Category Archives: Inspiration/ Positive News and Features

Designer Who Can and Enables

Joe Ikareth and his daughter with clothes designed by him.
Joe Ikareth and his daughter with clothes designed by him.

It was a heart-breaking moment for Joe Ikareth when his daughter Tilotama was born 10 years ago. Nerves that send signals from the spine to the shoulder, arms and hands were cut off, leaving her with limited mobility in her arms and a partially-paralysed right arm.

As Tilotama grew up, she proved to be an inspiration for her fashion designer father. Ikareth began to make clothes that she could wear easily. “I would design a dress with a larger arm area, and instead of a zip, I would use Velcro or a magnet,” says the 41-year-old.

Today, he is focused on making clothes for the physically challenged. He uses natural fabrics, like the Kerala handloom. “I plan to use material that will not get stained by liquid and will not need ironing,” he says.

Ikareth hopes to make the clothes economically viable for customers, but most of the 70 million physically challenged people in India are not well off. Hence, he will be tying up with NGOs and social service groups so that they can subsidise the garments. Clothes in the ‘Joe Ikareth’ label range from `2,750 to `9,500.

His differently-abled fashion line Move Ability Clothing is also gaining popularity in Europe. He was a finalist at the Danish Business Cup 2015, and in the top 25 at the NORDEN-Nordic Innovation Living Challenge at Copenhagen with his Danish partner Jeanette Kaeseler Mortensen. “Joe has exquisite technical skill and a strong creative competence,” says Mortensen.

Lakshmi Menon, a trustee of Kochi-based NGO Good Karma Foundation, calls Ikareth’s clothes “beautiful and elegant”. Mumbai-based marketing consultant Suranjana Ghosh Aikara, an above-knee amputee, says “clothes designed by him are functional and fashionable”. Her favourite is a pair of linen trousers. “It looks like a skirt, has a flexible waistband and is easy to wear,” she says. “Usually, there is wear and tear on clothes when you use a prosthetic leg. Jeans tear after wearing them about 15 times, but Joe has made two layers in the trousers, so it lasts longer.”

The designer wants “to help increase self-esteem and confidence of differently-abled people and change the way people perceive them,” he says. He is also designing uniforms for employees of hotels, hospitals and companies. For staffers of a new hospital in Kochi, Ikareth designed uniforms for nurses in colours that would be soothing for patients. “If you apply design and movement to a uniform, it becomes very interesting,” he says.

Ikareth graduated from the National Institute of Fashion Technology, New Delhi, in 1996. Thereafter, he worked with designer Suneet Varma for three years. “In the initial years, it used to revolve around the wedding season, with its kurtas, pyjamas and formal clothes,” he says. “Now it has become a huge business. A designer needs several assistants to make his creations and to meet deadlines.”

In 1999, Ikareth returned to his hometown Kottayam. He began getting orders right after he created his website joeikareth.com. The Cobblestone Gallery in Sussex, England, asked him to design clothes for plus-size people. Mohiniyattom danseuse Brigitte Chataignier of France, who has a dance studio in Shoranur in Kerala, asked him to make clothes for her troupe.

Ikareth has also worked with Kalaripayattu and Kathakali artistes. “I make dresses which are a balance between the traditional and modern,” he says.

source: http://www.newindianexpress.com / The New Indian Express / Home> Magazine / by Shevlin Sebastian / October 31st, 2015

Artificial pancreas to keep blood sugar in check

Thiruvananthapuram  :

A 53-year-old man, who was diabetic for the past 18 years, became the first patient in south India to have an artificial pancreas after a successful procedure at Jothydev’s Diabetes Research Centre in Thiruvananthapuram. The first generation artificial pancreas, 640 G, was implanted earlier this month. Artificial pancreas was first tried on a four-year-old Australian boy who had type-one diabetes in January this year.

