February 26, 2001 Issue


India Today, February 26

HUMAN GENOME
   

The Truth About Ourselves
The human genome sequence has been completed and shows some surprising findings. Despite having one-third less genes than estimated, human beings are still very complex. With access to disease genes, medicine and diagnostics will be revolutionised. However, this will also raise ethical questions on cloning and genetic privacy.

 
STATES
   

Hope In Hell
Four weeks after the earthquake, Gujarat is still coming to terms with the devastation. True grit is emerging from the rubble but it will be some time before lives are rebuilt. INDIA TODAY's teams went out across these death zones, capturing stories which record this renewal.

Simmer Time

 

 
BUSINESS
   

Profitable Loss
36 With over 90,000 employees opting for the VRS scheme, PSU banks are set to get over their problem of overstaffing. But is it going to make banks more competitive in this age of automation? Besides, it is also going to cost more than Rs 7,500 crore and will deprive the banks of skilled workers.

Paper Money

 

 
NEIGHBOURS
   

Spreading Terror
The attacks on Delhi's Red Fort,
the Srinagar airport and the city's police control room show the Lashkar-e-Toiba is increasingly catching the Indian security forces unawares-and emerging as the most daring terrorist group from Pakistan.

 

 
SPORTS
 

Face Off
It's David Vs Goliath as India play an Australian demolition squad at home. What makes the Aussies tick and how can India take them on?

Cricketwatch:
Ashley Mallett

 

 
CARE TODAY
  Mending Lives
The medical team sponsored by care today injected hope in quake- ravaged Gujarat-performing surgeries and tackling ailments.

 
OTHER STORIES
    Fifth Column:
Tavleen Singh
 
    Kautilya:
Jairam Ramesh
 
     
    Books  
    Music  
    The Arts: Jatin Das  
    Caplooks  
    Voices  
    Tremors  
    Confessional  
    Eyecatchers  
 



 
  Home  
 

OFFTRACK: BANGALORE, KARNATAKA

Healing Grounds

A mother's tribute to her spastic daughter is a unique garden

By Stephen David

SYLVAN OBSESSION: Priya Mascarenhas (right) knows Champa finds peace in the garden

As you approach Silverend-the 107-year-old British colonial bungalow on Cookson Road in Bangalore-you are greeted at the entrance by an 8-ft-high cactus, ginger lilies from Hawaii and heleconiums from Indonesia. Step inside and you come across almost a thousand pots with plants from all over the world, besides banana, mango, custard apple and other fruit-bearing trees. There's also a waterfall, a fountain, even a tiny bridge-it's almost as if you've stepped into the Garden of Eden.

It may not be the biblical retreat but it certainly is a nursery of love. For the prize-winning garden was inspired by love. It is a tale that began 27 years ago when Champa was born to Priya and Mohan Mascarenhas. A spastic child was a challenge Priya thought she would not be able to take on. But advice from a spiritual guru spurred her on. Then the love and labour that went into rearing her daughter found another outlet: a garden for the child.

To Champa, the garden is a loved sanctuary where she has discovered the curative power of plants and flowers. As a child Champa spent a lot of time in the garden, growing with it. Today, she knows all about cacti, the varied pots and plants and the waterfall, but is probably unaware that she has been the source of inspiration for it all. "She would just come by and help me as I prepared the manure or cropped leaves," says 55-year-old Priya, who spends two hours with Champa in the garden every day.

"When we moved to Silverend, which was my in-laws' home, there were just a few pots here and there. There was no garden," reveals Priya, of the time when they moved from Calcutta to Bangalore. It took Priya, then the marketing director with the Spencer International Hotels, some months to get used to the new home and a lifetime to create the garden. Married to Mohan, a professional engineer running an agency that represents several European engineering giants, Priya gets to travel all over the world frequently with her husband. Which is why she has a wide assortment of plants from around the globe.

The labour has not gone unnoticed. The garden has won several awards, among them the Best Maintained Building and Garden Award (for homes) from the Bangalore Urban Arts Commission (buac). Says buac Chairman M.A. Partha Sarathy: "Priya has given a lot of attention to trees, shrubs and flowers and is totally involved in the spread of garden culture in the city. We hope the award will reinvigorate the essence of aesthetics and environmental care in the city." Recently, Priya received the buac's Dawn of the Millennium Award and on Republic Day was given the Mysore Horticulture Society's Outstanding Garden award by Chief Minister S.M. Krishna.

Some of Priya's plants are now part of the garden at Raj Bhavan, home to Governor V.S. Ramadevi, who is herself a green thumb. Her prowess with plants has won her admiration. Says C. Gurumurthy of the Mysore Horticultural Society: "Priya spends a lot of time in her garden despite being a businesswoman in her own right."

"Greenery was my passion even as a child growing up in the lush green coffee estates," recalls Priya. Daughter of a rich coffee planter, she was born with the proverbial silver spoon in her mouth. A degree in arts from Mangalore's St Agnes College was followed by a specialised study of art at San Officio School of Art in Rome, Italy (she speaks fluent Italian). "I was blessed with good parents, good education and Christian values that have carried me through life. Besides, a very caring and supporting husband has helped me a great deal," says Priya, whose 32-year-old married daughter Nisha Rebello has also acquired the gardening bug from her mother.

But it is the younger daughter who has helped Priya "understand life better". "She and I find peace, quiet and togetherness in the garden. I am just a tool in God's hand and it's his creation that provides the best environment for therapy and care." Only, sometimes the tool is as important as the hand that creates beauty.

Top
 
 
 
Care Today
     METRO TODAY
 
   

MetroScape
Delhi On My Mind...
I'm very flattered to have this act of 'piracy' take place," laughs William Dalrymple, as extracts from his engrossing travelogue City of Djinns: A Year in Delhi were interpreted by photographer Agnes Montanari and art historian Nathalie Trouveroy in an exhibition.
more...

Looking Glass

Delhi: Restaurant

Delhi: Exhibition

Mumbai: Exhibition

 

 
    Web Exclusives
DESPATCHES
  Re-emergence of rivers, sweet water springs' there has been much geological speculation after the earthquake in the Rann of Kutch. INDIA TODAY'S Special Correspondent
Uday Mahurkar
weighs the possibilities and concludes it's early
days yet in
Despatches.

 

 
 
INTERVIEWS
 

"I was very much against the idea of India," says William Dalrymple, author, The City of Djinns: A Year in Delhi. In conversation with INDIA TODAY's Sonia Faleiro, he talks about his old girlfriend, Delhi and his "enormously exciting" next book, The White Moghuls in Interviews.

 

 

 

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