Thursday 8 August 2019

10 Rare Pictures Of Bishwa Kobi Rabindranath Tagore That You Might Not Have Seen Before

August 08, 2019 0
Rabindranath Tagore
Rabindranath Tagore is a name that spells virtuoso. The incomparable Indian scholar, his compositions are convincing, intriguing, and moving, that won him the Nobel prize in Writing in 1913. As the world praises the 155th birth commemoration of the visionary artist and thinker, likewise hailed as Bishwa Kobi, here are 10 of his uncommon photos.

1. Rabindranath Tagore with Jawaharlal Nehru at the Sylvan retreat of the writer in Bolpur on November 4, 1936.
Rabindranath Tagore

2. Mahatma Gandhi visited Shantiniketan to respect his promise of meeting Rabindranath Tagore every year. This image is from February 20, 1940. It was Tagore who gave the title of Mahatma to Gandhi.
Rabindranath Tagore

3. Disclosed on December 25th, 1932, this representation of Tagore was taken by S.P. Bhide when the writer last visited Poona.
Rabindranath Tagore

4. Tagore unwinding in his bed at a railroad compartment in Howrah station. This image was distributed on November 22, 1940.
Rabindranath Tagore

5. An uncommon photo of the three legends, Sir Maurice Gwyer, Rabindranath Tagore, and Sarvepalli Radhakrishnan, turning out from Sinha Sadan, Shantiniketan after the Oxford College Assembly on August 7, 1940.
Rabindranath Tagore

6. This image is from a gathering given by Rabindranath Tagore to Mahatma Gandhi and Kasturba, at Shantiniketan, February 20, 1940.
Rabindranath Tagore

7. Rabindranath Tagore photographed with a group throughout his tour of the West in 1921.
Rabindranath Tagore

8. Blind American author and labour rights lobbyist Helen Keller welcomes Rabindranath Tagore at a concert in New York in 1930.
Rabindranath Tagore

9. Tagore at the All-People's reception intern in his honour, at 99, Gower-street, London. This picture dates back to Feb 15, 1931.
Rabindranath Tagore

10. Rabindranath Tagore met Albert Einstein at his house in Caputh when he went to Berlin. This image was reclaimed in August 24, 1930.
Rabindranath Tagore

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Wednesday 7 August 2019

Ethiopia Sets Tree-Planting Record With 353 Million Seedlings In Under 12 Hours

August 07, 2019 0
"Besides planting trees, besides coming along to try and do one thing smart for our country, it had been a national unity. Everywhere, everybody was doing it - starting from very young age to the older age."
Amir Aman/Twitter
As countries around the world try to fight back against climate change, Ethiopia has just launched a campaign that certainly sets them apart from the pack. As part of the country’s Green Legacy initiative, Ethiopians planted a whopping 353 million tree seedlings nationwide in just 12 hours last week, which is believed to be a world record. In Ethiopia, millions of people across the country took part in the tree-planting efforts that far exceeded the initial goal of 200 million. “I was very sure that I don’t want to miss out, and I want to put my legacy as well on the ground,” Feben Tamrat, who planted her seedling near the African Union headquarters in Addis Ababa, told NPR. “Besides planting trees, besides coming together to do something good for our country, it was a national unity.
@PMEthiopia/Twitter
Ethiopia Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed plants a tree seedling during the country’s green campaign launch.

Everywhere, everyone was doing it – starting from very young age to the older age.” Even the country’s top officials got down and dirty during its race to re-forest before taking to Twitter to show off some of the newly-planted trees. “#GreenLegacy is a vision for the next generation. “It is making a diagram for them and demonstrating to them the way,” tweeted Ethiopian Minister of Wellbeing Amir Aman.” But these 350 million trees were just the beginning. According to his Twitter, the prime minister has kept up his promise to maintain the Green Legacy initiative with more communal planting in the days following the successful launch. Recently, he was joined by former president of Liberia Ellen Johnson Sirleaf to plant more seedlings around his administration’s compounds. The Ethiopian government plans to continue its successful tree-planting campaign with an even bigger goal in mind: They hope to plant a total of 4 billion trees before the end of the rainy season in October. In addition, more than 20 African nations have joined efforts to reforest and rehabilitate 247 million acres of land by 2030 under the African Forest Landscape Restoration Initiative. Being part of the initiative shows the Ethiopian government’s commitment to addressing the country’s growing environmental woes. The country’s forests have shrunken down to the point that they make up only four percent of its land, down from roughly one-third about a century ago. And according to environmental experts, large replanting campaigns are our best bet to reduce carbon gas emissions. “The amount of carbon that we will restore if we tend to plant 1.1 trillion trees, or a minimum of permitthose trees to grow, would be method over ensuingbest global climate change resolution,” climate change ecologist Tom Crowther told CNN.
@PMEthiopia/Twitter
Millions of Ethiopians broke the world record after planting 353 million seedlings in below 12 hours.
And it's like mass tree planting might be future environmental trend. In 2017, India launched its own mass tree-planting campaign that set the initial record once 1.5 million volunteers planted 66 million trees in 12 hours. In Asian country, home to two of the foremost polluted cities in the world, new property owners are lawfully required to plant a minimum of 2 trees.

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