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వంట గ్యాస్ ధర వరుసగా 3వ నెలలో పెంపు
వంటగ్యాస్, ఏటీఎఫ్ ధరలు పెంచినట్లు దేశీయ చమురు సంస్థలు ప్రకటించాయి. ఏటీఎఫ్పై 2.5 శాతం, వంట గ్యాస్పై 28 పైసలు ధర పెంచాయి.
వంట గ్యాస్
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Published : May 1, 2019, 4:01 PM IST
వంటగ్యాస్, విమాన ఇంధనాల ధరల్ని సవరించాయి దేశీయి చమురు సంస్థలు. అంతర్జాతీయ ధరలకు అనుగుణంగా ఈ మార్పులు చేశాయి.
వంటగ్యాస్ ధర స్వల్పంగా...
రాయితీ సిలిండర్పై 28 పైసలు, రాయితీలేని సిలిండర్లపై రూ.6 ధర పెంచాయి చమురు సంస్థలు. పెరిగిన ధరతో రాయితీ సిలిండర్ దిల్లీలో ప్రస్తుతం రూ.496.14కి లభించనుంది. రాయితీ లేని సిలిండర్ ధర రూ.712.50కు చేరింది.
ఎల్పీజీ ధరలు పెరగటం కూడా వరుసగా ఇది మూడో నెల. 2014తో పోల్చుకుంటే రాయితీ సిలిండర్పై ఇప్పటి వరకు రూ.82 ధర పెరిగింది. కిరోసిన్ ధరలనూ స్వల్పంగా పెంచాయి చమురు సంస్థలు.
ఏటీఎఫ్ ధరలు పైపైకి
విమానాల్లో వాడే ఇంధనం (ఏటీఎఫ్) ధర 2.5 శాతం (కిలో లీటర్కు రూ.1,595.63) పెరిగింది. ప్రస్తుతం కిలో లీటర్ ఏటీఎఫ్ ధర రూ.65,067.85కి చేరింది. ఏటీఎఫ్ ధరలు పెరగటం వరుసగా ఇది మూడో నెల. ఏప్రిల్లో దాదాపు ఒక శాతం... మార్చిలో అత్యధికంగా 8.1 శాతం ధర పెరిగింది.
ఇప్పటికే ఆర్థికపరమైన ఇబ్బందులు ఎదుర్కొంటున్న దేశీయ విమాన సంస్థలకు ఏటీఎఫ్ ధరల్లో పెరుగుదల మరింత భారంగా మారనుంది.
వంటగ్యాస్, విమాన ఇంధనాల ధరల్ని సవరించాయి దేశీయి చమురు సంస్థలు. అంతర్జాతీయ ధరలకు అనుగుణంగా ఈ మార్పులు చేశాయి.
వంటగ్యాస్ ధర స్వల్పంగా...
రాయితీ సిలిండర్పై 28 పైసలు, రాయితీలేని సిలిండర్లపై రూ.6 ధర పెంచాయి చమురు సంస్థలు. పెరిగిన ధరతో రాయితీ సిలిండర్ దిల్లీలో ప్రస్తుతం రూ.496.14కి లభించనుంది. రాయితీ లేని సిలిండర్ ధర రూ.712.50కు చేరింది.
ఎల్పీజీ ధరలు పెరగటం కూడా వరుసగా ఇది మూడో నెల. 2014తో పోల్చుకుంటే రాయితీ సిలిండర్పై ఇప్పటి వరకు రూ.82 ధర పెరిగింది. కిరోసిన్ ధరలనూ స్వల్పంగా పెంచాయి చమురు సంస్థలు.
ఏటీఎఫ్ ధరలు పైపైకి
విమానాల్లో వాడే ఇంధనం (ఏటీఎఫ్) ధర 2.5 శాతం (కిలో లీటర్కు రూ.1,595.63) పెరిగింది. ప్రస్తుతం కిలో లీటర్ ఏటీఎఫ్ ధర రూ.65,067.85కి చేరింది. ఏటీఎఫ్ ధరలు పెరగటం వరుసగా ఇది మూడో నెల. ఏప్రిల్లో దాదాపు ఒక శాతం... మార్చిలో అత్యధికంగా 8.1 శాతం ధర పెరిగింది.
ఇప్పటికే ఆర్థికపరమైన ఇబ్బందులు ఎదుర్కొంటున్న దేశీయ విమాన సంస్థలకు ఏటీఎఫ్ ధరల్లో పెరుగుదల మరింత భారంగా మారనుంది.
