Two UGs held by CDO

IMPHAL, April 17: At least two cadres belonging to different underground groups were apprehended by separate team of Thoubal District police commandos during their counter insurgency operations conducted in different… Read more »

IMPHAL, April 17: At least two cadres belonging to different underground groups were apprehended by separate team of Thoubal District police commandos during their counter insurgency operations conducted in different areas yesterday.According to an official release issued by the Addl. SP (Ops), one cadre of underground KCP identified as Waikhom Thoiba alias Naoton, 20 son of W Bokulchandra Singh of Hiyanglam Waikhom Leikai was arrested by a team of Thoubal District Police Commandos yesterday afternoon around 3.30 pm from Wabagai Tera Pishak. On spot verification it has been revealed that the arrested person is an active member of the KCP (Lamyanba Group) and working in Finance Section of the outfit, the release added.Further, another team of CDO unit of the district police on getting information about the presence of the valley based UG elements in the general areas of Khangabok Lamlong, conducted search operation at the area yesterday evening around 5.30 pmand able to apprehended one cadre of the proscribed PREPAK identified as Saikhom Arke Singh, 32, son of late S khamba Singh of Khangabok Makha Leikai Part-III, the release added.

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Prize distribution

IMPHAL, July 8: The annual prize distribution function of the board of secondary education, Manipur for the HSLC examination, 2011 will be held on Tuesday, July 12 at JN. Dance… Read more »

IMPHAL, July 8: The annual prize distribution function of the board of secondary education, Manipur for the HSLC examination, 2011 will be held on Tuesday, July 12 at JN. Dance Academy, Imphal at 11 am.

Prizes and Awards will be given to the rank holders and the awardees of the HSLC examination, 2011, informed a statement of the board.

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Manipur to field strong contingent at national aquatic meet

IMPHAL, July 9: Manipur will field a strong team of Swimmers and Water Polo of both boys and girls in the ensuing 38th junior national Aquatic championship, 2011 to be… Read more »

IMPHAL, July 9: Manipur will field a strong team of Swimmers and Water Polo of both boys and girls in the ensuing 38th junior national Aquatic championship, 2011 to be held at Bhopal, MP from August 5 to 9.

A release of the Manipur Swimming Association said altogether nine boys from the state will participate in various swimming events in the championship as also nine girls in different events.

Manipur will also take part in both the boys and girls Water Polo competition in the championship, the release added.

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Sangeeta football

var addthis_product=’wpp-252′;var addthis_options=”Google+1″IMPHAL, July 29: HNSC and YPHU ended in goalless goal while CRPF defeated WAFA by 1-0 today in 18th L Sangita Memorial 1st division…

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var addthis_product=’wpp-252′;var addthis_options=”Google+1″IMPHAL, July 29: HNSC and YPHU ended in goalless goal while CRPF defeated WAFA by 1-0 today in 18th L Sangita Memorial 1st division…

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Memorandum

IMPHAL, July 10: All Manipur Engineering Departments Unions’ Council (AMEDUC) will submit a memorandum to the Prime Minister of India on July 11.  A release of the AMEDUC stated that… Read more »

IMPHAL, July 10: All Manipur Engineering Departments Unions’ Council (AMEDUC) will submit a memorandum to the Prime Minister of India on July 11. 

A release of the AMEDUC stated that the office bearers of the council have left Imphal for New Delhi today to submit a memorandum to the Prime Minister of India through the president of All India Trade Union Congress on the issue of formulation of welfare policies for work charge, muster roll and casual employees of the five engineering departments of the state.

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Discussion on future generation of Manipur

IMPHAL, April 20: A one day seminar under the theme `future Generation of Manipur` was held at Manipur Press club, Imphal organized by parenting Forum Manipur. The seminar was graced… Read more »

IMPHAL, April 20: A one day seminar under the theme `future Generation of Manipur` was held at Manipur Press club, Imphal organized by parenting Forum Manipur.

The seminar was graced by P. Sarat, IAS, retd. Principal Secretary Government of Manipur, N. Chaoba, National Awardee and retd. ZEO, Ng. Naba National Awardee, retd. ZEO, as the Chief Guest, president and guest of honour. And IS. Khaidem attended as the moderator.

