf kids

04.07.2018
Eighteen college students are raising funds for hearing devices that will allow deaf kids from needy families to hear again. The students of Vellore Institute of Technology (VIT) wanted to raise ₹3.78 lakh and get at least 16 Siemens hearing devices for students of the Holy Cross Higher Secondary School for the hearing impaired at Sathuvachari, Vellore, but in close to two weeks have already raised ₹3.98 lakh through crowdfunding.

For Vandana Sundaresan and her classmates at VIT, their annual visit to The Holy Cross Higher Secondary School is something they look forward to. “This year, we decided to conduct an audiometry test to see the extent of damage to their hearing and see if something can be done. Kevin Ressul, who runs Sri Sai Hearing Solutions in Vellore, assisted us with the tests. The tests showed us that 10 kids have the scope to hear better if they have good devices,” said Sundaresan, who is spearheading the campaign on Fueladream.com, a crowdfunding platform.

“Some of these children use analog devices now, not digital. Most of these analog devices do not have features like decibel control. We are in touch with Siemens through our partners and we hope to have the devices at Vellore in one or two weeks,” she added.

With each device’s cost pegged at ₹21,000, the group of 18 students started individual campaigns to raise ₹3.78 lakh. Their campaign has been received well with 215 donors contributing ₹3.98 lakh till date. Sundaresan says the excess funds collected will be used to provide the children with additional batteries besides other needs of the school.

Ranganath Thota, founder of FuelADream, said that it was a wonderful initiative by the students. “It has high impact and is easy to implement. Crowdfunding is a great enabler and will ensure sufficient funds are raised to meet the needs of the students,” he said.


Parul to participate in World Deaf Tennis Team C’ship

02.07.2018
Chandigarh: Parul Gupta, the hearing impaired tennis player from Patiala, has been selected to represent the country in the World Deaf Tennis Team Championship scheduled to be held at Antayala, Turkey, from September 22. Parul had achieved third rank in the recently-held selection trials in Chennai. A total of four girls and four boys have been selected for the event. Parul had earlier this year won a doubles silver in the Slovenia Open Deaf Tennis Championship. — TNS

Tuesday, July 3, 2018

காது கேளாத, வாய் பேச முடியாத பெண் கீதாவுக்கு நடந்த சுயம்வரம்; 2 மாப்பிள்ளைகள் தேர்வு

02.07.2018
இந்துார் : பெற்றோரை கண்டுபிடிக்க முடியாத நிலையில், பாக்.,கில் இருந்து, இந்தியா திரும்பிய, காது கேளாத, வாய் பேச முடியாத இளம் பெண் கீதாவுக்கு திருமணம் செய்ய நடந்த சுயம்வரத்தில், இரண்டு பேர் தேர்வு செய்யப்பட்டுள்ளனர்.

பெற்றோரை பிரிந்து, 9வது வயதில், ரயில் ஏறி, பாகிஸ்தான் நாட்டின் லாகூர் சென்ற, காது கேளாத, வாய் பேச முடியாத சிறுமியை, அங்குள்ள தன்னார்வலர் ஒருவர் தத்தெடுத்தார். அந்த சிறுமிக்கு, கீதா என, பெயரிட்டார்.

மத்திய அரசின் நடவடிக்கையால், மூன்று ஆண்டுகளுக்கு முன் இந்தியா திரும்பிய கீதா, வெளியுறவு துறை அமைச்சர், சுஷ்மா சுவராஜ் உதவியுடன், தன் பெற்றோரை தேடி வருகிறார். தற்போது, 25 வயதாகும் கீதா, மத்திய பிரதேச மாநிலம், இந்துாரில், ஆதரவற்றோர் இல்லத்தில் தங்கி உள்ளார்.

பெற்றோரை கண்டுபிடிக்க முடியாததால் மன அழுத்தத்தில் உள்ள கீதாவுக்கு, திருமணம் செய்ய, அமைச்சர் சுஷ்மா முடிவு செய்தார். இதுகுறித்து, 'பேஸ்புக்' சமூக வலைதளத்தில் அறிவிப்பு வெளியிடப்பட்டது.

கீதாவை திருமணம் செய்ய, விருப்பம் தெரிவித்தவர்களில், 25 பேரை, வெளியுறவு அமைச்சகம் தேர்ந்தெடுத்தது. இந்த, 25 பேரும், கீதாவை சந்திக்க, ஏற்பாடு செய்யப்பட்டது. இதையடுத்து, சமீபத்தில் சுயம்வரம் நடத்தப்பட்டது. அதில், மத்திய பிரதேச மாநிலம் குவாலியர் மற்றும் ராஜஸ்தான் மாநிலம் ஜெய்ப்பூரை சேர்ந்த, தலா ஒருவரை, கீதா தேர்ந்தெடுத்தார்.

இந்நிலையில், கீதா மனநிலை மற்றும் உளவியல் ரீதியாக சரியான பின், இதுபோன்ற நிகழ்ச்சிகளை நடத்தலாம் என, அவரது பாதுகாவலரான ஞானேந்திர புரோஹித் கூறியுள்ளார். இதையடுத்து, இந்த இரண்டு பேரில், யாரையாவது ஒருவரை, கீதா, தேர்வு செய்வதற்காக, மீண்டும் சுயம்வரம் நடத்த திட்டமிடப்பட்டுள்ளது.