MIDEAST HOLOCAUST ARCHIVE
SOURCE: ASSOCIATED PRESS
RESTRICTIONS: AP Clients Only
LENGTH: 7:32
SHOTLIST:
ASSOCIATED PRESS - AP CLIENTS ONLY
Ramat Gan, Israel - 23 April 2019
1. Pan left of Moshe and Rachel Zeiger, Father died in Holocaust, entering living room
2. Mid of Moshe and Rachel looking at letter written by their father
UPSOUND (Hebrew): "It is a letter that our father wrote, he describes our situation in France to family members in Australia."
3. Mid of letter on table
4. SOUNDBITE (Hebrew) Rachel and Moshe Zeiger, Father died in Holocaust:
Moshe: "It is another small testimony, another drop in this sea of testimonies, because it is not something that makes us discover anything. The facts are known, what happened, happened and it's another small evidence"
5. Wide of Moshe and Rachel talking to Orit Noiman, Head of Yad Vashem's Collection and Registration Center
6. SOUNDBITE (Hebrew) Rachel and Moshe Zeiger, Father died in Holocaust:
Rachel: "I think that even my daughters are not so interested, it's difficult for them to imagine that."
Moshe: "Actually, I spoke with Liora yesterday."
Rachel: "But till now she didn't see that previous movie we sent her."
Moshe: "But she said that it starts to interest her. And in my house, the children were happy."
Rachel: "Maybe in a year or two when they will be older."
Moshe: "I think the main conclusion is that we have to keep a strong country, the emphasis on strong, because if the Jew is weak, this is what happens."
7. Wide of Noiman speaking with Rachel and Moshe
UPSOUND (Hebrew):
Noiman: "This letter that he wrote (their father) in June (19)42, was it before he got arrested?"
Moshe: "Yes, yes."
8. Close of identification document
UPSOUND (Hebrew): "This is my Belgian ID with the stamp Jew."
9. Mid of Rachel holding postcard
UPSOUND (Hebrew): "This is the postcard that father managed to throw out from the train that took him to death."
10. Tilt up from documents to Rachel and Moshe
11. Close of Rachel's fake French ID
12. Mid of Rachel, Moshe and Noiman looking at documents
13. Pan right from Rachel to Moshe
14. Close of picture of Rachel and Moshe's father, Samuel Akerman, in photo album
UPSOUND (Hebrew): "He really looks Jewish, it's from December (19)41."
15. Wide of Noiman speaking with Moshe and Rachel
16. SOUNDBITE (Hebrew) Orit Noiman, Head of Yad Vashem's Collection and Registration Center:
"The aim is not to display them at the museum, because the museum is very limited in place, but the aim is to keep and preserve the documents, to catalog them. Some of the archive is already open to the public in the Yad Vashem directory and some of them are accessible online via the Yad Vashem website."
17. Wide of Noiman speaking with Moshe and Rachel
UPSOUND (Hebrew): "I am now gonna put all the documents in the acid-free paper and we will digitize them in order to prepare copies. We will open them all so we can make a copy, all right?"
18. Various of expert scanning items
ASSOCIATED PRESS - AP CLIENTS ONLY
Jerusalem - 29 April 2019
19. Wide of Yad Vashem exterior
20. Various of exhibit sign, reading (English): "Gathering of Fragments"
21. Close of letters
22. Close of teddy bear and photograph
23. Tilt up of teddy bear belonging to Stella Knobel
24. Pan right of letter and photograph
25. Wide of doll in exhibit
26. Close of comb in exhibit
27. Various of Yad Vashem workers sorting letters, wearing white gloves
28. Setup shot of Avner Shalev, Chairman of Yad Vashem
29. SOUNDBITE (English) Avner Shalev, Chairman of Yad Vashem:
"I think our responsibility to take care and to have these stories and to keep them for generations. And it's important specifically now when we see all over the world new waves of hatred, new waves of anti-Semitic attacks, and we do believe and we know that those educational activities that we are doing with many other centers in the world can combat those expressions, those violent attacks on Jews and non-Jews all over the world. And it is important that they will be known, they will be presented, and it will be our material for teaching and learning about the period and the commitment a person, a sensitive person, has to take upon himself. He should ask himself what does it mean to me? This story, this artifact, this document and it means to me that I have to stand up whenever I see that a danger attack comes to attack those values and norms that are the basics of co-existence in a given society and community."