In the meantime, Soyam Lokendrajit HOD of Philosophy Manipur University spoke on the topic of bringing a change in the society and from fear, while Amar Yumnan also spoke on the topic `Our society and Education`, and Prof. K. Ibo Singh HOD political science MU on topic of `the contribution of intellectual to the future generation.

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Children`s meet held

var addthis_product=’wpp-252′;var addthis_options=”Google+1″IMPHAL, July 30: A one-day state level children’s cultural meet was organized by Manipur Alliance for Child Rights (MACR) under the…

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var addthis_product=’wpp-252′;var addthis_options=”Google+1″IMPHAL, July 30: A one-day state level children’s cultural meet was organized by Manipur Alliance for Child Rights (MACR) under the…

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Youth convention held

IMPHAL, July 11: A district level youth convention was held today at Nungourok REACH hall, Chandel district jointly organized by the ministry of social welfare and development, GOI and NYK… Read more »

IMPHAL, July 11: A district level youth convention was held today at Nungourok REACH hall, Chandel district jointly organized by the ministry of social welfare and development, GOI and NYK Chandel.

A statement issued by the DIPR stated that the objective of the convention aimed at giving awareness on the ill effect of drugs and its impact on the society, and preventive measures among the youths.

It said the convention was attended by about 100 youths. The convention will impart awareness to youths of about 150 villages under the Chandel district.

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Found dead

var addthis_product=’wpp-252′;var addthis_options=”Google+1″IMPHAL, July 31: A man who went missing for the past nine days was found murdered near a rivulet at Rashidpur in Jiribam sub-division at…

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var addthis_product=’wpp-252′;var addthis_options=”Google+1″IMPHAL, July 31: A man who went missing for the past nine days was found murdered near a rivulet at Rashidpur in Jiribam sub-division at…

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141st birth anniversary of VI Lenin

IMPHAL April 22: The 141st birth anniversary of VI Lenin was celebrated today at Irawat bhavan organized by MSC/ CPI, Manipur. The birth anniversary was celebrated in remembrance of his… Read more »

IMPHAL April 22: The 141st birth anniversary of VI Lenin was celebrated today at Irawat bhavan organized by MSC/ CPI, Manipur.
The birth anniversary was celebrated in remembrance of his contributions and sacrifices that Lenin had contributed for the welfare of the society.
L. Thoiren, secretariat member MSC/CPI while giving his inaugural speech praised and remembered the works and contributions of this great reformer and visionary. During the occasion, other invitees and dignitaries also spoke on the theme Leninism and Socialism in 21st century.
The celebration was attended by many admirers, scholars and media persons from both print and electronic media. V.I. Lenin is one of the great thinker, political and social reformer and revolutionary of the late 20th century. He is mostly remembered for the Great October revolution of 1917 in Russia.

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Manipuri version of report released

IMPHAL April 23: A summary report in Manipuri version of An NGO report in compliance with the Paris Principles by the National Human Rights Commission of India was released today… Read more »

IMPHAL April 23: A summary report in Manipuri version of An NGO report in compliance with the Paris Principles by the National Human Rights Commission of India was released today by Kh. Chonjon, ex-member Manipur human right commission, Y. Laba, ex-member MHRC and Kh, Anandi devi, managing trustee, Just Peace at the Manipur Press club. The function was or ganized by Human Rights alert.
Speaking at the occasion Y Laba said that Manipur is one of the most human rights violated state. Incidentally, the full report was submitted to the UN sub-committee on accreditation of international coordinating committee of NHRIs on January 22.  The summary report has been translated in various Indian languages. Babloo Loitongbam said that the Manipuri version was translated in simple and day-to-day use language in order to be more understandable and acceptable. A formal release ceremony was held at Constitution club, New Delhi on April 18.

