Thursday, June 23, 2016
PENCIL DRAWING - P.KAKKAN JI
தினம் ஒரு ஓவியம் வரைவோம் - 22-06-2016
P.KAKKAN
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| P.KAKKAN |
P. Kakkan (sometimes Kakkan) (Tamil: கக்கன்) (18 June 1908 – 23 December 1981) was a Dalit leader, freedom fighter and Indian politician who served as a member of the Constituent Assembly of India, Member of Parliament, President of the Tamil Nadu Congress Committee and in various ministerial posts in Congress governments in the erstwhile Madras state between 1957 and 1967.
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| PENCIL DRAWING - P.KAKKAN JI |
கறைபடியாத கரங்களுக்கு சொந்தக்காரர் என்ற பெயர் எடுத்தவர் பி.கக்கன்.தாழ்த்தப்பட்ட என்று சொல்லப்படும் சமுதாயத்தில் பிறந்த அவர்,சட்டமன்ற,நாடாளுமன்ற உறுப்பினராகவும்,பத்து ஆண்டுகாலம் தமிழக அமைச்சராகவும் பணியாற்றியவர்.பல வருடங்கள் அமைச்சராக இருந்தும் சொந்த வீடு கூட இல்லாமல் தன் கடைசி காலம் வரை வாழ்ந்தார்.
மதுரை அருகில் தும்பைப்பட்டி கிராமம்.அங்குள்ள ஸ்ரீவீரகாளியம்மன் கோவிலில் கக்கன் அவர்களின் குடும்பத்தார் நான்கு தலைமுறைகளாக பூஜாரிகளாக இருந்திருக்கிறார்கள்.கக்கன் அவர்களும் பூஜாரியாக பணியாற்றியவர்;அந்தக் கோவில் 18 கிராமங்களுக்குச் சொந்தம்.
காலை விடியலுக்கு முன்பே எழுந்து,காலைக்கடமைகளை முடித்து நெற்றி நிறைய விபூதி பூசிக்கொள்ளும் பழக்கம் உள்ளவர்;பாவக்காரியங்கள் செய்யக்கூடாது என்பதில் எப்போதும் உறுதியாக இருந்தவர்;இவரின் இந்தக் கொள்கைதான் கறைபடியாத கரங்களுக்குசொந்தக்காரர் என்ற புகழைத் தந்திருக்கிறது.
நன்றி:பஞ்சாமிர்தம் பகுதி,பக்கம் 10,விஜயபாரதம் 9.9.11..
Tuesday, June 21, 2016
Sunday, June 19, 2016
Saturday, June 11, 2016
PENCIL DRAWING - DIGITAL INDIA
தினம் ஒரு ஓவியம் வரைவோம் - 11-05-2016
DIGITAL INDIA
எங்கள் இந்தியா...
யானை முகம் கொண்ட..
யானை பலம் கொண்ட ....
எங்கள் இந்தியா.....
வாழ்க பாரதம்..
வாழ்க வையகம்...
ஜெய்ஹிந்த்...
India is a vast South Asian country with diverse terrain – from Himalayan peaks to Indian Ocean coastline – and history reaching back 5 millennia. In the north, Mughal Empire landmarks include Delhi’s Red Fort complex, massive Jama Masjid mosque and Agra’s iconic Taj Mahal mausoleum. Pilgrims bathe in the Ganges in Varanasi, and Rishikesh is a yoga center and base for Himalayan trekking.
Capital: New Delhi
Prime minister: Narendra Modi
President: Pranab Mukherjee
Population: 1.252 billion (2013) World Bank
States: Goa, Kerala, Tamil Nadu, Uttar Pradesh, Rajasthan, Bihar, more
DIGITAL INDIA
எங்கள் இந்தியா...
யானை முகம் கொண்ட..
யானை பலம் கொண்ட ....
எங்கள் இந்தியா.....
வாழ்க பாரதம்..
வாழ்க வையகம்...
ஜெய்ஹிந்த்...
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Capital: New Delhi
Prime minister: Narendra Modi
President: Pranab Mukherjee
Population: 1.252 billion (2013) World Bank
States: Goa, Kerala, Tamil Nadu, Uttar Pradesh, Rajasthan, Bihar, more
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| PENCIL DRAWING - DIGITAL INDIA |
Sunday, June 5, 2016
PENCIL DRAWING - T. V. Kalyanasundaram
தினம் ஒரு ஓவியம் வரைவோம் - 04-05-2016
T. V. Kalyanasundaram
Born Thiruvarur Viruttachala Kalyanasundaram Mudaliar
August 26, 1883
Thullam, Chengalpet district, Tamilnadu
Died September 17, 1953 (aged 70)
Occupation scholar, activist
Thiruvarur Viruttachala Kalyanasundaram (August 26, 1883 – September 17, 1953), better known by his Tamil initials Thiru. Vi .Ka (Thiruvarur Virudhachala Kalyanasundaram Mudaliar), was a Tamil scholar, essayist and activist. He is esteemed for the strong humanism of his essays, the analytical depth of his commentaries on classical Tamil literature and philosophy, and the clear, fluid style of his prose. His works, along with those of V. O. Chidambaram Pillai, Maraimalai Adigal, and Arumuga Navalar, are considered to have defined the style of modern Tamil prose.