30. Mid of sweater, hair ribbon and photograph belonging to Gitel Londner
31. Close of label
32. Tilt down from photograph of Gitel Londner to hair ribbon
LEADIN:
With the world's community of aging Holocaust survivors rapidly shrinking, and their live testimonies soon to be a thing of the past, Israel's Yad Vashem Holocaust memorial is preparing for a world without them.
Its "Gathering the Fragments" program has collected some 250,000 items from survivors and their families to be stored for posterity, and displayed online to preserve the memory of the six million Jews killed by the Nazis, even after the last of the survivors has passed away.
STORYLINE:
91-year-old Rachel Zeiger and her younger brother, Moshe, are sharing the last remnant they have of their long-lost father.
A 1943 postcard Samuel Akerman tossed in desperation out of a deportation train, hurtling him toward his demise in the Majdanek death camp.
"My heart is bitter. I unfortunately have to inform you that I, together with 950 other people, am headed toward an unknown destination," he scribbled in shaky handwriting to his two children on Feb. 27, 1943, from inside the packed transport.
"I may not be able to write you again... pray to God that we will joyfully see each other again. Don't give up hope and I am sure God will help us."
Akerman, a diamond merchant who dreamed of moving to pre-state Israel, was never heard from again.
A bystander likely found the discarded postcard on the ground and mailed it to Rachel and Moshe in occupied France, where they had fled from their home in Belgium after the Nazis invaded.
After the father was deported, the rest - mother, grandmother and the two children - survived by assuming false, Christian identities.
The postcard remained stashed away as a vestige of their painful past for more than 75 years, until Moshe Akerman heard of a campaign seeking the personal effects of aging survivors.
"It is another small testimony, another drop in this sea of testimonies, because it is not something that makes us discover anything," he says.
"The facts are known, what happened, happened and it's another small evidence."
With the world's community of aging Holocaust survivors rapidly shrinking, and their live testimonies soon to be a thing of the past, archivists from Israel's Yad Vashem Holocaust memorial are snapping photos and scanning artefacts into a mobile database.
Efforts such as these are at the forefront of preparing for a world without Holocaust survivors.
Through its "Gathering the Fragments" program, Yad Vashem has collected some 250,000 items from survivors and their families in recent years to be stored for posterity and displayed online in hopes of preserving the memory of the six million Jews killed by the Nazis, even after the last of the survivors has passed away.
"The aim is not to display them at the museum, because the museum is very limited in place, but the aim is to keep and preserve the documents, to catalog them," explains Orit Noiman, head of Yad Vashem's Collection and Registration Center:
"Some of the archive is already open to the public in the Yad Vashem directory and some of them are accessible online via the Yad Vashem website."
Copious video testimonies have been filmed and even holograms have been produced to try to recreate the powerful impact of a survivor's recollection, which has been the staple of Holocaust commemoration for decades.
As Israel starts marking its annual Holocaust Remembrance Day at sundown Wednesday, Yad Vashem will be laying the cornerstone of its new campus for the Shoah Heritage Collections Center - the future permanent home for its 210 million documents, 500,000 photographs, 131,000 survivor testimonies, 32,400 artifacts and 11,500 works of art related to the Holocaust.
On Thursday (May 2, 2019), it will offer the public a rare behind-the-scenes look of its preservation work, with tours of its collection, archive and digitizing labs.
Samuel Akerman's jarring letter to his family will soon join the collected assortment.
"I think our responsibility to take care and to have these stories and to keep them for generations," says Yad Vashem chairman Avner Shalev.
"And it's important specifically now when we see all over the world new waves of hatred, new waves of anti-Semitic attacks, and we do believe, and we know that those educational activities that we are doing with many other centers in the world can combat those expressions."
Besides rounding up Jews and shipping them to death camps, the Nazis and their collaborators confiscated their possessions and stole their valuables, leaving little behind.
Those who survived often had just a small item or two they managed to keep.
Many have clung to the sentimental objects ever since.
But with the next generation often showing little interest in maintaining the items, and their means of properly preserving them limited, Yad Vashem launched "Gathering the Fragments" in 2011 to collect as many artifacts as possible before the survivors - and their stories - were gone forever.
Rather than exhibit them in its flagship museum, Yad Vashem stores most of the items in a specialized facility and uploads replicas online for a far wider global reach.
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