"Many teachers inspired and influenced me.
Certainly ... "few names" ...
I would like to mention
with many many regards..."
- Sri.N.P. Narayanan Master and Sri. Ramakrihnan Master [ AUP School Cherukara ] - My Primary school teachres
- Sri.Thachukuty Master and Sri.Palakheezh Narayanan Master[ Govt.High School ,Perintalmanna] -My Secondary School Teachers
- Sri.Desamangalm Ramakrishnan and Mrs.SaraJoseph [Sree Neelakanda Govt.Sanskrit College ,Pattambi] -My College teachers
- Dr.Vijayakrishnan,Dr.Ray Pulickan, Dr.K.P.Chandrasekaran,Dr.N.S.Venugopal, Dr.P.A.Baskaran, Dr.Ram Manohar [ Govt.Medical College - Calicut] My Under graduate teachers
- Dr.M.R.Rajagopal [Govt.Medical College - Calicut], Dr.Paneedranath Thotta [ KMC -Manipal ], Dr.V.Ramkumar[KMC-Manipal] My post graduate teachers
- Dr.Madhavi Ramachandran and Dr.E.K.Ramdas [National Hospital as the head of Department] My professional teachers
- Sri.Devarajan [ Meenchanda Arts college ,Malayalam Department]
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My great teacher Prof.M.R.Rajagopal M.R.Rajagopal MD • M.R.Rajagopal MD, 63 years. Chairman, Pallium India (Trust), a registered charitable organization which works towards promotion of pain relief and palliative care facilities in India (www.palliumindia.org) • Director, Trivandrum Institute of Palliative Sciences. • One of the founders of Pain and Palliative Care Society in Calicut, which was formed in 1993, and which later became a WHO demonstration project, and grew to the present Institute of Palliative Medicine and a network of more than 100 pain centers in the state of Kerala, and prompted generation of several outside the state. • Works with Pain and Policy Studies group in Madison-Wisconsin, USA to remove regulatory barriers to availability of oral morphine for pain relief. Over an eight year period, this has resulted in simplification of narcotic regulations in 13 of India’s 28 states. • Member of Editorial Board, of Journal of Pain & Symptom Management, Journal of Pain and Palliative Care Pharmacotherapy and Indian Journal of Palliative Care. • Chairman, Opioid availability committee of Indian Association of Palliative Care. • Vice-chairman, Asia Pacific Hospice Network (APHN). • Member, board of directors of International Association of Hospice and Palliative Care (IAHPC) and International Association of Pain & Chemical Dependency (IAPCD) • Author of one textbook, several book chapters and more than 35 papers in medical journals • Awardee; Marie Nyswander Award for contributions to pain management – awarded by International Association for Pain and Chemical Dependency in 2008. • Awardee: Award for Excellence in Pain Management in Developing Countries, International Association for Study of Pain, World Pain Congress, Sept-Oct 2010, Montreal. My teacher in College days :Sara Joseph Sarah Joseph is a novelist and short story writer in Malayalam. She won the Kendra Sahitya Akademi Award for her novel Aalahayude Penmakkal (Daughters of God the Father).[1] She also received the Vayalar Award for the same novel.[2] Sarah has been at the forefront of the feminist movement in Kerala and is the founder of Manushi – organisation of thinking women.[1][3] She along with Madhavikutty (Kamala Surayya) is considered leading women storytellers in Malayalam.[4]
A Pirali Brahmin[4][5][6][7] from Kolkata, Tagore wrote poetry as an eight-year-old.[8] At age sixteen, he cheekily released his first substantial poems under the pseudonym Bhānusiṃha ("Sun Lion"), which were seized upon by the region's literary grandees as long-lost classics.