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Friday, June 19, 2015

Guinness record

B Sai Kiran, the only Vedic memory trainer in the world, achieved an unusual feat recently, when he memorised 100 odd words from different languages like Russian, Sanskrit, German and many other technical terms as well.

“Ten scholars from various colleges were invited and together they came up with 100 words from their respective fields. I was given 10 minutes to memorise them, after which I had to recall them in the same sequence in which they were given,” said Kiran.

So how did he manage to remember the words? “It is very simple. Mind understands the language of pictures and can remember only something that is tangible. All that I do is convert unimaginable things into pictures and decode them in pictorial forms,” he says.

Kiran has also applied for the Limca Book of Records as no one else has attained this feat.

“I didn’t try this task earlier as I wanted the students from my institute to be able to do it.

Unfortunately when they were unable, I decided to attempt it,” he said.

Kiran has been in the field of vedic learning since 2001, when he first began his institute, IMPACT (Institute of Memory Power and Calculation Techniques) in the city.

“After my graduation, I was not as successful in my job as I would have expected,” he says recalling his earlier days when Dr Madugula Nagaphani Sharma and Das introduced him to the field of Vedic mathematics and vedic memory. After attaining a degree in the subject, Kiran started teaching the technique to children in his colony.

Once the method became a rage and brought him fame he decided to make it his full-time profession.
“Today, I have institutes in Dubai and Kuwait as well and I train more than 2 lakh students every year,” he says.
Kiran now aims to help the education system in our country benefit from Vedic memory and adds that it was this method that aided our ancestors while doing calculations in the age when calculators were unheard of.

“Every calculation is done within 10 or what we call ‘Dashamshav’ and so one does not require a calculator for that. For example, if one is doing normal mathematics, and has to divide something by 34, then knowing the table of 34 is a must. But with Vedic mathematics, you can calculate it within seconds without knowing the table,” he said and immediately scribbled the calculations and reached the answer in a jiffy.
He also says that this system will help children think out of the box as it gives scope for understanding and logically memorising.

“Indian education system is more powerful than any other, mainly because we still don’t have to use calculators till a certain age, and insist on mental mathematics. This system will help the children more and they will never require a calculator,” he declares with confidence.


Guinness record

Sai Kiran subtracts a 70-digit number from another in 60.05 seconds

It was a day of ambiguity for 26-year-old B. Sai Kiran.
He could not decide whether to exult over his newly set world record or to mope over the lapse of milliseconds in achieving the task he set about for.
Nevertheless, jubilations broke out as soon as this numerical prodigy, in his second attempt on Monday, successfully subtracted a 70-digit number from another in 60.05 seconds.
Sai Kiran, who set out to achieve it in one minute, fell short of his goal by five milliseconds, still scaling the heights of the world record successfully. Delegates from the Record Holders Republic, United Kingdom, declared on the spot his ‘Super Subtraction Feat' as a world record.
Sai Kiran, a trainer in Vedic Maths and Vedic Memory, failed in the first attempt though. Despite completing his task two seconds before the set time, he committed mistakes in the giant subtraction. He was allowed a second chance which led him to success.
The attempt being for a Guinness World Record, it was ensured that all digits except the first in the minuend are smaller than the corresponding digits in the subtrahend, thereby raising the complexity level of the calculation.
“I am going to use Nikhilam sutra from Vedic Mathematics which is based on the number 10,” Sai Kiran declared prior to the event, “Through my feat, I want to show the greatness of Indian Mathematics to the world.”
While the conventional subtraction is done from right to left, Vedic maths requires it to be done from left to right, he explained.
The event was organised by Institute of Memory Power and Calculation Techniques in association with Bala Sahithya Parishad. Video recording of the event will be sent for an entry into the Guinness Book of World Records, the organisers said.

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