Dr Jothydev Kesavadev, who heads the centre, said that the 640 G is a network of devices that includes a device for continuous glucose monitoring and an insulin delivery system that are connected wirelessly. “In type-one diabetes and in many type-two cases, the biggest challenge is to keep the sugar level normal and avoiding hypoglycaemia or low sugar. It is a major cause for patient deaths in diabetes and a major reason for treatment failure. 640 G comes with an innovative technology where the pump will predict an impending low sugar 30 minutes in advance and automatically shutdown to prevent a low sugar episode. This system has automatic sensor to assess impending drop of blood sugar – say 60 – even when sugar level is 100. The pump will resume functioning once the sugar level is normal,” he said.

The device – which is almost the size of an iPhone – can be attached to the stomach, buttock of kids or on thighs of patients wearing dhoti. Insulin must be refilled every three days. 640G is so unique that the device need not be removed even while bathing or swimming. A tiny remote control, the contour meter helps glucose monitoring, insulin infusion and wireless communication between devices. The device is painless and ideal for kids,” said Dr Kesavadev.

“When insulin was founded in 1922, it was big remedy. But sudden change in sugar level remained a challenge. About 80-95 % of diabetes patients experience sudden change is sugar level. Either they get admitted for hypoglycaemia or for high sugar by eating sugar to control the sudden drop. This could be prevented if there is a device like 640 G,” he said.

The device is priced at Rs 5 to 6 lakh and entails a recurring monthly expense of Rs 10,000-20,000. However, the doctor said that it was cost-effective considering the cost for a pancreas transplant and related treatment.

source:  http://www.timesofindia.indiatimes.com / The Times of India / News Home> City> Thiruvananthapuram / by Jisha Surya, TNN / September 14th, 2015

Laurel for Keralite at speech contest

ManojKERALA09sept2015

A techie-turned-management consultant has made the capital city proud by become the first Malayali to achieve a podium finish at the recently held World Championship of Public Speaking, which is regarded the ‘Olympics of Oratory’, held in Las Vegas, USA.

Manoj Vasudevan, who hails from Kanjirampara, came third at the event organised at the Toastmasters International Convention, held in August. He represented Singapore where he has been residing since 1998.

Mr. Vasudevan delivered a speech titled ‘We Can Fix It’ before an audience of nearly 2,500 to figure among the toppers of the competition in which the contestants compete at various levels including club, area, district and global semi finals to reach the final round over a year-long process.

There were 10 speakers from the United States, India, Saudi Arabia, Canada, Sri Lanka and Singapore in the final round. The contestants delivered short speeches on wide-ranging topics.

Judging

The criteria used in judging include speech content, organisation, vocal quality and gestures. The country had another reason to cheer with a Chennai-based contestant, Aditya Maheswaran, coming second in the competition. Prior to migrating to Singapore, Mr. Vasudevan had completed his degree at the Government Arts College, Thiruvananthapuram, following which he pursued B.Tech. in Electronics and Communication at the College of Engineering, Thiruvananthapuram, from where he graduated in 1995.

During his early days in Singapore, he realised the importance of developing one’s communication skills. “Once we have landed our first job, a lot depended upon how one presented himself. Having faced such difficulties in my career, I took it as a challenge to master the art of public speaking,” he told The Hinduduring a telephonic conversation. There was need to create an awareness in this regard among the people of Kerala, particularly the youngsters. He has switched over from the technical field to focus on organising training programmes in public speaking. Mr. Vasudevan has gone on to coach individuals of 27 nationalities including CEOs, senior executives, professionals, managers, diplomats and celebrities.

source: http://www.thehindu.com / The Hindu / Home> News> Cities> Thiruvananthapuram / by Staff Reporter / Thiruvananthapuram – September 08th, 2015

He sweats blood to keep others happy

Jishnu Raj
Jishnu Raj

Kochi   :

When two-year-old Mohammed Altaf from Ooty was admitted to a city hospital for heart surgery on Monday, Jishnu Raj received a call in his mobile.

