Transsexuals participate in a weeklong festival in Tamil Nadu

Villupuram (TN), May 8 (ANI): Transsexuals from across the country are participating in a weeklong “Koovagam” festival at Villupuram district in Tamil Nadu.

The festival that started on May 3 is held annually at the Koothandavar temple.

The festival draws around 50,000 transsexuals every year.

“This is the third time, I have come to Villupuram. I am very happy to see all the people. Every year we meet all our friends and share all our joys and sorrows,” said Mallika Rai, a participant.

Most of the participants said they treated the annual event as a meeting hub.

“I live in Mumbai but I am originally from Madurai. I have studied till class tenth. When I became a transgender my father and mother were worried about me. 15 years back I went to Mumbai and I have been working there as a dancer. I have come here to take part in the “Koovagam” festival at Villupuram.

I got a chance to meet all my friends,” said Aishwarya Aiyer.

During this festival two elderly males tie the knot to symbolize warrior king Aravan’s wedding to Hindu God Krishna’s incarnation as a woman named Mohini.

According to Hindu mythology, Aravan agreed to be sacrificed in war to salvage his family’s honour.

His only request before going to battle was that he be given the opportunity to experience one night of marital bliss before going to war.

His brothers searched everywhere, but could not find a woman who would readily accept widowhood.

Finally, Lord Krishna, in the form of a woman, helped Aravan fulfill his desire.

To mark the event, transsexuals come dressed as brides to marry the warrior deity.

On the same day, after getting married they cut their ‘mangal sutra’ (thread worn by women after marriage) to become widows.

Then they cry and beat their chests, to mourn their widowhood.

After this, they bathe in a water tank and drape themselves in white saris and vow that they would return the following year to make the same sacrifice.

India has some 500,000 transsexuals with Tamil Nadu alone accounting for 30,000. By Jai Kumar (ANI)

Traffic jams ‘triple heart attack risk’

Washington, Mar 14 (ANI): Being in heavy traffic triples your risk of heart attack within one hour, warn researchers.

Researchers reported at the American Heart Association’s 49th Annual Conference on Cardiovascular Disease Epidemiology and Prevention that people who have had a heart attack are likely to report having been in traffic shortly before their symptoms began.

In the German study of patients who had a heart attack, researchers found the patients to be more than three times as likely to have been in traffic within an hour of the onset of their heart attack.

The researchers also observed small but statistically significant increases in the chance that a heart attack occurred within six hours after exposure to traffic.

Time spent in any mode of transportation in traffic was associated with a 3.2 times higher risk than time spent away from this trigger. Females, elderly males, patients who were unemployed, and those with a history of angina were affected the most by traffic.

“Driving or riding in heavy traffic poses an additional risk of eliciting a heart attack in persons already at elevated risk,” said Annette Peters, Ph.D., lead author of the study and head of the research unit at the Institute of Epidemiology, Helmholtz Zentrum Muchen, Germany.

“In this study, underlying vulnerable coronary artery disease increased the risk of having a heart attack after driving in traffic,” the expert added.

To reach the conclusion, researchers reviewed cases of heart attack through the KORA registry in Augsburg, Southern Germany between February 1999 and December 2003. They used a standardized interview with 1,454 patients to collect data on potential triggers of heart attack, including exposure to traffic in the four days prior to heart attack symptom onset.

The patients had a known date and time of heart attack and all had survived 24 hours after the heart attack. Participants were asked what they did the day of the heart attack, where they went, the means of transportation and time spent in traffic.
he average age of the participants was 60 years and about 25 percent were women.

The study showed that about 8 percent of the heart attacks in the group were attributable to traffic, Peters said. (ANI)