Tuesday, March 30, 2010

UK Streets Have Indian Names


UK Streets Have Indian Names

Goodbye Acacia Avenue, welcome to Eco Way, Euro

Close and Sustainability Way-these are just changed

names of some streets in Britain, which are increasingly

being chosen to reflect councils' interests in the environment,

health and safety, and diversity, revealed a survey."New age

" ideas are also influencing the naming of roads such as

Karma Way or Yoga Way.Other streets are being given

names, which reflect Britain's increasingly multicultural society.
According to experts, local authorities were doing the same

thing the Romans did 2,000 years- using names, which

reflected the nature of society around them."Street names

reflect modern culture and society and preoccupations.

They now also show a worldwide influence," the Telegraph

quoted Dr David Green, a geographer from King's College

London, as saying.Other new streets with an

environmental theme include Eco Way, in Doncaster,

and Sustainability Way, in Leyland, Lancashire.
There also exists a Kyoto Walk and Kyoto Terrace, in Havant,

Hampshire, which feature environmentally friendly homes

and were named after the Japanese city where an international

treaty on climate change was agreed.Council officials in Poole

renamed Salamander Road as Safety Drive, after a new

fire station was built on it, reflecting an interest in

health and safety,Samsara Road, in Bromsgrove,

and Karma Way, in Harrow, north London, both use

phrases from Indian religions,dealing with concepts of

reincarnation and cause and effect, respectively, which have

become popular elements of "new age" western thinking.
Then there is Yoga Way, in Sutton, south London.
In Brent, however, councillors chose the financial over the

spiritual, calling one street Euro Close.
Among the new names, which reflect Britain's multicultural

society, are Masjid Lane, in Tower Hamlets, east London,

which uses the Arabic term for mosque.
A street is called Jinnah Close, after Muhammad Ali Jinnah,

the founder of the modern state of Pakistan.Other recently

named addresses reflect African influences,

such as Ashanti Mews, in Hackney, named after a major ethnic

group and area of Ghana.Local authorities have responsibility

for the creation of street names, and very often they will take

suggestions from developers or the public.The names

uncovered by the survey of local councils, carried out by

The Sunday telegraph, are all for streets or developments created

within the last ten years.

Keywords- UK Streets Have Indian names

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