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#indian republic day 2023
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Happy Independence Day 2023: The Beautiful Indian Flag.
India’s 77th Independence Day 2023 As the vibrant tapestry of India readies itself for the grand spectacle of the 77th Independence Day on August 15, 2023, we stand at a crossroads of reflection and revelry. This momentous occasion is not merely a date on the calendar; it’s a tribute to the resilience, courage, and unity that have woven together the rich fabric of our nation. Together, let’s…
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iismmumbai · 2 years
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IISM wishes every Indian a Very Happy Republic Day 2023
‘The Sports Heroes 2.0’ turns 1 !!. It feels like only yesterday when the podium winners at the Olympic & Paralympic Games Tokyo 2020 came together on a single platform to sing the National Anthem of India at the IISM campus.
I’m grateful to all the athletes for coming together to shoot this video. Such videos will inspire younger generations to take up sports in their careers.
The video is directed by Abhijit P. and Mangesh Sawant.
I am eternally grateful to Shri. Amitabh Bachchan ji for reciting the poem ‘Man Main hai Maidan,' penned beautifully by Mr. Kshitij Patwardhan .
Music is composed by Ram Sampath. Costume designed by Umang Mehta. Special still photography by Tejas Nerurkar.
This video features: Neeraj Chopra, Manish Narwal, Sumit Antil, Pramod Bhagat, Krishna Naga, Ravi Kumar, Mirabai Chanu, Nishad Kumar, Yogesh Kathunia, Devendra Jhajharia, Bhavina Patel, Suhas Yathiraj, Praveen Kumar, Lovlina Borgohain, Harvinder Singh, Manoj Sarkar, Sharad Kumar, Sreejesh P.
Digital India Khelo India University Games, Sports Authority of India, Deepa Malik MyGov India.
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psychogirl87 · 2 years
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I wanted to post this morning but got busy then forgot.
Happy Republic Day!!!!!
For ya non Indians Republic Day, celebrated on 26 Jan is the day the Indians officially adopted their constitution in 1950 three years after independence.
Even though the constitution was adopted on 15 Nov the year before, a freedom fighter had declared, before independence, that it would be 26 Jan that India would enact its constitution.
Sorry if your not into history but I love war history especially about the country and The freedom war.
Proud.!!!!
🇮🇳🇮🇳🇮🇳
Jai Hind.
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worldinyourpalm · 2 years
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मजबूत और स्थिर नीचे कर्तव्य पथ | steadfastly moving down Kartavya Path;
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भारत अपने 74 वें गणतंत्र दिवस का जश्न मनाने के लिए
राफेल जेट और Su-30 MKI लड़ाकू विमानों द्वारा युद्धाभ्यास के साथ IAF का प्रदर्शन नौसेना के विमान और सेना के हेलीकॉप्टर उड़ान योजना को पूरा करते हैं मोटरसाइकिल स्टंट, बैंड, मार्चिंग टुकड़ियों ने भीड़ का मनोरंजन किया वीआईपी निमंत्रण में कटौती के साथ बैठने की क्षमता लगभग 45,000 तक कम हो गई।
भारत की कहानी: 
(बाएं से दक्षिणावर्त) नरम शक्ति, सैन्य ��क्ति और महिला नेतृत्व का प्रदर्शन तब हुआ जब राष्ट्रपति द्रौपदी मुर्मू ने कर्तव्य पथ पर गणतंत्र दिवस समारोह में मिस्र के राष्ट्रपति अब्देल फत्ताह अल-सिसी का स्वागत किया; लेफ्टिनेंट कमांडर। दिशा अमृत ने नौसेना दल का नेतृत्व किया; ऊंट पर सवार बीएसएफ दल में महिला कर्मी; गर्वित सीआरपीएफ महिलाएं; और स्वदेशी नेत्रा एयरबोर्न अर्ली वार्निंग एंड कंट्रोल सिस्टम और एक राफेल के साथ आकाश में एक संगीत कार्यक्रम।
जैसे ही भारत अपने 74 वें गणतंत्र दिवस का जश्न मनाने के लिए जागा, गुरुवार को गणतंत्र दिवस की परेड देखने के लिए हजारों लोग नई दिल्ली में नए पुनर्निर्मित और नए नाम वाले कर्तव्य पथ पर आए।
इस परेड में हर किसी के लिए हमेशा कुछ न कुछ होता है, इस साल की सभा, पुरुषों और महिलाओं, वरिष्ठ नागरिकों और बच्चों, छात्रों और कामकाजी पेशेवरों, और विक्रेताओं और दैनिक ग्रामीणों के मिश्रण को निराश नहीं किया।
जबकि परेड ने अधिकांश आगंतुकों के लिए मोटरसाइकिल स्टंट, विभिन्न बैंड और मार्चिंग दल, झांकी और सांस्कृतिक प्रदर्शन सहित कई आकर्षण पेश किए, यह भव्य कार्यक्रम को लाइव देखने का अनुभव था जो यादगार था। वशिष्ठ सिंह, 90, रांची के एक सेवानिवृत्त सहायक अभियंता, जिन्होंने सालों तक टीवी पर परेड देखी थी, ने कहा कि पहली बार कर्तव्य पथ पर बैठकर इसका अनुभव करना 'अवास्तविक' लगा।
उन्होंने कहा, 'मैं हमेशा से इसका अनुभव करना चाहता था, गणतंत्र दिवस परेड से बहुत सारी यादें जुड़ी हुई हैं।'
बादल मूंदना
हालांकि परेड 1.30 बजे शुरू हुई। एम। , लोगों ने पहली रोशनी से पहले ही आना शुरू कर दिया था क्योंकि वे सबसे अच्छी सीटें हड़पना चाहते थे। एक विशेष घटना जिसके बारे में वे उत्साहित थे, वह थी भारतीय वायु सेना के 45 विमानों, भारतीय नौसेना का एक और भारतीय सेना के चार हेलीकाप्टरों द्वारा फ्लाई पास्ट।
हालांकि, भीड़ निराश हो गई क्योंकि वे राफेल, मिग-29 और सुखोई-30 एमकेआई लड़ाकू विमानों द्वारा कर्तव्य पथ के ऊपर आकाश में विभिन्न युद्धाभ्यास नहीं देख पाए।
गाजियाबाद की रहने वाली 36 साल की विभा राफेल लड़ाकू विमानों को देखकर काफी उत्साहित थीं. 'हमने इसके बारे में केवल समाचारों में सुना है। मेरे बच्चे फाइटर जेट्स को देखने के लिए वास्तव में उत्साहित थे, लेकिन मौसम की स्थिति के कारण हम नहीं कर सके,' उसने कहा। देहरादून में राष्ट्रीय मिलिट्री कॉलेज के दो छात्रों, तेलुरी सृजन, 16, और सुनंद कुमार, 17, दोनों आंध्र प्रदेश के निवासी हैं, ने कहा कि मार्चिंग दल उनके लिए मुख्य आकर्षण थे।
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gatty-in · 2 years
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Amazon Republic Day Sale 2023 - Shop the Best Deals on Electronics, Fashion, Home Appliances during
Amazon Republic Day Sale 2023 – Shop the Best Deals on Electronics, Fashion, Home Appliances during
Amazon India is celebrating the upcoming Republic Day with Amazon Republic Day Sale 2023 – a sale that will run from January 17th to January 20th. During this period, customers can enjoy discounts on a wide range of products, including electronics, fashion, home appliances, and more. Republic Day Savings: Huge Discounts on Smartphones, Clothing, Appliances on Amazon 2023 One of the main…
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Okay, @sihatn wishes to be so hung up on the particular war crime the Israeli government is using to excessively slaughter innocent Palestinian civilians, so let’s explain the difference between Genocide, Ethnocide, and Ethnic Cleansing:
Genocide: the deliberate killing of a large number of people from a particular nation or ethnic group with the aim of destroying that nation or group
Examples: The Armenian Genocide (where the term actually originates), the Shoah/Holocaust, Taíno Genocide, and Rwandan Genocide to name a few.
