Wednesday, May 11, 2011

Yudhishtar impressed Ms Nadya

The Capital City Minstrels performing at the India Habitat Centre in New Delhi – inset Yudhishtar Singh Bedi.
A Ludhiana lad – Yudhishtar Singh Bedi – starred in the prestigious “The Capital City Minstrels “ (CCM), North India’s best known choir in New Delhi recently . The group gave a scintillating performance at the Hungarian Art Centre , The India Habitat Centre and the Gurgaon Epicentre Cultural Centre to a packed audience .
The Capital City Minstrels  comprises people from all walks of life - professionals such as doctors, lawyers, architects, teachers, corporate executives and embassy personnel, of all ages and nationalities, from all the five continents, as diverse as French, German, South American, African, Chinese, Korean, Australian and Indian, all with one thing in common – their love of music. CCM’s repertoire spans a wide range; from the earliest choral music to the entire spectrum of western classical music, and opera to ballads, folk songs, Broadway musicals, rock, pop, jazz as well as Indian music arranged for choir performance.
CCM has performed more than 100 concerts since the early 1990’s at prestigious venues all over India . CCM as the choral group is known, believes that there is more to singing in harmony than simply hitting the right notes at the right time. This notion of harmony is evident in the coming together of people of different ages, from different parts of the country and, indeed, from different countries. Various professionals from different walks of life are part of CCM, with sundry races and religions coming together to blend their voices in song, in many languages. Zohra Shaw, Fellow of Trinity College of MusicLondon, founded this choir eleven years ago - in 1994.  It is now headed by a talented group including Maxwell Pereira – ex Chief Commissioner of Police of New Delhi .  The composer is the talented Russian Nadya V Balyan. Mr Pereira has promised to hold a performance in Punjab soon.
 Yudhishtar - a young BioTechnology scientist  from Ludhiana – has joined this group recently and has impressed Ms Nadya with his talent . He is the youngest member of this prestigious select group . His parents are doctors in the Christian Medical College and Hospital Ludhiana (Dr Harinder Singh Bedi and Dr Nandini Bedi – Cardiac and Paediatric Surgeons respectively) . Yudhishtar has been selected at the prestigious University of California in USA - he will be continuing his passion for music there along with his research . Mr Pereira believes that music has a strong binding and healing touch in this chaotic era  and believes in encouraging the youngsters to get involved in music actively. Shalu Arora and Rector Kathuria 

