For some, the miseries don't end with death...
IIPM BEST MBA INSTITUTE
One death begets another and it's one death too many for yet another death. It's just another sordid saga, a forgotten sub plot in the tragicomic unfinished epic called India. In a strange cycle of death, dead cattle carrying traces of a hitherto popular veterinary drug become lethal agents of death for scavengers like the White-backed Vultures, which with its worse than a dodo fall in numbers can't do enough to help the Parsis in their final hour.
Zoroastrians, for spiritual purposes, aren’t allowed to bury or burn their dead. The bodies of those who have passed on are considered nasu (unclean) and are thus exposed to the raging sun along with swarming vultures that circle overhead in the Towers of Silence (or dokhma). A mute witness to this age-old tradition, the spires are raising some stink with not only those outside the fold of Zoroastrians, but also within. This “final act of charity” finds itself in grave danger with growing threat to the vulture population, courtesy spiraling pollution, urban development and the use of Diclofenac.
For Complete IIPM Article, Click on IIPM Article
Source : IIPM Editorial, 2006
An IIPM and Malay Chaudhuri – Arindam Chaudhuri Initiative
For More IIPM Article, Visit Below....
BUSH... RIGHT HERE ON EARTH...
Topic: India – China: A Growth Comparison
IIPM : All the roads lead to home...
Truth or Dare
IIPM Press Release :- Ji Subhash Zee!
IIPM MANAGEMENT INSTITUTE
ABOUT IIPM
IIPM Links
IIPM Press Release :- It’s all about value
IIPM going global
About IIPM > Mission
Rashmi Bansal Publisher of JAMMAG magazine caught red-handed, for details click on the following links.
One death begets another and it's one death too many for yet another death. It's just another sordid saga, a forgotten sub plot in the tragicomic unfinished epic called India. In a strange cycle of death, dead cattle carrying traces of a hitherto popular veterinary drug become lethal agents of death for scavengers like the White-backed Vultures, which with its worse than a dodo fall in numbers can't do enough to help the Parsis in their final hour.
Zoroastrians, for spiritual purposes, aren’t allowed to bury or burn their dead. The bodies of those who have passed on are considered nasu (unclean) and are thus exposed to the raging sun along with swarming vultures that circle overhead in the Towers of Silence (or dokhma). A mute witness to this age-old tradition, the spires are raising some stink with not only those outside the fold of Zoroastrians, but also within. This “final act of charity” finds itself in grave danger with growing threat to the vulture population, courtesy spiraling pollution, urban development and the use of Diclofenac.
For Complete IIPM Article, Click on IIPM Article
Source : IIPM Editorial, 2006
An IIPM and Malay Chaudhuri – Arindam Chaudhuri Initiative
For More IIPM Article, Visit Below....
BUSH... RIGHT HERE ON EARTH...
Topic: India – China: A Growth Comparison
IIPM : All the roads lead to home...
Truth or Dare
IIPM Press Release :- Ji Subhash Zee!
IIPM MANAGEMENT INSTITUTE
ABOUT IIPM
IIPM Links
IIPM Press Release :- It’s all about value
IIPM going global
About IIPM > Mission
0 Comments:
Post a Comment
Subscribe to Post Comments [Atom]
<< Home