The request was something, which the 24-year-old, who is the Kochi area coordinator for Blood Donors Kerala, has become accustomed to by now. For, the hunt for blood donors in the city often ends with a call to this soon-to-be M.Tech graduate.

While everyone was enjoying a national strike-enforced holiday on Wednesday, Jishnu was busy arranging 50-odd blood donors, which for the youngster was a less hectic day! “I usually get 100-150 calls a day asking for blood donors,” he said.

He also found time to distribute food packets to the destitute under the Snehasadya campaign of We Help Kerala, a voluntary group engaged in charity and social works, of which he is an active volunteer.

Jishnu was drawn into the world of social work seven years back. When driven by the impulse to be a do-gooder, he mobilised youngsters at his native place Vengoor near Perumbavur by founding an organisation named the Vengoor Youths. It has since been active catering to the needs of the impoverished by pooling together the time and resources of its members.

He is also a link in finding organ donators and conducting awareness campaigns on the need to donate organs. He is also working in close association with Datri, the active blood stem donor registry in India. Thanks to the rapport he has built with doctors over the years, he often manages to hold medical camps, especially in areas lacking adequate health facilities.

Jishnu’s constant presence in the social media means that he has become the pointsman for non-resident Keralites looking out for local help. For instance, if someone in the Middle East needs a document back from home then he is the man to turn to. Driven by his guiding philosophy “youths are not useless but used less,” Jishnu believes that given a cause to work towards, youngsters who tread down the wrong path out of sheer idleness can be reformed.

M.P. Praveen

While everyone was enjoying a national strike-enforced holiday on Wednesday, Jishnu was busy arranging

50-odd blood donors.

source: http://www.thehindu.com / The Hindu / Home> National> Kerala / by M.P Praveen / September 06th, 2015

Meet Lydia Sebastian, 12-Year-Old Keralite who is Smarter than Albert Einstein and Stephen Hawking

Meet Lydia Sebastian, 12-Year-Old Keralite Smarter than Albert Einstein and Stephen Hawkingaboutmodafinil.com/ Allan Ajifo/ Flickr
Meet Lydia Sebastian, 12-Year-Old Keralite Smarter than Albert Einstein and Stephen Hawkingaboutmodafinil.com/ Allan Ajifo/ Flickr

Lydia Sebastian, 12, has achieved the maximum score in the Mensa Intelligence Quotient (IQ) test, beating the IQ scores of physicists Albert Einstein and Professor Stephen Hawking.

In the mental ability test, the 12-year-old girl has scored the maximum, which is 162. With this, she has created a record as the IQ score of Einstein and Hawking were 160.

Born to 43-year-old Arun, a radiologist at Colchester General Hospital, and mother Erika Kottiath, who is an associate director at Barclays Bank, Lydia started reading books when she was just a few years old.

“She also had an early interest in reading. When she was a few years old she was reading books that were for children several years older than her. And maths is her favourite subject. She won a prize for that when she was at primary school,” her father told  The Daily Mail .

Hailing from the south Indian state of Kerala and settled in Langham, Essex in the United Kingdom, Lydia’s parents are astonished with the achievement of their daughter after the result was published on Friday, 28 August.

Lydia is a student at Colchester County High School in Essex.

source: http://www.ibtimes.co.in / International Business Times / Home> News> Science / by Anu James / September 03rd, 2015

Wonder Woman’s Ball Game

Vinaya (left) with women of Wings | Ratheesh Sundaram
Vinaya (left) with women of Wings | Ratheesh Sundaram

In conservative Kerala, where women rarely venture out of their homes after dusk, there is a slow wind of change. Housewives and working women in the age group of 25-65 can be seen playing volleyball in Thrissur district. They are largely from the middle-class and lower middle-class strata and till a year ago, were least interested in sports. For them  now, sports has not been simply been a life changer but has become a tool for empowerment. It has literally given them wings.

