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Feeding the hungry: Cancer doesn’t detract him from his life’s mission (IANS Special Series)

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By Jaideep Sarin
Chandigarh, Jan 14 (IANS) He is 83 years old and has been serving free food to the poor and needy for over three-and-a-half decades. He is fighting cancer and has sold off assets to keep his community service going. And, despite the odds, there is no let-up in the enthusiasm of businessman Jagdish Lal Ahuja in what he thinks is his life’s mission.

“I will continue the ‘langar’ (community kitchen) till my last breath. This is something that gives me ‘sakoon’ (satisfaction and contentment). Doing this is god’s command to me and I will continue this,” Ahuja, draped in heavy woollens on a winter evening in Chandigarh, told IANS outside Gate No. 2 of the Post-Graduate Institute of Medical Sciences and Research (PGIMER), a premier referral hospital.

Having started organising langars across Chandigarh and adjoining areas way back in 1981, Ahuja started the daily langar outside the PGI, which attracts hundreds of patients and their attendants from all states in northern India and even faraway places like Bihar and Uttar Pradesh, in 2001.

“I have been doing this all on my own. Over the years, many people have offered money and other things to get associated with it. But I do not take anything from anybody. I want to do it from my own resources. I decline all offers. I think that god has been kind enough to me to enable me to carry out this work,” Ahuja said.

In the process of carrying out community work, Ahuja has sold off seven properties in the past few years. “I will not allow the langar to be affected for want of funds. In recent years, we had to scale down the numbers. Earlier, we were providing food up to 1,800 people. Now, it is around 500,” said Ahuja, who says he has not studied much due to adverse family circumstances.

For Ahuja the inspiration to carry out the free langar came from his grandmother, Mai Gulabi, who used to organise such langars in their hometown Peshawar (now in Pakistan) for poor people. The langar food comprises dal (pulses), vegetables, rice, chapattis, bananas and halwa. For children, Ahuja’s wife, Nirmal Ahuja, carries balloons, candies, biscuits and other goodies in their SUV pick-up.

Ahuja, a millionaire businessman who now deals in fruits, lived no ordinary life. Displaced from his birthplace and childhood in Peshawar in the 1947 Partition, Ahuja, then 12, came to Punjab’s Mansa town as a refugee with his family. As a kid, he sold namkeen dal (a traditional snack) at the railway station to earn some money and survive. He later moved to Patiala and got into selling gur (jaggery) and fruits.

It was in the latter part of the 1950s that Ahuja, at the age of 21, moved to Chandigarh when the country’s first planned city was being built. He hired a fruit cart and started selling bananas.

“No one in this place knew how to properly ripen the bananas. I got into this and started making good money,” said Ahuja, who later came to be called “king” in the area and became a millionaire.

“I don’t want anyone to go on an empty stomach. I have faced very hard times in my childhood. In these people, I can recall those times. If I am able to contribute even a small percentage to lessen their suffering, I will try my best,” said Ahuja, who is not bothered about his own ill-health.

Popularly known as the “PGI Bhandare Wale” and “Langar Baba” by people coming there, Ahuja makes it a point to come himself every day at the langar venue outside PGI. The queue of people coming to take the langar is always long.

Many people coming at the langar venue try to touch his feet, but Ahuja gets irritated. “Please don’t touch my feet. I am nobody and have done nothing great. Seek blessings from the almighty,” he is heard saying often.

The langar at PGI is not the only social activity that Ahuja has been doing. He has been contributing to old age homes, distributing fruits and candies to children, giving away woollens and clothes to people, and engaging himself in other activities. He has been honoured by the Chandigarh Administration and several organisations and people. Ahuja, who said he is virtually illiterate, carries a mobile tablet in his car in which his daughter has loaded videos and photographs of his activities.

Married for five decades, Ahuja is supported in his activities by his wife, Nirmal.