I have seen some Zionists on this platform and on Instagram argue that Israel cannot be committing Genocide because it is a “very specific instance in history that only includes the Holocaust”. That fact is ardently incorrect. For one, the first event to be called a Genocide and where the term was coined was the Armenian Genocide and countless events have been labeled a Genocide since 1943/1944 when the term was initially coined (including events coined after the fact that had already happened like the aforementioned Taíno Genocide).
Ethnocide: the deliberate and systematic destruction of the culture of an ethnic group or nation without deliberately killing large numbers of people within that ethnic group or nation
Think “kill the Indian, save the man”, the American and Canadian policy against American Indian tribes and First Nations that sought to forcibly assimilate them into W.A.S.P. culture. A similar policy occurred in Hawaii during the “Republic of Hawaii” and “Territory of Hawaii” days, and even the destruction of Yiddish Culture by Zionists in Israel who feared it for being “too Middle Eastern”. Most Re-Education camps fall in this category too.
Ethic Cleansing: the mass expulsion or killing of members of an unwanted ethnic or religious group in a society
This term is relatively new and was coined in the aftermath of the collapse of Yugoslavia and Serbia’s treatment of Croats, Bosnians, and other ethnic minorities, as well as the Stalinist movement of ethnic minorities to different SSRs.
Mass Homicide: the deliberate killing of a large number of people
The only distinction here is the people are not being killed because of their ethnicity or nation, but for ✨ other reasons ✨
Now here’s the kicker, most Zionists would say they are committing Ethnic Cleansing. They might not say it out right, because the term has a nasty connotation, but they will say they’re doing the definition of ethnic cleansing.
Some propaganda reblogging Zionists might claim that they’re just committing Mass Homicide but here’s the thing, almost every example of mass homicide being committed by one nation to another nation has been an example of one of the first three categories. The only real examples of Mass Homicide actually being Mass Homicide occur within a state (see Mao famines, Pol Pot’s mass killings, or the countless purging of communists or anti communists during the Cold War).
Some (wrong) historians may claim the Bengal Famine and Irish Potato Famine were examples of mass Homicide but here’s the thing, in both cases aid from other nations and governments were barred from entering the effected places because the UK forbid it. Food exports were forced to continue to come from Ireland and Bengal because the UK forced it. The reasons these famines were so severe was because the UK had a eugenics inspired belief that the Irish and Bengalis were “sub human animals” and “less deserving of food than the Brits”.
The Irish Potato Famine and Bengali Famine were Genocides, with famine being the preferred method of killing.
Was it intentional at first? Maybe not. Did it become intentional after the fact? Yes.
But this takes us to the most important point. The difference between Genocide, Ethnocide, and Ethnic Cleansing AND Mass Homicide is the intent.
But the intent isn’t truly known until after the fact, when internal government documents are released and the facts of the situation are holistically known.
The Jews/Poles/Romani/etc knew they were going through a Genocide (or well, they didn’t know the word, but they knew what was happening) but most of the outside world didn’t because the N@zis were secretive about it. Yes some activists and Jewish/Polish/Romani/etc diaspora groups warned other governments, but these other governments (US, UK, USSR, China, France, Brazil, Mexico, Canada, Italy even) were skeptical.
We don’t full know intent now, but given Herzl and Jabotinsky’s rhetoric which essentially established modern day Zionism and the Israeli state, and the establishment of Area C for Israeli settlement after conflict in the West Bank, the fact that Israel has threatened a Second Nakba, an event internationally acknowledged as ethnic cleansing, the fact that there are oil reserves underneath Gaza and the forcing of 2 million people into an airport sized camp would allow Israel to open up drilling where the ruins of Gaza city lay, or the fact that Israel is an Ethnonationalist country that relies on the superiority of Israelis over Palestinians and other neighbouring countries in order to exist makes the intent known to those of us familiar with the history of this conflict.
Ok ok ok ok ok here’s where I M. Night Shyamalan this whole thing: Genocide, Ethnocide, and Ethnic Cleansing are all the same crime according to multinational organizations like the United Nations. They are all Genocide.
All Ethnocides are Genocides, but not all Genocides are Ethnocides.
All Ethnic Cleansings are Genocides, but not all Genocides are Ethnic Cleansings.
The Nakba was an Ethnic Cleansing, therefore the Nakba was a Genocide.
The Netanyahu administration claims that their on going attack on Gaza is a “new Nakba”.
Nakba = Ethnic Cleansing = Genocide
The Netanyahu administration claims that their on going attack on Gaza is a “new Genocide”.
Genocide carries with it negative connotations. If the term was as widely used in 1944 as it is today, Hitler would deny genocide allegations, just as the Turkish continue to deny genocide allegations from the Armenian Genocide, why the Japanese continue to deny Genocide Allegations during their rule of Korea, Taiwan, parts of Micronesia, Manchuria, and Nanjing. Why the British refuse to acknowledge the Irish Potato Famine or Bengal Famine as Genocides. Why the conservative right want to ban the teaching of American genocides against countless groups (namely Native Americans, African Americans, Native Hawaiians, and Chicanos). And why Zionists get so offended when you refer to the actions of Israel as a Genocide.
Those who commit Genocide will never acknowledge that they are committing genocide. The fact that the current mainstream Zionist reaction, like @sihatn, is to deny that the ongoing genocide exists just proves that one is happening… if the horrific videos didn’t prove it enough (this one is from an American pro Israel source, but it doesn’t not take long to find ones from individuals in Gaza)
In conclusion, Israel is committing a genocide, and if you say otherwise, you are blinded by Ethnonationalism just like the Germans were in the 30s/40s, the Turks were during the 10s/20s and onward, the Brits were for (well forever), and the American right wing is.
If you don’t acknowledge the fact that Israel is committing a Genocide you are part of the problem shawty, and it’s not a good look 😬
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afeelgoodblog · 1 year
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The Best News of Last Week - June 20, 2023
🐕 - Meet Sheep Farm's Newest Employee: Collie Hired After Ejection from Car!
1. Border Collie ejected from car during Sunday crash found on sheep farm, herding sheep
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Tilly, the 2-year-old Border Collie who was ejected from a car Sunday during a crash, has been found. He was found on a sheep farm, where he had apparently taken up the role of sheep herder. 
According to Tilly's owner, he has lost some weight since Sunday's crash and is now drinking lots of water but is otherwise healthy.
2. After 17-Year Absence, White Rhinos Return to the Democratic Republic of the Congo
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The Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC) recently welcomed the reintroduction of 16 southern white rhinoceroses to Garamba National Park, according to officials. The last wild northern white rhino was poached there in 2006.
The white rhinos were transported to Garamba, which lies in the northeastern part of the country, from a South African private reserve. In the late 19th century, the southern white rhino subspecies was believed to be extinct due to poaching until a population of fewer than 100 was discovered in South Africa in 1895, according to WWF.
3. UK to wipe women’s historic convictions for homosexuality
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Women with convictions for some same-sex activity in the United Kingdom can apply for a pardon for the first time, the Home Office has announced.
The Home Office is widening its scheme to wipe historic convictions for homosexual activity more than a decade after the government allowed applications for same-sex activity offences to be disregarded.
It means anyone can apply for a pardon if they have been convicted or cautioned for any same-sex activity offences that have been repealed or abolished.
