Category: News & Press

  • The Hindu: Children have right to nutrition, healthcare and education

    The Hindu: Children have right to nutrition, healthcare and education

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    FOR a CAUSE: US Consul-General David T.Hopper launching an audio CD in Chennai on Friday. Playback singer S.P.Balasubramaniam and Aseema Trust’s V.R.Devika are in the picture.

    David T. Hopper appreciates South India Girl Child Initiative

    CHENNAI: “Every child, boy or girl, should have an opportunity to grow with access to nutrition, healthcare and education and without the threat of violence,” US Consul-General in Chennai David T. Hopper said here on Friday.

    Speaking at a function to launch an audio CD `Kuyilum Mayilum’ on the girl child, he appreciated the South India Girl Child Initiative in trying to improve the educational and health status of under-privileged adolescent girls. The South India Girl Child Initiative is a joint effort of Aseema Trust, Nalamdana, Gram Vikas Samstha and the Centre for Applied Research and Extension (CARE).

    Mr.Hopper said the initiative of the US Consulate here to protect women, going to the US on dependent visas, from domestic violence was being replicated by other US Consulates elsewhere in the country.

    “We had started with issuing pamphlets in English, Tamil, Telugu and Malayalam with details of how one could get help in the US.”

    Though this was only a small step, it would be one of the frontlines against domestic violence.

    He said: “Here in Chennai, we issue more visas to the dependents of foreign students and temporary workers in the US than at any other location in the world. We will issue more than 40,000 such visas this year.”

    Playback singer S.P.Balasubramaniam and Children’s Garden School’s Secretary Shakuntala Sharma received the first copy of the CD.

    To create a model

    Aseema Trust’s V.R.Devika said the South India Girl Child Initiative aimed to increase life options for hundreds of vulnerable girls each year through direct interventions. It also aims to create a model for collaboration and network building by grassroots organisations.

    Nalamdana’s Nithya Balaji urged philanthropists to donate copies of `Kuyilum Mayilum’ CDs to schools so that more children get to listen to the songs.

    A portion of the money from the sale would go towards funding the education, food and stay of rescued girl children at the CARE school.

    Children belonging to three schools — Avvai Home, Navbharath Matriculation School, and Okkium Thoraipakkam Panchayat School — have penned the lyrics. CDs can be had from Nalamdana Trust.

    Those who want to get details can visit www.nalamdana.org.

  • The Hindu: Amazing Show, Oodles of Maturity

    The Hindu: Amazing Show, Oodles of Maturity

    Amazing show, oodles of maturity
    http://www.thehindu.com/todays-paper/tp-national/tp-tamilnadu/amazing-show-oodles-of-maturity/article345322.ece
    Staff Reporter

    CHENNAI: When two young boys danced along with a group of girls there was no giggling or smirking in this large gathering of students who were brought together by the Nalamdana Trust for an interactive afternoon recently.

    For, the children were an awakened lot and are aware of their rights as individuals and respect each other. The programme, held on Friday, was the culmination of a year’s activities in which the children learnt a lot of things through art, song, dance and live presentation. The children presented dance programmes, dramas, role model presentations, songs and poster presentations and shared with others what they had learnt.

    According to Nithya Balaji of Nalamdana, during this time the students also made two videos on the differences that they saw in the treatment meted out to girls and boys in their area and another one on why girls drop out of school.

    Siblings D.Fathima and D. Parveen, who were in the team that shot the videos, said they worked for about 6 months learning how to operate a camera and spoke to people in their area about the issue. Students belonging to Olcott Memorial School, Corporation School Adyar, Besant Theosophical School and Corporation School Thiruvanmiyur participated in the Each One Teach One programme.

  • The Hindu reviews Pesu Maname Pesu

    The Hindu reviews Pesu Maname Pesu

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    http://www.thehindu.com/todays-paper/tp-features/tp-sundaymagazine/no-more-a-taboo-on-celluloid/article918724.ece

    No More a Taboo on Celluloid

    Gokulnath A., Sathyaraj Venkatesan

    “Pesu Maname Pesu” is a one-hour Tamil Tele film by ‘Nalamdana’, a non-profit organisation based in Chennai. Produced on a low budget, the telefilm in two parts narrates the story of a young girl, Karpagam, who is forced to enter into a marriage with Kumaresan without her family insisting on an HIV test. A year later, when Karpagam undergoes clinical tests, the doctor finds that she is pregnant and also discloses that Kumaresan is HIV-positive. The film through its realistic portrayal of rural India emphasises the need for mandatory HIV/AIDS test before marriage to avert the possible spread of HIV/AIDS.