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Notification

var addthis_product=’wpp-252′;var addthis_options=”Google+1″IMPHAL August 2: According to a notification by the department of library and information science Manipur University, Canchipur, Imphal,…

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var addthis_product=’wpp-252′;var addthis_options=”Google+1″IMPHAL August 2: According to a notification by the department of library and information science Manipur University, Canchipur, Imphal,…

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Condemn

IMPHAL, Aug 4: Apunba Manipur Kanba Ima Lup (AMKIL) and Yek Taret Loop have strongly condemned the bomb blast at Sangakpham Bazar which killed four persons and injured eight others.

IMPHAL, Aug 4: Apunba Manipur Kanba Ima Lup (AMKIL) and Yek Taret Loop have strongly condemned the bomb blast at Sangakpham Bazar which killed four persons and injured eight others.

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Basic course

IMPHAL April 26: The candidates for 15 days Basic course in News Reporting to be held at Manipur press, organized by the state Institute of Journalism, DIPR has been declared… Read more »

IMPHAL April 26: The candidates for 15 days Basic course in News Reporting to be held at Manipur press, organized by the state Institute of Journalism, DIPR has been declared said a press release.
The release further said that the selected candidates has to deposit  admission fee of Rs.200 at the cash counter of DIPR within April 30 and also, to report at the Manipur press club on May 2 at 10am. The list of selected candidates can be check from the notice board of DIPR, the release further added.

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Reservation policy

IMPHAL, July 17: The Democratic Students’ Alliance of Manipur (DESAM) has demanded the concerned authority to streamline the reservation policy for the children of faculty members at Jawaharlal Nehru Institute… Read more »

IMPHAL, July 17: The Democratic Students’ Alliance of Manipur (DESAM) has demanded the concerned authority to streamline the reservation policy for the children of faculty members at Jawaharlal Nehru Institute of Medical Sciences (JNIMS).

A release of DESAM stated that the five percent seat reservation in MBBS course for the children of faculty members of JNIMS is a good policy for the institute to attract more of well qualified professors. However, the governing council needs to frame proper criteria before introducing such policy, it added.

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Play premier show

IMPHAL August 5: Manipur Artist Touring Drama Party’s Bisharjan, a Manipuri adaptation of a play written by Rabindranath Tagore was premiered today at the Manipur Dramatic Union hall located at… Read more »

IMPHAL August 5: Manipur Artist Touring Drama Party’s Bisharjan, a Manipuri adaptation of a play written by Rabindranath Tagore was premiered today at the Manipur Dramatic Union hall located at Yaiskul in Imphal east.

A ceremonial function was held prior to the premier show this afternoon. Dr. K. Sobita Devi, director Art and Culture, government of Manipur, Ksh. Ibohal Singh, president MDU and G. Gourakishwor, director, Hueiyen Lanlong Thangta Association graced the function as the chief guest, guest of Honour and president of the function respectively. Bisharjan, a production of Manipur Artist Touring Drama Party was sponsored by the Ministry of Culture, government of India, New Delhi, under its Tagore commemoration grant scheme. The play   directed by E. Joykumar Singh, is revolved around social discrimination and victimization of common people by high and mighty in our society. The play is translated to Manipuri from its original text by Khomdram Dhanachandra.

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Warm Hands And Cold Cream,My mother Sanaibema Wangolsana and I: 1954-1965

by Laifungbam Debabrata Roy “Many sweet thoughts fill my heart today/Dear mother of mine.” *** Faded, easy words gazed back at me from an inscribed smudgy marble tablet set into… Read more »

by Laifungbam Debabrata Roy
“Many sweet thoughts fill my heart today/Dear mother of mine.”
***

Faded, easy words gazed back at me from an inscribed smudgy marble tablet set into the front wall of an old shop building on Imphal’s Mahatma Gandhi Avenue. The words mesmerized me. Ever since I got a request from Bimbabati, Saratchand Thiyam’s wife, to write an article about my reminiscences of living with my mother as a child, I had been pondering endlessly to myself. I imagined to myself so many ways to write the memories that sometimes trickled, sometimes swamped my mind. Days turned to weeks without me putting a single word down into my ancient laptop computer. I had even begun to despair, when she gently chided me a few days ago for not finishing the article. Then these words, staring at me, released me from my agony.
***

Honestly describing an association exposes the associates…otherwise, it is mere observation, filled with falsehood.
***

