Showing posts with label : Indira Gandhi in Sikkim. Show all posts
Showing posts with label : Indira Gandhi in Sikkim. Show all posts

Thursday, September 16, 2010

Ray’s Sikkim film sees light of day after 29 years



Gangtok:The Ministry of External Affairs (MEA) recently lifted the ban on Satyajit Ray’s documentary film, Sikkim (1971). Though official sources in the MEA confirm the lifting of the ban on public screening of the film, nobody is willing to go on record. The 60-minute documentary was lying in cold storage after its screening was banned by the government since Sikkim was not officially merged with the Union of India by then.

The two prints of the film are in the US and the British Film Institute. It is believed that the film is a personal favourite of Richard Attenborough, and he made it available for the Academy of Motion Pictures, Arts and Sciences in 2003 to preserve and restore the documentary.

The film will be made available for public screening through the Ministry of Information and Broadcasting. However, official sources in the ministry say they are not aware of any such developments.

The film was a dream project of the last Chogyal of Sikkim, Palden Thondup Namgyal, who came to power in 1965 and commissioned the documentary as a means to promote tourism. “His wife, Hope Cooke, was a great fan of my father. She had recommended my father to the king, who asked him to make a documentary on the region,” recalls Ray’s son and filmmaker Sandip Ray, who was 17 at the time of the shooting. During the shooting, Ray stayed at the royal palace in Gangtok.

Wednesday, July 28, 2010

Sikkim Officer who quit IAS to tour India dies

GANGTOK (SIKKIM) : P G Tenzing, the Kerala-cadre IAS officer who quit his job to go on a 25,320-km motorcycle ride across India, died of cancer in his hometown Gangtok on Monday. He was 46.Tenzing studied at Delhi University. He was in the Kerala cadre of the Indian Administrative Service for twenty years. His colleagues said of him, as he embarked on his adventures: 'Philosopher, eccentric, drinking companion, fitness freak, party animal, secret workaholic, visiting professor, reluctant officer, successful hotelier and great friend of


Tenzing, who joined the civil service at the age of 22, opted for voluntary retirement in 2007. The former higher education secretary of Kerala then bought a green 350 cc Enfield Thunderbird, strapped on it a rucksack that contained three pairs of clothes, a few thousand rupees, an ID and ATM cards, and went on a nine-month road trip.

On what made him quit the IAS, Tenzing had said, "I am following my heart. I was tired working under bosses who ought to have been shooed and I had to 'Sir' them."
In his travelogue Don't Ask Any Old Bloke for Directions, published by Penguin last year, Tenzing was more eloquent. "I had always wanted to travel at random and with only myself for company," he wrote. "Watching my hair grow without combing it. Watching the sunrise and sunset from sea level and from the heights of the Himalayas. Getting my face burnt and my toes wet."


Kickstarting what he called his "karmic journey" from Thiruvananthapuram, Tenzing rode across states, making quick roadside friends, observing the quirks and quiddities of people and places and revisiting the cities he had worked in in the past.




His former colleagues in Kerala remember him as an honest officer, sympathetic towards anyone in need. Recalls Chief Minister's Principal Secretary Sheela Thomas: "Tenzing was a fun-loving person. Even when he was engaged in serious matters, he projected a jovial face." She said his colleagues tried to dissuade him from quitting, but Tenzing thought 20 years in service were more than enough.



Prita Maitra, who was an editor at Penguin India, recalls her introduction to the bureaucrat-turned-adventurer and how the book came about: "In 2007, a journalist friend told me about this amazing person who had quit the IAS and was undertaking a motorbike trip all around the country to acquaint himself with places he hadn't seen. Naturally, there was a book there and less than a year after the decision to write it, he served up this perfectly delightful account of his experiences. He was a person with a great sense of humour and he was extraordinarily generous and sensitive. His book reflects all that. His description of travelling around his home state, Sikkim, was the most moving."



The 1986-batch IAS officer had held several key posts in IT, Education, Fisheries and Transport in Kerala. Tenzing had played a crucial role in inking the Smart City project with Dubai-based TECOM. Tenzing is survived by wife Ambica, a Sikkim-cadre Civil  Service officer, and two daughters.

Sunday, November 01, 2009

Rashtriya Sankalp Diwas observed in Sikkim



(photo: SikkimExpress)
GANGTOK, November1: The State Government observed ‘Rashtriya Sankalp Diwas’ with full solemnity joining the rest of the nation today to commemorate the death anniversary of late Prime Minister Indira Gandhi.


A solemn function was held here at Chintan which was attended by Governor BP Singh, Chief Minister Pawan Chamling, legislatures and a host of senior government officials.

The function started with the rendering of patriotic songs by students from TNHSS and Middle Camp school.

In his address, the Governor pointed out that the late Prime Minister had a special place in her heart for Sikkim and she had visited Sikkim on three occasions in 1952, 1956 and 1958. She was very fond of Sikkim, said the Governor.

The Chief Minister while remembering Indira Gandhi as a stalwart of the country urged upon the students to follow the path of positive thinking. He said that violence is a product of hatred and the hate feelings can be done away only through positive thoughts.

Chamling called upon the students to have a competitive streak in their studies to overcome challenges of future. He also appealed the students to value the gift of peace and tranquility of Sikkim. We all should ensure that this peace is preserved through our dedication and determination to create a new progressive State of Sikkim, he said

Saturday, October 31, 2009