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Friday 23 August 2019

Miasma.



(L-R) - Mr. Rishi Kapal launches his book with Mr. Ram Kamal Mukherjee, India’s first Power Brand Film Journalist, Filmmaker & Biographer, Mr. Sudhanshu Vats, MD and CEO of Viacom 18, and Mr. Siddhath Bhardwaj, CMO and National Sales Head, UFO Moviez India Limited.

Rishi Kapal, the ex interim MD and VP of Sony Mobile turned author and performance coach, has launched his latest fictional thriller titled ‘MIASMA’. The book was launched at Title Waves, Bandra West, in the presence of the finest dignitaries in the industry : Mr. Sudhanshu Vats, MD and CEO of Viacom 18, Mr. Siddhath Bhardwaj, CMO and National Sales Head, UFO Moviez India Limited and Mr. Ram Kamal Mukherjee, India’s first Power Brand Film Journalist, Filmmaker & Biographer
Commenting on the Launch, Mr. Rishi Kapal said, “I am thrilled to put forward my fictional piece of writing and present it in front of you all. I hope that the media and entertainment industry welcomes to new and fresh content. We also have a very intelligent audience today who are living proof for us to know that content is king. I would like to thank Mr. Sudhanshu, Mr. Ram and Mr. Siddharth who stand strong by my side on such an important day life. With bated breath, I eagerly look forward to all the reviews and feedback about my book. The surprise to reveal here is that , there will be a sequel to this book whose manuscript is being penned by me as of now.”
Mr. Siddharth Bhardwaj commented, “Miasma is more than just a story, it takes you through an experience just like at the movies. You need to have the power to visualize what you read, and the book takes you through just that. Miasma is the most explosive thriller you can read. It’s edgy and simply unputdownable. The high-octane, pulse-racing style of writing makes you experience the story almost real time. With its unexpected turn of events, you may think the climax is near, but then it becomes elusive. I would be rating this as a screenplay-worthy novel from Rishi and can’t wait for him to release the sequel.


Mr. Ram Kamal said, “Whenever you read a book, it should keep you hooked. Thriller is such a genre, it keeps you gripping and you just can’t stop reading it. The curiosity keeps you going all the way till the end. Miasma does just that. Rishi's latest book promises some chills and thrills. For those who want to be glued to a thrilling book over the weekend, do grab a copy of Miasma. I would like to congratulate Rishi on this commendable achievement, and would like to wish him all the best for his successful future endeavours as well.”
Mind games are tough to win. They are deep and dark. Miasma, a requital thriller, is a journey of planning, ruthless execution and a thriller you won't put down before reading end to end.


Nirbhay, a self-made, highly successful consulting professional lives in a lavish villa on an island in the Maldives. Everything is perfect until he starts to have near death episodes. Luckily for Nirbhay, his best friend is a doctor who saves him from disasters well in time. Before Nirbhay realizes it, the ordinary things os use in his life turn into weapons, inflicting psychological and physical harm. What is happening? Why and how did Nirbhay’s blessed life turn into a curse?
Does Nirbhay’s have a genuine medical issue? Or is there something much more evil and sinister unfolding in Nirbhay’s life?
What does the future have in store for Nirbhay? Has something in his past come back as a haunting?
Read it to live it, to believe it.


About the Author (Rishi Kapal):
A Stanford LEAD alumni, 47-year-old, Rishi is a corporate professional turned author, startups specialist and academician. This is his first fiction novel, having earlier written two books, one each for higher education and management domains. Rishi derives inspiration from life’s experiences of losses and the hardships faced when young. Through this book, Rishi aims to bring out a narrative that will keep the readers craving for more.
Rishi’s earlier works have been praised by Ronnie Screwvala and Sachin Bhatia, co-founder of MakeMyTrip, amongst many other well-wishers. As a person, Rishi is best known for being witty, assertive and impactful. After pursuing a degree in engineering, law and dual degrees in management, Rishi worked in leadership positions with many Fortune 500 companies for two decades. Later he pivoted into a forward-integrated career of coaching, teaching and writing. He lives in Pune and tries to make each day count.

Wednesday 31 July 2019

Guru Sutra.