They are part of Women’s Integration and Growth through Sports (Wings), a venture by Vinaya, a senior civil police officer at the Police Academy in Thrissur. Started a year ago, Wings has more than 300 members with around 12 A teams and three B teams in Thrissur district. Two weeks ago Wings launched three teams in Palakkad.

She says that women are often excluded from many events and places due to gender disparity. “In Kerela, women often have no business entering public places like playgrounds or take active part in festivals like Thrissur Pooram. They are often totally excluded or sidelined from such activities and places, which are men’s fiefdoms promoting male camaraderie. I found this very disturbing and was determined to change it. During the football world cup or cricket world cup matches, the whole world will be rejoicing but women are totally excluded from the festivities and sometimes even ridiculed if they show interest in the games. This had to change. Wings is my way of making a change,” says the 44-year-old.

Vinaya explains that while playing volleyball, a player runs, jumps and shouts. It improves a person’s physical and mental health and increases self-confidence, gradually changing one’s attitude and outlook. “Most of these women have never done anything like this before. It has brought about a great change in them physically, mentally and socially,” says Vinaya.

The players agree. Asha Devi, a 40-year-old housewife who plays for the Kuttimukku team and is the secretary of Wings says, “Our attitude towards life changed since we started playing. We have realised the importance of maintaining our health. Once you join the team, you make so many friends and just talking and laughing with them can be a great stress buster. We don’t use our surnames these days but introduce ourselves by our first names. We have realised that there is no need to introduce ourselves by our husband’s names when we have an independent identity.” Pappa, a 34-year-old staff nurse who plays for the Police Academy team adds, “The game has positively influenced our lives, our health and physical fitness.”

Wings’ coach Ratheesh Chullikkad says that most of them are ordinary women from interior areas like Anappara, Peringottukkara, Puthur, Cheroovazhi and Vallissery whom Vinaya has recruited from roadsides or through neighbourhood groups. “Today they participate in all our activities. Besides playing tournaments, we organise blood donation camps, quiz competitions and treks.”

Wings will start teams in every district in another year. “Life is not a four-line book where you write abiding by all the rules. Women have to think differently and fight for their space in life. Being part of a sisterhood like this makes it easier to fight life’s battles,” says Vinaya.

source: http://www.newindianexpress.com / The New Indian Express / Home> Magazine / by Elizabeth Ninan / August 08th, 2015

Women Power Kerala’s Growing Biz Ventures

Women entrepreneurs attending an event
Women entrepreneurs attending an event

Kochi :

When Sheeba S began selling rice and wheat flour and later cashew nuts and powdered pepper in small packets from a makeshift room attached to her small house in Kollam—an old seaport and city on the Laccadive Sea coast in Kerala—her immediate objective was to make both ends meet and if lucky to get one or two ‘mom and pop’ stores to sell the products. Twelve years into her journey as an entrepreneur, Sheeba’s Amba Foods is now taking the business to the next level—bar coding the products to give them wider acceptability especially in supermarkets, and building a new unit that will have much  higher capacity.

Bindu Pallickal began selling ‘kachiya enna’, the traditional homemade conditioner, back in 2007. Now, she sells about 21 products including home-made jam, ‘thali podi’ and Brahmi oil under her unit Athira Herbal.

Sheeba and Bindu are not isolated cases. There are several hundreds of women in Kerala who are looking to expand their tiny business ventures—which are into selling anything from curry powders to pickles and jams, garments to home-made soaps, ready-to-eat items and other baking products—to running home stays, cafes, retail shops and IT firms across the state.

It is estimated that there are at least 70,000 enterprises run by women  under the Kudumbashree, an women-empowering project run by the Kerala government. The Economic Review 2014 says, 25 per cent (58,562) of the 2,34,251 working small scale industry and micro small and medium entreprises (SSI/MSME) units in the state are run by women.

