logo
‘Couldn't hold back tears, they sang so beautifully': President Droupadi Murmu

‘Couldn't hold back tears, they sang so beautifully': President Droupadi Murmu

Indian Express20-06-2025
President Droupadi Murmu, who turned 67 on Friday, was moved to tears when a group of visually impaired children sang a song to wish her.
'I could not hold back my tears. They were singing so beautifully. They were singing from their heart,' said Murmu at the National Institute for Empowerment of Persons with Visual Disabilities at Dehradun.
The President said the progress of a country or society can be judged by the way the people treat persons with disabilities in that society. 'India's history is full of inspiring incidents of sensitivity and inclusiveness,' said the President.
She said through the Sugamya Bharat Abhiyan, which emphasises developing an accessible physical environment, transport, information and communication ecosystem, the government is striving for empowerment and equal participation of 'divyangjan (persons with disabilities)'.
The President, who is on a three-day visit to Uttarakhand beginning Thursday, inaugurated Rashtrapati Tapovan and Rashtrapati Niketan in Dehradun.
She also laid the foundation of Rashtrapati Udyan at Rashtrapati Niketan. Rashtrapati Tapovan, situated on Rajpur Road in Dehradun, is a 19-acre Presidential Estate nestled in the Himalayan foothills, developed with an emphasis on spiritual retreat and ecological preservation.
According to the communication from the President's Secretariat, Tapovan is a dense forest patch rich and hosts 117 plant species, 52 butterfly species, 41 bird species and seven wild mammals, including some protected species. The area features natural bamboo groves and undisturbed woodland ecosystems.
– PTI inputs
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Tibetans in exile wonder, will the next Dalai Lama be as charismatic as this one?
Tibetans in exile wonder, will the next Dalai Lama be as charismatic as this one?

New Indian Express

time10 hours ago

  • New Indian Express

Tibetans in exile wonder, will the next Dalai Lama be as charismatic as this one?

DHARAMSHALA: The Dalai Lama has announced that he intends to reincarnate, paving the way for a successor to take on a mantle stretching back 500 years after his death. But as he approaches his 90th birthday, that news hasn't eased the worries of Tibetan Buddhists who wonder: What will happen when this Dalai Lama is gone? For decades, the 14th Dalai Lama has been more than a spiritual leader. He has sustained a nation in exile and managed to build a community that's kept the Tibetan culture and identity alive. He is the China -reviled spokesperson for a Tibetan homeland that many, like him, can see only from afar. He has received a Nobel Peace Prize and been courted by royalty, politicians and Hollywood stars, helping him draw global attention and support for Tibet. When his death comes, it will pitch the global Tibetan community into uncertainty, perhaps for years. His successor will have to be found through the traditional process of reincarnation. China, whose troops took control of Tibet in 1950, says it will reject anyone chosen without Beijing's consent. Tibetans in India's Himalayan town of Dharamshala, the Dalai Lama's home in exile, and scattered around the world fear a new onslaught on their cultural and religious identity. 'The absence of His Holiness would be a huge setback for the Tibetans,' said Penpa Tsering, the head of the democratically elected Tibetan government-in-exile. 'The responsibility lies on us as to how we carry forward the legacy of His Holiness.'

Tibetans in exile wonder: Will the next Dalai Lama be as charismatic as this one?
Tibetans in exile wonder: Will the next Dalai Lama be as charismatic as this one?

Time of India

time11 hours ago

  • Time of India

Tibetans in exile wonder: Will the next Dalai Lama be as charismatic as this one?

