<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8"?><?xml-stylesheet href="http://blogs.fullhyderabad.com/styles/rss.css" type="text/css"?><rss version="0.91">

 <channel>
  <title>ACE 2008 – The Making</title>
  <link>http://blogs.fullhyderabad.com/showblog.php?blogId=675</link>
  <description></description>
    <item>
   <title>ACE 2008 – The Making</title>
   <description> 
 
 
  ACE 
2008 &ndash; The Making  
 
 
 Ravi Mundoli 
 
 
 Asha &ndash; Hyderabad &nbsp; 
 
 
&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; At 
least one reason why ACE 2008 happened is possibly geological. It is 
conjectured that about 65 million years ago, something called the Deccan 
Traps explosion may have caused one of the largest extinctions recorded. 
What is known for sure is that it resulted in an outpouring of molten 
material that cooled and hardened into much of the rock of the Deccan 
Plateau. 
 
 
&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; In 
some places, shaped by skilful hands and tools and guided by a surpassing 
artistic vision, the living rock turned into poetry in stone (Hampi, 
Mamallapuram). In others, they merely lay strewn across the land in 
all sorts of fantastic sizes and shapes, like the discarded toys of 
some giant infant. Even today, a short excursion into the countryside 
near the outskirts of Hyderabad will bring you face to face with these 
monstrosities. 
 
 
&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; After 
lying undisturbed for millennia, the 20 th  and 21 st  
centuries rolled in and changed all this. Global and local factors conspired 
to turn Hyderabad into one of India&rsquo;s poster children for &ldquo;growth&rdquo; 
and &ldquo;economic development&rdquo;. The influx into the city of money and 
the people who made it was a harbinger of a real estate and construction 
boom. Land was gobbled up, and buildings sprung up in the unlikeliest 
places. In the morning you drove past a standing crop of paddy; in the 
evening the slab for the 4 th  floor was being poured and the 
EMIs were also pouring in. Concrete needs stone, and stone is begat 
by rock, and it wasn&rsquo;t long before the kind ministrations of the builders 
in town turned to the igneous offerings of the Deccan Traps. 
 
 
&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Quarries 
sprung up all around the outskirts of town, and the clink of hammer 
and chisel and the boom of dynamite replaced birdsong and the sound 
of wind in the leaves. The Yellammabanda area in the Kukatpally suburb 
of Hyderabad was generously endowed with rock and soon became home to 
frenetic quarrying. 
 
 
&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Quarries 
need quarry-workers, and since labour is such an expensive and highly 
prized commodity in India, the owners turned to machinery. 
 
 
&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Right. 
Needless to say, the cheapest way of converting rock into pebbles a 
thousand years ago was to employ people to hack at it, and being conscientious 
protectors of our heritage, we have continued this hoary tradition into 
the present age. The Yellammabanda quarries employ hundreds of labourers 
in this backbreaking &ldquo;profession&rdquo;. 
 
 
&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; The 
Ramakrishna Upper Primary School (RUPS) was set up to try and make sure 
that the children of the quarry workers could possibly aspire to lives 
that were at least marginally better than what their parents have to 
endure. Time will tell whether it is successful in its mission. 
 
 
&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Asha-Hyderabad 
was a late entrant into this drama. When the chapter was established 
in 2003, like all Asha chapters we needed a project. And if the mountain 
will not come to Mohammad, Mohammad has to go to the mountain. Or quarry, 
as the case may be. When Asha-Hyderabad got involved with RUPS, the 
school suffered from a high dropout rate. The children who did attend 
weren&rsquo;t at their playful and attentive best, and a health camp that 
we organized revealed that most of them were suffering from nutrition 
linked illnesses. And so it came to be, that the mid-day meal programme 
at RUPS became the Hyderabad chapter&rsquo;s first real Asha project. The 
school administration helped us get started, a vendor was identified, 
and a helper to assist with serving the meal and cleaning was appointed. 
 
 
&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Anyone 
who has done fund raising for non-profits must be very aware that dollars, 
pounds and Euros don&rsquo;t grow on the surrounding vegetation. Neither 
do rupees, as it turns out! Once we had committed to supporting the 
mid-day meal, we quickly had to rack our brains for finding out how 
the hell we were to continue the programme. We relied on individual 
donations and goodwill for the first couple of years, but it was in 
2005 when the chapter had found its legs and had acquired a bunch of 
fairly regular volunteers who didn&rsquo;t want to twiddle their thumbs, 
that the idea of doing a corporate quiz competition as a fund-raising 
event took root. Things moved fast, and before you could say &ldquo;Sivasubramaniam 
Chandrasegarampillai&rdquo;, the Asha for Children&rsquo;s Education (ACE) Corporate 
Quiz was born. 
 