4. Study shows human tendency to help others is universal
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A new study on the human capacity for cooperation suggests that, deep down, people of diverse cultures are more similar than you might expect. The study, published in Scientific Reports, shows that from the towns of England, Italy, Poland, and Russia to the villages of rural Ecuador, Ghana, Laos, and Aboriginal Australia, at the micro scale of our daily interaction, people everywhere tend to help others when needed.
5. In a First, Wind and Solar Generated More Power Than Coal in U.S.
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Wind and solar generated more electricity than coal through May, an E&E News review of federal data shows, marking the first time renewables have outpaced the former king of American power over a five-month period.
The milestone illustrates the ongoing transformation of the U.S. power sector as the nation races to install cleaner forms of energy to reduce greenhouse gas emissions from fossil fuels.
6. Iceland becomes latest country to ban conversion therapy
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Lawmakers in Iceland on June 9 approved a bill that will ban so-called conversion therapy in the country.
Media reports note 53 members of the Icelandic Parliament voted for the measure, while three MPs abstained. Hanna Katrín Friðriksson, an MP who is a member of the Liberal Reform Party, introduced the bill.
7. The temple feeding 100,000 people a day
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Amritsar, the north Indian city known for its Golden Temple and delicious cuisine, is also renowned for its spirit of generosity and selfless service. The city, founded by a Sikh guru, embodies the Sikh tradition of seva, performing voluntary acts of service without expecting anything in return.
This spirit of giving extends beyond the temple walls, as the Sikh community has shown immense compassion during crises, such as delivering oxygen cylinders during the COVID-19 pandemic. At the heart of Amritsar's generosity is the Golden Temple's langar, the world's largest free communal kitchen, serving 100,000 people daily without discrimination. Despite a history marred by tragic events, Amritsar continues to radiate kindness, love, and generosity.
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That's it for this week :)
This newsletter will always be free. If you liked this post you can support me with a small kofi donation:
BUY ME A COFFEE ❤️
Also don’t forget to reblog.
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fatehbaz · 1 year
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But what is more upsetting about sugar is its atrocious history. To this day, working conditions in sugar are among the world’s worst. [...] For nearly five centuries, European planters made dizzying fortunes in sugar, made possible by enslaving workers in colonized lands. [...] Canadian investors, too, have reaped massive sugar profits. During the 1700s and 1800s, most Europeans, in what is now Canada, were implicated in the transatlantic sugar and slave trades. Not only did many consume the fruits of the enslaved sugar industry — including molasses and rum, in addition to sugar, as historian Afua Cooper writes — but some also invested in Caribbean trade, itself powered by enslaved sugar work.
Several Canadian banks — including the Imperial Bank of Commerce and the Bank of Nova Scotia (now known as Scotiabank) — have their origins in the West Indies, where their forerunners established themselves early in the 19th century. According to Cooper, the Bank of Nova Scotia exists “in the shadow of West Indian slavery.”
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Western Canadians have also profited from unfree sugar labour. The famed western Canadian brand, Rogers Sugar, was established by American Benjamin Tingley Rogers who moved to Canada in 1889. Having grown up in the sugar industry, Rogers had both sugar connections and expertise.
Building a refinery in Vancouver, a city newly constructed [...], Rogers created a western Canadian sugar empire — one that sourced raw sugar cane through the Pacific, refined it in British Columbia and sold it throughout the Canadian West. Railway magnate William Cornelius Van Horne, together with noted investors [...], were among the ventures’ early shareholders. By the time of his death in 1918, Rogers had become “quite wealthy.” Now owned by Lantic Inc., Rogers Sugar remains a recognized Canadian brand. Less well known, though, is Rogers Sugar’s violent past. [...]
Refined predominantly in Vancouver, Rogers Sugar was made mostly from raw cane sugar. Since sugar cane cannot grow in Canada, B.C. Sugar sourced internationally [...]. B.C. Sugar also ventured into sugar cane plantation ownership: in Fiji between 1905 and 1922, and in the Dominican Republic between 1944 and 1955. Notably, it purchased the latter from the Bank of Nova Scotia. In both cases, workers reported horrendous conditions. The pay was so low and the work was so menial in the Dominican Republic that, as historian Catherine C. Legrand points out, workers left the plantation whenever they could.
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In Fiji between 1905 and 1920, B.C. Sugar employed indentured workers from India who migrated to the colony on five-year contracts. [...] Forced into hard physical labour with little time for sleep, indentured workers at B.C. Sugar’s Fiji plantation endured sickness, confinement, hunger, abuse, injuries, whippings, beatings and more [...]. When Fiji de-criminalized the desertion of indenture contracts in 1916, it is little wonder that hundreds of workers left the colony’s sugar plantations. [...]
Canadian sugar was built upon violence, including upon enslaved and indentured labour.
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All text above by: Donica Belisle. “Uncovering the violent history of the Canadian sugar industry.” The Conversation. 16 March 2023. [Bold emphasis and some paragraph breaks/contractions added by me. Images and captions are shown unaltered as they originally appear published with Belisle’s article. Presented here for commentary, teaching, criticism purposes.]
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quoththemaven · 8 months
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2023 Favoritest Book Reads
Vineland - Pynchon, Thomas
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Prophet - Blaché, Sin & Helen Macdonald
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And the Ass Saw the Angel - Cave, Nick
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Lou Reed: The King of New York - Hermes, Will 
The Color of Magic (Discworld, #1; Rincewind, #1) - Pratchett, Terry
Steal Like an Artist: 10 Things Nobody Told You About Being Creative - Kleon, Austin 
Sonic Life: A Memoir - Moore, Thurston
The Fifth Season (The Broken Earth, #1) - Jemisin, N.K. 
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Fuzz: When Nature Breaks the Law - Roach, Mary
Everyone's a Aliebn When Ur a Aliebn Too - Sun, Jonny
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The Night Masquerade (Binti, #3) - Okorafor, Nnedi 
Home (Binti, #2) - Okorafor, Nnedi 
Binti: Sacred Fire (Binti, #1.5) - Okorafor, Nnedi 
Binti (Binti, #1) - Okorafor, Nnedi 
Black Paradox - Ito, Junji
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David Bowie's Low (33 1/3) - Wilcken, Hugo
Faith, Hope and Carnage - Cave, Nick
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The Sirens of Titan - Vonnegut Jr., Kurt
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Zealot: The Life and Times of Jesus of Nazareth - Aslan, Reza
Smashed - Ito, Junji
Time Shelter - Gospodinov, Georgi
Brian Eno's Another Green World (33 1/3) - Dayal, Geeta
Armageddon in Retrospect - Vonnegut Jr., Kurt
Neverwhere (London Below, #1) - Gaiman, Neil 
The Committed (The Sympathizer #2) - Nguyen, Viet Thanh 
Into the Great Wide Open - Canty, Kevin 
Mongrels - Jones, Stephen Graham 
DisneyWar - Stewart, James B.
Bonk: The Curious Coupling of Science and Sex - Roach, Mary
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The Left Hand of Darkness - Le Guin, Ursula K.
My Bloody Valentine's Loveless (33 1/3) - McGonigal, Mike 
Suttree - McCarthy, Cormac
Life's Work: A Memoir - Milch, David
The Invisible Life of Addie LaRue - Schwab, V.E.
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Against the Day - Pynchon, Thomas
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Burn It Down: Power, Complicity, and a Call for Change in Hollywood - Ryan, Maureen 
Bruce Springsteen's Born in the USA (33 1/3) - Himes, Geoffrey
La Moustache - Carrère, Emmanuel
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Janelle Monáe’s The ArchAndroid (33 1/3) - Favreau, Alyssa 
Sooner or Later Everything Falls Into the Sea - Pinsker, Sarah 
The Man Without a Shadow - Oates, Joyce Carol
The City & the City - Miéville, China 
Mem - Morrow, Bethany C. 