(The weekly feature series is part of a positive-journalism project of IANS and the Frank Islam Foundation. Jaideep Sarin can be contacted at jaideep.s@ians.in)

–IANS
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Meghalaya Reserves Legalized Gambling and Sports Betting for Tourists

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PureWin Online Betting

The State Scores Extra High on Gaming-Friendly Industry Index

Meghalaya scored 92.85 out of 100 possible points in a Gaming Industry Index and proved to be India’s most gaming-friendly state following its recent profound legislation changes over the field allowing land-based and online gaming, including games of chance, under a licensing regime.

The index by the UK India Business Council (UKIBC) uses a scale of 0 to 100 to measure the level of legalisation on gambling and betting achieved by a state based on the scores over a set of seven different games – lottery, horse racing, betting on sports, poker, rummy, casino and fantasy sports

Starting from February last year, Meghalaya became the third state in India’s northeast to legalise gambling and betting after Sikkim and Nagaland. After consultations with the UKIBC, the state proceeded with the adoption of the Meghalaya Regulation of Gaming Act, 2021 and the nullification of the Meghalaya Prevention of Gambling Act, 1970. Subsequently in December, the Meghalaya Regulation of Gaming Rules, 2021 were notified and came into force.

All for the Tourists

The move to legalise and license various forms of offline and online betting and gambling in Meghalaya is aimed at boosting tourism and creating jobs, and altogether raising taxation revenues for the northeastern state. At the same time, the opportunities to bet and gamble legally will be reserved only for tourists and visitors.

“We came out with a Gaming Act and subsequently framed the Regulation of Gaming Rules, 2021. The government will accordingly issue licenses to operate games of skill and chance, both online and offline,” said James P. K. Sangma, Meghalaya State Law and Taxation Minister speaking in the capital city of Shillong. “But the legalized gambling and gaming will only be for tourists and not residents of Meghalaya,” he continued.

To be allowed to play, tourists and people visiting the state for work or business purposes will have to prove their non-resident status by presenting appropriate documents, in a process similar to a bank KYC (Know Your Customer) procedure.

Meghalaya Reaches Out to a Vast Market

With 140 millions of people in India estimated to bet regularly on sports, and a total of 370 million desi bettors around prominent sporting events, as per data from one of the latest reports by Esse N Videri, Meghalaya is set to reach out and take a piece of a vast market.

Estimates on the financial value of India’s sports betting market, combined across all types of offline channels and online sports and cricket predictions and betting platforms, speak about amounts between $130 and $150 billion (roughly between ₹9.7 and ₹11.5 lakh crore).

Andhra Pradesh, Telangana and Delhi are shown to deliver the highest number of bettors and Meghalaya can count on substantial tourists flow from their betting circles. The sports betting communities of Karnataka, Maharashtra, Uttar Pradesh and Haryana are also not to be underestimated.

Among the sports, cricket is most popular, registering 68 percent of the total bet count analyzed by Esse N Videri. Football takes second position with 11 percent of the bets, followed by betting on FIFA at 7 percent and on eCricket at 5 percent. The last position in the Top 5 of popular sports for betting in India is taken by tennis with 3 percent of the bet count.

Local Citizens will Still have Their Teer Betting

Meghalaya residents will still be permitted to participate in teer betting over arrow-shooting results. Teer is a traditional method of gambling, somewhat similar to a lottery draw, and held under the rules of the Meghalaya Regulation of the Game of Arrow Shooting and the Sale of Teer Tickets Act, 2018.

Teer includes bettors wagering on the number of arrows that reach the target which is placed about 50 meters away from a team of 20 archers positioned in a semicircle.

The archers shoot volleys of arrows at the target for ten minutes, and players place their bets choosing a number between 0 and 99 trying to guess the last two digits of the number of arrows that successfully pierce the target.

If, for example, the number of hits is 256, anyone who has bet on 56 wins an amount eight times bigger than their wager.

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