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Community harmony

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Ipswich restaurateur Rajesh Sharma at the Premier's Cultural Diversity Awards Photo: Tuba Media Productions
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An inspirational Ipswich man is rewarded for his kind spirit

Ipswich restaurateur Rajesh Sharma at the Premier’s Cultural Diversity Awards
Photo: Tuba Media Productions

Despite having racial abuse directed at him and his family, and having his restaurant vandalised by armed robbers in recent months, Rajesh Sharma moves through life with a smile on his face.

A fearless, compassionate man, and a constant giver to society, Rajesh Sharma was the recipient of the Minister’s Award for Community Harmony at the Premier’s Cultural Diversity Awards held recently in Brisbane. These awards, spread over 14 categories, recognise the valuable contributions of Queenslanders who strive for a harmonious and inclusive society. Rajesh received the award from Minister for Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander and Multicultural Affairs Glen Elmes.

“This recognition is a great pat on the back from Queensland. What a great honour to be acknowledged in this way,” Rajesh told Indian Link.

Hailing from Himachal Pradesh, Rajesh has been living in the city of Ipswich for over a decade and is the owner of Indian Mehfil Indian restaurants and other businesses.

Over the years Rajesh has raised money for various charities. He does this by organising events during Diwali that gather people from across multicultural communities to come together, eat and celebrate, all for a good cause.

As part of the Harmony Cricket Challenge, Rajesh and his teammates went to play a cricket series in Himachal Pradesh in January 2014, and now a reciprocal Indian team will come to play in Brisbane in January 2015. Rajesh also provides assistance to Indian-origin students in whatever way he can.

“Harmony is all about living in peace and respecting each other’s culture and values,” Rajesh says.

Continuing to live in Ipswich even after hurtful events, Rajesh is keen to spread a spirit of brotherhood within the local community.

 

India Fair!

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Brisbane celebrated Indian Independence Day with flair and style

Dresssed in traditional Indian attire, be it kurtas, lehengas or saris, Indian origin people bustled through Roma Street train station, or made a dash from their cars, to make it on time for the celebrations of India’s 68th Independence Day. The India Day Fair, organised by the Global Organisation of People of Indian Origin (GOPIO) on 10 August at the Roma Street Parklands, was an opportunity to reminisce and savour all things Indian from morning until late evening.

Celebrations were kick-started with a parade of various associations representing their states and cultures of India on a warm Sunday morning. There were the Kashmiri Pandits, Tamil, Punjab, Goan, Maharashtra Mandal, Kannada Sangha, Telugu to name a few and, for the first time, representatives from the newly formed state of Telengana.

Australian and Indian dignitaries attended the Fair, including Lord Mayor Graham Quirk, Glen Elmes, Minister for Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander and Multicultural Affairs and Archana Singh, Honorary Consul of India for Queensland. The Australian and Indian flags were hoisted by Glen Elmes and Archana Singh respectively, which was followed by the national anthems of each of the countries’ to mark their respect for one another.

Honorary Consul of India for Queensland, Archana Singh paid tribute to 1.4 million British Indians who lost their lives during World War I. She continued, “India’s community ensures diversity, and today we celebrate India and her contributions”.

Keeping true to the spirit of the Indian culture, Lord Mayor Graham Quirk was dressed in a kurta. Speaking at the opening ceremony of the India Day fair, he emphasised his fondness for the Indian community and culture.

Echoing similar sentiments, Glen Elmes said, “There is a spirit of fun, extravaganza, saris and colours. I look forward to coming to all the future (Indian) events. Thank you for today’s invite”.

As the crowd hummed along to the familiar tunes of Vande Matram and Aye mere watan ke logon, which were sung beautifully, a few were teary eyed as they were transported back to Indian soil.

Following the opening ceremony, different age groups, both young and old, showcased their singing and dancing talent and enthusiasm from all corners of India. Traditional Bharathnatyam, Punjab folklore, and Bollywood performances kept the crowd enthralled. There was non-stop cheering and dancing.