Sapiens: A Brief History of Humankind - Harari, Yuval Noah
Arcade Fire’s The Suburbs (33 1/3) - Eidelstein, Eric
Gutshot - Gray, Amelia 
The Price of Time (Watch What You Wish For #1) - Tigner, Tim 
The Revolution Was Televised: The Cops, Crooks, Slingers and Slayers Who Changed TV Drama Forever - Sepinwall, Alan 
Just Kids - Smith, Patti 
Sounds Like Titanic: A Memoir - Hindman, Jessica Chiccehitto 
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Flicker - Roszak, Theodore
Tinderbox: HBO's Ruthless Pursuit of New Frontiers - Miller, James Andrew 
Flashback - Simmons, Dan
Flaming Lips' Zaireeka (33 1/3) - Richardson, Mark 
The Sympathizer (The Sympathizer #1) - Nguyen, Viet Thanh 
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Pavement's Wowee Zowee (33 1/3) - Charles, Bryan
Neuromancer (Sprawl, #1) - Gibson, William
Invisible Cities - Calvino, Italo
Don't Fear the Reaper (The Indian Lake Trilogy, #2) - Jones, Stephen Graham 
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The Wes Anderson Collection - Seitz, Matt Zoller
Flow My Tears, the Policeman Said - Dick, Philip K.
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Kendrick Lamar's To Pimp a Butterfly (33 1/3) - Maner, Sequoia
The Nineties - Klosterman, Chuck
Tomorrow, and Tomorrow, and Tomorrow - Zevin, Gabrielle 
Wanderlust: An Eccentric Explorer, an Epic Journey, a Lost Age - Mitenbuler, Reid
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A Heart That Works - Delaney, Rob 
Imago (Xenogenesis, #3) - Butler, Octavia E.
Cryptonomicon (Crypto, #1) - Stephenson, Neal 
Blacktop Wasteland - Cosby, S.A. 
Pearl Jam's Vs. (33 1/3) - Brownlee, Clint
Tracy Flick Can't Win - Perrotta, Tom
Devil House - Darnielle, John 
Adulthood Rites (Xenogenesis, #2) - Butler, Octavia E.
Heat 2 - Mann, Michael & Meg Gardiner
Joy Division's Unknown Pleasures (33 1/3) - Ott, Chris
Dawn (Xenogenesis, #1) - Butler, Octavia E.
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The Diamond Age: Or, a Young Lady's Illustrated Primer - Stephenson, Neal 
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The Republic of Thieves (Gentleman Bastard, #3) - Lynch, Scott 
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The Year of the Flood (MaddAddam, #2) - Atwood, Margaret 
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5 notes · View notes
brookston · 9 months
Text
Holidays 12.30
Holidays
Cleaning Day (Haiti)
Falling Needles Family Fest Day
Feast of the Holy Family
Festival of Enormous Changes at the Last Minute
Flail Day French Republic)
Freedom Day (Scientology)
Incwala Day (Eswatini, f.k.a. Swaziland)
International Day of Indian Cinema
Kodachrome Day
Let's Make A Deal Day
Lhosar (Gurung People, Nepal)
National Cheryl Day
National Resolution Planning Day
New Year’s Eve Eve
Rizal Day (Philippines)
Smart Highway Day
Take a Walk Show
Tamu Lochar (Sikkim, India)
Food & Drink Celebrations
Bacon Day [also 8.31]
Baking Soda Day
Coffee Day (Hawaii)
Drink With a Straw Day
International Day of the Donut
Kona Coffee Day
National Bicarbonate of Soda Day
5th & Last Saturday in December
Evergreen Tree Day [Last Saturday]
Last Saturday of the Year [Last Saturday]
Independence Days
Day of the Declaration of Slovakia as an Independent Ecclesiastic Province
Midget Nation-in-Exile (Declared; 2009) [unrecognized]
Northern Federation of Occidental Republics (Declared; 2012) [unrecognized]
USSR (Established, 1922)
Xenlandia (Declared; 2021) [unrecognized]
Feast Days
Abraham the Writer (Christian; Saint)
Anysia of Salonika (Christian; Saint)
Boxing the Jesuit Day (Church of the SubGenius)
The Clam (Muppetism)
Ecgwine of Worcester (Christian; Saint)
Egwin of Evesham (Christian; Saint)
Felix I, Pope (Christian; Saint)
Frances Joseph-Gaudet (Episcopal Church)
Gall (Positivist; Saint)
Get Drunk Early for Hogmanay Day (Pastafarian)
Kwanzaa, Day 5: Nia (Purpose)
Liberius of Ravenna (Christian; Saint)
Louis-Jean-François Lagrenée (Artology)
Maximus (Christian; Saint)
Obatala’s Day (Pagan)
Ralph of Vaucelles (Christian; Saint)
Roger (a.k.a. Ruggero) of Cannae (Christian; Saint)
Sabinus, Bishop of Assisi, and his companions (Christian; Martyrs)
Sixth Day of Christmas (a.k.a. Bringing in the Boar)
Twelve Holy Days #5 (Leo, the heart; Esoteric Christianity)
Twelvetide, Day #6 (a.k.a. the Twelve Days of Christmas or Christmastide) [until 1.5]
Lucky & Unlucky Days
Butsumetsu (仏滅 Japan) [Unlucky all day.]
Premieres
Alice, Darling (Film; 2022)
Aqua Teen Hunger Force (TV Cartoon Series; 2000)
Ben-Hur: A Tale of the Christ (Film; 1925)
Born to Die, by Lana Del Rey (Song; 2011)
The Curious Puppy (WB MM Cartoon; 1939)
Dallas (Film; 1950)
The Gallopin’ Gaucho (Disney Cartoon; 1928)
Kiss Me, Kate (Broadway Musical; 1948)
Let’s Make a Deal (TV game Show; 1963)
A Man Called Otto (Film; 2022)
The Merry Widow, by Franz Lehár (Operetta; 1905)
My Way, recorded by Frank Sinatra (Song; 1968)
Nelly’s Folly (WB MM Cartoon; 1961)
No Man of Her Own (Film; 1932)
Rob Roy, by Walter Scott (Novel; 1817)
The Roy Rogers Show (TV Series; 1951)
Some Came Running, by James Jones (Novel; 1957)
Sounder, by William H. Armstrong (Novel; 1969)
Tainted Dreams (TV Soap Opera; 2013)
Tangled Up In Blue, recorded by Bob Dylan (Song; 1974)
Tin Yop (Pixar Cartoon; 1988)
Two’s a Crowd (WB MM Cartoon; 1950)
Why Him? (Film; 2016)
Today’s Name Days
Felix, Lothar (Austria)
Feliks, Rajner, Srećko (Croatia)
David (Czech Republic)
David (Denmark)
Taave, Taavet, Taavi, Taavo, Tavo (Estonia)
Daavid, Taavetti, Taavi (Finland)
Roger (France)
Herma, Hermine, Minna (Germany)
Anisios, Filetairos, Gideon, Josef (Greece)
Dávid (Hungary)
Eugenio (Italy)
Dāvids, Dāvis (Latvia)
Dovydas, Gedrimė, Gražvilas, Irmina, Sabinas (Lithuania)
David, Diana, Dina (Norway)
Dawid, Dawida, Dionizy, Eugeniusz, Irmina, Katarzyna, Łazarz, Rainer, Sabin, Sewer, Uniedrog (Poland)
Anisia (Romania)
Dávid (Slovakia)
Judit, Judith, Raúl (Spain)
Abel, Set (Sweden)
Ainsley, Kelsa, Kelsey, Kelsi, Kelsie, Mason (USA)
Today is Also…
Day of Year: Day 364 of 2024; 1 days remaining in the year
ISO: Day 6 of week 52 of 2023
Celtic Tree Calendar: Beth (Birch) [Day 5 of 28]
Chinese: Month 12 (Jia-Zi), Day 18 (Ren-Xu)
Chinese Year of the: Rabbit 4721 (until February 10, 2024)
Hebrew: 18 Teveth 5784
Islamic: 17 Jumada II 1445
J Cal: 4 Fest; Foursday [4 of 5]
Julian: 17 December 2023
Moon: 87%: Warning Gibbous
Positivist: 28 Bichat (13th Month) [Gall]
Runic Half Month: Eihwaz or Eoh (Yew Tree) [Day 5 of 15]
Season: Winter (Day 10 of 89)
Zodiac: Capricorn (Day 9 of 31)
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xtruss · 10 months
Text
The Forgotten Hero: How Russia Helped Launch The Decolonial Movement in The Heart of The British Empire
Rafiq Ahmed, Who Founded the Communist Party of India in Tashkent, Gave His Descendants Both a Legacy and a Name, But Hardly Any of Them Know Why They Are Called ’Roosis’
— December 5, 2023 | RT
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Rafiq ‘Roosi’ Ahmed died four decades ago, but his visits to the erstwhile Union of Soviet Socialist Republics (USSR) are forgotten, to the extent that his descendants, who continue to be known as the ‘Roosis’ (Hindi/Urdu for Russian national) of Bhopal, are unsure of the origin of the name they carry, and are ignorant of his illustrious legacy.
