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Showing posts with label #fibonacci. Show all posts
Showing posts with label #fibonacci. Show all posts

Tuesday, September 30, 2025

Dussehra 2025: Delhi Ramlila Itineraries via Metro & NaMo Trains (RRTS)

   

🪔 Dussehra 2025: Experiencing Delhi NCR’s Ramlila’s via Metro & NaMo Trains (RRTS)

(Intertwined with the Joy of Safe ePayments – April 11, Safe ePay Day, Proposed)







🌸 Section 1: A Tale of Two Cities & the Story of Ramlila

Living in Bangalore, Dussehra always brings Mysuru to mind. The Mysuru Dasara is legendary — elephants carrying the golden howdah, the Mysuru Palace illuminated with over one lakh lights, and jubilant crowds lining the streets. For Karnataka, this festival is not just about tradition; it’s a declaration of cultural pride and identity.

Yet, just as Mysuru has its grandeur, Delhi NCR has its Ramlilas. Here, the focus shifts from royal processions to dramatic storytelling. Makeshift stages in open grounds become theatres for the Ramayana, where the battles of Rama and Ravana are enacted with music, dance, and pyrotechnics. If Mysuru’s Dasara is regal pageantry, Delhi’s Ramlilas are people’s theatre — vibrant, participatory, and rooted in community spirit.

🌿 The Origins of Ramlila

Ramlila, which literally means “the play of Rama,” has been performed for centuries in different forms across India. It is believed that Goswami Tulsidas, the poet-saint of the 16th century, gave shape to the earliest organized Ramlilas in Varanasi after composing the Ramcharitmanas. Since then, the practice has spread far and wide, adapting to the cultural pulse of each region.

  • In North India, Ramlilas often culminate with the symbolic burning of Ravana’s effigy on Dussehra night — a ritual that has come to represent the victory of truth over falsehood.
  • In smaller towns, the performances can stretch across all ten days of Navaratri, with each evening focusing on a different episode from the Ramayana.
  • In modern cities like Delhi, Ramlilas are a blend of tradition and spectacle: live actors supported by LED screens, elaborate sound systems, and firework finales that draw crowds in the lakhs.

🎭 Delhi NCR’s Signature Ramlilas

Delhi, with its layered history, has naturally become one of the epicenters of Ramlila traditions:

  • Lal Qila Maidan (Red Fort Ramlila): Perhaps the most iconic, with the majestic Red Fort as its backdrop. Dating back to the Mughal period, this Ramlila is not only a cultural performance but also a political and historical stage.
  • Ramlila Maidan (Near New Delhi Station): Known equally for cultural gatherings and political rallies, this ground becomes a magnet during Dussehra.
  • Karol Bagh Ramlila: A community-driven production, smaller in scale than Lal Qila but cherished for its intimacy.
  • Dwarka and Noida Ramlilas: Reflecting the expansion of the city, these newer venues cater to the NCR’s growing population, offering family-friendly experiences with food courts and amusement rides.
  • Ghaziabad and Meerut: Beyond Delhi’s borders, towns like Ghaziabad and Meerut host Ramlilas that rival the capital’s in grandeur, drawing audiences from surrounding villages and cities.

🪔 More Than Theatre: A Social Experience

What makes Ramlila so enduring is that it is not just a performance but a shared experience. Families dress in festive attire, children eagerly wave toy bows and arrows, vendors sell balloons and sweets, and elders retell the morals of the Ramayana. The smell of roasted peanuts mixes with the sound of devotional songs, creating an atmosphere that is both sacred and joyous.

In a way, these Ramlilas are living museums of Indian culture — where art, history, religion, and community come together under the night sky. For many Delhiites, attending a Ramlila is not optional; it is an annual ritual.


🚇 Section 2: Delhi Metro – The Festival Connector

If Mysuru Dasara’s grandeur is defined by its palace and procession, Delhi’s Ramlilas are defined by their accessibility. What makes these sprawling cultural events possible for lakhs of people is the Delhi Metro — a network that has become the lifeline of the capital.

