Jain Agri Park-Jain Hills,Jalgaon Maharashtra ( India)
PATNA: The famous Ajanta caves in Maharashtra are worth a visit, but a few kilometres away, there's a fascinating quiet place called Jalgaon.
Here, located in a property called the Jain Hills, is a phenomenon that
has already found echoes in distant north Bihar. But first, a story:
It was 1985. A farsighted industrialist wanted to set up a factory to
manufacture resin, the raw material for PVC pipes. It was the 'licence
raj'. So he needed a licence. The file arrived in New Delhi. The project
was accepted. All it needed
was one crucial
signature, that of the minister. The minister called the businessman to
Delhi to discuss the deal. The 'cost' of the signature was 5 crore
rupees.
The man said that all his life he had accomplished everything on merit, and he had never paid a single rupee
as bribe. He told the minister that if there was merit in the proposal,
there was no reason to pay the bribe. The signature never went on the
file. Fifteen days later, a licence was granted to a competitor.
This Gandhian
industrialist, now chairperson of the largest irrigation systems
manufacturing group in the country, that has gifted the world one of the
most amazing tributes to the Mahatma, the first-ever dedicated multimedia Museum named 'Gandhi Teerth'.
A walk through the museum takes about three hours. On entry, the
visitor is handed an electronic gadget with a set of headphones. The
guest can choose to receive the narration in Hindi or English.
In the first gallery, 'Wants and Needs', the guest is confronted with a
touch-screen and asked to make an 'avatar' of himself - to choose the
house, clothes, and lifestyle he wants from a set of visuals. The next
exhibit shows his face (recorded by the camera) and along with it his
lifestyle and the how 'cost-effective' it is for Mother Earth. This is
the first of eleven stages of the 'Gandhi Pilgrimage': the childhood,
influences, student life, journey to England, then India, then South
Africa, then the return to India and Champaran and so on. Each gallery
has surprises, experiences and new learning opportunities.
Mahatma Gandhi's school leaving results, for instance, is an eye opener.
He didn't even make it to forty percent! Paintings, sculptures,
replicas of lifestyle items, actual artefacts used by Gandhi, and
audio-visual magic that transports you to the sights and sounds of the
late 19th and early 20th century: it's an experience to remember and
cherish.
But that's not all. Before you leave, witness the work
being done across India by different 'Gandhians in action', people using
their skills and knowledge to make India's villages work.
Gandhi Research Foundation, founded by Padma Shri Bhavarlal Jain, (the
industrialist in the story) is an international academic and research
organization that doesn't limit itself to armchair philosophy. It is
actively involved in helping surrounding villages grow organic crops,
adopt waterharvesting, improve the condition of their schools, and
aspire to a better economic status through small income generation
measures that will be linked to viable marketing strategies.
In
Bihar, Bhavarlal Jain, through the Gandhi Research Foundation, has
offered technical support to the Gandhi Shodh Sansthan in a sleepy
undiscovered corner of West Champaran. Every week, scores of
schoolchildren from neighbouring schools go to this ordinary looking
building to experience Gandhiji and admire replicas and material made
possible by the GRF. They also learn to spin thread on a charkha. This
is not all.
Several young people between the ages of 21 and 32
are already making their way to Bhitiharwa. They are educated,
articulate achievers from across India, with one vision: to develop an
environment friendly, humane, responsible and Gandhian approach to rural
development in one of Bihar's most backward districts.
Mahatma Gandhi,
on 20 November 1917, had established his second basic school at
Bhitiharwa. His development work was based on education, sanitation, and
health. In his autobiography, he expressed his regret that his work in
Champaran was left unfinished, because of the lack of committed local
volunteers. It is just possible, that 95 years on, the youngsters of Bihar will rise to the occasion and by 2017, Champaran will show signs of a vibrant 'gram swaraj'.
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