After battling lung cancer for three years, Comrade ‘Roosi’ died as quietly as he had lived, in the central Indian city of Bhopal at the age of 93, in 1982.
Bhopal had been run by the Nawabs during British rule, from 1818 to 1947, after which it became part of the Indian Union; since then, the socio-political fabric of the city has changed radically. Roosi’s travels to the USSR in 1920, inspired by the great revolutionary upsurge in Russia and Central Asia, have largely been forgotten.
Rafiq Ahmed's ancestral home is a stone’s throw from the picturesque Upper Lake in a typically non-descript narrow bylane in the old quarters of Bhopal, but it is easy to find – thanks to the title, Roosi. Apart from a handful of senior residents of the city, nobody quite knows the origin of this name.
His daughter-in-law Saulat has done a fine job of keeping his belongings safe – especially those pertaining to his trip to the Soviet Union in September-October 1967 to attend the 50th anniversary of the Great October Socialist Revolution – but the family’s collective knowledge is limited to his second trip to Russia, and some anecdotes from his first visit which border on the mythical.
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Comrade Rafiq Ahmad, personal archive © RT
They are unaware that Roosi was among the first group of Indian revolutionaries who went to the Soviet Union to seek advice on ousting their British colonial rulers, or that he was among the first to enroll at the Indian Military Training School in Tashkent, or was the founding member of the Communist Party of India in Tashkent, or was tried and jailed for almost a year in the Peshawar Conspiracy Case.
Septuagenarian Khalid Ghani, who knows Bhopal’s history and its people like the back of his hand, attributes this to Roosi’s modest lifestyle. The Ghanis and his family have been neighbors and go back a long way. Ghani’s family used to run a sports shop on the ground floor, and Roosi’s son ran a small hotel called ‘Moonlight’ on the first floor of the same building.
When Ahmed came back from Russia in 1923, people started calling him ‘Roosi’. “He had rubbed shoulders with the top Indian and Russian revolutionaries there, risked his life, and had been jailed. But he didn’t speak about it to anyone, let alone brag about his stay there. Even after the independence of India, he did not list himself as a freedom fighter and avail benefits – such as seeking a plot of land – and secure his future. He just went back to being the person he was before he had left Bhopal. This says a lot about the kind of man he was,” says Ghani.
Modest Background
Roosi hailed from a modest background, and when he returned from Russia, he took a job as the head of the kitchen of the last ruler of Bhopal, Nawab Hameedullah Khan. Much later, when his son Jameel opened his own restaurant, Roosi started assisting him.
Jameel’s wife, Saulat, and his sister, Rafia-un-Nisa, are the two surviving members of the family who spent time with Roosi. Rafia-un-Nisa is in her late eighties and can barely speak. Saulat married into the family in 1969, five decades after Roosi returned from Russia.
Although she is alert and can recall most details about her father-in-law, she is unable to piece together the sequence of events of his life before she married into the family.
“He would be at the hotel during the day and spend the nights writing. I saw him do that for eight years. It is unfortunate that we cannot find most of his writings,” she laments. She pulls out a newspaper clipping to show that Roosi was among the first Indians to write a book on Vladimir Lenin in 1923. However, she has no idea where the book is.
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Comrade Rafiq Ahmad (center) meets with youths of the Soviet Union in the city of Kirov. © Sputnik/I. Agranovskiy
Trip to Russia
Roosi’s long period of anonymity ended quite suddenly when Soviet Land magazine published an article on him in around 1966-1967. He was invited to the Soviet embassy in New Delhi and before he knew it, he was on his way to Moscow.
In between, there were mentions of him in the writings of fellow compatriots such as Shaukat Usmani, but they seem to have gone unnoticed.
Ghani recalls, “Nearly five decades after he had returned from Russia, Ahmed was invited to meet the Soviet ambassador in New Delhi. In 1967, he flew to Russia to take part in the 50th anniversary of the Great October Socialist Revolution. Later in 1972, he was acknowledged as a freedom fighter at former prime minister Indira Gandhi’s behest.”
In Moscow, he was awarded a gold medal for his struggle alongside Russian revolutionaries. After receiving the medal, he told Patriot newspaper that the revolutionaries who languished in jail and died there deserved the decoration more than him.
“Twenty of my comrades died fighting there. They were all courageous people…I think they deserved this honor much more than me,” he said, adding that he was held hostage in Kerki (in modern-day Turkmenistan) for over a month along with 36 other Indians, as well as Russian and Turkmen revolutionaries. He spoke about how the British tortured the revolutionaries.
He visited Lenin’s mausoleum and placed a wreath there. He told the newspaper New Age that he had seen Lenin addressing a meeting once, but he could not meet him in person alongside his Indian comrades as he had fallen ill, and this was his greatest misfortune. New Age newspaper then described him as a tall and energetic man.
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Comrade Rafiq Ahmad with a monument of Vladimir Lenin at Smolny, in Leningrad (N ow St. Petersburg). Ahmad met Lenin in 1921. © Sputnik/Mikhail Ozerskiy
Roosi reunited with other revolutionaries in Moscow; among them was Maria Fortus. She had been his teacher at the Communist University of the Toilers of the East, in Moscow, and remembered all her Indian students by their names. She recognized Roosi and asked him about the other Indian revolutionaries. He also met Avanes Baratov, an old Communist who had participated in the struggle against the counter-revolutionary bands.
Roosi, who was hosted by APN Board (Novosti Press Agency), visited Kerki, where he had fought alongside the Red Army, and Tashkent, where he went to a school where children were taught Urdu. Saulat has a couple of photos of him with Fortus and Baratov, and of his visits to Tashkent and Kerki.
Later that year, he was decorated with another medal by the Soviet Ambassador to New Delhi, N.M. Pegov.
In 1972, he was among the few freedom fighters to be invited to New Delhi by the government of India to celebrate the silver jubilee of India’s Independence.