🚉 A Modern Artery of the City

Since its inauguration in 2002, the Delhi Metro has grown into one of the world’s largest urban transit systems. With 12 lines, 290+ stations, and daily ridership crossing 6 million, it is more than just transport; it is a public utility that binds the city together.

During festivals, the Metro assumes an even greater role:

  • Reliability: Unlike roads jammed by festive traffic, the Metro runs on schedule.
  • Connectivity: From Old Delhi’s Lal Qila to Noida’s Sector 62, the Metro touches every corner.
  • Safety: Well-lit stations, security checks, and CCTV make it safer for families returning late at night.
  • Eco-Friendliness: As cars crawl in gridlock, the Metro silently reduces carbon footprints.

For Ramlila-goers, this reliability is invaluable. Parents with children, groups of students, and office-goers heading straight to evening shows all rely on the Metro to reach venues comfortably.


🪔 Metro + Ramlila: A Perfect Pairing

During Dussehra week, iconic venues like Lal Qila Maidan and Ramlila Maidan attract tens of thousands every evening. Parking near these grounds is nearly impossible, and traffic diversions are common. The Metro, however, delivers you right at the doorstep:

  • Lal Qila Metro Station (Violet Line): Just a 5-minute walk from the Red Fort grounds.
  • New Delhi Metro Station (Yellow Line): A short stroll from Ramlila Maidan.
  • Karol Bagh (Blue Line): Practically in the neighborhood of the local Ramlila.
  • Dwarka Sector 21 (Blue Line): Perfect for West Delhi residents.
  • Noida Sector 62 (Blue Line): NCR professionals find this venue most convenient.

The Metro not only saves time but also makes the Ramlila experience inclusive. Students from hostels, families from suburbs, and even tourists staying near Connaught Place can hop on a train and become part of the celebration.


🛡️ Metro as a Cultural Equalizer

What is striking about the Metro during Ramlila season is how it blurs social and economic boundaries. Inside the train, you might see:

  • A family carrying balloons and snacks for children.
  • College students excitedly debating who will play Hanuman this year.
  • Elderly couples recalling how Ramlilas were staged decades ago without microphones or lights.
  • Office-goers still in formal clothes, squeezing in a performance before heading home.

The Metro, in this sense, becomes an extension of the Ramlila ground — a shared space where anticipation builds, conversations spark, and the festive mood spreads.


💳 The Convenience of Cashless Travel

Another dimension that makes Metro journeys festive-friendly is the ease of cashless payments:

This aligns beautifully with the idea of safe ePayments, proving that technology can make even cultural journeys smoother. When thousands of people are moving at once, avoiding cash exchanges speeds up the entire experience.


🌉 A South–North Parallel

As someone from Bangalore, it’s hard not to compare. Just as special trains and buses ferry people to Mysuru for Dasara, the Delhi Metro ferries lakhs to Ramlilas every night. Both systems — one rooted in heritage, the other in modern infrastructure — highlight how mobility powers celebration.

Without transport, festivals risk becoming exclusive to locals. With transport, they become shared experiences accessible to everyone. And that inclusivity is what makes Ramlilas and Dasara alike in spirit, though different in form.


🚄 Section 3: RRTS (NaMo Trains) Joins the Festivities – Expanding the Cultural Map

The Delhi Metro has already transformed travel within the capital, but festivals like Dussehra extend beyond Delhi’s borders. Ghaziabad and Meerut, long known for their own spectacular Ramlilas, are now seamlessly connected to the capital through the Delhi–Meerut Regional Rapid Transit System (RRTS), popularly branded as NaMo Trains.

What is RRTS (NaMo Trains)?

The RRTS is India’s first regional high-speed commuter rail, designed for average speeds of 100 km/h, cutting travel times drastically between Delhi and surrounding cities.