The festival of Kang will always evoke a thrill for me. Its arrival somehow causes the deeply buried child within me to awaken, every time. It was always special to my mother too. Perhaps that would be the reason for this unfounded emotion for I am not a deeply religious person. She had a particular fondness for the Hindu deity called Jaganatha, which she used to call Jagabondhu, like a fond friend. Her relationship with this god did not seem to be inspired by personal religious passion or related to any form of deep or mindless devotional act. The acts with which she showed this special friendship with Jagabondhu could only be described as play. She never tired to tell me, and others, how she played with her Laiphadibee as a child, growing up among her elder sisters carried along in the whirlwind world of the royal palace of Manipur…habouring a smoldering jealousy, awestruck by their beauty. She told me that she drooled over their beautiful things, their laces, books, and His Master’s Voice gramaphone records. When she became overwhelmed by self pity, she was moody, brooding alone by herself, retreating to her Laiphadibees, to whom she poured out her complaints of neglect and inadequacies in prolonged dramatized monologues about her sisters who enjoyed special treatment from her royal parents. Those mute hand-made dolls kept her sane. Those extended sessions of doll play, she told me, were cathartic…much akin to confiding and grumbling to her best friends, like going to her tolerant therapist. I believe that playfulness stayed with her throughout her life. To her, Jagabondhu was a lifelong dear friend with whom she played occasionally.
***

Our house had many small things she had picked up, bought or collected from wherever she had been. One could have made a long list of places and events my mother had been to just by examining this collection. Little pebbles of various hues from exotic mountain rivers, sea shells from the beaches of Puri, oddly shaped stones and roots from various picnics, tiny and painted statuettes, beads of various colour and pretty, clay pots, dried gourds (toomba) from the distant villages of the Manipur and Khasi Hills and the North East Frontier Agency (NEFA, known as Arunachal Pradesh today), miniature pictures, elegant but peculiarly shaped containers made of copper, souvenir sized replicas of deities from various tirthasthan lined our home’s window sills, hung from the walls in artistic disarray or sat dotingly next to the black telephone, on shelves and tables in the drawing room and bedroom. She would be quite possessive of these aimlessly assembled ménage, but never scolded me if I handled any of them. I began to collect some stones and other things too that caught my childish fancy, and brought them to her. She would examine what I had brought with great care; turn them over and around as she looked at the object before passing verdict. Our house was like a zoo of memorabilia and artistic artifacts.
***

One of my earliest memories was of a film that I saw. It was black and white, and it was screened at home by a friend of hers in our bedroom. I can’t remember who, I must have been about four years old. An old bed sheet did the job of a makeshift screen. I could not understand a single word of it, but the uncertainly lit dim images haunted me. Strangely, the story or what little I understood of it was a very ordinary seeming one to me. It was set in some village in rural India and the characters were all dressed in grimy looking plain clothing. The harried father that seemed always anxious. A girl that played, ran, skipped and wandered around saw everything through her clear inquisitive eyes. She, her little brother and their parents lived with an old aunt in a worse for wear house, which couldn’t have been much even in its heyday. The fat village shopkeeper, fawning and threatening in turns, who doubled as a teacher armed with a fearsome cane whilst selling rice, kerosene and other daily needs, was funny. The toothless old aunt, a cripple, was another loving character I remembered. In the background, with the noisy churning sound of the projector and alien garbled sound track, I watched the girl and her little brother live a very plain life enjoying simple joys of life in a village. What left an indelible impression in my mind’s eye about the film was the scene of the brother and sister running carefree amongst the white cloudlike blossoms of tall wild grass (kaash), running to catch up with a black, smoke-belching train. Later, much later, when I asked my mother, she told me the film was Pather Panchali made by the legendary Satyajit Ray. As I grew up, Pather Panchali, made in 1955, became a familiar household topic associated with many anecdotes and discussions amongst us about this classic film and the renowned Director and litterateur.
***