“Today is a great combination of ancient Indian rich culture leaping in a modern age democracy,” Anthony Lin, Director of the Ethnic Communities Council of Queensland, told Indian Link at the India Day Fair.

Indian food is synonymous with any Indian event, and this Fair was no exception. Stalls of different cuisines were lined up with finger licking curries and rice, chaat, authentic South Indian delicacies and a stall with interesting tangy and sweet Indian flavoured juices – Aaam Ras, Imli, Jamun, Kachha aam and also Ayurvedic stalls.

A plendid display of fireworks at dusk concluded the India Day Fair celebrations, and left us all eagerly awaiting next year’s fair.

Cheers for couscous

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This little-known food is gaining growing popularity for its ease of cooking, taste and as a healthier option than pasta or rice. 

Australians take part in record for World’s Longest Fresh Flower Garland

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Ashrita Furman (right) and team member Sanjaya Spettigue
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A new Guinness World Record in honour of Indian spiritual leader Sri Chinmoy

New York Councilman Jimmy Gennaro working with the garland and Russian students of Sri Chinmoy

A new record for the World’s Longest Fresh Flower Garland was set on a sunny afternoon in Queens, New York recently. The record was inspired by Ashrita Furman, holder of 206 current Guinness Records, and over 200 meditation students of Sri Chinmoy from 35 countries, including Australia and India, aiming to honour Sri Chinmoy’s 50 years of work for world peace.

The garland, which consisted of 185, 000 carnations of various colours, was 7.87 kilometres long. It surpassed the previous record of a 5km garland which was set by a team in India just four months after Ashrita had broken the record with a 3.2 km garland in 2011. The first record of a 2.5 km garland was set by a group in Tahiti.

Perth locals Anubha Baird and Hastakamala Diaz attended the record attempt and helped make the garland.

“The atmosphere was really divine,” Anubha said. “Everyone was working together with a feeling of self-giving, and it was really inspiring”.

“It was nice being part of a world record,” Hastakamala said. “Sri Chinmoy felt individuals’ hearts are like a flower that can offer it’s fragrance to the world for its improvement, so it was nice to work with such a big garland”.

 

 

Ashrita Furmanworked for three months with flower farms in South America and gathered a team from all over the world to plan the assembly of the garland. The 180,000 carnations were flown from the high plateau of Bogotá Savannah in Colombia to Miami airport and then were transported in a truck to a refrigerated warehouse near John F. Kennedy Airport, where Ashrita’s helpers picked them up.

 

Ashrita Furman (right) and team member Sanjaya Spettigue

Furman and his team worked on the field from 7am until 2pm to create the longest garland in the world. His assistants made one metre flower strings, each consisting of about 20 carnations, which were put into boxes. The boxes were carried to different locations on the field where the ends of the strings of flowers were gradually connected together.

The attempt was inspired by Sri Chinmoy, a renowned peace visionary, who founded the Oneness-Home Peace Run, the world’s largest torch relay for peace. Sri Chinmoy loved flowers and the purity they represented. “Because of your heart’s gratitude-leaf, you are divinely good,” he once poetically uttered. “Because of your life’s surrender-flower, you are supremely perfect”.

Anubha Baird(L) Hastakamala Diaz (R)

 

Australians take part in record for World's Longest Fresh Flower Garland

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Ashrita Furman (right) and team member Sanjaya Spettigue
Reading Time: 3 minutes

A new Guinness World Record in honour of Indian spiritual leader Sri Chinmoy

New York Councilman Jimmy Gennaro working with the garland and Russian students of Sri Chinmoy

A new record for the World’s Longest Fresh Flower Garland was set on a sunny afternoon in Queens, New York recently. The record was inspired by Ashrita Furman, holder of 206 current Guinness Records, and over 200 meditation students of Sri Chinmoy from 35 countries, including Australia and India, aiming to honour Sri Chinmoy’s 50 years of work for world peace.
The garland, which consisted of 185, 000 carnations of various colours, was 7.87 kilometres long. It surpassed the previous record of a 5km garland which was set by a team in India just four months after Ashrita had broken the record with a 3.2 km garland in 2011. The first record of a 2.5 km garland was set by a group in Tahiti.
Perth locals Anubha Baird and Hastakamala Diaz attended the record attempt and helped make the garland.
“The atmosphere was really divine,” Anubha said. “Everyone was working together with a feeling of self-giving, and it was really inspiring”.
“It was nice being part of a world record,” Hastakamala said. “Sri Chinmoy felt individuals’ hearts are like a flower that can offer it’s fragrance to the world for its improvement, so it was nice to work with such a big garland”.
 