  • Delhi–Ghaziabad: Under 20 minutes.
  • Delhi–Meerut: Around 1 hour (compared to 2.5–3 hours by road).

Launched in phases from 2023 onwards, by 2025 the RRTS (NaMo Trains) has become a lifeline for NCR commuters. For festival-goers, it is a game-changer.


🎭 Ghaziabad’s Grand Ramlilas

Ghaziabad hosts some of the NCR’s largest Ramlilas, particularly in areas like Kavi Nagar, Shastri Nagar, and Ramleela Ground near Ghantaghar.

  • Access via NaMo Trains (RRTS): Board at Sarai Kale Khan Station in Delhi, get down at Ghaziabad Station, then take a 10–15 minute auto or e-rickshaw to the grounds.
  • Time saved: What used to be a frustrating 90-minute car ride in festive traffic is now a 20-minute breeze.

🌆 Meerut: A Cultural Powerhouse

Meerut’s Ramlilas are among the grandest in North India, staged at venues like Nauchandi Ground and Victoria Park.

  • Access via NaMo Trains (RRTS): Delhi (Sarai Kale Khan) Meerut Central or Meerut South.
  • Travel time: Just about an hour — quick enough for an evening trip.
  • Experience: Many Delhi families now treat a visit to Meerut’s Ramlila as a festive outing, returning by the last train at night.

🪔 RRTS (NaMo Trains) as a Festival Bridge

The system is not just about speed; it’s about expanding cultural participation. Families in Meerut can now watch the Red Fort Ramlila in Delhi without overnight stays. Delhiites can enjoy the traditional flavor of Ramlilas outside the capital. This cross-pollination creates a regional cultural circuit rather than isolated events.


💳 Digital Convenience Onboard

Much like the Metro, NaMo Trains emphasize cashless transactions:

  • QR tickets and smart cards reduce queues.
  • UPI kiosks onboard sell water and snacks.
  • Integration with Delhi Metro cards offers a unified experience.

🌉 South–North Reflection

Just as special trains and buses bring lakhs to Mysuru Dasara, NaMo Trains (RRTS) now bring lakhs to Delhi and Meerut Ramlilas. Both systems extend the festival beyond one city, turning it into a regional celebration.


Section 4: Itineraries & Travel Plans – Experiencing Ramlila via Metro & NaMo Trains (RRTS)

Delhi NCR transforms into a living theatre during Dussehra. While Mysuru Dasara shines in royal grandeur, the Ramlilas of Delhi, Ghaziabad, Noida, and Meerut are people’s theatre — staged under the open sky, filled with drama, music, and fireworks. Thanks to the Delhi Metro and the Delhi–Meerut RRTS (RapidX), reaching these grounds is now smoother, faster, and more inclusive than ever.

Here’s a detailed look at how you can plan your evenings, complete with routes, interchanges, travel times, and pro tips.


🚇 Delhi-Centric Ramlilas

🎭 1. Lal Qila Maidan (Red Fort Ramlila)

The Red Fort Ramlila is the crown jewel, unfolding against the historic backdrop of Lal Qila.

  • Metro Route: Violet Line Lal Qila Metro Station Exit Gate 1 5-min walk.
  • Best Time: Arrive by 6:15 pm (show begins 6:30 pm).
  • Pro Tip: Combine with a pre-show Chandni Chowk food trail.

Start Location

Metro Line

Interchange

Final Stop

Travel Time

Rajiv Chowk

Yellow Violet

Central Secretariat

Lal Qila

~20 min

Anand Vihar (via Ghaziabad RRTS)

Blue Yellow Violet

Rajiv Chowk, Central Secretariat

Lal Qila

~50 min


🎭 2. Ramlila Maidan (Near New Delhi Station)

A ground that has hosted both cultural performances and political rallies, it remains a magnet during Dussehra.

  • Metro Route: Yellow Line New Delhi Metro Station Exit Ajmeri Gate 12-min walk.
  • Best Time: Shows begin at 7:00 pm.
  • Pro Tip: End the evening with a Connaught Place dinner.