When one is a child, the earliest recollections are mostly dominated by those associated with smell, sound, touch and taste. Such memories are the lasting ones we take them with us when we die. The so-called lower senses and emotions they evoke somehow are so deeply impressed, that they even simulate themselves along with the memory as it is triggered. And so, an object or its particular shape, the timber of a voice or a song, a kind of food or dish, a certain shade of colour, such random things evoke old memories of childhood to us, and we like certain things or a stranger for no particular reason, our mouths water when we see or smell certain foods, make us impulsively buy an ordinary cheap thing, make our emotions swell up suddenly for no particular rhyme or reason. My earliest memories of my mother are, therefore, dominated by such kinds of sensually and emotionally linked ones. The delicate fragrance of Pond’s cold cream dabbed swiftly onto my face by her warm hands before I fell asleep will always be one of my personal symbols of motherhood.
***

“Nahak Churachandpurd? pokp?né.”
***

My mother always told me that I was born in Churachandpur. This, to her, happened when my father was posted there as a District Medical Officer. I found this most intriguing even in my earliest childhood days because she also narrated another parallel story about my birth! The second narrative, which had many witnesses who retold this story in their own versions, carried the story of a prolonged and exhausting labour and even the hint of a breach delivery. With many doctors in attendance, including my grandfather Dr Bhorot Roy, tragedy was only averted by the aggressive intervention of the midwife Sister “Iche” Taruni. It happened in Imphal, in Yaiskul inside the upaak-ka at her sister’s house. The tin-roofed house constructed in the traditional “Assam style” still stands today, just to the north of our present residential compound in Yaiskul. It is a story worth telling only because of its dramatic nature and the obvious relish of the telling to whoever was telling it. As a child, I heard many versions of this second narrative.

In the night of my parent’s wedding day in 1950, which happened with the usual fanfare of the marriage of the royalty at the temple of Sri Sri Sri Govindaji in the Sana Konung, a great earthquake shook Assam and Manipur. It was known as the Great Assam Earthquake of 1950, and it happened on August 15, which also happened to be India’s Independence Day. For four years, my mother was childless. She began to despair, and visited many shrines including the one of the ancestor god Ibudhou Oknarel at Ningthoukhong to make offerings. Ningthoukhong is on the road from Imphal to Churachandpur, where my father was posted at that time. According to legend, Oknarel was the son of Ibudhou Koubru, and a great polo player like Marjing, Khamlangba, Thangjing, Khoiriphaba and many others of our ancestors. I do not know how Oknarel Hanuba came to be associated with the childless woman, but my mother conceived soon after visiting the shrine and offering a polo stick. This perhaps explains the first narrative.
So, I grew up with two different stories of my birth, as told to me by my own mother.
***

There is yet another story about my birth; this she told me too. My mother’s favourite brother was my Mamo Yaima. He was the second son of Maharaj Churachand Singh of Manipur. He is known generally as PB, short for his real name Priyabrata; she used to call him Tamo when he was around but just PB whenever she had to refer to him. Mamo Yaima was a handsome confirmed bachelor with many talents and achievements, widely respected all over the State of Manipur irrespective of tribe, clan or community. PB and my mother shared a passion for art and aesthetics. He was the first person to make moving pictures in Manipur. And he was a painter and carpenter. He had served as an officer in the Assam Regiment during the British days, so a few who knew him as a military man also called him Captain PB. Soon after I was born, he made me a wooden cot with a sliding side. The very idea of a separate baby cot for an infant child would still be received with horror in Manipur today. The childless PB doted on me, the first born child of her favourite little sister, Tombi. The cot that PB made in 1954 is still with me; perhaps I shall keep it for my first grandchild.

While my mother was carrying me, there was much speculation as to the sex of the child…will Sana Wangol have a son or a daughter crossed everyone’s mind. My mother was the foremost among these speculators. She was a great admirer of the legendary Hollywood actress Elizabeth Taylor. Secretly, and constantly, my mother prayed for a daughter, a beautiful girl with magical eyes whom she would spoil and play with, like one of her childhood Laiphadibee. PB somehow discovered this secret wish. He was an intelligent man, and he put two and two together when he saw a new photograph of Taylor in my mother’s bedroom and observed that she stitched many baby clothes…all of them for a baby girl!