 
&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Thanks 
to the generous support of the International School of Business (ISB) 
who to our utter surprise and delight agreed lend us their superb auditorium 
for one afternoon every year without asking for anything in return, 
to the crazy quizmasters of Quizerati, and to tens of local and out 
of town companies who sponsored the geeks and trivia buffs from their 
ranks, ACE was off to a flying start. 
 
 
&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Preparations 
for ACE 2008 kicked off in earnest in January. Having pulled it off 
for 3 years in a row, we thought we had everything covered. Using space 
age, bleeding edge, state of the art technologies such as GMail, Excel 
and Yahoogroups, we thought we would be able to polish off one more 
instalment with little trouble. 
 
 
&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Initially, 
it was hard going. Leads led to precisely nowhere, calls weren&rsquo;t returned, 
and a moderate sized black hole apparently made especially for us was 
diligently swallowing all our emails, apart from sucking up all our 
enthusiasm  en passant.  Gloom and despondency began to descend 
on the few of us who knew the state of affairs, even as the &ldquo;veterans&rdquo; 
put on a brave face so that the &ldquo;newbies&rdquo; wouldn&rsquo;t lose heart. 
 
 
&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Luckily 
for us, from out of the blue came Phase Forward. They had just opened 
an office in Hyderabad and were looking for ways to get involved with 
the local community. We helped connect the dots. Phase Forward generously 
agreed to become a Platinum Sponsor for the quiz. If that wasn&rsquo;t enough, 
quite unexpectedly, they decided to sponsor the mid-day meal programme 
for a whole year. Boy, were we thrilled (not to mention relieved!). 
 
 
&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; As 
the date of the quiz drew near, other preparations were in full swing. 
PPTs were churned out, certificates were printed, trophies were ordered, 
and industrial quantities of  chai  were drunk in weekly meetings. 
 
 
&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; The 
day of the quiz dawned per usual. What else could it have done? The 
volunteers sped off from various corners of the city to the lush ISB 
campus and we were there in time. To do pretty much nothing! The excellent 
facilities staff at ISB had already made the auditorium ready, all we 
had to do was hang up a couple of banners, set up a registration desk, 
and finish the vitally important task of finding lunch. 
 
 
&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; The 
participants started trickling in over the course of the afternoon, 
all brimming with energy and ready to &ldquo;slaughter&rdquo; each other at 
the altar or knowledge. As Lewis Carroll said (even if it was about 
oysters), 
 
 
&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;  Thick and fast they came at last,  
 
 
&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;  And more and more and more.  
 
 
&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; The 
kids from RUPS sang an invocation and off we went! The written preliminary 
round saw everyone chew the tips off their pens as they wrestled with 
such ponderous issues as what rock band gets its name from a book on 
thermonuclear war and what would your number be if you were sitting 
in the &ldquo;Shakespeare seat&rdquo; in an aircraft. 
 
 
&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; During 
the break before the finals, the chapter coordinator quickly slipped 
in our usual song and dance about Asha, Asha-Hyderabad and RUPS, in 
the hopes of enticing more donors and volunteers. This was tremendously 
successful in rapidly putting everyone to sleep, and it took all the 
quizmasters&rsquo; horses (yes, that was a bit of a surprise) and all the 
quizmasters&rsquo; men to wake them up and keep them engrossed. The final 
was a smash hit thanks to a superb set of questions that were tantalizingly 
familiar and yet just hard enough to help everyone appreciate the skills 
of the teams on stage. 
 
 
&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; When 
the curtain rang down, we ended with the practice we started in Version 
1.0 of getting the RUPS students and not some hi-fi &ldquo;chief guests&rdquo; 
hand out the prizes. As the sun set we wended our way to the ISB canteen, 
tired but happy, a few of us already calculating our profit &amp; loss 
statement for the event, everyone bubbling over with laughter and conversation 
and a deep desire for pastries, a feeling that any Asha volunteer around 
the world who has been part of a fund-raiser is intimately familiar 
with. We had done it again, even if it was by the skin of our teeth. 
The mid-day meal programme would continue, and so would Asha-Hyderabad. 
 
 
 </description>
   <link>http://blogs.fullhyderabad.com/showblog.php?op=ViewArticle&amp;articleId=3699&amp;blogId=675</link>
      <pubDate>Thu, 11 Jun 2009 11:33:23 +0000</pubDate>   
  </item>
   </channel>
</rss>