 
Ashrita Furmanworked for three months with flower farms in South America and gathered a team from all over the world to plan the assembly of the garland. The 180,000 carnations were flown from the high plateau of Bogotá Savannah in Colombia to Miami airport and then were transported in a truck to a refrigerated warehouse near John F. Kennedy Airport, where Ashrita’s helpers picked them up.
 
Ashrita Furman (right) and team member Sanjaya Spettigue

Furman and his team worked on the field from 7am until 2pm to create the longest garland in the world. His assistants made one metre flower strings, each consisting of about 20 carnations, which were put into boxes. The boxes were carried to different locations on the field where the ends of the strings of flowers were gradually connected together.
The attempt was inspired by Sri Chinmoy, a renowned peace visionary, who founded the Oneness-Home Peace Run, the world’s largest torch relay for peace. Sri Chinmoy loved flowers and the purity they represented. “Because of your heart’s gratitude-leaf, you are divinely good,” he once poetically uttered. “Because of your life’s surrender-flower, you are supremely perfect”.
Anubha Baird(L) Hastakamala Diaz (R)

 

The time to act is now

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The world needs to step up and fight back against ISIS

Over the past few months, the world has seen the rapid rise of extremist Islamic group ISIS as it has captured territory for itself in north-east Iraq the size of Victoria. Exploiting a three-year civil war in Syria, and the disenfranchisement of the Sunni population in Iraq, the group calling itself the Islamic State of Iraq and Syria has carved out a sizeable sanctuary from which to enlarge its activities. To help in its expansion plans, the militant organisation has a war chest which is funded from illegal oil sales, arms running and ransom payments for hostages, and its estimated income grows by over a million dollars a day. It is believed that it has over 10,000 fighters, a number of them foreign nationals from US, UK and Australia. It is now believed to be in Phase Two of its expansion, wanting to bring in administrators who can work on building up a state. The call has gone out to doctors, engineers and others to join ISIS in a non-fighting role.

This has to stop. If the recent videos of the public beheadings of two American journalists are any indication of the brutality of this regime, they simply have no place in our modern society. These are barbaric actions which have been roundly condemned by world leaders, but this needs to be followed up by action.

The United States has been spurred to act by the public outcry over its initial lack of action. Australia has stepped in to start the initial efforts. One suspects that post the NATO meeting over the next few days, and with the installation of the new government in Iraq, there will be strong international action and intervention to minimise the threats posed by ISIS.

However, what is important is that the actions against the terrorist group not be restricted only to a handful of NATO countries; other countries which strongly condemn ISIS and what it stands for, also need to step up. Countries with sizeable Muslim populations such as Indonesia and Malaysia need to take a position on this.

If there are an estimated 1.6 billion Muslims around the world, they cannot allow their religion to be hijacked by 10,000 fundamentalists. They need to raise their own voice.

The ISIS fundamentalists have shown strong capability in using social media to push their messages, including the editing and footage of the beheading of the innocent hostages. Their recruitment of foreign fighters is also believed to have been through social media. To counter this, perhaps moderate Islam needs to use these very channels of new media, and show its own strength in the condemnation of ISIS. While their governments fight the ground battles, everyday citizens need to use their options to educate the community on the insanity of this organisation. Moderate Islamic leaders need to flood the airwaves of the traditional media of print, radio and television, and ensure their feelings and thoughts on this topic are heard, read and seen by as many people as possible.

The sexiness and myths generated by the Islamic State of Iraq and Syria need to be shown for what they are – a group of individuals using religion to perpetuate barbaric acts against other human beings.