When the news got out that a son had arrived, PB dropped by and his first greeting to me was, “O, Elizabeth Taylor!”

Another passion they shared, the brother and the younger sister, was their love for Manipur. Mamo Yaima stammered. His stammer got worse when he became upset. As soon as he walked into our house, my mother would first bow to him in the traditional style and then ask him if he wanted an omelette. He loved omelettes. He was always served an omelette freshly made by my mother when he visited us. This was because such kind of food was prohibited in his orthodox household in the palace. Tombi was PB’s sounding block whenever he had a vexing problem, be it political or personal.

As a young girl, my mother hero-worshipped her brother PB. She used to tell me how handsome how he was as a young man, wearing a spotlessly white cotton sleeveless vest and sporting a “jum-jum taba” hairstyle. It was the hairstyle that Leonardo DiCaprio sported in the Hollywood blockbuster Titanic. It is popular even today, not even the “Korirang wave” has managed to kill it. The younger sister emulated her accomplished brother; he inspired her with his love for art, literature, beauty and Manipur.
***

The consciousness that my mother was a woman of beauty or high social standing, a princess of Manipur, an artist and later a writer came much later to me. To the child that I was, she was a familiar person, a shape who carried particular smells and fragrances at different times of the day and night, a sound or phanek’s swish that made me want to get up abruptly, abandon whatever I was doing and run towards it, a hand that I feared if I knew I had done something wrong or had told a lie, a kind of machine which had the expertise and repertoire to produce mouth watering delectable items to eat.
***

My mother’s dressing table was a piece of furniture in our home that always evoked endless curiosity for me during my earliest childhood. It was like a monument. It had a large well-lit mirror and a large rectangular stool with a curved seat made of walnut placed in front; and the table was always cluttered with objects and items that were obviously her secret arsenal of powerful weapons. There were drawers too, which held many more top secrets. Somehow, I knew instinctively that this was a no-no territory for me. My inborn sense of survival told me that my very life depended upon not being caught in the table’s vicinity. This instinctive “avoid it if you value your life” message from my guardian angel, however, did not prevent me from snooping into this prohibited military territory whenever opportunity presented. Such was the level of caution I exercised in my secret forays to this table that I was never caught. She spent a lot of her waking hours at this table, especially before she had to go off somewhere with my father.

Many kinds of bullet shaped lipsticks adorned this table, along with perfume bottles, Lakmé powder compacts, mascara, eyebrow and other liners, Pond’s cold cream and vanishing cream, combs and a brush, bottles of nail polish and removers, cotton balls, and bowls with a mind-boggling array of ear-studs and ear rings, necklaces, rings, brooches, bangles, clasps, hair clips and dark glassed goggles. I sensed that this formidable arsenal was of the essence for her; vital aids that helped her to conceal in order to reveal! Growing up with my mother was also growing up with this dressing table.
***

“I am the most misunderstood woman in Manipur.”
***

My life, with my younger brother, as children was full of stories. My mother loved stories and to tell us stories was one her favourite past times; and we devoured them. I think she loved telling stories because she loved to hear them again too. The realms of literature are in the world of stories. She told us countless stories, many of them from her own life, and others from books she had read or films she had seen. She loved to tell us ghost stories too. But my childhood associations with her will always be warmly wrapped by the books and their stories that we shared.

Some of the best stories I remember were from her days in Shantiniketan. The Shantiniketan days, I realized later, were some of the best of her life. The few life-long friends she had are all associated with Shantiniketan. Intermixed with her Shantiniketan stories were the stories of Tagore and Shankar. Shankar, known also as Sankar, is a Bengali novelist unfamiliar to the readers of Manipur. His real name is Mani Shankar Mukherjee. His father died while Sankar was still a teenager, as a result of which Sankar became a clerk to the last British barrister of the Kolkata High Court, Noel Frederick Barwell. Noel Barwell introduced Shankar to literature. Sankar’s ground breaking debut novel Kato Ajanare, published in 1955, inspired my mother. My favourite bed-time story telling memories with her are steeped with the world of the young protagonist of this novel, a lawyer’s clerk, and his barrister sahib. I would listen to these stories again and again.
Very little is known of how much Sankar’s first novel influenced her short stories and radio plays. This is because the association is unknown in Manipur, and Sankar is not only largely inaccessible to the readers here who are unable to read Bengali; most of his works remain to be translated. Jana Aranya (The Middleman), a film directed by Satyajit Ray and released in 1976, is based on the novel of the same name by Sankar. Another novel Chowringhee, was made into the classic cult film of the same name in 1968 by Pinaki Bhushan Mukherjee, starring Uttam Kumar and Supriya Devi.