Leaders Discuss Afghanistan Redeployment Challenges


By Karen Parrish
American Forces Press Service

FORWARD OPERATING BASE SHARANA, Afghanistan, May 10, 2011 - Task Force Currahee, composed primarily of soldiers from the 101st Airborne Division's 4th Brigade Combat Team, will return to Fort Campbell, Ky., in the coming months.
Click photo for screen-resolution image
Army Col. Sean M. Jenkins, commander of Task Force Currahee and the 101st Airborne Division's 4th Brigade Combat Team, speaks to the unit's chaplains and chaplain assistants during a religious support team redeployment planning conference May 6, 2011, at Forward Operating Base Sharana in Afghanistan's Paktika province. DOD photo by Karen Parrish 
During a May 6 redeployment-focused conference here that brought together the brigade's seven religious support teams -- each consisting of a chaplain and chaplain assistant -- the brigade's commander and command sergeant major outlined the challenges they expect as the troops move home and cope with their deployment's aftermath.
Army Col. Sean M. Jenkins, brigade and task force commander, said the biggest challenge is ensuring all 4,200-plus soldiers get any help they need.
For members of an airborne infantry unit, it isn't easy seeking help for post-combat stress or for personal or domestic issues, the colonel said.
"Type-A personalities, 6-foot-2 and bulletproof -- most Currahees put themselves in that category," he said. "We've got to break through that."
Responsibility for seeking needed care rests on the individual soldier, Jenkins said, but leaders at all levels have to ensure their soldiers know there is no stigma attached to asking for help and that they know what help is available.
For 90 to 120 days after returning to Fort Campbell, the colonel said, soldiers can expect a tough period of adjustment. His plan is to educate leaders down to the squad and team level about how best to help their soldiers make that adjustment.
As the deployed soldiers return, new troops and their families will be arriving, Jenkins said, noting up to 1,400 new Currahees will begin assignments at 4th Brigade over the next several months.
The religious support teams can help to educate young leaders in how to help their soldiers, and also can work with families and family support groups, Jenkins said.
Some of the religious support teams will redeploy early to help manage the transition as the troops return home, the colonel said, adding that he plans to maintain a comfortable rhythm for soldiers coming out of Afghanistan.
"We will go back, we will do the seven-day integration, and we will be in a battle rhythm the entire time," he said.
Jenkins said he will maintain regular report times for duty and daily physical training as soldiers reset at Fort Campbell before unit block leave starts in September. This will give troops a routine they're comfortable with, and will help to establish a normal sleep cycle at home, he explained.
The military improves mission performance not only through technology, tactics and procedures, Jenkins said, but also through mindset. Resources are available to assist soldiers in their return to garrison and family life, he added, but the mindset they need is that it's their responsibility to use those resources.
"We want to be proactive back there, we don't want to be reactive," the colonel said. "It is a collective effort."
The brigade's senior enlisted leader, Command Sgt. Maj. William R. Hambrick Jr., told the assembled religious support teams their work is critical to the unit's success.
"We've been deploying in this war on terror for a long time," he said. "We've been pushing these soldiers hard. But you are the people who advise the commanders on the pulse of the companies and battalions."
Returning home is a risky time for soldiers, Hambrick said. In the past, drunk driving accidents and incidents of spouse and child abuse have spiked following Army redeployments.
"That's because we let those soldiers go with a high-five at the ramp when we got home," he said. "We don't do that any more."
Soldiers make the U.S. Army the best in the world, he said, and the effort the brigade chaplains are putting into managing redeployment issues demonstrates how the Army "gets after an issue" to keep the force strong.
"When we put our minds to something, we always succeed," he said.
Related Sites:
4th Brigade Combat Team, 101st Airborne Division 
NATO International Security Assistance Force
Related Articles:
101st Troopers Help Safeguard Paktika Province 

Gates Urges Graduates to Consider Public Service


By Fred W. Baker III 
American Forces Press Service

WASHINGTON: U.S. public servants are the most dedicated, capable and honest in the world, Defense Secretary Robert M. Gates said today during a commencement ceremony at Washington State University, in Pullman, Wash.
Click photo for screen-resolution image
Defense Secretary Robert M. Gates addresses the audience during the Washington State University commencement ceremony, May 7, 2011. DOD photo by Cherie Cullen 
The secretary, on the eve of his own retirement, used the podium to urge the graduates to consider dedicating at least part of their careers to some type of public service.

Gates choked up briefly when recalling his most recent tenure as defense secretary, saying he will be forever thankful for the opportunity to lead today's military.

And he was still visibly emotional in his closing as he issued a challenge to the 2,350 graduates.

"And so I ask you ... will the wise and the honest among you come help us serve the American people?" Gates asked.

Gates' plea came in contrast to earlier jokes about life within the Washington, D.C., beltway, as he often does in his speeches.

"It's a special pleasure to be with you here today, especially since it gives me an excuse to get about as far away from the other Washington as one can get within the continental Unites States," Gates joked.

Gates also joked about parents who will continue to shell out money even after their children graduate. And he acknowledged that he was the only obstacle between the graduates and their graduation parties.

So Gates kept his promise to keep his speech short.
But he packed the 15 minutes he spoke, with praise for the sacrifices of those who serve their country in and out of uniform.

He quoted billionaires and film directors, an opera star and an actress, presidents and their parents.

It was in his own words, however, based on a lifetime of public service, that the seriousness of the message crept. Now, more than ever, the United States needs the talents of its best and brightest, he said.

"You are graduating in challenging times, of that there is no question," Gates said, citing a decade of war, a period of wrenching economic turbulence and a huge budget deficit and national debt.