Kerala State Industrial  Development Corporation (KSIDC), in fact, has plans to handhold the high-potential women-run ventures to scale up their business to a much bigger scale. “Our plan is to shortlist 150-200 most promising ventures from across the state. We will narrow down the list to may be 25-50 for mentoring and funding to help them scale up their operations,” said B Jyothi Kumar, executive director of KSIDC. The ‘We Summit’ to be held in Kochi on November 19, the UN Women’s Entrepreneurship Day, will be a step in this direction, said KSID officials. Over 2,000 women entrepreneurs are expected to attend the event.

source: http://www.newindianexpress.com / The New Indian Express / Home> The Sunday Standard / by  Rajesh Abraham / August 16th, 2015

200 years on, Nangeli’s sacrifice only a fading memory

The area near Manorama Kavala, Cherthala, was once known as Mulachiparambu and was the site where Nangeli, in 1803, cut off her breasts to protests against the breast tax imposed on the lower caste women of Travancore. Photo: H. Vibhu
The area near Manorama Kavala, Cherthala, was once known as Mulachiparambu and was the site where Nangeli, in 1803, cut off her breasts to protests against the breast tax imposed on the lower caste women of Travancore. Photo: H. Vibhu

Nangeli gained her place in history as the woman who cut off her breasts to protest against an inhuman tax imposed in erstwhile Travancore

Many books and histories have been written about caste oppression in Kerala and the men and women who fought the injustice. Yet the story of one woman’s protest has almost faded away from the collective memory of the State.

Nangeli, who lived in Cherthala in Alappuzha over 200 years ago, gained her place in history as the woman who cut off her breasts to protest against the inhumanmulakkaram (breast tax) that was imposed in the erstwhile kingdom of Travancore.

CASTE OPPRESSION

Kings of the time ensured the subjugation of the lower castes by imposing heavy taxes on them. Their wealth was built on some of the worst taxes imposed anywhere in the world. Besides the tax on land and crops, peasants had to pay taxes for the right to wear jewellery, the right of men to grow a moustache, and even the right of women to cover their breasts.

The heavy taxes ensured that the lower castes were kept eternally in debt, while members of the upper castes flourished.

“Nangeli was a poor Ezhava woman from Cherthala. Her family could not afford to pay the taxes and was in debt to the rulers,” says D. Sugathan, advocate and former MLA from Alappuzha.

“The tax collector, then called the parvathiyar, came to her house one day and demanded that she pay the tax,” he says. The legend goes that Nangeli cut off her breasts and presented them to theparvathiyar on a plantain leaf. The tax collector fled in fear, while Nangeli bled to death at her doorstep.

Her husband Chirukandan came home to find his wife lying dead and mutilated. He is said to have jumped into her funeral pyre out of grief.

“The incident happened in 1803. It created a lot of anger and the practice of collecting breast tax was put to an end here by 1812,” says Mr. Sugathan, who mentions Nangeli’s story in his book ‘Oru Desathinte Katha, Kayarinteyum’.

While Nangeli’s sacrifice put an end to one form of caste oppression, the land where she lived came to be known as mulachiparambu – the plot where the woman of breasts lived.

“Nangeli’s story is unique also for the fact that it is the first recorded instance of a man committing sati,” says Ajay S. Sekher, a teacher of English at the Tirur centre of Sree Sankaracharya University of Sanskrit. A blog post written by Mr. Sekher, who researches issues of caste and gender, has introduced many to the story of Nangeli and mulachiparambu.

An earlier generation of political leaders grew up hearing about Nangeli’s protest and its significance in Kerala’s history. Leaders C. Kesavan and K.R. Gowri Amma have mentioned her in their autobiographies.

‘UNIQUE RESISTANCE’

“Nangeli’s story is an articulation of a unique resistance and struggle against a Brahmanic patriarchy. The tradition of such resistance by leaders such as Gowri Amma could perhaps be traced all the way back to Nangeli,” says Mr. Sekher.