"The world of Guruism has been shrouded in secrecy for centuries. For the first time ever, a guru has revealed the secrets governing this spiritual realm. The fourth book in the Hingori Sutras series of spiritual books, Guru Sutra – The Guru who won’t keep Spiritual Secrets, lays out the protocol governing the sacred relationship between a siddh (realised) Guru and his shishya (disciple). It outlines the qualities and behaviour of a realised spiritual master while cautioning against pretenders to the title of 'Guru'. It provides a roadmap to guide the disciple in the tricky, obstacle-prone, snakes and ladders game of spiritual evolution.
Guru Sutra is meant for those who intend to traverse the steep path of self-evolution en route to discovering the divinity within. Seeped in relevance, this first of its kind analyses, decodes the spiritual principles of faith, surrender, loyalty, humility and even spiritual greed, vanity, envy and attacks.
Infused with time-tested wisdom, anecdotes and real-life examples, the concepts in the book are simple to grasp. Reading it will make you take a hard look at yourself and whom you call your spiritual mentor. Parallels to a mentor-mentee relationship in today’s corporate environment can be culled from several sections of this masterpiece.
According to Hingori, author of this book, In today’s world, a combination of poor health, financial stress and relationship issues keep people bound to lower levels of consciousness, impairing their natural ability to evolve. True mentors untainted by the arc of commercialism are rare to find. Guru Sutra is a tool and guidebook for those seeking experienced and accomplished mentors/coaches to help them navigate the turbulent manifestations of material life while acquainting them gradually with their inner divinity.”

The unveiling of this book was ceremonialised by the fusion of poetry and dance in the ‘Ballad of Guru Sutra.’ A troupe of illustrious Kathak dancers led by Jonaki Raghavan and Girish Dalvi brought the concepts of the book to life, at a gathering of India’s illustrious book retailers".


Thursday 28 March 2019

THE TRANSFORMATIVE CONSTITUTION

A new way of reading the Constitution as India approaches the seventieth anniversary of its adoption

The Constitution of India embodies a moment of profound transformation—one in which the subjects of an alien, colonial regime became the free citizens of a republic. Yet, this is the story of constitutions the world over. The Indian Constitution was, however, transformative in a second sense as well: it sought a thorough reconstruction of State and society itself.
The Transformative Constitution is an attempt to understand—and to give primacy to—this original transformative vision of the Constitution. Gautam Bhatia interprets India’s founding document in a way which is faithful to its text, structure, and history, and above all to its overarching commitment to political and social transformation.
He picks out nine cases—and analyses their judgements in detail in the context of seven decades’ worth of jurisprudence—to show how they advance the core principles of equality, fraternity, and liberty enshrined in it. This is a treatise that presents a new way of reading the Constitution as India approaches the seventieth anniversary of its adoption.

Contemporary Relevance of the book:
In September 2018, in the space of a little over three weeks, the Supreme Court handed down four judgments that sent tremors through the country's legal, political, social, and cultural landscape. Same-sex relations were decriminalised. Adultery were decriminalised. The Sabarimala Temple's ban on the entry of women between the ages of 10 and 50 was struck down as unconstitutional. And Aadhaar - the government's national biometric identification programme - was upheld while its use was significantly curtailed. Six months later, the impact of these judgments is still only beginning to be felt, demonstrating once again the importance of the judiciary - as an institution - in India's public life.
Each of these judgments grappled with fundamental questions about what the Indian Constitution is about. Do the constitutional guarantees of equality and equal protection prohibit the government from discriminating on the basis of sexual orientation? Is the criminalisation of adultery based upon outmoded notions of sexual subordination and women's lack of sexual agency? How does the Constitution navigate the complex terrain where the beliefs or traditions of religious groups clash with the desires of some of their members to express their faith? And what do the rights to liberty, privacy, and equality have to say about the pervasive adoption of centralised biometric technology in multiple spheres of society? As a marker of just how complex the questions were, two of the four judgments returned split verdicts, with judges penning fierce and eloquent dissents.
September 2018 reminded us of how the Constitution is indispensable to our lives as citizens of the Republic. The objective of The Transformative Constitution is to articulate a roadmap towards understanding what the founding document has to say about these fundamental moral and social questions of the day. By locating the Constitution within a long, historical tradition of Indian thought dealing with issues around rights, the individual, communities, and the State, The Transformative Constitution advances a vision of the document organised around the three words of the Preamble - liberty, equality, and fraternity - and argues that the purpose of our Constitution was not just to protect the individual against State power, but to undertake a thorough reconstruction of both State and society.  

