Meeratayi Koppikar passes away
The Hindu
Belagavi
Meeratayi Koppikar, veteran Gandhian who ran Vatsalya Dhama, a commune of natural farmers and Khadi and village industries workers in Mudhol, passed away on Friday. She was 97.
She was ailing for sometime, but continued to spin on the Charkha and do her chores around the house, commune sources said.
Born in an affluent family, she plunged into the freedom struggle while still a teenager. The British jailed her twice. After advice from Mahatma Gandhi, she joined the Sarvodaya movement. She also joined the North Karnataka efforts of the Bhoodan movement of Vinoba Bhave.
She refused to go to Bengaluru to accept the Rajyotsava Award in 2009. And, Chief Minister B.S. Yediyurappa visited the ashram to present it to her. She had said that she would dedicate the ₹1 lakh award money for the uplift of the poor.
She set up Vatsalya Dhama, a commune of people who believed in simple living, natural farming and Khadi and village industries in two-and-a-half acres of land on the outskirts of Mudhol.
Shivaji Bhave, Vinoba Bhave’s brother, inaugurated the ashram in 1984.
Vatsalya Dhama has small patches of land where natural farming is practised, along with spinning on the Charkha and making daily usage items such as clothes, soap, caps, brush and farm equipment of wood.
Pakistan coach Gary Kirsten stated that “not so great decision making” contributed to his side’s defeat to India in the Group-A T20 World Cup clash here on Sunday. The batting unit came apart in the chase, after being well placed at 72 for two. With 48 runs needed from eight overs, Pakistan found a way to panic and lose. “Maybe not so great decision making,” Kirsten said at the post-match press conference, when asked to explain the loss.