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Lohri celebrated

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Indian Abroad Newsdesk

The Consulate General of India, Perth family celebrated the festival of Lohri, MakarSankranti, MaghBihu and Pongal recently. The celebrations were presided over by Consul General Amarjeet Singh Takhi.

Essay competition to celebrate Vishwa Hindi Diwas

Indian Abroad Newsdesk

Consul General of India (CGI), Perth Amarjeet Singh Takhi met his new consular colleague, British Consul General Tina Redshaw, at the Consulate. Both discussed bilateral ties, including with Australia.

CGI meets business leader

Indian Abroad Newsdesk

Celebrating Vishwa Hindi Diwas, High Commission of India, Canberrais organising an online essay writing competition. The topic of the Competition is “Bharat: MeriNazar Se” (India: From my perspective). One can submit self-written essay on the topic and win exciting prizes. The last date of entry is 31st January 2023

Rajasthan International Expo from 20 March

Indian Abroad Newsdesk

Consul General of India (CGI), Perth Amarjeet Singh Takhimet Sameer Chhikara, GM Metals, Minerals and Recycling at Sojitz Australia Ltd recently. With 7 offices across India, Sojitz is engaged in several projects, including dedicated freight corridor, and partners with Maruti, Tata & L&T.

Australia-India film making ties discussed

Indian Abroad Newsdesk

Consul General of India (CGI), Perth Amarjeet Singh Takhi met Chris Watson, Chris

Veerhuis and Dan Holliday from Screenwest Western Australia (WA) recently and discussed opportunities for cooperation in areas of cinematography, film making between Australia-India.

Indian Abroad Newsdesk

It is a moment of pride for the Indian-Australian community as eminent Physicist Prof.

ChennupatiJagadish AC has been conferred the prestigious

PravasiBharatiyaSamman (PBS) Award 2023. He is the President of the Australian Academy of Science, and a Distinguished Professor of Physics at the Australian National

University Research School of Physics. He is head of the

Semiconductor Optoelectronics and Nanotechnology Group which he established in 1990. He is also the Convener of the Australian

Nanotechnology Network and

Director of Australian National Fabrication Facility ACT Node.

New COVID guidelines announced

Indian Abroad Newsdesk

As per the new COVID guidelines for international arrivals in India dated 29th December 2022, passengers arriving to India from China including Hong Kong, ROK, Japan, Singapore and Thailand would be required to fill self-declaration form and upload negative RT-PCR Report on the Air Suvidha Portal. Transiting passengers through aforementioned six countries would also be required to fill self-declaration form and upload negative RT-PCR

Report on the Air Suvidha Portal, irrespective of their originating country.

Tricolour hoisting on 26 January

Indian Abroad Newsdesk

The Consulate General of India in PerthAmarjeet Singh Takhi has invited all Indians and

Friends of India to flag hoisting ceremony on the occasion of 74th Republic Day of India on 26 January. The time will be from 10-11 am. The venue of the flag hoisting is Level 6, 12 St. Georges Terrace, Perth.

ZanetaMascarenhas Guest of Honour at Youth PravasiBharatiya Divas 2023

Indian Abroad Newsdesk

ZanetaMascarenhas MP was the Guest of Honour at the 13th Youth PravasiBharatiya Divas 2023 in Indore, Madhya Pradesh,

India and spoke about aspirations and hopes of the Indian Diaspora in Australia. Narrating her experience in a

Facebook post ZanetaMascarenhas wrote, “I’m in India! It was an honour to share my hopes for the Indian diaspora as the keynote speaker at the 13th PravasiBharatiya Divas (Overseas Indians Conference) Youth Plenary in Indore, Madhya Pradesh, India.” About the bourgeoning AustraliaIndia relations Zaneta wrote, “Australia’s relationship with India has never been closer. IndianAustralians are one of our fastest growing migrant groups, and our shared histories and cultures make for a special bond between our two countries. In the 75th year of Indian independence, it is my hope that the next 75 years are as productive and enriching as the last.”