Gates said it is no surprise that recent polls show a souring of the public mood, with many Americans pessimistic about the trajectory of our country. But, Gates said, he has lived through times when such pessimism was as prevalent.

In 1957, when Gates was a freshman in high school, the Soviet Union launched its Sputnik 1 into space, and Americans feared being left behind in the space race. Even more cause for worry was being left behind in the missile race, he said.

In the 1970s the nation went through another period of questioning its place in the world, brought about by the angst over the Vietnam War and the OPEC oil embargo, followed by sky-high inflation and equally high interest rates, he said.

And in the late 1980s America's growing fiscal and trade deficits left many worried that we would soon be taken over by Japan, Gates added.

"I lived through each of these periods of declinism when many were convinced America was stuck in a downward spiral," Gates said. "And yet, after meeting the many challenges we faced head on, our nation emerged from each of these periods stronger than before, and I am convinced we will do so again.

"Indeed today, as throughout our history, this country remains the world's most powerful force for good. The U.S. will, I am convinced, remain the indispensable nation, and our country will be able to adapt and overcome once again as it has in the past," he said.

However, especially in times of fiscal constraint, the United States must come up with innovative solutions to the challenges it faces.

"It is precisely during these trying times that America needs its best and brightest young people from all walks of life to step forward and bring their talents and fresh perspectives to bear on the challenges facing this country," Gates said.

"Because while the obligations of citizenship in any democracy are considerable, they're even more profound and more demanding as citizens of a nation with America's global challenges and responsibilities, and America's values and aspirations," he said.

Gates encouraged the graduates to find out what drives them, to find their passion and to pursue it with all of their energy and commitment. But he asked that they consider spending at least part of their careers in public service.

"You will have a chance to give back to the community, the state, or to the country that has already given you so much," he said.

Gates said that he understands that with today's political rhetoric, public service may not be appealing.

"I understand that it can be disheartening to hear today's often rancorous and even tawdry political discourse," he said. "Too often those who chose public service are dismissed as bureaucrats or worse. And in many cases politicians run for office running down the very government they hope to lead."

"Cynicism about the people and the institutions that govern and protect our country can be corrosive," he said.

The secretary said he worries that too many of brightest young Americans, normally engaged in volunteerism, turn aside careers in public service.

"There is another aspect of public service about which Americans hear very little," he said. "The idealism, the joy, the satisfaction and fulfillment."

Gates, who served under eight U.S. presidents, said he has worked with political appointees and career civil servants of the highest quality, acting with steadfast integrity and love of country and what it stands for.

The secretary applauded the efforts of today's all-volunteer military, saying that "over this past decade doing one's duty has taken on a whole new meaning and required a whole new level of risk and sacrifice."

But, he added, "to serve our country you don't need to deploy to a war zone or a Third World country or be buried in a windowless cube in gothic structure by the Potomac River.

"You don't have to be a CIA spy, or an analyst, a Navy SEAL who tracked down and brought down the most notorious terrorist in the world," he said.

"Whatever the job, working in the public sector at some level offers the chance to serve your fellow citizens as well as learn the inner workings of our government and build skills that will stand you in good stead in facing other challenges in your career and in your life," he said.

Gates said the graduates live in a time of "great necessities" when the America cannot avoid the challenges of addressing its domestic problems, or the burdens of global leadership.

"The stakes are unimaginably high," Gates said. "If, in the 21st Century, America is to continue to be a force for good in the world, for freedom, justice, rule of law, and the inherent value of each person, then the most able and idealistic of our young people -- of you -- must step forward and accept the burden and the duty of public service.

"I promise you that you will find joy, satisfaction, and fulfillment," he said.

Gates' wife, Becky, is a Washington State University graduate and member of the College of Liberal Arts Advisory Council. Their son, Brad, is a 2003 graduate of the university. Gates has plans to retire in the state. (Issued on May 7, 2011)
Biographies:
Robert M. Gates
Related Sites:
Photo Essay: Gates Speaks at Washington State University Commencement
Washington State University