The legend of Nangeli’s mutilation of her own body in protest against oppression has been handed down through generations.

Today, however, her tale is preserved only in the memories of a few old-timers and researchers. There are no memorials to her name, no books extolling her courage.

The name mulachiparambu too has been covered up, perhaps due to embarrassment. The plot, divided up between several owners, is situated near the SNDP office at Manorama Junction in Cherthala.

source: http://www.thehindu.com / The Hindu / Home> News> Cities> Kochi / by Nidhi Surendranath / Kochi – October 21st, 2013

Blind youth develops mobile app for eye donation

Kochi :

A new app called Netradaan enables users to sign up for eye donation through their mobile phones. What makes the app all the more special is the contributions by a visually challenged person in its making.

Muhammed Ramees was born with partial eyesight. When Sunil Mathew, founder of Sightica Solutions spotted him during an interview to train visually challenged persons in using computers, he realized that Ramees was too good to be just trained in basics. That was the beginning. Together the duo went on to develop a series of Android apps.

“One of the unique features of the app is t the recipient request through which a request for cornea can be made. This will go into the database of the association. The app has English and Hindi versions, Ramees said. The app encourages users to donate their eyes through an easy to fill-and-submit donor form. “We have partnered with the Eye Bank Association of India. The donor receives an eye donation card from the association,” said Sunil, who also runs Society for Rehabilitation of the Visually Challenged (SRVC), an NGO in Kochi.

Another app called Kuluk created by them enables the blind to call for help by shaking or tapping their phone “A visually challenged person can call for help by shaking the phone or tapping it just once keeping the app on. The users can customize the number of shakes upto three. A shake or a tap prompts a call or message to emergency numbers saved on their phones,” said Sunil. Another app called Mapseeker helps the elderly or visually challenged to find important places using google maps. “This is just like the GPS but with more user-friendly features for the blind,” Ramees added. ”

Netradaan app has won the m-inclusion Awards at the mBillionth Awards held in New Delhi last week. The award honours outstanding mobile content and apps from South Asia.

“We should spread awareness regarding eye donation. What pushed us to develop this app was the long waiting list for corneas. About 45,000 corneas are imported from Sri Lanka alone every year,” said Sunil. All the apps can be downloaded from Google Playstore.

source: http://www.timesofindia.indiatimes.com / The Times of India / News Home> City> Kochi / by Sudha Nambudiri, TNN / August 04th, 2015

This 30-yr-old battles disability through art

Kochi  :

Praveesh Chandran’s work ‘Resurrection, a man with art’, which is being displayed at Durbar Hall Art Gallery, revolves around two themes, nature and a celebration of disability.

The thirty-year-old, who hails from Thrissur, has been battling against muscular dystrophy, a disorder that weakens a person’s muscles over time. But it has not stopped him from pursuing his passion.

“I was diagnosed with the condition when I was around 5 years. By the time I was in Class X, it became painful for me to walk around, and my parents decided not to send me to school any more,” said Praveesh. The genetic disorder has left Praveesh confined to a wheelchair.

“My hands areweak and hurt me when I try to do anything. But painting is one of the few things that gives me great joy, apart from my wife and daughter,” said Praveesh.

One of the paintings that has caught visitors’ attention is that of a bird’s eye view of earth with a wheelchair facing it in outer space. “People ask me how I paint bearing the pain. This is my way of telling them that disabled or not, if one puts his/her mind to it, then sky is the limit. Look at Stephen Hawking, even with amyotrophic lateral sclerosis, he continues his work as a theoretical physicist,” says Praveesh, who says that he will paint until he is completely incapacitated.

His paintings will be on display till Friday from 11am to 7pm.

source: http://www.timesofindia.indiatimes.com / The Times of India /  News Home> Kochi / by Rochelle DSouza, TNN / July 26th,  2015