Indian Abroad Newsdesk

The Sikh Sangat in Western Australia, together with members of the wider Indian community, celebrated Guru Gobind Singh Ji’sPrakashPurab, with great devotion and fervor, at the Canning Vale Gurdwara Sahib. The Consul General Amarjeet Singh Takhi and his family and the entire Consulate parivar joined the langgarsewa at the Gurdwara sahib. The Indianorigin Members of Parliament of Western Australia - YazMubarakai MLA, Parliamentary Secretary for Citizenship and Multicultural Interests and Education; as well as Dr Jags MLA, newly-appointed Parliamentary Secretary for Finance, Commerce, Women’s Interests - and Cr. TarunDewan from City of Cockburn and also representatives of Indian Society of WA (ISWA), Hindu Council of Australia Perth, HSS, Maharashtra Mandal Perth, ABCWA, Haryanvi Association of Western Australia, Haryana Society of Western Australia, Hindi Samaj HSWA, ISKCON Perth - Sri SriGauraNitai Temple, Aggarwal Association, Kashmiri Pandits Perth, Assam Association of WA, FIAWA, Australia-India Medical Association, Honorary Consul of Fiji, business persons and academicians joined the evening Dewan&langgarsewa and obtained blessings of the Guru. Indo OZ/ Perthnama Australia and Radio Tarang covered the Gurpurab celebrations.

Indian Abroad Newsdesk

The PravasiBhartiyaDivas2023was celebrated on January 9 at the Consulate General of India premises in Sydney.It was attended by previous PravasiBharatiyaSamman Award (PBSA) recipients, community leaders, representatives from business, culture, media and academia. PravasiBharatiya Divas is observed on 9 Januaryto mark the contribution of the Indian diaspora towards the development of India. The day commemorates the return of Mahatma Gandhi from South Africa to Mumbai on 9 January 1915.

Swachhata pledge taken

Indian Abroad Newsdesk

As part of the Swachhata Pakhwada, being observed from 1-15 January 2023, Consul General of India, Sydney Manish Gupta administered the swachhata pledge to the members of the Consulate. Since the Modi government took over the reins of India in 2014, Swachhata or cleanliness has been given the utmost priority throughout India. Officials of the High Commission of India, Canberra also took the Swachhata pledge to celebrate Swachchhata Pakhwada from 1st to 15th Jan 2023. As a Special Campaign on Cleanliness under “Swachhata Pakhwada”, on 2nd January 2023 Consul General of India Melbourne Dr Sushil Kumar administered Swachhta pledge to officials of India in Melbourne to adopt and spread the message of cleanliness at various levels. The Consul General administered the Swachhata Pledge to the consulate officials as part of the Swachhata Pakhwada.

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By Vishnu Makhijani

New Delhi, Jan 10 (IANS) As a journalist one is relentlessly exposed to stories of conflicts between the state and indigenous tribes, more in some areas than others like along some belts in the North east or Jharkhand, Chhattisgarh, or Orissa to name a few, says Richa Lakhera, the bestselling author of books like ‘Hungry Gods’, ‘Garbage Beat’ and “Item Girl”, who is back with an intense and gripping take of the supernatural and horror with a female combatant set in the current times. “One cannot but be moved by their separate tragedies, the desolation which results from constant strife- wars which leave indigenous people homeless, in fact, thousands of forest dwellers are still fighting over traditional rights for their own land parcels,” Lakhera told IANS in an interview of her new book, ‘Contamination’. “That they manage to hang on optimism is also evidence of the stubborn resilience of the people. For any human being losing their land is traumatic but the suffering is greatest from losing hope. These are people who live buried under the compromises with the state and face repeated exploitation,” she added. Sometimes they resist and fight back against organised subterfuge across villages, people informing on each other and reward for getting ‘information on the Resistance militia’ and so on and all this is a big part of her next book ‘A History of Violence’. “But somewhere during the pandemic the germ of the story of ‘Contamination’ was spawned. I got hooked on the idea of pitting supernatural powers against soldiers with modern weapons, basically mixing horror elements into the war scene and seeing what happens. The bullets fly, grenades explode, body count rises right from the beginning, there is paranoia of a constant war, surviving on low ammo and supplies and then facing supernatural creatures. “There’s guerrilla warfare and hunting down insurgent patrols interspersed with horror imagery. On one hand there is the constant attempt by your characters to survive on low ammunition and dwindling supplies and the paranoia of a constant war and real possibilities of that they would all starve and freeze to death or be blown to bits getting slammed or hit by stray artillery and then come the ghosts! “Having said that, war is the greater horror, not ghosts. It is a militia horror and fronted by a female hero. And the genre is quite under-utilized especially in India. As such there is a lot of unexplored terrain to be uncovered in the militia-horror sub-genre,” Lakhera elaborated.