Start Location

Metro Line

Interchange

Final Stop

Travel Time

Kashmere Gate

Yellow Line direct

New Delhi

~10 min

Anand Vihar RRTS Metro

Blue Yellow

Rajiv Chowk

New Delhi

~45 min


🎭 3. Karol Bagh Ramlila

A community-driven production with plenty of neighborhood flavor.

  • Metro Route: Blue Line Karol Bagh Metro Station Gate 2 8-min walk.
  • Best Time: 6:45 pm onwards.
  • Pro Tip: Try the legendary Chole Bhature before the show.

Start Location

Metro Line

Interchange

Final Stop

Travel Time

Rajiv Chowk

Blue Line direct

Karol Bagh

~12 min

Anand Vihar RRTS

Blue Line direct

Karol Bagh

~35 min


🏙️ NCR Itineraries via Metro

🎭 4. Noida Sector 62 Ramlila

Tech-driven production, popular among young families and professionals.

  • Metro Route: Blue Line (Noida Electronic City branch) Sector 62 Metro Station Gate 1 short e-rickshaw.
  • Best Time: 7:00 pm.
  • Pro Tip: Family-friendly atmosphere with play zones and food courts.

Start Location

Metro Line

Interchange

Final Stop

Travel Time

Rajiv Chowk

Blue Line direct (Noida side)

Sector 62

~45 min

Ghaziabad RRTS

Blue Blue (Noida branch)

Vaishali Yamuna Bank

Sector 62

~50 min


🎭 5. Dwarka Sector 21 Ramlila

A spacious ground, ideal for West Delhi residents.

  • Metro Route: Blue Line (Dwarka branch) Dwarka Sector 21 Metro Station Gate 3 7-min walk.
  • Best Time: 7:15 pm.
  • Pro Tip: Ample parking nearby, good for families returning late.

Start Location

Metro Line

Interchange

Final Stop

Travel Time

Rajiv Chowk

Blue Line direct

Dwarka Sector 21

~50 min

Anand Vihar RRTS

Blue Line direct

Dwarka Sector 21

~65 min


🚄 RRTS-Enabled Festive Journeys

🎭 6. Ghaziabad Ramlilas

Large-scale Ramlilas in Kavi Nagar and Shastri Nagar rival Delhi in popularity.

  • RRTS Route: Sarai Kale Khan (Delhi) Ghaziabad RRTS Station.
  • Local Commute: 10–15 min e-rickshaw.
  • Best Time: 6:45 pm onwards.
  • Pro Tip: Save time by avoiding Delhi traffic — RRTS cuts the journey to just 20 minutes.

🎭 7. Meerut Ramlila’s

Among the grandest in North India, staged at Nauchandi Ground and Victoria Park.

  • RRTS Route: Delhi (Sarai Kale Khan) Meerut Central / Meerut South.
  • Local Commute: Autos take you directly to the grounds.
  • Best Time: 7:00 pm.
  • Pro Tip: Make it a half-day trip — leave by afternoon, return by midnight.

🎟️ Practical Travel & Payment Tips

  • Smart Cards & QR Codes: Metro and RRTS both support cashless ticketing.
  • Safe ePayments: From ticket recharges to snacks at stalls, UPI 💳 ensures smooth transactions.
  • Timing: Last Metro (~11 pm) and RRTS (~12 midnight) give flexibility.
  • Comfort: Expect short walks at most venues — comfortable footwear is a must.

🌉 A South-to-North Connection

For a Bangalorean used to Mysuru Dasara’s pageantry, experiencing Delhi’s Ramlilas feels like stepping into another dimension of the same festival spirit. While Mysuru dazzles with elephants and palaces, Delhi NCR mesmerizes with stagecraft and effigy burnings.

Both traditions remind us that festivals thrive when transportation makes them inclusive. Just as trains and buses bring lakhs to Mysuru, the Metro and RRTS deliver lakhs to Ramlilas across Delhi NCR. In both cases, technology doesn’t overshadow tradition — it sustains it.