Roosi’s Journey
A few years after his death, a portion of Roosi’s missing memoir was published in Qazi Wajdi-ul-Hussaini’s book “Barkatullah Bhopali” in 1986.
According to Hussani, when the Khilafat Movement was in full swing in 1920, the Khilafat Committee of Delhi announced a conference and an emotionally charged and rather naïve group of Bhopalis headed for Delhi, believing that this was a call to rid India of the British.
Apart from Roosi, the fiery group included Aftab Ali Khan, Mohammed Ali, Abdul Hayi, Master Mashkoor, Mohammed Khan, Ahmed Kabeer Ahmed, Mohammed Shafi and Mohammed Akhtar.
These revolutionaries stood out among the others when they literally kicked a spy out from their group, and stopped the Imam of Delhi’s Jama Masjid from leading the prayers, as he was said to be close to the British.
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Comrade Rafiq Ahmad visiting USSR © RT
However, when they learnt that this was a call to protest against the British stance towards the Turkish Caliphate, a few of Roosi’s companions decided to return to Bhopal. The rest decided to go ahead with the “Hijrat” (Migration), impressed by the enthusiastic call given by Afghanistan’s King Amanullah Khan, and set out for Kabul.
They crossed the border from Peshawar and entered Afghanistan, and headed towards Kabul via Jalalabad. They met King Amanullah Khan, who received them well, but ordered that the refugees be sent to Jabal al-Siraj (a former palace he used as a military base). When the Emir promised to give them jobs, it dawned on the group that he was buying time to strike a deal with the British.
Disappointed, the group escaped from Jabal al-Siraj, covering 30 to 40 miles on foot each day, crossing difficult mountains and treacherous deserts, and reached the Turkistan border, and then finally Termez via Mazar-i-Sharif and Ghor. In Termez, they heard the fiery speech of a Russian commander who said his country had opened its doors to the workers of the world. They met the commander and went to Tashkent with his help.
In ‘The Indian Revolutionaries and the Bolsheviks - their early contacts, 1918-1922’, Arun Coomer Bose writes, “We have it on the authority of Rafiq Ahmed (Roosi) that the first four ‘muhajirs’ (Migrants), including himself, reached Kabul sometime in May 1920. They were well received, and were lodged at Jabal us-Siraz (Jabal al-Siraj), at some distance from Kabul. Others, who came after them, were also brought there, and by the beginning of July there were about a couple of hundred of them at Jabal us-Siraz (Jabal al-Siraj).”
After the founding of the Communist Party of India in Tashkent, it was decided that some of the Indian ‘Muhajirs’ would return to India to establish the foundations of a communist movement there.
Accordingly, towards the end of March 1922, a bigger group of ten, which included Roosi, set out for India via the Pamir route, writes Bose. “At Kharog they divided themselves into small groups and, barring a couple of them, succeeded in reaching Chitral or the tribal territories in the north-west of India. But, almost all of them were apprehended by the Indian police, and were tried in the Peshawar Conspiracy Case,” adds Bose.
Roosi was jailed for nearly a year. A letter issued by the Government of India on December 25, 1972 states that Roosi was arrested in the Peshawar Conspiracy Case (Crown vs Akbar Shah and seven others in the Moscow Tashkent conspiracy case) in the last week of October 1922 and released on May 18, 1923, and that he spent his term in the District Jail in Peshawar.
Saulat’s son now runs the family restaurant, which serves Mughlai cuisine. Her daughter, Bushra, who was eight years old when Roosi passed away, has taken charge of her grandfather’s papers and plans to preserve them.
The next generation of Roosis are unaware of their great-grandfather’s lineage, content with the knowledge that he visited Russia. Can, then, one blame the rest of Bhopal?
— By Lamat R Hasan, an Independent Journalist Based in Delhi
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brookstonalmanac · 7 months
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Holidays 3.5
Holidays
Act Goofy Day
Alimony Equality Day
Anthass Day (Kerala, Fans of Indian actor Mukesh)
Arivee de l’Evangile (Gospel Day; French Polynesia)
Babysitter Safety Day
Boston Massacre Day (Massachusetts)
Brain Injury Awareness Day
Charity Day (Iran)
Children’s Day (New Zealand)
Cinco de Marcho
Cincomarzada
Crispus Attucks Day
Custom Chief’s Day (Vanuatu)
Day of Physical Culture and Women in Engineering & Technology begins
Dr. Doolittle Day
Erotic World Book Day
Excited Insects (Chinese Farmer’s Calendar)
Goat Day (French Republic)
Green Hellebore Day
Hula Hoop Day
International CVS Awareness Day
International Day for Disarmament & Non-Proliferation Awareness (UN)
International Day of Energy Efficiency
International Day of the Seal
Judiciary Employee Day (Kyrgyzstan)
Katyn Massacre Day
Learn from Lei Feng Day (China)
Madison Beer Day
Mother-in-Law's Day
Multiple Personalities Day
National Dissociative Identity Disorder Day
National Emetophobia Awareness Day (UK)
National Industrial Design Day
National Journalist Day (Thailand)
National Kalpak Day (a.k.a. Hat Day; Kyrgyzstan)
National MAR5 Day
National Potty Dance Day
National R&B Music Day
National Scott Day
National Tree Planting Day (Iran)
Panchayati Raj Divas (Odisha, India)
Reel Film Day
Running of the Reindeer (Alaska)
Say Hi to Mom Day
Scouts’ Day (Taiwan)
Spread the Word to End the Word Day
Stapler Day
Stop the Clocks Day
Temperance Day
305 Day
World Sustainable Energy Day
Food & Drink Celebrations
National Absinthe Day
National Cheese Doodle Day
National Mobile Food Vendors Day
National Pasty Day (UK)
National Poutine Day
Ramen Noodles Day
1st Tuesday in March
Cotton Carnival (Memphis, Tennessee) [1st Tuesday, Lasts 5 Days]
Football Day (England) [1st Tuesday]
National Sportsmanship Day [1st Tuesday]
Peace Corps Day [1st Tuesday]
Peace Day (Jamaica) [1st Tuesday]
Town Meeting Day (Vermont) [1st Tuesday]
Unique Names Day [Tuesday of Name Week]
Independence & Related Days
Rebellion Anniversary Day (Iraqi Kurdistan)
Trujillo Anniversary Day (Peru)
Festivals Beginning March 5, 2024
CinemAsia Film Festival (Amsterdam, Netherlands) [thru 3.10]
Heritage Miami: Wine and Food Experience (Miami, Florida)
Research Chefs Association Culinary Expo (Quincy, Massachusetts) [thru 3.7]
World Championship Cheese Contest (Madison, Wisconsin) [thru 3.7]
Feast Days
Adrian and Eubulus of Palestine (Christian; Martyrs)
Blessing of the Fleet by Isis (Ancient Egypt)
Ciarán of Saigir (a.k.a. Kiaran of Ireland; Celtic & Christian; Saint)
Clive Cahuenga (Muppetism)
Diasia (Festival of Zeus Meilikhios; Ancient Greece)
Eusebius of Cremona (Christian; Saint)
Feast of Orthodoxy (Greek Orthodox) [1st Sunday in Great Lent; 2023]
Feast of Saint Piran (Cornwall)
George Carlin Day (Church of the SubGenius; Saint)
Gerasimus (Christian; Saint)
Giovanni Battista Tiepolo (Artology)
Howard Pyle (Artology)
John Joseph of the Cross (Christian; Saint)
Momfuku Ando Day (Pastafarian)
Navigum Isidis (Blessing of the Vessel of Isis; Ancient Egypt; Everyday Wicca)
Navigum Isis (a.k.a. Ploiaphaesia; Poseidon’s Day; The Festival of Navigation; Ancient Rome)
Orthodox Sunday (Orthodox Christian) [1st Sunday in Great Lent; 2021]
Phocas of Antioch (Christian; Martyr)
Piran (Christian; Saint) [Cornwall]
Roger (Christian; Saint)
Serpent Mother Day (Ancient Minoa; Starza Pagan Book of Days)
Solon (Positivist; Saint)
Symphony No. 7, The “Leningrad Symphony,” in C Major, by Dmitri Shostakovich (Symphony; 1942)
Theophilus, bishop of Caesarea (Christian; Saint)
Thietmar of Minden (Christian; Saint)
Virgil of Arles (Christian; Saint)
Wedding of the March Dryads (Shamanism)
Lucky & Unlucky Days
Sensho (先勝 Japan) [Good luck in the morning, bad luck in the afternoon.]