    The success of such short/tele films again reinforces the need for such initiatives. With no permanent cure yet in sight and stigma still attached to the syndrome, such ventures will help to dispel discrimination against the PLWAs. As such, lLiterature and mass media, especially cinema and short/tele films, is an effective tool as Paul Reed argues “to alert people”, “to explore multi-facets of the epidemic” and “to educate” the general ‘unaffected’ population about HIV/AIDS.

  • Times of India – They’re Playing My Song, Doc

    Times of India – They’re Playing My Song, Doc

    ,TOI Crest | Jan 30, 2010, 11.43 AM ISTAIDS-centre
    Original Article online here

    Mondays are for tuning into memorable melodies. Tuesdays are when romantics get their fill of mushy love songs. Wednesdays are reserved for the latest chartbusters . Folk numbers fill the air on Thursdays. Fridays are the much-indemand ‘Your Choice’ days while Saturdays are for movie soundtracks. A week passes in a breeze for HIVaffected persons at India’s largest AIDS care centre in Chennai. Literally. ‘Thendral’ (breeze in Tamil), the daily cable radio programme, fills wards and an outpatient wing with film songs interspersed with nuggets of information.

    An initiative of the NGO Nalamdana, Government Hospital of Thoracic Medicine (GHTM) and Tamil Nadu State Aids Control Society, the project uses a public address system to educate and entertain HIV-affected and TB patients with low literacy levels. The programmes reach anti-retroviral treatment (ART) and TB wards daily.

    At ward no 3, a gaunt figure keeps adjusting the speaker volume on a balmy Tuesday afternoon. Love songs are in the air, and Rajan, an inpatient , misses his wife and children though he is set to leave for his hometown as soon as he completes a 15-day ART module.

    “The radio is good, especially in the afternoons after the doctors have come and gone. Every day there are different songs and lots of information ,” he says. Once the doctors’ rounds are over, Rajan and others in the male ward huddle around the speakers, one for every three beds. “I just heard how important it is to bathe twice a day in warm water and trim my nails. They also said on the radio that I should stay away from my kids if I have a TB infection,” says Rajan.

    Thendral broadcasts are a curious mixture of movie songs, especially composed jingles and information modules with hospital staff pitching in as on-air personalities . “GHTM is a huge campus. Whatever I want to tell my patients about nutrition, I can do that via the Thendral broadcast,” says dietician K Devika.

    The cable radio, launched in 2005, started with seven ART wards for two hours a day. Now, it broadcasts for four-and-a-half hours, six days a week, and covers 16 TB and ART wards, the ART out-patient wing and the children’s ward.

    A recent evaluation of the project by various stakeholders indicates that patients relate more directly to the songs on radio, and the receipt of valuable information . Doctors have “noticed patients recalling and referring to what they heard,” notes the evaluation study.

    India has nearly 2.5 million people living with HIV and AIDS. The first AIDS case in India was reported in Tamil Nadu in 1986. Estimates indicate that the epidemic has stabilised or seen a drop in Tamil Nadu and other states. HIV prevalence continues to be higher among vulnerable groups. More than 200 hospitals run ART departments that have community care centres attached to them.

    Staff nurse, P Anita, says the Thendral messages catch on better as they are in Tamil. “In the female ART ward, most of them know about the importance of avoiding breast-feeding to prevent parent-to-child transmission . The jingles on regular medication are all in simple Tamil.”

    Initially, GHTM had street theatre sessions and plays conducted by Nalamdana to improve HIV awareness. “The Q&A session with senior doctors after the play got so intense that we decided to have an in-house radio to address patients’ doubts,” says superintendent, Dr C Chandrasekar . GHTM is the largest AIDS care centre with at least 400 HIV in-patients visiting the separate pre-ART clinic department daily and over 300 patients undergoing in-patient treatment in 11 exclusive HIV wards.

    The suggestion for a cable radio came from Nalamdana project director, R Jeevanandham, who saw in the PA system the possibility of using music as therapy and easy information dissemination about health and hygiene practices.

    Once government approval came through, Nalamdana staff got busy converting a portion of the old hospital complex to a compact state-of-the-art studio. “We developed our own programming. Now, NGOs on the premises use Thendral to come up with modules on nutrition,” says Nithya Balaji, executive trustee of Nalamdana.

