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August 15, 2007

Politics Is the New Star of India’s Classrooms

The New York Times has published a story on open debates in Indian schools about politics. Kanti Bajpai is quoted discussing the new curriculum.

Kanti Bajpai, an adviser to the world politics text, described the new curriculum as “forcing” students “to look at what’s going on and why.” Mr. Bajpai, the headmaster of an exclusive boarding school in northern Dehradun town, said, “If you’re serious about active citizenship, you’ve got to do that.”

August 10, 2007

Rose Bowl update

Rose Bowl Publication Subscription update as on August 10, 2007. Download file

August 5, 2007

DSOBS Memorandum of Association online

The DSOBS Memorandum of Association has been published among the Resources links on the lower left hand corner of the Dosco.org home page below the Flickr photographs.

Jaipur House Refurbishment Cocktails in Delhi

Download a copy of the invitation for the Jaipur House Refurbishment Plan cocktails. The event will be held on Friday, August 10th 2007 at the India Habitat Center. Be sure to tell other Jaipur House doscos about the event too.

August 2, 2007

Backwoods Babus - Have doscos lost interest?

civil_servants.jpgOutlook Magazine is reporting that fewer people from the metros are being admitted into the IAS. In fact, less than 2 in 10 entrants were from a metro or a state capital in '04 and one out of four are kids of fathers who have not studied beyond matriculation. It represents a changing of the guard and probably better reflects the composition of India as a whole. But are fewer doscos applying the IAS and the IFS? Anecdotally, it certainly appears so.

Why is this the case? Is it because we feel there are better paying jobs awaiting us abroad? Or because we are fed up with the the political system? Every few years, we discuss whether doscos are doing enough for the country. With fewer choosing government service, just as fewer people from the metros are too, what place will Doon have in the shaping of India two decades from now?

The Deviant Diplomat - Sandeep Kumar

It was the mid 1980s when the trend of abandoning small towns for the big bad world of city lights hadn't quite caught fire. Certainly the offspring of affluent business families in his town rarely left the roost. But even then Sandeep Kumar's feet were itching. "It's always been this love of traveling, languages, interacting with new cultures, meeting people." This article was originally published in Little Indiasandeep.jpg

So after a very English upbringing at the prestigious Doon School, Kumar left his town of Najibabad in Western Uttar Pradesh to join the Indian Foreign Service and see the world. 22 years later Kumar is still stepping out of the box.

A diplomatic posting in Afghanistan is not everyone's cup of tea. The country has rudimentary services; cities, villages and families have been destroyed by 30 years of war. There are pitched battles for territorial control in South Afghanistan and elsewhere, including the capital city of Kabul, where bombs, suicide and rocket attacks are commonplace.

In this city most foreigners live almost an embattled existence. Behind tall walls and barbed wire, they travel from one "secure location" to another. Surrounded by a large security apparatus that prevents them from taking public transport, walking, shopping and eating in local restaurants, most complete their postings in Afghanistan with limited contact with Afghans and Afghanistan. Life is lived in an artificial expat bubble that separates foreigners from Afghans, with the real and normal life experienced during frequent rest and recuperation breaks outside the country.

In this peculiar milieu, Kumar stands out by his ability to lead a normal life.

A walk around his flat is a tell tale giveaway of his wide ranging interests. The walls are covered by his oil paintings, the difference in colors and styles hreflecting the progression of his travels, from the rich reds and yellows of Cape Town to the muted blues and browns of Afghanistan's landscape. Musical instruments are strewn around. In a corner is his gym equipment, the essential tools of a junkie, a man who by his own confession, is addicted to the gym.

He is working on a book, Musings from Afghanistan, in which he jots down his impressions of Afghanistan, the dust, the smells and tastes of the country, the human interactions, the concerns about the rebuilding of the nation.

Before Cape he was in Hong Kong, Paris, Cambridge and Vietnam. In each place Kumar managed to claim a little bit of the country through his eclectic interests. In Vietnam he joined the Vietnamese symphony orchestra, singing Vietnamese songs, traveling and giving performances. "When we returned home there would be flowers at our doorsteps from appreciative listeners." In Afghanistan Kumar misses his Sitar, something he had to leave behind because of the difficulties of transporting it.

When he arrived here Kumar was fearful of missing out on his gym regimen as well. But he soon found his niche. Not in the "international only" gyms frequented by the denizens of UN and other international organizations, but in an Afghan-only gym.

He writes in his diary:"Hundred metres from my place: mostly young guys in trendy tracksuits, no women. I am the only foreigner, but I am not complaining as I get right of first use on the machines (traditional Afghan hospitality). However I have to constantly watch out for the bulky weights, some of which are beautifully carved out of old vehicle tyres, steel cans and discarded weapons that get swung around wildly in all directions... At times there is no electricity/fuel, in the generator, all movements are conducted in gaslight and although it is admittedly rather risky, I prefer to attribute romantic overtones to the situation: where else in the world does one get to gym by candlelight?"

Now Kumar's relationship with the gym regulars is one of friends. "They call up saying we want to come and cook pizza at your place." The crowning glory was the Mr Afghanistan body building competition last year when Kumar cast aside the usual diplomatic reticence to take part, preparing for a month on a strict diet. Finally, in the competition solely attended by Afghans, Kumar took his place in the spotlight to preen and flex his muscles cheered on by a wildly enthusiastic crowd.