Uncyclopedia Bad to Be Born Today (because it’s Stalin's birthday.)
Unfortunate Day (Pagan) [17 of 57]
Premieres
Airport (Film; 1970)
Alice in Wonderland (Film; 2010)
Amos & Andrew (Film; 1993)
Analyze This (Film; 1999)
The Ant and the Aardvark (Ant and the Aardvark Cartoon; 1969)
The Ballad of Nessie (Disney Cartoon; 2011)
Barnyard Blackout (Terrytoons Cartoon; 1943)
Big-Hearted Bosko (WB LT Cartoon; 1932)
Bongo Boris or The Hep Rat (Rocky & Bullwinkle Cartoon, S2, Ep. 103; 1961)
Coming 2 America (Film; 2021)
Cruel Intentions (Film; 1999)
Diner (Film; 1982)
Donald’s Diary (Disney Cartoon; 1954)
Down pin the Levee (Terrytoons Cartoon; 1933)
Drip Dippy Donald (Disney Cartoon; 1948)
Evil Under the Sun (Film; 1982)
Fire! Fire! (Ub Iwerks Cartoon; 1932)
For Your Love, by The Yardbirds (Song; 1965)
Foucault's Pendulum, by Umberto Eco (Novel; 1988)
Human’s Lib, by Howard Jones (Album; 1984)
Kindly Scram (Phantasies Cartoon; 1943)
The Left Hand of Darkness, by Ursula K. Le Guin (Novel; 1969)
Lock, Stock and Two Smoking Barrels (Film; 1999)
The Mad Dog (Disney Cartoon; 1932)
Mad Dog and Glory (Film; 1993)
Neon Bible, by Arcade Fire (Album; 2007)
The Railway Children, by Edith Nesbit (Novel; 1905)
Raya and the Last Dragon (Animated Film; 2021)
Red Hot Music (Terrytoons Cartoon; 1937)
Rival Romeos (Oswald the Lucky Rabbit Cartoon; 1928)
The Road to Serfdom, by Friedrich A. Hayek (Political Theory; 1944)
Room and Bored (Woody Woodpecker Cartoon; 1962)
Run Baby Run, by Nicky Cruz (Novel; 1969)
The Saint to the Rescue, by Leslie Charteris (Short Stories 1959) [Saint #35]
The Secret of Kells (Animated Film; 2010)
Shaun the Sheep (Animated TV Series; 2007)
Songs For Swinging’ Lovers!, by Frank Sinatra (Album; 1956)
The Spies of Life or When a Fella Needs a Fiend (Rocky & Bullwinkle Cartoon, S2, Ep. 104; 1961)
Stairway to Heaven, 1st performed live by Led Zeppelin (Song; 1971)
Swing Kids (Film; 1993)
Us Again (Disney Cartoon; 2021)
Where Do Teenagers Come From? (DePatie-Freleng Animated TV Special; 1980)
Today’s Name Days
Dietmar, Jeremia, Olivia (Austria)
Hadrijan, Lucije, Teofil, Vedran (Croatia)
Kazimír (Czech Republic)
Theophillus (Denmark)
Laila, Laili, Leila, Leili (Estonia)
Laila, Leila (Finland)
Olive, Olivia (France)
Gerda, Dietmar, Olivia, Tim (Germany)
Arhelaos, Evlogios, Konon (Greece)
Adorján, Adrián (Hungary)
Adriano, Foca, Giovanni, Giuseppe, Virgilio (Italy)
Aurēlija, Aurora, Austra (Latvia)
Giedrė, Klemensas, Virgilijus, Vydotas (Lithuania)
Patricia, Patrick (Norway)
Adrian, Adrianna, Fryderyk, Jan, Pakosław, Pakosz, Wacław, Wacława (Poland)
Conon (Romania)
Fridrich (Slovakia)
Adrián, Adriano, Eusebio (Spain)
Tora, Tove (Sweden)
Ciara, Ciera, Cierra, Keren Keri, Kerri, Kerrie, Kerry, Kiara, Kiera, Kieran, Kierra, Sierra (USA)
Today is Also…
Day of Year: Day 65 of 2024; 301 days remaining in the year
ISO: Day 2 of week 10 of 2024
Celtic Tree Calendar: Nuin (Ash) [Day 17 of 28]
Chinese: Month 1 (Bing-Yin), Day 25 (Wu-Chen)
Chinese Year of the: Dragon 4722 (until January 29, 2025)
Hebrew: 25 Adair I 5784
Islamic: 24 Sha’ban 1445
J Cal: 5 Green; Fryday [5 of 30]
Julian: 21 February 2024
Moon: 29%: Waning Crescent
Positivist: 9 Aristotle (3rd Month) [Xenophanes]
Runic Half Month: Tyr (Cosmic Pillar) [Day 11 of 15]
Season: Winter (Day 76 of 89)
Week: 1st Week of March
Zodiac: Pisces (Day 16 of 30)
1 note · View note
helputrust · 2 years
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आत्माके सौंदर्य का शब्द रूप है काव्य, मानव होना भाग्य है, कवि होना सौभाग्य ||
– पद्मा भूषण गोपाल दास नीरज
Youtube Link :  https://youtu.be/EzI4bEKTWEs
भारतीय गणतंत्र दिवस उत्सव के उपलक्ष्य में Indian Republic Day KAVI SAMMELAN AND MUSHAIRA DUBAI 2023 वास्तव में भारत को समर्पित, दुबई में आयोजित, अद्भुत आयोजन एवं कार्यक्रम है, जिसे लाइव देखने का सौभाग्य, विशेषाधिकार, सम्मान, किस्मत, हेल्प यू एजुकेशनल एंड चैरिटेबल ट्रस्ट के प्रबंध न्यासी श्री हर्ष वर्धन अग्रवाल तथा हेल्प यू एजुकेशनल एंड चैरिटेबल ट्रस्ट की आतंरिक सलाहकार समिति के सदस्य श्री पंकज अवस्थी को दिनांक 28.01.2023 को मिला ।
मुख्य अतिथि महामहिम श्री संजय सुधीर, यू.ए.ई. में भारतीय राजदूत, उनके साथ उनकी पत्नी श्रीमती वंदना सुधीर की उपस्थिति ने, कार्यक्रम में भारतीयता की अलक का संचार कर दिया |
आदरणीय डॉ उदय प्रताप सिंह की अध्यक्षता में, प्रोफेसर डॉ नैय्यर जलालपुरी की निजामत से, डॉ हरी ओम, श्री कलीम कैसर, श्री खुर्शीद हैदर, प्रोफेसर डॉ नैय्यर जलालपुरी, श्रीमती मालविका हरिओम, श्री अल्ताफ जिया, सुश्री तजदीद कैसर, सुश्री उरोसा अर्शी, श्री हनीफ राही ने दुबई में नायाब महाकाव्य प्रतिभा प्रदर्शन की एक शाम दी ।  
हिंदी से लेकर उर्दू तक, छंद से लेकर बंद तक, गीत से लेकर लय तक, स्वर से लेकर शब्द तक, मिसरा से लेकर शेर तक, मतला से लेकर मकता तक, तहत से लेकर तरनुम तक, यह हमेशा के लिए याद की जाने वाली शाम थी |
कवियों और शायरों की विनम्र प्रकृति, उनकी महाकाव्य आवाज और हर कविता और शायरी प्रदर्शन ने H.H. SHEIKH RASHID AUDITORIUM, INDIAN HIGH SCHOOL, DUBAI को खचाखच भरे रखा ।
भारतीय गणतंत्र दिवस कवि सम्मेलन एवं मुशायरा के संस्थापक तथा मुख्य संरक्षक श्री सैय्यद सलाहुद्दीन जी का, हेल्प यू एजुकेशनल एंड चैरिटेबल ट्रस्ट को सम्मान प्रदान करने के लिए आभार | श्री सैय्यद सलाहुद्दीन जी विगत 21 वर्षो से निरंतर भारतीय गणतंत्र दिवस कवि सम्मेलन एवं मुशायरा का आयोजन कर रहे है जिसके लिए श्री सैय्यद सलाहुद्दीन जी को बधाई और शुभकामनाएं | प्रभु श्री राम से प्रार्थना है कि आपका जीवन सुख, समृद्धि एवं वैभव से परिपूर्ण हो तथा आप इसी प्रकार अनेक वर्षों तक देश सेवा के कार्यों में संलग्न रहें l
टीम सैयद सलाहुद्दीन, प्रायोजकों, ध्वनि और प्रकाश इंजीनियरों आदि ने शुरू से आखिर तक परफेक्ट सामूहिक कार्य सम्पादित किया ।
#भारत #India #republicdaycelebration #JaiHind #74threpublicday2023 #Ambassador #Dubai #IRENA #Sanjay_Sudhir #संजय_सुधीर #संयुक्त_अरब_अमीरात #Indian_Republic_Day_KAVI_SAMMELAN_AND_MUSHAIRA_DUBAI_2023 #KaviSammelan #Mushaira #UdayPratapSingh #DrHariOm #drnusratmehdi #drkalimqaiser #khurshidhaider #drnayyer #malvikahariom #altafziya #tajdeedqaiser #uroosaarshi #haneefrahi
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bobbyinthegarden · 1 year
