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Celebrate World Theatre Day with Bangalore Hindi Theatre Community

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Celebrate World Theatre Day with Bangalore Hindi Theatre Community


Amit Aggarwal
| Photo Credit: Special Arrangement

Theatre, is a space where drama comes alive, stories unfold with actors performing right in front of you. Theatre, despite having a record of not being a platform to sustain actors financially, has stood the test of time across borders, ages, culture, languages and stories. To celebrate this creative space, theatre enthusiast Amit Aggarwal, is organising an evening for Hindi theatre practitioners on World Theatre Day.

 “Theatre practitioners from across the city will meet, ideate and share their dreams for 2025,” says Amit, the founder of the Bangalore Hindi Theatre Community. The 45-year old theatre enthusiast from Sarjapur plunged into theatre in 2005 in Bengaluru. “I have primarily been active in Hindi theatre. When I ventured into this space there were hardly two or three groups that were into Hindi theatre and about 10 to 15 practitioners. At that point of time, I felt a need to expand the horizon for Hindi theatre, have more people join theatre and be aware of what is happening in this space.”

The Bangalore Hindi Theatre Community was founded in 2012 with three theatre groups, says Amit. “Over the years we have 50 active groups and over 1,000 theatre practitioners in the community.” The community grew, Amit says and so did its objectives.

“Now it is no longer about networking between artists and groups but a space to help people who come to the city or those who dream of starting a theatre group or actors who need to find a group to act in.”

Besides this, the community also helps with stage props and costumes. “With lack of large, storage spaces, we help groups share props and costumes. This not only helps in cutting costs and time for productions, but also opens doors for collaborative interactions.” Amit runs the community on his own, and provides these connections free of cost. He welcomes help on a voluntary basis.

Being a theatre practitioner himself for the past two decades, Amit says he decided to start a community and not a theatre group. “A lot of theatre happens in Bengaluru, but in pockets spread across the city. It was important to do cross-collaborative work, by creating a theatre community, where an actor is not restricted to just one group but can work across groups.”

The choice of celebrating World Theatre Day (March 27) on March 29 was a deliberate one, says Amit. “In Bengaluru with the traffic and distance, we realised that the footfalls are low when events happen on weekdays.”

This is the fourth edition of Bangalore Hindi Theatre Community’s World Theatre Day celebrations. The first edition was co-hosted by Kalagruha, while the 2023 and 2024 editions by Lahe Lahe. “I am grateful for all these people and now to Vyoma for offering us the space and co-hosting it as this is a non-commercial event. We have 150 seats for this event. In case we cannot accommodate anyone for this particular event, they can reach out to our community on our facebook page and I will make sure to make time for them.”

Jamming with music and artists

Jamming with music and artists
| Photo Credit:
Special Arrangement

Amit took to theatre during his college days in Pune. Coming from an Armed Forces background, Amit says he travelled across the country with his parents during school and college days. “I hardly stayed in a place for more than a couple of years. It was only when I moved to Benglauru 20 years ago that I decided to stay on.”

Besides ideation and brainstorming and sharing works, the community also helps bring outside theatre groups to the city and vice versa. “We help groups by spreading the word, marketing for them.”

Amit is the founding and casting director of Webshorts Casting, a platform, where he helps actors get roles in advertisements, films and web series.”

The World Theatre Day-2025 celebrations commences at 3pm with an update on the Hindi theatre scene in the year gone by and the dreams for 2025. “Group heads and directors will share their works, discuss new projects, resolve issues if there are any and the day concludes with a music jam, refreshments and collaborative works. On this day, we are not divided by our groups but united by our love for theatre.”

The Bangalore Hindi Theatre community’s World Theatre Day celebrations will be held on March 29, 3pm onwards, at Vyoma Artspace & Studio, JP Nagar.