 


🌉 Section 5: Conclusion – Celebrating Without Boundaries

India’s festivals are living bridges — they connect past with present, tradition with modernity, and communities across regions.

For me, in Bangalore, Mysuru’s Dasara is the ultimate Dussehra memory. For Delhiites, it’s the Ramlilas. Both are grand, both are timeless, both thrive because transportation makes them inclusive.

With Delhi Metro and NaMo Trains (RRTS) ensuring smooth, eco-friendly, and cashless journeys, these festivals are more accessible than ever.

Intertwined with the Joy of Safe ePayments – April 11, Safe ePay Day (Proposed).


⚠️ Disclaimer

This blog is an independent cultural and informational piece. References to Delhi Metro, NaMo Trains (RRTS), and digital payments are illustrative only.

  • These organizations have not endorsed this post.
  • Travel times/routes may vary with traffic or schedules.
  • Readers should check official updates from DMRC, NCRTC (NaMo Trains/RRTS), and Ramlila organizers before planning.

 

 

Plan your Dussehra 2025 in Delhi NCR! Explore iconic Ramlila venues with itineraries via Delhi Metro & NaMo Trains (RRTS). Intertwined with the Joy of Safe ePayments.

 

🌿💳🧠🌍Appeal  for Safe ePay Day 🌟

 

## Call to Action 

I urge governments, financial institutions, businesses, and communities worldwide to join hands in declaring April 11 as **Safe ePay Day**.

Let’s celebrate UPI’s milestone by making **Safe ePay Day** a global movement for secure, innovative fintech.

Together, we can build a future where financial access is universal, and every e-payment is safe—starting with **Safe ePay Day** in 2026.

 

No Vada Pav, not even one bite,
Till SafeePay Day takes off in flight.
Quirky vow with a Mumbai flair—
Announce the date, and I’ll be
there!

 

📌 References

1.    Nayakanti, P. (2025, September 7). September 07 — National Buy a Book Day and April 11 — Safe ePay Day: Building Trust, One Page and One Payment at a Time. Medium.
Retrieved from
https://medium.com/@nshantin/september-07-national-buy-a-book-day-and-april-11-safe-epay-day-building-trust-one-80483f34d7e7

2.   Nayakanti, P. (2025, August 13). 218th Lalbagh Flower Show via RV Road Interchange! Innovation in Banking.
Retrieved from
https://innovationinbanking.blogspot.com/2025/08/august-13-metro-rides-blooms-218th.html

Prashant Nayakanti. (n.d.). LinkedIn profile. Retrieved September 2025, from
https://in.linkedin.com/in/prashantnayakanti

 

 

 

 



Sunday, September 21, 2025

GST Bachat Spirit : How Modiji’s Cuts Make Dussehra Brighter


 

GST Bachat 2025 🪔: Modiji’s Double Bonanza for Families 👨‍👩‍👧‍👦

 

🎯Dussehra 2025: GST Bonanza & Safe ePayments Bring a Festival of Savings and Security” 🔍

GST + Safe ePayments: 
Celebrate Dussehra 2025 with Modiji’s GST bonanza & Safe ePayments—slay high prices, secure every rupee, and enjoy a true festival of savings.

Dussehra-only: 🪔
This Dussehra 2025, Modiji’s GST bonanza slays high prices, bringing households relief, renewal, and a true festival of savings.


Dussehra 2025 🎇: Slaying High Prices with the GST Bonanza 💰 and Safe ePayments 🔐

Every Dussehra, India celebrates the triumph of good over evil ⚔️ — the story of Lord Rama’s victory over Ravana 👹, the reminder that light conquers darkness 🪔 and truth defeats deceit.

This year, the celebration comes with an added gift 🎁: the GST Bonanza, as Modiji has called it — a true festival of savings 💵 that puts more money back into people’s hands just as they prepare for festive shopping 🛍️.

