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Entries categorized as ‘Writing’

The Wicked Dragon of Pelmel

July 23, 2009 · 6 Comments

Aditi Raychoudhury. Forest Fire. 2009. Adobe Illustrator CS.

Aditi Raychoudhury. Forest Fire. 2009. Adobe Illustrator CS.

Aditi Raychoudhury. Mother Owl. 2009. Adobe Illustrator CS.

Aditi Raychoudhury. Mother Owl. 2009. Adobe Illustrator CS.

“Whoo hooo, whoo hoooooo,
Has lost his grace utter-ly?
What can I do?
About this hullabaloo -
It wakes my chicks up early!

Aditi Raychoudhury. The Wicked Dragon of Pelmel. 2009. Adobe Illustrator CS.

Aditi Raychoudhury. The Wicked Dragon of Pelmel. 2009. Adobe Illustrator CS.

There was a wicked dragon

And so wicked was he..

That every night
When all slept tight

He went on a burning spree..

(Excerpt from The Wicked Dragon of Pelmel by Aditi Raychoudhury)

Synopsis:

The Wicked Dragon of Pelmel Forest is a story about the addictive nature of power, and its potential to devastate, or to create. When the dragon accidentally discovers his ability to breathe fire, he uses it to terrorize the little creatures of Pelmel Forest. Disturbed by these developments, the little creatures make it their mission to find this monster who is destroying their forest and their lives with it. When they do, they are in for a big surprise! Not only is the dragon sleeping quietly, but looks terribly innocent. So they promptly include him in their circle of trust. What will this invitation to friendship beget? The scorching heat of his breath, or the gentle warmth of friendship?

Categories: Illustration · Images · Picture Book · Writing
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The Bomb and The General V2.2009

May 5, 2009 · 8 Comments

Aditi Raychoudhury. Strawberries. 2009. 6" x 4". Adobe Illustrator CS.

Aditi Raychoudhury. Strawberries. 2009. 6" x 4". Adobe Illustrator CS.

The original ‘The Bomb and the General’ is a delightfully optimistic, anti-war children’s book – written by Umberto Eco (The Name of The Rose), and brilliantly illustrated by Eugenio Carmi. It was published in 1989 –

In Italian: By Gruppo Editoriale Fabbri, Bompiani, Sonzogno, Etas S.p.A.;
and
In English: By Harcourt Brace Jovanovich, Inc.

This version of “The Bomb and the General” weaves in some of the original text (italicized), which initially inspired this story. Like the original story, this version also maintains a naïveté to create an anti-war message for children, and for adults, a more complex tale about hegemony and insular faith.

Aditi Raychoudhury. Land of Plenty. Adobe Illustrator CS. 2009.

Aditi Raychoudhury. Land of Plenty (In Green). 2009. 22" x 11". Adobe Illustrator CS.

The General of our story enjoys a life of utter ease and gluttony, till he is compelled to seek God, during a moment of personal crisis. This pivotal encounter awakens in him an unshakeable passion for God’s word. But his myopic obsession with the details of God’s message clouds its original intent, and provokes an ominous future. Will his country slumber on through the impending doom or will they arise to reclaim their right in a peaceful world?

Aditi Raychoudhury. Land of Plenty (In Pink). 2008. 17" x 14". Colored Pencils on Tracing Paper.

Aditi Raychoudhury. Land of Plenty (In Pink). 2009. 17" x 14". Colored Pencils on Tracing Paper.

Aditi Raychoudhury. Land of Plenty (In Orange). 2009. 17" x 14". Colored Pencils on Tracing Paper.

Aditi Raychoudhury. Land of Plenty (In Orange). 2009. 17" x 14". Colored Pencils on Tracing Paper.

Aditi Raychoudhury. Land of Plenty (In Orange). 2009. 17" x 14". Gouache on Paper.

Aditi Raychoudhury. Land of Plenty (In Orange). 2009. 17" x 14". Gouache on Paper.

Categories: Illustration · Images · Picture Book · Writing
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Why Obama’s Tax Plan Will Help Us

November 3, 2008 · Leave a Comment

Its Election day tomorrow. With the economy sliding faster than the downward spiral of a ride in “Great America”, we are justifiably nervous about the issues that have featured prominently on debates – albeit not always answered with clarity – the continuing war, government spending, tax reforms, jobs, education, mortages…

Sadly, in the Bay Area, even a 100k annual salary, can often, and shamefully, be short of a mortgage on a three-bedroom single family home, quality K-12 education, and some. The sad state of public schools in some of the Bay Area urban spots – San Francisco, Berkeley, and yes, the infamous Oakland School District, where I live, is testimony to the misplaced priorities even in this otherwise relatively liberal state

Besides, the crumbling public schools, Oakland, CA, also has the dubious distinction of being the homicide capital of America. But I disagree with such stereotyping. It is easier to stereotype than to look beneath that smug sentence and find a solution for change. (more…)

Categories: Essay · Opinion · Writing
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The Politics of Economy

October 12, 2008 · Leave a Comment

I am enraged to hear the ongoing argument about tax cuts for big businesses helping the economy as a hardsell against Obama’s tax reform plan. I am not an economist, nor have studied the tax structure in great depth, nor can I say for sure that Obama’s tax structure is a win-win situation.

But what I can say with a great deal of confidence is that the last set of tax reforms have clearly shown us that bigger tax cuts for big business DO NOT help the economy. We are in the middle of an unending war, and we hear the word depression being thrown out with increasing regularity these days. One doesn’t have to be an economist to come to this conclusion. One only needs to be a US taxpayer and US resident for a few years to see this without a shred of doubt.