Monday, July 2, 2018

Two years after return from Pakistan, parents still elusive, Geeta presented with ‘grooms’

01.07.2018
A WEEK ago, among the ‘prospective brides’ lined up at a ‘Parichay Sammelan’ in this city, one diminutive woman in her mid-20s drew the most attention. It was Geeta. Two-and-a-half years after India brought the speech-and-hearing impaired woman back from Pakistan amidst much fanfare, the futile hunt for her parents by the government has evolved into a new search: a groom for Geeta.

On June 7 and 8, an exercise akin to a swayamvar was held at the Indore Deaf Bilingual Academy where Geeta is housed, with prospective grooms lining up. The list had been pruned from 26 applicants to 14 by the academy and another expert who works with speech and hearing impaired, “in consultation with the External Affairs Ministry” — with Sushma Swaraj having made Geeta her pet inter-border exchange.

Eventually only four grooms turned up.

The director of the Indore academy, Monica Punjabi, says of the four, Geeta showed interest in two suitors, one from Gwalior and the other from Jaipur. The External Affairs Ministry again stepped in at this point, and only after its go-ahead did the academy express its wish to meet the parents of the two. But before that could go through, the academy says, Geeta said she wanted to meet more suitors.

Hence, on June 24, Geeta was among the more than 160 speech-and-hearing impaired persons and prospective brides who were brought to the Parichay Sammelan (or Introduction Meeting) organised by the academy at Indore. Geeta introduced herself from the stage and showed interest in two youths, from Raipur and Surat.

As officials keep their fingers crossed, the Joint Director, Social Justice Department of Madhya Pradesh government, B C Jain, who attended the meet, says it would take time for “both sides to make up their minds”.

The Raipur youth, at least, has not reciprocated, says the academy’s Murlidhar Dhamani.

It is now nearly a year since Swaraj said that Geeta would get married soon and that Chief Minister Shivraj Singh Chouhan would do the “kanyadaan”. She made the announcement in July 2017 at her official bungalow in Bhopal, where Geeta was also present.

But the efforts to find a groom began in right earnest only in April this year when Indore-based sign language expert Gyanendra Purohit, who runs another facility for speech-and-hearing impaired, and the Indore academy issued Facebook advertisements inviting proposals from potential grooms.

However, Purohit doesn’t expect an easy end to this search — much like the hunt for Geeta’s parents, from whom she is believed to have got separated while very young and strayed into Pakistan.

Purohit says Geeta’s expectations “have risen very high”. “She needs to be mentally stable. She often thinks that actor Salman Khan will come one day and unite her with her parents… Once she said her marriage could happen only after her parents are found,” he says, adding she also keeps expressing the wish to meet film stars and cricketers.

For the Salman Khan part, at least some of the blame may lie on official doors. Geeta is believed to be a huge fan of the actor’s superhit Bajrangi Bhaijaan, and her return from Pakistan was much publicised for its parallels with the plot of that film, that had released around that time and in which the character played by Salman Khan returns a lost Pakistani girl to her family.

Since her return in October 2015, the External Affairs Ministry has kept a close watch on both Geeta and whom she meets. The Indore district administration seeks the ministry’s permission before letting anyone meet her.

In October 2017, two years after her return, again with Geeta by her side, Swaraj had issued a video appeal requesting her parents to “come forward and take her home”. “She often gets restless. She desperately wants to be with you. Whoever provides a clue to her parents will get a reward of Rs 1 lakh,” she had said.

In Pakistan, Geeta spent more than a decade with the well-known Edhi Foundation in Karachi. Speaking to The Sunday Express on India’s efforts to find Geeta a home, one way or the other, Faisal Edhi of the charity hopes she will find a husband soon. “She would often accompany my mother for shopping for other girls who got married. She was happy with us… It seems she is getting frustrated because the search to locate her parents is getting longer and longer.”

While the foundation’s doors “are always open for Geeta”, Edhi adds, “She loves India and may not want to come back.”

Sunday, July 1, 2018

Weeks-old deaf puppy rescued after falling down 50-foot hole



30.06.2018
An 7-week old deaf puppy melted hearts across the globe Saturday when she was pulled from a 50-foot hole in Alabama after a harrowing 30-hour rescue.

Rescue workers and volunteers from across the Huntsville region poured in to save Toffee, a black-and-white calico canine, after she somehow slipped into an inches-wide crevice in a wooded area around 5 p.m. Thursday.

“Y’all this is a miracle,” Toffee’s foster mom told the local TV station, WHNT News19, as she cradled the fatigued floppy-eared pup in her arms. “So many people have been sending me texts saying they’re praying. I’m just so thankful to everybody that came.”

Rescuers worked through the night and all day Friday to fish Toffee from the hole, as thousands watched the rescue on live-streaming videos posted by local TV stations.

Finally, around 12:20 a.m. Saturday, Toffee was pulled from the pit to a cheering crowd of rescue workers and onlookers.