At the same time, the rise of Safe ePayments 🔐 ensures that these savings are not lost to modern demons — fraud, trickery, and unsafe digital practices 🎭. Together, GST relief and secure digital transactions give Dussehra 2025 a unique financial glow .




The GST Bonanza Explained 💡

The Goods and Services Tax (GST) has long been a backbone of India’s indirect tax system 🏛️. But until now, it carried complexity and burden. Multiple slabs — 5%, 12%, 18%, and 28% — often confused consumers and businesses alike, while keeping prices stubbornly high 📈.

With GST 2.0, effective from 22 September 2025 📅, the system has been simplified. Most goods and services now fall into just two broad slabs: 5️% and 1️8️%. A higher 40% category remains for sin and luxury items, but for households, the real change is in the essentials.

Medicines 💊, insurance 🛡️, toothpaste 🦷, soap 🧼, clothing 👕👗, and other everyday goods are now either exempt or fall into the lower slab. A sari once taxed at 12% may now be billed at 5%. Appliances, clothing, and FMCG goods have all become more affordable.

Families planning their festive budgets 🎊 will see relief, not strain. Combined with earlier income tax relief that exempts incomes up to ₹12 lakh 💸, this move is expected to free up ₹2.5 lakh crore across households. Truly, as Modiji called it, a “double bonanza” 🥳.


Dussehra — Slaying the Demon of High Prices 👹➡️🎯

The symbolism could not be stronger .

In mythology, Ravana had ten heads 👹, each representing vices like pride, greed, or deceit. In modern family life, Ravana takes the form of bills 📄, inflation 📈, and financial strain 💸.

Every time a family struggled to pay for medicines 💊, groceries 🛒, or school fees 📚 under heavy GST slabs, it felt like fighting a many-headed demon.

This Dussehra, with GST rates slashed 🪓, the story changes.

  • A family buying festive clothes 👗👕 finds more room in the budget.
  • A young couple purchasing a scooter 🛵 pays less tax.
  • A shopkeeper replenishing inventory 📦 feels more confident.

Each saving is a symbolic arrow 🎯 striking Ravana’s heads.

Dussehra is also about renewal 🌱 — starting fresh, buying tools, vehicles, or home essentials on an auspicious day. The GST Bonanza makes those new beginnings lighter, almost like a divine blessing 🙏.

Just as Lord Rama’s victory reassured the people of Ayodhya 🏹, GST 2.0 reassures Indian households: the demon of high taxes can be defeated.


Safe ePayments — A Modern Victory in the Spirit of Dussehra 🔐⚔️

Victory today is not only measured in savings 💰 but also in safety 🛡️.

As households take advantage of GST cuts and flood the markets for festive shopping 🎊, more transactions than ever are happening digitally 💳📱. From QR codes at sweet shops 🍬 to UPI links for festive clothes 👗, digital payments are now inseparable from celebrations.

Yet, just as Ravana wore many disguises 🎭, the digital world carries risks — phishing links, fake QR codes, and fraudsters waiting for an opening. The answer is vigilance: Safe ePayments 🔐.

Every secure transaction — whether through UPI, cards, or net banking — is like Rama’s bow 🏹, ensuring the arrow of money reaches its rightful destination 🎯. Families that double-check payment requests, protect their OTPs 🔑, and verify merchants are practicing the vigilance that Dussehra itself teaches.

This Dussehra, every safe digital payment can be seen as another victory 🏆: trust over deceit, safety over risk, and light over darkness 🪔. Together with GST savings, Safe ePayments ensure not just financial relief, but also peace of mind 🌸.


Modiji’s Address — The Festival of Savings Declared 📢🎉

In his address to the nation on 21 September 2025 📅, Modiji gave these reforms their emotional center ❤️. Speaking on the eve of Navratri 🌼, he declared that from sunrise on 22 September, GST 2.0 would take effect — launching what he proudly called a “GST Bachat Utsav 🎉” (savings festival).