I fail to understand how ANYBODY well, that includes McCain-Palin) can be so ridiculously illogical to criticize the the Bush government, and yet refuse to accept that the last set of tax reforms (big tax cuts for big corporations) have not helped the economy at all!

I fail to understand why some people still believe in an ideology that has failed to provide jobs, or boost the economy – in short, a complete failure – over and over and over again. Or do they have simply too much spare change?

‘Nuf said!

Categories: Opinion · Writing
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Do You Trust Nuclear Power?

July 26, 2008 · 3 Comments

On one of my favorite radio progams: BBC World Have Your Say.

And this is what I had to say:

This is not an area I have much knowledge in, but I do think that nuclear fuel as a clean alternative is more maligned than it deserves to be. (more…)

Categories: Opinion · Writing
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The Paradox of Missing the Boat

August 16, 2007 · 1 Comment

January 1997, Los Angeles International Airport.

I had hesitantly pointed to a “doughnut” resting amidst other tantalizing treats behind a spotless glass case that now had been marred by my oily fingerprint. “A bagel, you mean?,” the server had politely replied.

Carrying a suitcase full of spices, and $ 200, I was “fresh off the boat”. I knew right then that, despite my long time love-hate relationship with American culture, there was a lot that I didn’t know about America!

More than a decade later, I know the difference between a bagel and a doughnut. I have an Indian-American accent – one that endlessly amuses my friend in India.

He wondered if he had missed the boat during my early days in America. Now, not a day goes by when I don’t read about India Rising! or America Sliding!

I catch him just as he is headed out with his 5-year old to the driving range near his swanky new apartment in Gurgaon, an outsourcing hub outside Delhi. His son can’t wait to start skating lessons at the rink nearby! No such amenities adjoin my tiny, rental unit in Berkeley, California.

He works in a multi-national architecture firm, which spews out glitzy offices and malls, to populate the townships his wife, an urban planner, churns out at the frenetic rate of nearly one per week!

These shining glass towers of India’s new economy are grossly ill-suited to its blasting summers. Air-conditioning them squeezes India’s power resources.

In 2001, the Bureau of Energy Efficiency was formed to initiate a Building Energy Code for India. Ironically, the task of drafting the code that buildings, such as those my friend designs, will have to meet, was “outsourced” to my San Francisco employer.

Why were Americans chosen over competent and cheaper energy-efficiency experts in India? I felt chagrined! Perhaps, American consultants, and an American-style code, were not entirely inappropriate for these cookie-cutter boxes – no different from those crowding the urban downtowns and office parks of America, and quite different from older Indian architecture.

Indigenous Indian architecture’s response to local climate and materials minimized the energy needed for cooling and transporting materials. It also strengthened grassroots economy by keeping it local.

In contrast, these transplanted resource guzzlers demand additional energy to import materials, equipment, and expensive sustainable design consultants, such as my employer, till India has enough personnel and resources to meet the requirements of a Western-style code.

However, India didn’t need a Western-style code to make “green” buildings. Two years before the draft code was adopted, India gave the world its “greenest” building at the time. In 2004, the Confederation of Indian Industry’s Green Business Centre became the most sustainable building under LEED, a voluntary American sustainable design rating system, and adopted worldwide.

The code was adopted to encourage this practice, but its effectiveness is hostage to India’s beleaguering bureaucratic system, whose middlemen and bribes make it possible to flout any well-intentioned mandate.

For example, the structural mandate of the National Building Code is intentionally over-designed to accommodate its routine circumvention by greedy contractors. But buildings continue to collapse and kill people. An unreliable judicial system has done little to discourage this evil practice. In a ludicrous twist of fate, the Bureau of Energy Efficiency has been one of the chief hurdles to the code’s timely adoption.

While the energy code is a good step towards achieving a sustainable growth, an equitable distribution of resources is just as critical.

The outsourcing hubs suck power and water away from India’s villages, creating droughts. Globalization has also forced industrial farming practices and cash crops that strip the soil of nutrients. It indentures farmers to expensive, non-renewable seeds from large corporations.

When these induced droughts yeild a poor harvest, these indebted farmers commit suicide. Failed farms, increased cost of living, and tantalizing Western products have induced greater migration into cities. Once here, a growing economic disparity pushes the urban poor to crime to stay afloat.

In a country, where two-thirds of the population grows food to sustain the beneficiaries of globalization, supporting these farmers is imperative for long-term success. A return to small subsistence farms, mixed farming practices, renewable farm-generated seeds, and a strong infrastructure, is a good start, along with reliable bureaucracy and judiciary.

Aristotle believed that “the most perfect political community is one in which the middle class is in control”, while Gandhi believed in building the nation bottom-up.

India’s economic success, global visibility and confidence, have definitely empowered the middle-class to demand an investment in India’s villages, which would secure the comfort and opportunities that, for years, Indians went to find in the West.

For little children, that means skating and swimming. For young architects, that means a car, an uninterrupted supply of hot water, a kitchen without rambunctious rats, a roof that keeps the rain out – and the ironically resource intensive luxury of golf!

“Have a nice day!” says my friend, as he heads out to putt. Oceans away from me, he has become more American, too! Just as we have morphed into our semi-American identities, India will need to seize the best of this seamless continental transfer to create a culture that is uniquely and enduringly Indian – exactly as it has done through its long history of invasions.

Categories: Essay · Opinion · Writing
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