[9][10] He graduated to his first short stories and dramas—and the aegis of his birth name—by 1877. As a humanist, universalist internationalist, and strident anti-nationalist he denounced the Raj and advocated for independence from Britain. As an exponent of the Bengal Renaissance he advanced a vast canon that comprised paintings, sketches and doodles, hundreds of texts, and some two thousand songs; his legacy endures also in the institution he founded, Visva-Bharati University. Tagore modernised Bengali art by spurning rigid classical forms and resisting linguistic strictures. His novels, stories, songs, dance-dramas, and essays spoke to topics political and personal. Gitanjali (Song Offerings), Gora (Fair-Faced), and Ghare-Baire (The Home and the World) are his best-known works, and his verse, short stories, and novels were acclaimed—or panned—for their lyricism, colloquialism, naturalism, and unnatural contemplation. He penned two national anthems: the Republic of India's Jana Gana Mana and Bangladesh's Amar Shonar Bangla. A professor of philosophy, he travelled throughout India in the 1960s as a public speaker. His outspoken criticism of socialism, Mahatma Gandhi and institutionalised religions made him controversial. He also advocated a more open attitude towards sexuality: a stance that earned him the sobriquet "sex guru" in the Indian and later international press.[3] In 1970, Osho settled for a while in Bombay. He began initiating disciples (known as neo-sannyasins) and took on the role of a spiritual teacher. In his discourses, he reinterpreted writings of religious traditions, mystics, and philosophers from around the world. Moving to Poona in 1974, he established an ashram that attracted increasing numbers of Westerners. The ashram offered therapies derived from the Human Potential Movement to its Western audience and made news in India and abroad, chiefly because of its permissive climate and Osho's provocative lectures. By the end of the 1970s, there were mounting tensions with the Indian government and the surrounding society. In 1981, Osho relocated to the United States and his followers established an intentional community, later known as Rajneeshpuram, in the state of Oregon. Within a year, the leadership of the commune became embroiled in a conflict with local residents, primarily over land use, which was marked by hostility on both sides. The large collection of Rolls-Royce automobiles purchased for his use by his followers also attracted notoriety. The Oregon commune collapsed in 1985 when Osho revealed that the commune leadership had committed a number of serious crimes, including a bioterror attack (food contamination) on the citizens of The Dalles.[4] He was arrested shortly afterwards and charged with immigration violations. Osho was deported from the United States in accordance with a plea bargain.[5][6][7] Twenty-one countries denied him entry, causing Osho to travel the world before returning to Poona, where he died in 1990. His ashram is today known as the Osho International Meditation Resort. His syncretic teachings emphasise the importance of meditation, awareness, love, celebration, courage, creativity and humour—qualities that he viewed as being suppressed by adherence to static belief systems, religious tradition and socialisation. Osho's teachings have had a notable impact on Western New Age thought,[8][9] and their popularity has increased markedly since his death.[10][11] Before his term as India's president, he worked as an aeronautical engineer with DRDO and ISRO. He is popularly known as the Missile Man of India for his work on development of ballistic missile and space rocket technology.[4] Kalam played a pivotal organizational, technical and political role in India's Pokhran-II nuclear test in 1998, the first since the original nuclear test by India in 1974.[5] He is currently the chancellor of Indian Institute of Space Science and Technology, a professor at Anna University (Chennai), a visiting professor at Indian Institute of Management Ahmedabad, Indian Institute of Management Indore, and an adjunct/visiting faculty at many other academic and research institutions across India. In May 2011, Dr. Kalam launched his mission for the youth of the nation called the What Can I Give Movement.[6] Dr. Kalam better known as a scientist, also has special interest in the field of arts like writing Tamil poems, and also playing the music instrument Veena.[7]
Elamkulam Manakkal Sankaran Namboodiripad, popularly known as EMS, was an Indian Communist leader and the first Chief Minister of Kerala. As the first non-Congress
chief minister in independent India, he became the leader of the first
democratically elected communist government in the world. He was
renowned as a socialist and a Marxist theorist.