At the Indian embassy in Afghanistan, Kumar is a minister, the senior most diplomat after the ambassador. He administers India's large aid program to Afghanistan, a complex and politically sensitive task, meeting with ministers, officials and visiting around the country.

But Kumar makes sure he makes time for painting. In Cape Town he picked up his brush after a gap of 10 year inspired by the amazing landscape. In Afghanistan the inspiration is Afghan women. Canvas after canvas is filled with paintings of women in blue burkhas. For Kumar the most amazing thing about the women is their strength. His favorite painting based on a picture that of a woman in a burkha her hand outstretched holding a gun, a policewoman from Kandahar practicing her shooting skills, a woman he was to meet later on.

He muses in his diary: "There are five paintings, hreflecting the situation of women at a cross roads of life, against stark backdrops... I can feel their collective piercing gaze slicing through me.. the muse yields, the hear quivers, the sparks solder. The painter becomes the painting."

Along with other Afghan men he has learnt to look out for the telltale signs under the burkha, the paint on the toe nails, the footwear that reveals more about the personality of the wearer. "I try to get my stare to ducs on the feet of the lady in blue to see what color toe nails she apprents to her torso, but am disappointed by her all-black non-revealing footwear...."

Kumar's desire to partake of Afghan life fully takes him to Afghan homes, streets, places in the city normally avoided by expats and even Afghan orphanages. A friend Hameed is an Afghan government interpreter who gave up his own academic ambitions to put his brother through college and support his family. Hameed is thrilled when Kumar decided to perform namaz. Wahid has a medical degree, but cannot practice medicine, because of the inadequate salaries of doctor in Afghanistan. Kumar becomes involved in negotiations for Wahid's marriage, even as he decries Wahid's double standards towards women in his diary.

"In his own way he has been illegally 'dating' several young girls as well, but wouldn't marry them. 'If a girl can date another man before marriage, then she is not wife material' he says simply. 'And what about the man who leads them on?' I am unable to ward off the aggression and sarcasm that has crept into my voice. But he just passes that off with a disarming shrug."

Kumar learns that the relatively poorer border province of Paktika apparently has the highest bride price, ranging from $10-12,000. Why he wonders later, are women not treated better if they are so expensive?

Kumar's book reveals a great deal about him. Written with a painful honesty, the book records every thought, his emotions, struggles, joys and lows with an almost embarrassing frankness. He struggles with his own frustrations when the problems of living in Kabul and the country get too much for him. In doing so, it also provides a glimpse of Afghanistan. Not the Afghanistan of academic tomes and sensational stories, but the ordinariness of living life in an extraordinary land.

Lifetime ownership of Chand Bagh

Unfortunately, once we leave Doon, us Doscos do not have lifetime ownership of school! As the school is at pains to point out, no one is allowed to enter any of the boarding houses without express permission of the housemaster. This is a two decade old rule and while most doscos are respectful of it, some don't and cause unnecessary havoc. So next time you're visiting Doon and are interested in entering your old house, be sure to first knock on the housemaster's door first.

Shell - Hiring for a Marketing Manager

Nimai Swaroop (11-HA '96) is recruiting for a Campus Marketing Manager based in London. This person would be responsible for the recruitment marketing and attraction of graduate talent from UK and Ireland for Shell. The role is based in London.

ecruitng for a Campus Marketing Manager
based in London responsible for the recruitment marketing and
attraction of graduate talent from UK and Ire for Shell. The role
is based in shell centre near the london eye and reports into
myself. The candidate should have 3-5 years broad marketing
experience, knowledge and experience dealing with agencies, working
across multiple functions and experience in project management.

If any of you know of anyone who may be interested then do contact
me. I have attached the Job description below, the salary is approx
£35k plus benefits, exact details and benefits can be

August 1, 2007

Jaipur House Fundraising Event - Delhi


Find more photos like this on The Dosco Network
Jaipur House doscos are invited to a special fundraising event on Friday, August 10th, 2007 at the India Habitat Centre, Delhi. This event is to raise money for the Jaipur House reconstruction project. All Jaipur house doscos are invited to attend. Entrance is free of charge. Invite other Jaipur House doscos to attend this important event. The event will be followed by others in later months as the fundraising efforts pick up steam.

ABN AMRO Bank is sponsoring the event.

Talent Burst is hiring - Looking for a job?

TalentBurst is a mid-sized IT consulting and staff augmentation firm based in Natick, MA (USA)with several large Fortune 500 clients. They are looking to hire a Service Delivery Specialist, who will be located at their corporate offices in Natick, MA and will support customers like VISA USA, Symantec, EDS, Novell, MasterCard, The Home Depot, EMC, BlueCross BlueShield and Metavante. Doscos Bharat Talwar (452-HA '93) and Deep Deshpande (500-HA '94) are two of its founders.

Varun Sharma (533-KB '01) at USC in California

After completing hi BE, Varun Sharma (533-KB '01) has been working with Infosys for two years now. He will now be joining the University of Southern California this fall to pursue a Masters in Computer Science. He is interested in hearing from any Doscos currently studying at USC or are in and around California.





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