History[edit]
Thiru Vi. Ka was born in the village of Thullam in Chengalpet district, near Chennai in the southern Indian state of Tamil Nadu on 26 August 1883 in the Sozhiya Saiva Vellala community. He attended the Wesley College High School, and also studied Tamil under Maraimalai Adigal and N. Kathiravel Pillai of Jaffna. He worked briefly as a teacher, and in 1917 became an editorial assistant on Desabaktan, a nationalist Tamil daily. Thiru Vi. Ka. was soon involved in various aspects of the independence movement. During this period, he became a strong campaigner for worker rights. In 1918, he became active in the trade union movement as an associate of BP Wadia, and organised the first trade unions in the south of India.[1]
T. V. Kalyanasundaram
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| T. V. Kalyanasundaram |
Born Thiruvarur Viruttachala Kalyanasundaram Mudaliar
August 26, 1883
Thullam, Chengalpet district, Tamilnadu
Died September 17, 1953 (aged 70)
Occupation scholar, activist
Thiruvarur Viruttachala Kalyanasundaram (August 26, 1883 – September 17, 1953), better known by his Tamil initials Thiru. Vi .Ka (Thiruvarur Virudhachala Kalyanasundaram Mudaliar), was a Tamil scholar, essayist and activist. He is esteemed for the strong humanism of his essays, the analytical depth of his commentaries on classical Tamil literature and philosophy, and the clear, fluid style of his prose. His works, along with those of V. O. Chidambaram Pillai, Maraimalai Adigal, and Arumuga Navalar, are considered to have defined the style of modern Tamil prose.
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| T. V. Kalyanasundaram |
History[edit]
Thiru Vi. Ka was born in the village of Thullam in Chengalpet district, near Chennai in the southern Indian state of Tamil Nadu on 26 August 1883 in the Sozhiya Saiva Vellala community. He attended the Wesley College High School, and also studied Tamil under Maraimalai Adigal and N. Kathiravel Pillai of Jaffna. He worked briefly as a teacher, and in 1917 became an editorial assistant on Desabaktan, a nationalist Tamil daily. Thiru Vi. Ka. was soon involved in various aspects of the independence movement. During this period, he became a strong campaigner for worker rights. In 1918, he became active in the trade union movement as an associate of BP Wadia, and organised the first trade unions in the south of India.[1]
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| T. V. Kalyanasundaram |
Saturday, June 4, 2016
PENCIL DRAWING - Gautama Buddha
தினம் ஒரு ஓவியம் வரைவோம் - 04-05-2016
Gautama Buddha
Siddhārtha Gautama (Sidaaha) was born in the kingdom of Kapilvastu in Nepal. At present this birthplace is called Lumbini, in Nepal. At that time, a clan called the Shakya's ruled Kapilvastu. His father was a king named Suddodana Tharu, and his mother was the beautiful Mahamaya.[1] Siddhārtha lived in luxury; his father kept trouble and hard work far from him. A seer predicted that if Siddhārth stayed inside his palace his whole life, then he would become a great king. However, if he left the palace, then he would become a great religious leader. The king did not want his son to become a religious leader. He kept Siddhartha in the palace for his whole childhood.
When he was older, his father found a woman for Siddhārtha to marry at the age of 16. He married the woman named Yashodhara,[2] and they had a son, Rahul.[3] Although Gautama had everything he could want, he still was not happy. He wanted to learn the meaning of his existence.
He got out of the castle against his father's orders. He saw the "Four Passing Sights": an old crippled man, a sick man, a dead man, and a holy man with no home. Right then, Gautama knew that nothing can stop people from being born, becoming old, getting sick, and dying. He decided to give up his worldly life. He would not keep his wives, his children, his wealth, or his palace. He would become a holy man with no home. He would look for the answer to the problem of birth, old age, sickness, and death. He left his home in the middle of a dark and stormy night.
Gautama Buddha
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| PENCIL DRAWING - Gautama Buddha |
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| PENCIL DRAWING - Gautama Buddha |
When he was older, his father found a woman for Siddhārtha to marry at the age of 16. He married the woman named Yashodhara,[2] and they had a son, Rahul.[3] Although Gautama had everything he could want, he still was not happy. He wanted to learn the meaning of his existence.
He got out of the castle against his father's orders. He saw the "Four Passing Sights": an old crippled man, a sick man, a dead man, and a holy man with no home. Right then, Gautama knew that nothing can stop people from being born, becoming old, getting sick, and dying. He decided to give up his worldly life. He would not keep his wives, his children, his wealth, or his palace. He would become a holy man with no home. He would look for the answer to the problem of birth, old age, sickness, and death. He left his home in the middle of a dark and stormy night.