 

Top Ten: Bizarre Ways People Have Died

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Reading Time: 5 minutes

People die all the time and for all sorts of reasons, but it’s the weird ways people pass that stick in our memories

 

Around the world an estimated 154,080 people die every day. That’s 6,420 lives lost every hour and a staggering 107 souls traversing the Highway to Heaven every minute. (Whoa! Imagine the traffic congestion!) People die all the time and for all sorts of reasons…disease, accidents, natural causes. Though the memory of the deceased is cherished for a long time, the cause of death is sooner forgotten, but some people’s final farewell leaves the world talking for years. See if your eyebrows shoot up at this list of top ten bizarre ways people have died.

10. Revenge of the bird

In 1926, 16-year-old Phillip McClean of Queensland became the only person to be killed by a cassowary. The bird was spotted by McClean and his younger brother on their lawn, prompting the teenagers to attack it with a bat. The third largest flightless bird in the world, this cassowary was not amused. It landed a brutal kick on Phillip’s neck, knocking him down and opening a gash on his main blood vessel. The youngster soon succumbed to severe blood loss and died. Lesson: Don’t pick on birds your own size.

9. Water water everywhere

As a participant in a radio show contest in 2007, all Jennifer Strange had to do to win a Wii console was to hold her wee. The 28 year old Californian mother of three drank large quantities of water without urinating to bag the prize. But, since all that water couldn’t go down, it went up to her brain causing water intoxication resulting in death. The family sued KDND 107.9 ‘The End’ radio station winning $16.5 million in damages. Lesson: Too much of a good thing can be too much.

8. Killer roach

Edward Archbold of Florida was another casualty of a game contest. In 2012 the 32 year old entered a cockroach eating challenge and won a python, but he died soon after of accidental choking on arthropod body parts. His airways were found to be obstructed by cockroach bits that had travelled down the wrong pipe. Lesson: Exercise caution when trying new ways of pest control as sometimes the exterminator can end up being terminated.

7. Fatal selfie

Just this year, Oscar Otero Aguilar of Mexico fatally shot himself while attempting to take a selfie with a borrowed, loaded gun. The 21 year old had been drinking with friends when he was struck with the bright idea of taking a photo. As he was waving the gun around, it accidentally went off – planting a bullet in his forehead. He passed away on the way to hospital. Lesson: When drinks, guns and cameras collide, you can only say cheese and die.

6. Bovine blow

If someone told Joao Maria de Souza that he was going to die in his sleep as cows fell from the sky, he would have laughed at the ridiculousness of the prediction. But that’s exactly what happened in 2013. The 45 year old Brazilian and his wife were asleep in bed when a 1.3 tonne cow fell through the roof and crushed him. While the wife and the cow were unhurt, Joao died of internal bleeding within hours of the incident. It is believed that the cow had escaped from a nearby farm and ended up on the roof which leaned on the side of a steep hill. Lesson: If it’s darkness that’s bringing the cows home, better leave the lights on.

5. In the line of duty

In 1871, Clement Vallandigham shot himself while trying to prove a point. The American lawyer and politician was defending Thomas McGehan against murder charges. While demonstrating how the victim could have shot himself, he drew a gun and the weapon accidently went off. Lesson: Going beyond the call of duty is sometimes not worth it.

4. Self-ignition

In 2013, Danny Vanzandt was found incinerated in his Oklahoma residence. Since the surroundings and the floor beneath him were all unscathed, the coroner delivered the verdict that the 65 year old had died of spontaneous combustion. For a human body to self- ignite, temperatures of around 3000 degrees are required. In spontaneous combustion, the person’s body emulates the ‘inside out’ candle effect where the body fat becomes the wax and clothes act as a wick. Lesson: Drinking eight glasses of water a day might keep combustion at bay.

3. The glass half glued

Canadian lawyer Garry Hoy met his end when he fell from the 24th floor of the Toronto Dominion Centre in 1993. He was trying to prove to a bunch of visiting students that the glass window was unbreakable and, in doing so, threw himself full force at it. He had performed the stunt many times before with no consequences, but apparently the glass had enough. When Hoy lunged at it that day, it didn’t break, but just popped out of its frame, plunging the 38 year old 300 feet to his death. Lesson: Beware window ‘pains’.