Recently, in February, while passing through Kolkata airport and visiting my old favourite corner book store there, I purchased a copy of Penguin India’s “The Great Unknown”, an English translation of Kato Ajanare by Soma Das. Discovering this book was one of the highest watermarks of elation in my life after my mother died in January. It was as if she had sent me this book. Suddenly, as I began to read the book on a slick jet plane cruising 35,000 feet above peninsular India, I looked up and around from my seat, looking for a familiar or friendly face so that I could pour out my feelings, my memories, my tears.

Penguin India’s website said,
“The Great Unknown is the moving story of the many people Shankar meets… It offers a uniquely personal glimpse into their world of unfulfilled dreams and duplicity, of unexpected tragedy, as well as hope and exhilaration.”

Sankar’s almost autobiographical, very personal anecdotal style influenced my mother’s appraisal of her personal life as a young doctor’s wife. Buried somewhere in her collection of short stories Nung’gairakta Chandramukhi is an concealed tribute to this post-Tagore modern Bengali novelist whose stories my mother dearly loved.
***

Our house received many strange guests and visitors. Many of them, I discovered, were well known personalities. A few stayed with us, and others dropped by and left after meeting my mother. There was Mulk Raj Anand, one of the first English language writers of India; Salim Ali the renowned ornithologist, Petre the Romanian dancer, and Milada Ganguli the Czech-Indian anthropologist are among those I remember. One day, when I was about nine years old, a tall and gaunt “white lady” showed up in an above-ankle sari and no-nonsense leather sandals. Her bags suggested that she was to stay. My mother had been busy for some days preparing a bed in another room. The woman’s eyes were a faded inscrutable colour, and her maize-flower like hair was neatly done in a single plait. I spent hours staring at her long thin nose and quick nervous gestures. A few of our neighbours remember the peculiar lady who waded in knee deep into the Nambul River during the rainy season to take photographs of women catching fish with chinese nets.

Milada Ganguli married Mohanlal Gangopadhyay, a close relative of Rabindranath Tagore, after they met in London at some soiree. She came to India in 1939 as a young newly married bride. Some years later, she met my mother in Shantiniketan, who invited her to come to Manipur. But it was 1963 before she set foot on Manipur’s soil. It was a significant year for the Indian State of Nagaland had just been created. She became fascinated by the stories of Nagaland and its peoples. My mother managed an Inner Line Permit for her, and Milada first traveled to Nagaland from our house in an MST mail-bus, part of a convoy escorted by over a hundred Indian Army trucks. She visited Nagaland many more times. I believe eighteen times. She wrote several books on the Naga peoples in the style of the European traditional anthropological school. Her extraordinary and extensive unique collection of beautiful photographs and Naga art objects has been acquired by the Museum der Kulturen in Basel, Switzerland and the Indira Gandhi National Centre for the Arts. She died in the year 2000. But I will always remember her as the awesome and brave “Aunty Milada”.
***

I grew up as a sickly child. My mother told me that I learnt to walk with great difficulty and after much coaxing with numerous ruses when I was more than two years of age. Nurturing motherhood skills were a big blank with her. Growing up in a palace as a girl has its definite disadvantages too. She hadn’t a clue how to look after a newborn baby. She had been raised by wet-nurses and maids. However much you want to cuddle and spoil the infant, it’s still not a Laiphadibee! My father had left for bilaat soon after I was born to pursue higher studiers, to become bilaat trained surgeon. He was absent for almost two years. I became ill with severe malnutrition, rickets and all sorts of debilitating diseases common to the neglected infant. My mother was at her wit’s end, I was told; she had also just given birth to my brother. She begged her father-in-law, Dr. Bhorot, to recall his son, her husband. In the end, a telegram was sent to my father in Glasgow to return immediately because I had become too ill, it was doubtful that I would survive very much longer. He had been accepted as a Fellow of the Royal College of Surgeons in Edinburgh in record time; but he wanted to acquire second degree from the United Kingdom. It was the fashion in those days to have a double, even triple, FRCS degree behind your name.