Gautam Bhatia graduated from the National Law School of India University in 2011. He read for the BCL and the MPhil at the University of Oxford (on a Rhodes scholarship), and the LLM at Yale Law School. He practiced law for four years in New Delhi, was visiting faculty at various Law Schools, and is presently reading for a D.Phil in Law at the University of Oxford. He has been part of legal teams involved in contemporary constitutional cases, such as the right to privacy case, the Section 377 challenge, and the Aadhaar challenge.

Silicon States

The Power and Politics Of Big Tech And What It Means For Our Future

A Bracing Look at How Google, Apple, Amazon, Facebook, And Other Silicon Valley Power Players Are Using Their Influence Across the Globe to Encroach Upon Our Civil Landscape
In an era when faith in government and its institutions is quickly eroding, the businesses of Silicon Valley are stepping in to fill the gap. With outsize supplies of cash, talent, and ambition, a small group of corporations has been gradually seizing leadership—and consumer confidence— around the world.
In Silicon States, renowned futurist and celebrated international think-tank leader Lucie Greene offers an unparalleled look at the players, promises, and potential problems of Big Tech. Through interviews with corporate leaders, influential venture capitalists, scholars, journalists, activists, and more, Greene explores the tension inherent in Silicon Valley’s global influence. If these companies can invent a social network, how might they soon transform our political and health-care systems? If they can revolutionize the cell phone, what might they do for space travel, education, or the housing market? As Silicon Valley faces increased scrutiny over its mistreatment of women, cultural shortcomings, and its role in widespread Russian interference in the elections of other countries, we are learning where its interests truly lie, and about the great power these companies wield over an unsuspecting citizenry.
While the promise of technology is seductive, it is important to understand these corporations’ possible impacts on our political and socioeconomic institutions. Greene emphasizes that before we hand our future over to a rarefied group of companies, we should examine the world they might build and confront its benefits, prejudices, and inherent flaws. Silicon States pushes us to ask if, ultimately, this is the future we really want.
Lucie Greene is the worldwide director of The Innovation Group, J. Walter Thompson’s in-house creative think tank for the future. The Innovation Group’s work is frequently cited in publications including The New York Times, Bloomberg Businessweek, The Guardian, WWD, USA Today, and The Times (London). She is a thought leadership columnist for Campaign, writes for the Financial Times on futures, and has spoken at conferences including TNW, WWD Digital Forum, SXSW, Web Summit, Cosmoprof, and Ad Week, discussing future trends across multiple lifestyle sectors. She has appeared on BBC, Fox News, and Bloomberg TV as an expert on the future.

KHOONI VAISAKHI

A Survivor’s Account of the Jallianwala Bagh Massacre

The great Punjabi writer Nanak Singh was present at Jallianwala Bagh on 13 April 1919 and twenty-two years old at the time. As the British troops opened fire on the unarmed gathering protesting against the Rowlatt Act, killing hundreds, Nanak Singh fainted and his unconscious body was piled up among the corpses. After going through the traumatic experience, he proceeded to write Khooni Vaisakhi, a long poem that narrates the political events in the run up to the massacre and its immediate aftermath. The poem was a scathing critique of the British Raj and was banned soon after its publication in May 1920.
After sixty long years, the poem was rediscovered; it has now been translated into English by the author’s grandson, Navdeep Suri, for the first time. Featuring the poem in translation and in original, the bilingual edition is accompanied by essays by Navdeep Suri, H.S. Bhatia and by Justin Rowlatt, whose great-grandfather, Sir Sydney Arthur Taylor Rowlatt, who drafted the Rowlatt Act.
Nanak Singh (1897-1971) is widely regarded as the father of the Punjabi novel. With little formal education beyond the fourth grade, he wrote an astounding fifty-nine books and recieved the Sahitya Akademi Award in 1962.
Navdeep Suri is an Indian diplomat who is currently India’s Ambassador to the UAE. He has translated into English the classic Punjabi novels Pavitra Paapi and Adh Kidhiya Phool written by his grandfather.