2. Greased lightening

In a bizarre incident, all 11 members of a visiting football team perished when a flash of lightning struck the pitch during a match in the Democratic Republic of Congo in 1998. Surprisingly, the home team was totally unharmed, raising speculations of witchcraft and foul play. Lesson: Lightning doesn’t have to strike the same place twice, it often finishes the job first time.

1. The last laugh

Greek philosopher Chrysippus died of laughter in 206 BC. The 3rd century thinker found a donkey eating his figs and he ordered a slave to give it some wine to wash them down. Chrysippus found the spectacle of a donkey eating and drinking, so funny he started laughing uncontrollably. This caused strain to his heart resulting in his death. Lesson: He who laughs last is often an ass.

 

100% Pure New Zealand

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PARMINDER JIM SINGH recently travelled around New Zealand capturing the beauty of the natural landscape including Lake Tekapo, Church of the Good Shepard, Cannibal Bay, Milford Sounds, Te Anau and Castle Point Lighthouse

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Check out more of Parminder Jim Singh’s work here:

http://pixaso.biz/new-zealand-tour

 

PC packs in a punch as MC!

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PC packs in a punch as MC!

Film: Mary Kom

Cast: Priyanka Chopra, Darshan Kumar, Zachary Coffin, Robin Das, Shakti Singh

Director: Omung Kumar

Rating: *****


It’s that life-defining moment when a character on screen transforms totally into a real life personality. We’ve seen Seema Biswas, Ben Kingsley and Farhan Akhtar metamorphose into real life characters in front of our bewildered eyes.

Now it is Priyanka Chopra. She virtually transforms her physicality before entering the spirit and the soul of boxing champ Mary Kom (MC).

And what a grand entry!

Ladies and gentlemen, we give you Priyanka as the gritty volatile boxer from Manipur who won’t take no for an answer, even from god. Penetrating a male domain like boxing in a gender-defying swoop, Priyanka’s MC takes us on a voyage of self-discovery where a plucky, poor girl from rural Manipur goes right to the Olympics. It’s an incredible story filled with sound and fury, signifying something deep and seductive, just waiting to be told.

Hats off to debutant director Omung Kumar for bringing us one of the most inspiring biopics to have ever reached the silver screen.

Mujhe bronze pasand nahin aata,” barks MC’s coach. I don’t like bronze.

As we see Mary’s dreams come true in front of our eyes, we know she was born to win.

The narrative has a soaring quality and texture. It simply takes off with scarcely any room for breathing space. The breathless quality of the storytelling goes well with the protagonist’s stormy mercurial nature.

As MC’s story unravels in flashback, we meet a woman who is not affected by the gender rules and the discrimination that governs our society.

Very early in the tightly clenched narrative, we see MC get into a full-fledged scuffle with a school bully. Later she takes on another far more dangerous bully who threatens to destroy her boxing career. In and out of the arena Mary never stops fighting.

“The rest of the world may be round. But your world is this square ring,” her coach reminds her pointing to the boxing arena. The struggle, as depicted in the stunning unspoilt north-eastern terrain of Manipur, captured with mesmeric intensity by cinematographer Keiko Nakahara, is manifold. Here it is a curse to be born a girl. And to be born a girl who wants to be a boxing champ! You have to be kidding.

Admirably the narrative doesn’t over-sentimentalise MC’s struggle. This is “Mother India” without the glycerine and melodrama. As played by Priyanka, MC is both gritty and giggly, plucky and precocious, a ferocious fighter and a tender mother.

Priyanka expresses every shade of her character with a pitch-perfect bravado. Her north-eastern accent could easily have become caricatural. But she controls, curbs and quantifies every component of her character’s personality without losing that basic element of spontaneity without which Mary would have become mechanical.

I dare any other actress to play MC the way Priyanka has. With her mystical mix of the girlish and the aggressive, Priyanka gets the point.