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Fort Fit Foods to open 2 new factories in Hwh | Kolkata News – The Times of India

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Fort Fit Foods to open 2 new factories in Hwh | Kolkata News – The Times of India



Kolkata: Food processing company Fort Fit Foods is set to establish two new manufacturing units at Sugandha and Bagnan in Howrah in the next eight months, with an investment of around Rs 15 crore. The company will produce noodles and pasta at these new facilities.
The company has 11 food processing units, including rice and flour mills across the state, according to company director and CEO Rahat Agarwal. “We are also planning to manufacture ice creams in Bengal,” he said at an event on Tuesday.
Speaking at the event, Bengal CEO Manoj Agarwal, also former secretary in the state’s food and supplies department, focused on the need for food fortification. “Stakeholders in the food processing sector need to come on a single platform with govt bodies. Food fortification is happening on a small scale today,” said Agarwal.





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Unpolluted stretch of the Cooum to get one more check dam; residents call for action against sewage pollution

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Unpolluted stretch of the Cooum to get one more check dam; residents call for action against sewage pollution


The unpolluted stretch of Cooum River is set to get one more check dam at Perambakkam in Tiruvallur district. However, residents have raised concerns over discharge of sewage and urged the State government to ensure that the check dams do not turn into sewage discharge points.

The Water Resources Department (WRD) has started the process to construct the check dam — a storage structure that will retain floodwater and boost groundwater table. It will come up around 7.7 km downstream of Kesavaram anicut at a cost of ₹6.50 crore.

Many check dams across the Cooum in Tiruvallur have retained water even during summer. This has encouraged the WRD to chalk out plans to build more storage structures for recharging groundwater and preventing floods in Chennai.

Officials said that the check dam, across the 85-metre-wide river, would have a design to discharge nearly 10,556 cubic feet of water per second (cusecs) and a storage capacity of nearly 6.74 million cubic feet of water (mcft), when filled twice a year.

“This check dam will retain water in the Cooum for a length of 1.4 km, help irrigate about 360 acres of land and recharge borewells that are used to supply drinking water…,” an official said.

The WRD is set to start the work in May or early June, and complete it in a year. Welcoming the efforts to build more check dams across the river, residents said that the check dams too were not spared of sewage discharge in fast-urbanising areas.

K. Mugundhan, co-ordinator, Unpolluted Cooum Protection Committee, said that residents of Soranchery and Anaikattucherry benefited from the new check dam near Soranchery for irrigation and drinking water needs. However, a check dam along Kaduvetti village near Paruthipattu had become vulnerable to sewage discharge. “It is important for government agencies to ensure that check dams do not become sewage discharge points of nearby local bodies,” he added.

Officials of the WRD said they were coordinating with the local bodies to address the issues.



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Area-wise info of pre-schools on single portal | Mumbai News – The Times of India

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Area-wise info of pre-schools on single portal | Mumbai News – The Times of India


Mumbai: Parents in Maharashtra may soon have access to information about all pre-primary schools in their vicinity on one official platform. The information will not only include details on their website addresses, the students enrolled, and when they were started, but also on the physical infrastructure available, including the number of toilets, and the teachers and attendants available at the pre-schools. In a first such initiative to have consolidated data on pre-schools under one platform, the state govt launched a portal for their registration.
With the National Education Policy (NEP) 2020, the central govt has brought children in the 3-6 age group under its ambit. The state is now making an attempt to implement the policy in a phased manner. Though the women and child development department has details on anganwadis, there is little or no control over private institutions offering pre-primary education. So, the state has launched this portal to bring all private centres providing pre-primary education under one platform, said school education minister Dadaji Bhuse. The portal was launched by chief minister Devendra Fadnavis on Tuesday.
The information sought from the pre-schools in the registration forms available online also includes data on whether the school enrols children with special needs, whether they have CCTV surveillance, or if they have playgrounds or even water tanks. In the section made available for teachers, schools have to fill in details about their qualification. The data will also help the govtframe a policy for pre-primary education soon.
Principal secretary, School Education, Ranjit Singh Deol, said that registration on the portal will not be mandatory as of now. “Currently, the state does not have information on all such private centres providing pre-primary education. Once the policy is framed and implemented, registration will become mandatory for all,” said Deol.





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