    The broadcast includes songs written by doctors, counsellors and staff of the Indian Network for People Living with HIV/AIDS like V Bhagyaraj, whose song is a lilting folksy number asking HIV-affected to live their lives without anger and addiction.

    There are also minor altercations when seasoned Thendral-listeners object to new patients spitting. “Old inmates repeat what they heard on the radio and get agitated when newcomers cough and spit in the open. Sometimes we do have to interfere,” says a doctor, laughing . Jokes apart, all the stakeholders say there should be more programmes and a lot more wards connected to the radio. “There is one nurse for around 40 patients and one social worker has to give information to 100 patients a day. Doctors and medical staff, who do the Q&A for Thendral every week, are overworked. It will make a huge difference if there are qualified people to spend more time with patients,” says a senior medical official.

    sandhya.soman@timesgroup .com

  • The Hindu: Through the Looking Glass to benefit Nalamdana

    The Hindu: Through the Looking Glass to benefit Nalamdana

    http://www.thehindu.com/todays-paper/tp-features/tp-metroplus/through-the-looking-glass/article404710.ece

    Through the looking glass

    Perch stages two plays by one of the sharpest social commentators of his time, V.M. Basheer

    To portray onstage, the complex works of Vaikom Muhammad Basheer, the Padma Sri award-winning novelist, known for his whimsical humour, idiosyncratic characters and sharp social commentary, is no easy task. Perch, the Chennai-based theatre group, takes on the challenge, staging two English plays, Moonshine and Skytoffee and Sangathi Arinhya! (Have you heard!), at the Koothambalam Auditorium in Kalakshetra. They will be on November 21 and 22 respectively, at 7.15 p.m.

    Moonshine and Skytoffee is the amalgamation of two of Basheer’s humorous love stories, The Love Letter and The Card-Sharp’s Daughter. Sangathi Arinhya! (Have you heard!) is an adventurous combination of seven of Basheer’s stories, with themes ranging from love to nostalgia, war to political satire, and humour to pathos.

    Both plays were part of ‘Under the Mangosteen Tree’, a festival organised by Perch in Chennai to pay tribute to Basheer in his centenary year in 2008. Since then the plays have toured the country extensively. This time, they are being staged as part of the annual fund-raiser ‘Kutti Karanam’, to aid the children’s projects of the Nalamdana and Aseema trusts, both NGO’s with over 15 years experience in working with children in the areas of health and education through the medium of the arts and theatre.

    For more information, call 98414 96723 / 98410 09927.

  • The Hindu: They Articulate Social Messages in Artistic Ways

    The Hindu: They Articulate Social Messages in Artistic Ways

    http://www.thehindu.com/todays-paper/tp-national/tp-tamilnadu/they-articulate-social-messages-in-artistic-ways/article1380742.ece

    They articulate social messages in artistic ways

    Informative: Students of the Corporation High School, Adyar, at the cultural show held as part of the ‘Safe child’ project in Chennai on Friday.

    Staff Reporter

    Students of Corporation High School, Adyar entertain, educate their peers

    2008112258570201_434006eCHENNAI: They stayed back after school hours, but seemed thoroughly pleased to do so. Students of the Corporation High School, Adyar, were treated to an interesting cultural show by their peers here on Friday.

    It was held as part of ‘Safe child,’ a project of non-governmental organisation Nalamdana that works in the area of spreading awareness of social issues using the arts as tools of communication.

    Through ‘Safe child,’ a project funded by Singapore-based Art Venture, Nalamdana trains students on various communication skills. In south Chennai, the NGO has identified three schools to start with.

    “The children use these skills in art forms or other forms of expression, to articulate various social messages,” said M. Sampath, project in-charge.

    Volunteers of the NGO have worked with a group of children of this school for nearly ten days. “We also used content from a work book prepared by Tulir [an NGO], to highlight ways to take care of one self,” said J. Bama, programme assistant.

    Basic child rights, different types of abuse and self-protection are among the topics covered in these modules. Children are also informed about the child helpline – 1098.

    Using the training and skills obtained, students of the school put up a cultural show that included song, dance, brief speeches and visual depiction of ideas on charts and posters. A dance item presented as part of Friday’s cultural show outlined a message on how children should take care of their body and mind to lead a happy life.

    Such programmes would give students good exposure to a range of issues, headmaster of the school SK. Jayaram said.