My favourite sequences are the ones where MC shares tender marital moments with her husband. If it’s vital for a career woman to get a supportive husband, it is equally essential for a film starring a female hero to have a co-actor who can play yin to her yang. Newcomer Darshan Kumar suffuses the screen with such supreme spousal sensitivity. He is a talent to watch.

Predictably enough, a lot of the opposition to MC’s dreams is shown to come from within her home. The skirmishes between MC and her father (Robin Das) and MC’s gender battle with the slimy executive of the boxing federation (played with diabolic relish by Shakti Singh) are exceptionally ‘filmy’, and I use that word in the truest cinematic sense.

The picturesque narrative, the richly flavoured music composed by Shashi Suman and Shivum (watch out for the poignant lullaby sung by Priyanka), the rapid fire editing, the framing of the shimmering shots and the incredibly aesthetic use of rich colours, all bear the unmistakable stamp of producer Sanjay Leela Bhansali, who is billed as Creative Director.

Mary Kom is a motivational masterpiece. From first frame to last, it grips your senses and irrigates the parched corridors of your heart like very few biopics in recent times. Kumar weaves seamlessly in and out of Mary’s remarkable life creating a work that is as dramatic as Mehboob Khan’s Mother India and as inspiring as Richard Attenborough’s Gandhi.

Priyanka’s powerhouse performance knocks the breath out of our solar plexus. She yet again proves herself the best actress of her generation.

Hereafter there will be an eternal confusion about whose face goes on the hoardings announcing Mary Kom’s boxing events.

PC or MC?

Subhash K. Jha 

 

Rising Complexity Across the Board

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Online learning is the future – so don’t get left behind

The last time I wrote about online learning was in July 2011. Luckily for me, several of my predictions quickly came true. I said that online education courses would be free and supported by public interests in philanthropy, governments and big corporations; peer groups would help students to learn online better; and online learning is the future of learning.

These ideas have now been found to be true by none other than the Director of Research at Google, Peter Norvig. He started with the obvious assumption that one-to-one learning face-to-face was perhaps the best method, but soon found, through his and his colleagues’ detailed experiments with online learning, that ultimately there was not a huge difference between machine (online) learning (with peer assisted networks and more) compared with face-to-face learning.

Where I got it wrong was that the peer to peer groups I speculated about did not proliferate on social media like Facebook (they still may), but for now student peer groups have a few other sites as listed by Norvig. I can only be delighted by all these!

As the new Modi government pushes online education in India, I am in seventh heaven. India’s education problem is huge and online education is a Godsend. Quota systems are not a solution to India’s problems, but online education, for all who want it, is. But more on that some other time. For now, I want to focus on why online education is a must for everyone around the world throughout their lives. You sort of know it, and suspect it’s true, but still you have doubts and hence this spiel:

Have you ever known how much you need to know that you don’t yet know? Most people have opinions (me too!) and they take them for granted, but as soon as you question them on facts that led them to that opinion you find they have little knowledge, very often wrong facts and even the wrong understanding. Facts are now easily accessible through searches on the internet, so learning to find facts continuously, correctly and vetting them appropriately, is central to forming opinions. This is just one reason for life long online education.

My worst fears are imagined when I meet board members and directors of many leading, and even cutting-edge organisations, and find that not only do they lack facts, they shun complexity, are afraid of it and in turn are afraid to form the solid opinions necessary for their businesses to strategise and succeed. As soon as you talk of even simple things, they feel overwhelmed by their ignorance. I am routinely told, “What you say is too complex, simplify it”. As one of the best simplifiers of complex things (as my friends know me), I find that many board members do not understand even the basics.

Suppose you are in insurance and don’t know what ‘Injury Biomechanics’ means! Or you are a programmer acquiring a software start-up and do not know what ‘Parsing’ means. Or an academic and you don’t know what ‘declension’ does to languages! God help you! Online education can!

As Peter Norvig notes, the success of online education should not be measured by how many students took and cleared an exam, or with what credit, but rather by how each person achieved the objective they set for themselves within their learning framework. As to the board members, I have bad news. Life is not simple anymore and you need to brace complexity or exit the boards and spare your organisations more failures!