The Dalai Lama has announced that he intends to reincarnate, paving the way for a successor to take on a mantle stretching back 500 years after his death. But as he approaches his 90th birthday, that news hasn't eased the worries of Tibetan Buddhists who wonder: What will happen when this Dalai Lama is gone? For decades, the 14th Dalai Lama has been more than a spiritual leader. He has sustained a nation in exile and managed to build a community that's kept the Tibetan culture and identity alive. He is the China -reviled spokesperson for a Tibetan homeland that many, like him, can see only from afar. He has received a Nobel Peace Prize and been courted by royalty, politicians and Hollywood stars, helping him draw global attention and support for Tibet . When his death comes, it will pitch the global Tibetan community into uncertainty, perhaps for years. His successor will have to be found through the traditional process of reincarnation. China, whose troops took control of Tibet in 1950, says it will reject anyone chosen without Beijing's consent. Tibetans in India's Himalayan town of Dharamshala, the Dalai Lama's home in exile, and scattered around the world fear a new onslaught on their cultural and religious identity. Live Events "The absence of His Holiness would be a huge setback for the Tibetans," said Penpa Tsering, the head of the democratically elected Tibetan government-in-exile. "The responsibility lies on us as to how we carry forward the legacy of His Holiness." A long gap The Dalai Lama has become one of the world's most recognizable figures while leading a Tibetan diaspora through their struggle for autonomy and opposition of China's control of Tibet. He has not named a successor, but he says they will be born in the "free world" - outside China. Previous Dalai Lamas have been identified by senior monastic disciples, under strict religious rituals meant to identify their predecessor's reincarnation. Monks interpret signs, consult oracles and send search committees to Tibetan households looking for a child who exhibits the qualities of the Dalai Lama. All of this takes years of effort, leaving a leadership vacuum. Years of religious education and training are needed before the identified successor grows up and takes up full responsibilities as spiritual leader. China has already sought to elevate other spiritual figures, particularly Tibetan Buddhism's No. 2 figure, the Panchen Lama, whose legitimacy is highly contested by many Tibetans at home and in exile. Gyaltsen Norbu was installed by Beijing as the 11th Panchen Lama in 1995 after followers of the Dalai Lama recognized a different boy as the Panchen's incarnation. That boy disappeared soon after. Joy and stubbornness And there's no guarantee the successor will have the current Dalai Lama's charisma, or his ability to balance a sense of joy with the stubbornness needed to counter China. "He is a fulcrum, he's the epitome of the Tibetan movement," said writer and activist Tenzin Tsundue, who was born in India. Tsundue for years has advocated for Tibet's autonomy. To him, the current Dalai Lama's absence will be hugely felt. Like many other Tibetans, however, his hopes are pinned on the government in exile. "How is home not anything but a genuine human demand?" he added. Such concerns are most prevalent in Dharamshala, where a Tibetan community of over 20,000 administers its own schools, hospitals and monasteries and elects its own lawmakers and president. The Dalai Lama handed over his political powers to a democratically elected government in 2011. Beijing is likely to appoint its own candidate China doesn't recognize the Tibetan government-in-exile and brands the Dalai Lama a dangerous separatist. It has shunned direct contact with his representatives for more than a decade. It has insisted that the Dalai Lama's successor will be from inside China and must be approved by its government. Tibetans in exile have long been wary of the officially atheist Chinese government's attempts to meddle with the Tibetan Buddhism reincarnation system. They see it as part of Beijing's plan to tighten its control over Tibet. "If they do it, they are actually making a mockery of themselves among the free countries," said Geshe Lhakdor, a Tibetan Buddhist scholar, calling Beijing's stance "hypocrisy." Tibetans say they were effectively independent for centuries and accuse China of trying to wipe out Tibet's Buddhist culture and language. Many of the more than 7 million Tibetans living under Chinese rule accuse Beijing of stifling religious freedoms, changing its ethnic makeup by moving millions of Han Chinese into the region and torturing political prisoners. The Chinese government denies these allegations. Waning global attention For years, governments across the world have feted the Dalai Lama for advocating for Tibetan rights and spreading a message of nonviolence. They have also helped him raise tens of millions of dollars to build Tibetan cultural and religious institutions. But Tsundue said that global powers have become more unreliable in their support of the Tibetan cause as China's influence grows. "Everybody has benefited at our cost because they have been trading with China," Tsundue said. "We are, in a way, a victim of geopolitics." Some countries, including the United States, view Beijing's attempts to control the reincarnation of the Dalai Lama as a violation of religious freedom and Tibetan cultural tradition. Others, like the European Union and India, have maintained a cautious stance to avoid friction with China. Tsering, the president of the government-in-exile, acknowledged this, calling Tibetans' efforts to keep the issue of Tibet alive "a miracle." He also cautioned that the future depends on the Tibetan people at large. Under the Dalai Lama's "Middle Way" policy, the movement for Tibet's autonomy has largely been nonviolent. It espouses autonomy under Chinese sovereignty. The newly announced succession plan, however, can prompt a reckoning of that policy, and it is unclear how the Dalai Lama's successor might approach dialogue with Beijing. Tsering cautioned that much could change in the coming years. His biggest worry is that the Dalai Lama's death in exile could trigger a violent response inside Tibet, where in recent years hundreds of monks and others reportedly set themselves on fire in protest against Chinese rule. "I hope the Tibetans won't get radicalized," he said.

