Rajendra B. Aklekar's Blog, page 9
February 23, 2015
Book review-- Halt Station India -- Hindi newspaper Yashobhoomi
Published on February 23, 2015 11:55
February 8, 2015
Discovered!!! An old turn-table on Mumbai railway. Bandra yard
Complete set of pics of Bandra yard turn-table on Mumbai railway.
-- Rajendra B. Aklekar, Mumbai (Bombay, India)
-- Rajendra B. Aklekar, Mumbai (Bombay, India)








Published on February 08, 2015 23:59
Sigh! Last set of diesel-hydraulic locos lined up for scrap!
Sigh! The last set of WDS-4 class diesel-hydraulic locomotives with vintage side-rods are lined up for scrap at Bandra in Mumbai last week. Only a few remain now. The first of the WDS-4 class engines was built in 1968 (numbered 19057 was named Indraprastha and had been homed at Shakurbasti shed, Delhi, for a long time.




Published on February 08, 2015 23:11
February 7, 2015
Halt Station India book review
Published on February 07, 2015 22:22
February 2, 2015
Historic day! 90 years of electric Mumbai local
Historic day for railways today. A collage of images of the India's first electric train that ran on February 3, 1925 and an image taken in February 2015 at the same location. Sandhurst Road station. Harbour Line Mumbai Division, Central Railway.

Published on February 02, 2015 21:36
January 31, 2015
Romancing Indian Railways -- Halt Station India
Romancing Indian Railways: Top 4 memoirs of travellers of earliest trains in IndiaBy Indo-Asian News Service @indiacom | January 30, 2015 4:17 PM | commentTags: indian railways, memoirs, Salman Khurshid



From the arrival of the first train and the subsequent emergence of a pioneering electric line – all in Mumbai, this book rekindles the romance with Indian Railways by highlighting the the rise of India’s original rail network. Written by journalist Rajendra B. Aklekar, the book draws from journals, newspapers and archives, along with “nostalgic accounts” of those who have traveled by the country’s earliest trains. It also captures the “economic and social revolutions spurred by the country’s first train line”. With a foreword by journalist and author Mark Tully, the book is peppered with images, maps and sketches.2. Building Bridges: The Role of Indian Americans in Indo-US Relations

Not satisfied with simply being an immigrant success story, the author decided it was time to give back – both to his adopted land and his motherland. He took on a leading role in the burgeoning movement of Indian Americans seeking rapprochement between the United States and India after decades of Cold War misunderstandings and resentment. The author helped shape this movement and its strategy – and in the
process developed a new play book for the political empowerment of immigrants. This memoir is a chronicle of the ups and downs of that movement, a blueprint for younger Indian Americans and other immigrant groups raising their voices in the United States – and a deeply personal family story.3. And Home Was Kariakoo

The author was born in East Africa, and like many Indian East Africans of his generation, he migrated to the West and made a life for himself there. But Africa remained his primal home – the land whose colours and smells most beckoned to him, the land in which his family roots went deepest. In this book, he travels to his homeland to draw a vivid portrait of East Africa today – always the melting pot of Asia, Africa and Arabia – and tells the story of the Gujarati Indians of that region for whom Africa is both home and not home.4. At Home in India: The Muslim Saga

Published on January 31, 2015 04:37
January 23, 2015
Halt Station India book review in Business Standard
Published on January 23, 2015 22:39
January 20, 2015
January 9, 2015
December 25, 2014
The story of Churchgate station
Published on December 25, 2014 12:02