M.R.Rajagopal MD is a palliative care physician from India. He
qualified as a physician from Trivandrum Medical College, Kerala and as
an anaesthesiologist from All India Institute of Medical Sciences, New
Delhi. While working as Professor and Head of Anaesthesiology in Calicut Medical College, he and his colleagues founded the Pain and Palliative Care Society (PPCS) in Calicut in 1993. By creating a palliative care delivery system suited to the Indian cultural and social background, it attracted international attention and in the year 1995 was designated a WHO demonstration project. Over the next decade it grew to the present Institute of Palliative Medicine and a network of about 100 palliative care centers in the state of Kerala, and prompted generation of several outside the state. This initiative has now resulted in palliative care reaching about 30% of the needy in Kerala as against a national average of less than 0.5%. After leaving Calicut in the year 2002 he worked for three years as the Professor and Head of Pain and Palliative Medicine at Amrita Institute of Medical Sciences, Kochi, Kerala, India. During this time he started educational programs in Kochi including the first university-approved postgraduate diploma program in the country in Pain and Palliative Medicine. Since 1996 he has worked with Pain and Policy Studies group in Madison-Wisconsin to remove regulatory barriers to availability of oral morphine for pain relief in India. Over an eight year period, this has resulted in simplification of narcotic regulations in 13 of India ’s 28 states. He currently works as
Vice chancellor KUHAS
Member MCI
Padmasree Dr.Azad Moopen
Dr. Azad Moopen, an Indian physician, is a developer of healthcare facilities in Dubai. He has been awarded the Padma Shri by the Government of India in 2011.
He has been actively involved in the development of heathcare facilities in India.[3] MIMS Hospitals employ about 3,000 people directly.He participated in establishing the 600-bed tertiary care Malabar Institute of Medical Sciences (MIMS) hospital[4] at Kozhikode in Kerala in 2001 This the first multispecialty hospital in India to receive the NABH) accreditation in 2007. The second 150-bed MIMS Hospital set up at Kottakkal in Malappuram district in 2009. His group is setting up a Medical College at Wayanad, a MIMS Curie Cancer Centre at Kozhikode, and Community Dialysis Centres, in Kerala. They have embarked on a project to establish the DM MedCity at Kochi. The Group conducts regular free medical camps for the labour in different GCC countries. He started the ‘Save the Little Heart’ programme in Dubai in March 2009 to spread awareness and raise about Rs 65 lakh for doing cardiac surgery for 60 children from the economically weaker section. MIMS Charitable Trust under his leadership established a Rural Health Centre at the backward Vazhayur Panchayat near Kozhikode in 2008 and adopted 7,000 BPL members for comprehensive free OP and IP care. The Trust is adopting the BPL population in the 3 Wards around MIMS in the Corporation of Calicut and also plans to conduct a breast and cervical cancer screening program. Naseera & Moopen Foundation, his family Trust is setting up the Human Resource Management Centre in his native village of Kalpakancheri to address the educational backwardness through intervention among school children and by parental counselling and training. The MIMS Academy Trust, under his Chairmanship has set up a 32-acre campus at Karad in Malappuram District which has more than 1,100 students in medical and nursing subjects.[5]
Dr.George.P.Abgraham
ONV
Ottaplakkal Nambiyadikkal Velu Kurup popularly known as O. N. V. Kurup or simply O. N. V., is a Malayalam poet and lyricist from Kerala, India, who won Jnanpith Award,the
highest literary award in India for the year 2007. He is considered one
of the finest living lyrical poets in India. O. N. V. Kurup is also a lyricist in Malayalam cinema. He received the awards Padma Shri in 1998 and Padma Vibhushan in 2011, the fourth and second highest civilian honours from the Government of India. In 2007 he was bestowed an Honorary Doctorate by University of Kerala, Trivandrum. O. N. V. is known for his leftist leaning.[2] He was the Left Democratic Front (LDF) candidate in the Thiruvananthapuram constituency for the Lok-Sabha elections in 1989.[3]
MT Vasudevan Nair
Madathil Thekkepaattu Vasudevan Nair popularly known as MT, is a renowned Indian author,[3] screenplay writer and film director.[4] He was born in Kudallur, a small village in the present day Palakkad District, which was under the Malabar District in the Madras Presidency of the British Raj.[5]
He is one of the most prolific and versatile writers in modern
Malayalam literature. In 2005, India's third highest civilian honour
Padma Bhushan was awarded to him.[6] He was awarded the highest literary award in India Jnanpith for his work Randamoozham (Second Turn).[7]
V.T.Murali
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