Nuclear leakage in Ganga? How a secret CIA mission 60 years ago may haunt the billions in India who depend on the holy river
Nuclear leakage in Ganga? How a secret CIA mission 60 years ago may haunt the billions in India who depend on the holy river

Time of India

timea day ago

  • Time of India

Nuclear leakage in Ganga? How a secret CIA mission 60 years ago may haunt the billions in India who depend on the holy river

In 1965, India's top climbers carried a nuclear spying device up Nanda Devi for the CIA to watch China's atomic tests. Bad weather forced them to abandon it. The device vanished into the glacier, taking five kilograms of plutonium with it. Parliament asked questions, but the device was never found. Today, meltwater feeds the Ganga from the same glacier. Local fears remain while official monitoring is absent. The Cold War's hidden bomb still rests, half-lost, beneath India's sacred peaks. Tired of too many ads? Remove Ads Everest heroes turned spymasters Tired of too many ads? Remove Ads The Plan: Watch China from the 'roof of the world' The storm that swallowed a secret Tired of too many ads? Remove Ads Who is Captain Kohli, the Everest pioneer A Nation's pride on Everest Flowing water, frozen risk Legacy of a reluctant hero Nearly sixty years ago, deep in the Himalayas, India's best climbers carried a nuclear-powered spying device up Nanda Devi , aiming it at China's secret atomic tests. What happened next has left a radioactive question mark buried somewhere under the snow — and perhaps leaking slowly towards the Ganges, lifeline to half a billion device, a Remote Sensing Data Collection Unit powered by a plutonium capsule, vanished during a storm in 1965. Despite risky recoveries and years of quiet searching, it remains lost near the Rishi Ganga glacier. Captain Manmohan Singh Kohli , who led the mission, never called himself a spy. 'Look, we weren't spies, but adventure men. For us, it was a mountaineering expedition with a special purpose,' Kohli told the BBC years later from his home in Cold War made unlikely partners. The CIA's plan was born when China shocked the world by testing its first nuclear bomb in Xinjiang. The US needed eyes on Chinese missile launches and bomb designs. Satellites were too new and unreliable. High Himalayan peaks offered a view no camera in space could Bishop, an American mountaineer, convinced Air Force Chief Curtis LeMay the plan could work. LeMay, known for his aggressive nuclear strategies, signed off. India's leaders, still recovering from the 1962 border war with China, agreed to help. Their best climbing team would haul the American-built sensor as high as possible — in Kohli and his climbers had only just returned from planting India's flag on Everest in 1965. Many porters and Sherpas who trusted him followed him up Nanda Devi too. This time, the cargo was no flag but a 57 kg generator with a plutonium heart.'You should write about the uniqueness of the mission — the Nanda Devi joint operation was the biggest in the world,' Kohli told the BBC. 'Biggest, because of the number of people that took part in it. Besides the military of porters and Sherpas, we also had nuclear experts, intelligence officers, specialised agents like communicators, which is not the case in regular mountaineering expeditions.'The idea first sparked when Barry Bishop, a renowned American climber, spoke with US Air Force Chief of Staff Curtis LeMay. Bishop told him the Himalayan peaks offered a clear line into Chinese territory. LeMay, known for his appetite for nuclear brinkmanship, pushed the CIA to act. But they needed still reeling from its 1962 defeat by China, saw a chance to watch its old foe. Intelligence chiefs Bhola Nath Mullik and Rameshwar Nath Kao agreed. They picked Kohli — the calm Navy officer who'd brought India glory on wrote later, 'I was told we had to carry something to the summit of a mountain, alongside the Americans. It was, or the fact that it was composed of 80% of the radioactive material that destroyed Hiroshima, were details we didn't know.'In September 1965, two junior Intelligence Bureau officers reached Lata village below Nanda Devi. They needed porters — tough men of the Jad Bhotia tribe. Karthik Rana, an elder porter, remembered: 'Luckily, in the early summer of 1965, I was hired by Japanese mountaineers to climb another peak, Trisul, so I missed out when Indian saabs came calling.'Thirty-three Bhotia porters signed up. Nine elite Sherpas joined them. The mission's brain trust was formidable: Kohli led, with four IB officers — Harish Rawat, Sonam Wangyal, Gurcharan Singh Bhangu, and Sonam Gyatso. Rameshwar Nath Kao, future father of RAW, kept daily radio contact with Kohli. American climbers and CIA men watched from base plan was simple but brutal. Drag 57 kg of high-tech sensors and plutonium fuel up the Rishi Ganga gorge. Lash it to the peak. Let it team set out in late September 1965. IB officers secured dozens of local porters in Lata village, gateway to the peak. As the men climbed, weather turned. Blizzards pinned them near 7,300 metres. The nuclear device was too heavy to carry safely down. The only choice: secure it to a rock outcrop and escape before frostbite claimed Kohli's team returned in spring, snow slides and shifting ice had wiped the ledge clean. The device was gone, dragged into the glacier's gut by tonnes of moving snow and rock. 