eet the retired Mirzas who make the best of HAM radios
In between noting down in Braille about those who have checked in,
72-year-old Perviz
Mirza excitedly demands that the walkie-talkie be handed over to her! Though she
and her 70-year-old brother, Vispi, take turns to go online on
alternate days, excitement
welled up when she heard familiar voices on Friday night. They were on
the "net",
a ritual every active HAM follows every night.
It's the desire to hear people talk that made the two visually impaired siblings
become HAMs. Visible during calamities, and these days frequently on
city beaches
during Ganpati Visarjan,
HAMs are a group of people glued to each other for the thrill of
talking on radio
and wireless communication devices and their improvised versions.
Incidentally, the
Mirzas are among the most talkative HAMs around.
"I first came to know of HAMs in 1968. Some of my visually impaired
colleagues were
already HAMs while I was studying in Boston College," said Vispi, who along with
his sister are 20-year-old HAMs.
Vispi, who used to teach visually-impaired kids, remembers the days
when his colleagues
in US asked him to become a HAM.
Becoming a HAM was not easy, however. As they were visually impaired
no one was willing
to teach the siblings.
"I went to the Nehru Science Centre too, but they were not willing," said
Vispi
. However, in late
1990s
and early 2000 they met someone willing to teach them.
"The most difficult part was teaching them the circuit diagrams. A
larger picture
on butter paper had to be made with another paper below it in order to make them
feel and understand it," said
Sudhir
Shah, their teacher.
Now they make it a point to be online from their "shack" as and when
they can. "We
log in at least once every day. Sometimes it's three times," said
Perviz
, who used to work in Union Bank. For talking to the "young, smart and
intelligent"
about the weather, clarity of voice and the devices in use are important.
For
HAMs
, conversations are mostly about technology. That is what the
Mirzas
enjoy the most too. Best of their conversations have been with
friends like Cyril
Alphonso
, a
Mazgaon
resident.
"Presently, I am working on a transceiver. We like to talk about
improvisation we
make on the handsets," said
Alphonso
, 78-year-old former radio officer in Navy.
For
Mirzas
there have been some interactions that they still cherish. One such
was with Commander
Harkirat
Singh who was in INS
Vikrant
. Another was with
Ashish
Saxena
, a senior Navy personnel in Western Command. They came across these
two when they
tuned in on HAM.
"In fact,
Saxena
comes to visit us whenever he is here. The first time we met, he did
not not understand
that we were visually impaired," said
Vispi
, who did most of the talking about the friends made on HAM.
The
Mirzas
don't talk about politics. For them HAM is a hobby and they enjoy
exchanging recipes
and hobbies on air. "I talk to my sister in
Valsad
who too is a HAM. We exchange recipes, and I experiment," said
Perviz
.
HAM which is described as "the king of hobbies and not the hobby of
kings" has many
commoners and dignitaries as members. The essence of this licensed
hobby is to provide
voluntary help in times of emergencies when alternate means of
communication is not
around.
The
Mirzas
, unlike most active
HAMs
, cannot be physically present at disaster sites, but they make sure their hobby
serves some useful purposes at times. "Once it so happened that one HAM, Dr
Shenoy
, a friend of ours, had to go out into a forest area where there was
no mobile network.
He left our home number with the hospital for contacting him in case
of any emergency.
He would tune in every hour and we would inform him if the hospital had left any
message with us," said
Vispi
.
What is HAM radio?
HAM radios are wireless communication devices used as alternate means
of communication,
especially during emergencies or calamities. HAM requires
licence
and each HAM has his own identity which is coded with emphasis on phonetics.
HAMs
primarily work on Morse Code. It's said to be an acronym of Hertz,
Armstrong and
Marconi
, the scientists who are said to have developed the handset. Some however say it
means 'Help All Mankind'.
Popular
HAMs
Rajiv Gandhi, Sonia Gandhi,
Amitabh
Bachchan
, King
Hussain
of Jordan, a couple of
UAE
princes, Sultan
Qaboos
of Oman among others.
How to become a HAM?
One has to know English well. S/he has to appear for an exam. Before
licence
is granted, investigative agencies will conduct a background check. Aspiring
HAMs
are also given training.
Price of HAM radios
A HAM radio can cost from
Rs
8,000 to
Rs
75,000 depending on its reach. Some
HAMs
cover as much as half the world.

http://www.dnaindia.com/mumbai/report-meet-the-retired-mirzas-who-make-the-best-of-ham-radios-2001878




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