He highlighted that the reforms will make everyday purchases easier 🛍️:
“From tomorrow, you will be able to buy your favourite items with ease.”

Linking GST cuts with earlier income tax relief, he described this as a double bonanza 🥳 for the poor, the middle class, and the neo-middle class.

Modiji also reminded citizens of the past — a time when taxes were scattered, tolls slowed trade 🚧, and compliance was confusing. The new GST system clears that clutter, making life easier for both consumers and businesses.

Finally, he called for pride in Swadeshi goods 🇮🇳 and Aatmanirbhar Bharat, urging shopkeepers and families alike to embrace “Made in India” products 🛠️. By combining savings with self-reliance, the reforms are designed not just to lighten wallets 💸 but to strengthen the economy 📈.

In that speech, policy became poetry ✍️: the GST Bonanza was framed not as an accounting exercise, but as a moral and emotional victory 🏆 for households across India.


A Dussehra of Savings and Security 🪔💵🔐

As the effigies of Ravana fall in every corner of the country 🔥 this Dussehra, Indians will celebrate more than mythology. They will celebrate a real and tangible victory in their daily lives.

✔️ GST 2.0 has slashed tax burdens 🪓, allowing families to save more as they shop for clothes 👕, appliances 🏠, or medicines 💊.
✔️ Safe ePayments 🛡️ ensure that every digital transaction is guarded, every rupee is protected from modern-day Ravanas 🎭 of fraud and deceit.
✔️ Modiji’s leadership 🤝 has framed these reforms not just as tax cuts, but as a festival of savings 🎉 — perfectly timed with a festival of victory ⚔️.

The lesson of Dussehra is eternal: no demon is invincible 🌟. In 2025, the demon of high prices has been struck 🎯, and the path ahead shines brighter .

This festive season, households across India will feel lighter, safer, and more confident 🏡 — their celebrations infused with both tradition 🪔 and trust 🔐.

This is Dussehra 2025 🎇: a celebration of victory, of savings 💵, and of safety 🛡️ — all working together to make the festival of triumph even more meaningful.

 

 

 

The Citizen Advocate Summary: Declaring April 11 as Safe ePay Day

Proposing April 11 as Safe ePay Day to mark UPI’s pilot launch on April 11, 2016, by NPCI with 21 banks, initiated by Dr. Raghuram G. Rajan in Mumbai. This initiative celebrates UPI’s seamless integration of banking and merchant payments.

April 11 – Declare ‘Safe ePay Day’,

Yes, April 11 is vacant in the UN Observance Day calendar

 

🌿💳🧠🌍Appeal  for Safe ePay Day 🌟

 

## Call to Action 

I urge governments, financial institutions, businesses, and communities worldwide to join hands in declaring April 11 as **Safe ePay Day**.

Let’s celebrate UPI’s milestone by making **Safe ePay Day** a global movement for secure, innovative fintech.

Together, we can build a future where financial access is universal, and every e-payment is safe—starting with **Safe ePay Day** in 2026.

 

No Vada Pav, not even one bite,
Till SafeePay Day takes off in flight.
Quirky vow with a Mumbai flair—
Announce the date, and I’ll be
there!

 

📌 References

1.    Nayakanti, P. (2025, September 7). September 07 — National Buy a Book Day and April 11 — Safe ePay Day: Building Trust, One Page and One Payment at a Time. Medium.
Retrieved from
https://medium.com/@nshantin/september-07-national-buy-a-book-day-and-april-11-safe-epay-day-building-trust-one-80483f34d7e7

2.   Nayakanti, P. (2025, August 13). 218th Lalbagh Flower Show via RV Road Interchange! Innovation in Banking.
Retrieved from
https://innovationinbanking.blogspot.com/2025/08/august-13-metro-rides-blooms-218th.html

Prashant Nayakanti. (n.d.). LinkedIn profile. Retrieved September 2025, from
https://in.linkedin.com/in/prashantnayakanti

 

 

 

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