How does she see writing on the supernatural evolving given its rise on OTT and the big screen?

“Indian storytelling has been, and still is, partial to family dramas, and on screen it imbues them with spectacular tales of love and wealth, found-lost-regained amidst the pageantry of choreographed dance pieces. India, the largest film industry of the world, but for the longest time mostly there has been a visible disinterest in big budget supernatural and sci-fi content the kind we see in Hollywood as far as films are concerned and perhaps because the audience was not too keen on the content,” she said. Pointing out that when the Indian story writing scene is replete with folk tales with magic and mythology in India and its part of our cultural history, this makes their near absence till recent times in Indian cinema and overabundance in Hollywood more remarkable. “The top earners, even till a few months ago, were not really expected to be about wizardry or apocalyptic destruction caused by supernatural forces. No one could even think of investing that kind of money and time in such a project. Bollywood, not Hollywood, is the largest movie industry in the world. But only a handful of its top hits in the last four decades have dealt with science fiction themes, and even fewer are fantasy or horror,” Lakhera maintained. Noting that the 19th century German sociologist Max Weber had a useful theory about the west being ‘disenchanted’ and the world to them felt explainable, predictable, and boring leading to a widespread loss of a sense of wonder and magic and so they sought the enchantment in films, she said Perhaps that’s why Hollywood has an overabundance of supernatural and sci-fi content. “Indian content creators somehow for some reason relegate the supernatural to a lower position than material-based reason. However, there have been departures of late, perhaps with the coming in of global content and though Indian audiences were not seen as being keen on supernatural content on the big screen but that’s changed a little more sharply in recent times,” she maintained.

What’s missing in the Indian writing scene in this genre?

“We still do not have a ‘The Lord of the Rings’ and ‘Alice in Wonderland’, but we have had Hindi films like the hugely successful ‘Koi...Mil Gaya’, ‘Krrish” to ‘Bhool Bhulaiyya’ sequels. I think filmmakers are now more than ready to test the audience’s commitment to the rational by introducing the fantastic into the narrative. “I think that has got to do with the commerce of it. Commerce would be tied to desires and needs are cultural and there has been perhaps a cultural change in audience taste. People are now opening up, and this is fairly recent, to watching films with mythological, supernatural and nationalism themes. There is a distinct shift in taste...so we have big budgets being invested now in such films and after the success of Ayan Mukherjee’s ‘Brahmastra’ we have several more big-ticket films of the fantasy and supernatural world lined up. “Having said that, and talking of OTT, if the uptick of Hunger Games-inspired archery lessons and the CDC’s humorous-but-practical Zombie Preparedness Guide are any indication, this is not going away any time soon. Re-enchantment delivers something more important than escapism or entertainment. Through its promise of a world of mystery and wonder, it offers the hope that we have not seen all that there is and there is so much more which can be done,” Lakhera explained. What next? “My next, ‘A History of Violence’, is all about guns, grenades and guerillas and gangsters. But no ghosts in my next. The next book is a militia thriller-political drama and is set in the hill states of North India. Land wars and conflict between state and indigenous people is an integral part in the story with the larger unifying theme of how wars never end. They mutate. They change form. “Even though there are no supernatural horror elements involved, it is about a people caught in brutal relentless wars. It is about the shadowy world of tunnels along the borders which come alive during economic blockade and nakabandi, about gangsters and local warlords who feed on blood and bullets and unlimited power and greed. The true horror of war and conflicts, about accords failing, turncoats and sellouts, piling coffins, dirty cops and dirtier deals,” Lakhera concluded.

(Vishnu Makhijani can be reached at vishnu.makhijani@ians.in)

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