He flew back immediately, in a British Overseas Airways Corporation (BOAC) owned Constellation passenger aircraft, via Rome, Italy. Upon his arrival, he also discovered that he had two challenging tasks before him, one professional and the other emotional. To cure the malnutrition of his first-born, and to make friends with a second son born in absentia.
***

Soon after Little Flower School as established at Imphal in 1958, I was enrolled there after pre-schooling a short spell at the Montessori School attached to Tamphasana Girls’ High School. It was quite close to our home and my mother took me there every day. It’s a pity that the school has long been discontinued. All my cousins also went there, so I thoroughly enjoyed the first experience of formal education outside the sheltered atmosphere of my mother’s house, surrounded by aunts, uncles and helpers.

The Montessori tradition, as it became known, was I believe started by an Italian doctor called Maria Montessori. She said that the greatest sign of a success for a teacher is to be able to say, “The children are now working as if I did not exist…

Read more / Original news source: http://kanglaonline.com/2011/08/warm-hands-and-cold-creammy-mother-sanaibema-wangolsana-and-i-19541965/

Phone affairs goes awry, accused arrested

Newmai News Network IMPHAL, July 19: A love affairs conducted over phone went terribly awry with the young woman duped and abandoned in a hotel room a day after the… Read more »

Newmai News Network
IMPHAL, July 19: A love affairs conducted over phone went terribly awry with the young woman duped and abandoned in a hotel room a day after the couple eloped.

The 33-year old dupester Sapam Noren aka Manao s/o Gouramani of Heingang Awang Leikai under Imphal East police station was arrested by Waikhong police on July 18 and taken to Regional Institute of Medical Sciences (RIMS) for medical examination. The young woman victim has been identified as Moirangthem Priya, 23, d/o M Boboy of Waikhong Kunjao Keikai in Thoubal district.  

The two lover began their affairs over the phone. After about two months of phone affairs, the couple finally met on June 20, at about 11 am at Waikhong Kunjao area.

Noren, who is married, reportedly used a fake name and concealed his marital status in order to woo young Priya. 
The two decided to elope within minutes of their first meeting and took their love affairs to a hotel room in North AOC area. But the fraud guy ventured out the next day in the pretext of finding financial assistance and never went back, abandoning her to her own devices.

A report had been registered with the police after the incident. The police who have been investigating into the case made a breakthrough by establishing the veracity of a phone number used by the accused. Noren was arrested by the police at about 1 pm from Heingang village yesterday, according to the police.

Read more / Original news source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Kanglaonline/~3/OeT6Lxpkv2I/

KCP message

IMPHAL, April 30: On the occasion of May Day which is being widely celebrated today globally, the Kangleipak Communist Party (Maoist), in a statement, sends its heartfelt greetings to the… Read more »

IMPHAL, April 30: On the occasion of May Day which is being widely celebrated today globally, the Kangleipak Communist Party (Maoist), in a statement, sends its heartfelt greetings to the people of Manipur.

A KCP(M) statement said May Day is being celebrated in more than 80 countries throughout the world with the main objective of reserving working day for a labourer to eight hours daily.

With the coming of the May Day, the KCP(M) also wishes the farmers and labourers of Manipur for a meaningful and prosperous year.

It also said communist party and peasants/labourers are two sides of the same coin and the two worked together for the betterment of the society.

The KCP(M) statement further said revolutionaries, petty-bourgeois and rich peasants need to maintain a cordial relationship in Manipur.

The outfit also announced that KCP(M) will stop any form of collection from peasant community and reserving percentage with regard to distribution of essential commodities meant for the people.

Read more / Original news source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Kanglaonline/~3/sP_dClCg6dw/