'If the capsule ever ruptures, it could contaminate the Rishi Ganga for decades,' Kohli the next few years, new attempts used dummy units to test safer placements on Nanda Kot, a nearby peak. Some dummy sets also vanished into crevasses. The original unit, with its real plutonium, never Manmohan 'Mohan' Singh Kohli, the Navy officer who put India atop Everest and carried a secret nuclear mission into the Himalayas, died on 23 June in New Delhi at 93. The Indian Navy described him as 'a pioneer of adventure training and a national icon who shaped the mountaineering ethos of the armed forces.'Born in 1932 in Haripur, now in Pakistan, Kohli's childhood turned upside down by Partition. At just 15, he fled his burning town on a refugee train to Amritsar. A bullet missed him by inches. He arrived with nothing but fear — and college in Lahore, Shimla and Allahabad, Kohli joined the Navy in 1954 as an education officer. His life changed when he was posted to the Himalayan Mountaineering Institute . There, he trained under Tenzing Norgay — Everest hero of 1953. The student climbed fast. By 1959, Kohli led the Navy's ascent of Nanda Kot, a tough peak no one had tamed since 1936. Two years later, he summited Annapurna III, braving killer ridges and avalanches. He was now India's top 1964, India had twice failed to conquer Everest. Lives were lost. Hopes were high. So the nation turned to Kohli. He had six months to lead India's third plan was precise. As The Times of India reported, the team of 21 — climbers, Sherpas, doctors, and even a film crew — left by train on 26 February 1965. They trekked into the Solu-Khumbu valley, reached Thyangboche Monastery by 8 March, and built base camp on 22 March. By 27 March, they crossed the deadly Khumbu Icefall — the season's earliest crossing — giving them an 20 and 29 May, four summit teams planted nine Indians atop Everest — then a world record. Kohli stayed at South Col, coordinating every step. He did not climb the final ridge. Instead, he ran the radios, rationed supplies, steadied they returned, Prime Minister Lal Bahadur Shastri called it 'a triumph for the whole nation.' Kohli refused to take an Arjuna Award unless every climber and Sherpa got one too. He won that fight. It remains the only time the award has honoured an entire the Rishi Ganga tumbles down from the same glacier into the Alaknanda, one of the Ganga's main tributaries. Local communities depend on this meltwater for crops, livestock and daily life. There are no warning signs on the trails. Trekkers pass over the ancient slip point. Few know a Cold War relic lies somewhere like Dr Milap Chand Sharma say the Himalayas do not hide things forever. Unlike deserts, glaciers shift and flow downhill. As the ice melts under climate pressure, debris buried for decades can surface. The device's stainless steel casing was designed to resist corrosion — but the mountain's force is Menon, the only surviving scientist from the 1978 inquiry, later urged, 'Someone in the government should look into it.'Some porters who helped carry the generator fell ill later. Some died young. No direct link was ever proven. But the fear lingers in local monitoring ever began. Villagers living beneath the snowfield drink glacier runoff every day. The mountains remain quiet. But as glaciers shrink and rivers swell, the Cold War's buried spy could still return — carried by the holy river that so many call life never stopped warning about Everest's commercial circus. He told the BBC, 'Climbing Everest looks like a big joke today. It absolutely does not resemble the old days when there were adventures, challenges and exploration.'After retiring in 1974, he wrote books, mentored young climbers, and pushed mountaineering into schools. He shaped the Indo-Tibetan Border Police into a mountain lived through Partition's pain, Everest's storms and a Cold War secret. Yet he left this simple line behind: 'Leadership is not about standing on top; it is about taking others there.'Captain Kohli's peaks still stand. So does the secret he left behind. Some secrets, though, are buried deeper than any summit.(With inputs from TOI)

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store