Below is what I found on Yahoo home page. Please have a read. I very
proud of ARRji.


Once, solar consultant Jaideep Malviya would start his official mails
and letters with 'Dear Sir' and end them with 'Yours Sincerely'. Now,
he has replaced both standard expressions with one: Jai Ho.

It was destiny, it seems, that Slumdog Millionaire's award-winning
song would become an anthem. Corporate executives so smitten by the
words that they are now using Jai Ho as salutation and valediction in
their e-mails. What's more, the term has captivated even international
clients.

"After the movie's success, most of my international clients started
using Jai Ho in the valediction. Since the Oscars, almost every mail I
got from my international clients had Jai Ho either as salutation or
valediction," says Malviya.

One of his clients, Nigel Cotton of Germany, wrote that the only thing
he wanted to see after the Taj Mahal when in India was Slumdog
Millionaire in an Indian theatre; all he would want to carry back was
a DVD with the song Jai Ho on it.

"Namaste was very common, until Jai Ho took over. It's very emotional
to get such letters. No matter how different that person is, you
automatically relate to him if he uses your language. Moreover, after
eight Oscars, the words have a sense of pride associated with them,"
says Malviya.

Dutchmen Edwin Koot and Johan Trip, now in Pune, are other Jai Ho fans
who use the words in all their letters. Trip took his family to watch
the movie back home and now prefers to write Jai Ho in every mail to
his colleagues or friends, irrespective of their nationality.

Roger Little, CEO of Spire Corporation, US, who has a special liking
for India and keeps visiting Pune for business, found it appropriate
to replace 'Hi' with Jai Ho in his e-mails and says it's been well
accepted.

In India, of course, the youth have almost declared Jai Ho as their
anthem. Diwesh Diwakar, manager of Quadrangle (naukri.com), did not
lose a day in starting the trend in his office. He calls it the root
effect.

"In villages of Bihar, people still wish each other by saying Jai Ho,
and thanks to the song the expression is universal now. By using it I
also feel nearer my roots as I hail from Bihar. Moreover, my
colleagues also liked it and now we have a Jai Ho team in office,"
Diwakar said.

"The song is full of life and it reflects youth. I got a mail from my
sister from Canada congratulating us on the Oscars win and she
concluded the mail with Jai Ho. Since then I have been using the
expression in all my mail. Even over the phone or in person, we greet
each other with Jai Ho," says Harshit Verma, a student.

Ankit Shah, another student, sets his signature as Jai Ho in his
e-mails. "Irrespective of whether the mail is personal or official, I
put my signature, Jai Ho, in all my e-mails. I feel the expression is
worth celebrating and sharing," says Shah. Jai Ho indeed.

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