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March & April Reading Wrap-Up
Just like my February Reading Wrap-Up, here’s March & April
Fiction
Sense and Sensibility by Jane Austen 
Might be my favourite Jane Austen novel? Maybe? I love the relationship between the sisters, and I hard relate to Marianne in an “I’m in the photo and I don’t like it” kind of way.
The Passion of New Eve by Angela Carter
This book is really weird. I think I liked it, but I’m still working through my thoughts on it. I saw somebody on Goodreads say that this book is a bit like a hybrid of Mad Max: Fury Road and The Handmaid’s Tale, and that is pretty accurate. It’s bizarre at times, I was trying to explain some of the plot to my partner who was extremely bewildered by it. Major trigger warning that there is a lot of sexual violence in this book, and it also features forced surgical transition as a major plot point, so, do with that what you will.
The Moonstone by Wilkie Collins
Did a whole review of this one
Silas Marner by George Eliot
Absolutely adored this book, I am now a full fledged George Eliot stan.
Axoim’s End by Lindsay Ellis
I don’t know if this will be a surprise or not, based on my blog, but I do actually like sci-fi. Not so surprising, considering my lifelong X-Files obsession, I like stories about aliens and weird conspiracies to cover them up, so this definitely appealed to me for that reason and this was pretty decent, I will be continuing the series when I have time.
The X-Files: Fight the Future by Elizabeth Hand, adapted from the screenplay by Chris Carter
I thought it would be fun to check out some of the X-Files novelisations. As with most TV shows that get novel tie-ins, some are adaptations of episodes and some are original stories, with X-Files, they seem to mostly be original stories, but this one is a novelisation of the first movie. It’s a very faithful re-telling, it doesn’t really add anything, but it doesn’t detract anything either, it’s a very straight re-telling of the movie. I like the movie (the first one anyway), so that was fine for me, and the books pretty short so it only took me two days to get through.
The X-Files: Cold Cases by Joe Harris and Chris Carter 
Debated if I should include this in my wrap-up or not, since it’s an audiodrama, not a book, BUT I listened to it specifically for my 2023 Reading Challenge (the audiobook category). Full review incoming.
The Railway Children by E. Nesbit
Read this one for my reading challenge too, this time the children’s literature category. Despite really loving the movie when I was a kid, I’d never actually read the book, so it was nice to finally sit down and read it. Full review incoming.
Colonel Brandon In His Own Words by Shannon Winslow
I read this purely because I was curious to learn what self-published Jane Austen fanfiction is like, and I chose this one because I had read Sense and Sensibility so recently (for the unaware, this book is a re-telling of that one). It’s basically exactly what you expect. I saw somebody on Goodreads say that they liked this book better than Sense and Sensibility, which is definitely not an opinion that I share. The depictions of the Indian characters and the British Army in this book was quite questionable, in my opinion.
Non-fiction:
The Medium is the Massage by Marshall McLuhan
I read this book several years ago, when I was doing my BA at university, and it totally blew my mind. I have far too many thoughts about this book to express in one short paragraph, other than to say that it’s amazing that this book was written in the 1960s, Marhsall McLuhan was out there, writing about the internet 20 years before it was even invented.
First They Killed My Father by Loung Ung
Did a whole review of this one too
Poetry:
Deaf Republic by Ilya Kaminsky 
This one too
Zines/comics:
The Fisherman’s Wife by @grendel-menz
A re-telling of the tale of the fairytale with absolutely gorgeous art that truly took my breath away. [LINK]
Two Pounds of Flesh by @thequeenofbithynia
I’ve talked about other comics by this user in my February wrap-up. This one is a beautiful and complex tale about gender, blended with horror - it’s extremely cool. I love everything that Andreas makes, and am planning on buying his most recent comic as well when I can. [LINK]
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salmankhanholics · 1 year
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★ EXCLUSIVE: YRF VFX head on Pathaan, Tiger 3 & more: ‘Shah Rukh Khan is insightful, Salman Khan adapted well’!
Apr 26, 2023  
Over the years, Yash Raj Films have established themselves as the market leader in the Hindi Film Industry. The banner has few of the biggest IPs of Indian cinema like Dhoom, Tiger, War, Mardaani and Pathaan among others. The banner is fast expanding its wing on the VFX front too with yFX. Their last venture was the republic day release, Pathaan, which went on to become the biggest blockbuster of Hindi Cinema. The film was shot in the midst of a pandemic, which made the shooting process a challenge.
The world of VFX for Tiger 3
Next up is Tiger 3 with Salman Khan. “We have been working with Salman Khan for a long time. We have done several VFX shoots with him over the years. He had adapted and adjusted to it well enough. We know what works for him and he knows what is required. With him, it’s all about how clearly you can convey the VFX requirement. Once that’s done, the process is collaborative,” she explains. When asked to share about the visuals of Tiger 3, Sherry informs that a lot of prep work has gone into creating the third Tiger film.
“We invested a lot of time on the film and hence the process once it went on floors has become easier. We pre-visualized each and every scene of Tiger 3 and that has led to the process becoming a lot more efficient. Tiger 3 is a well-planned film with ample pre-production,” she smiles. Sherry’s most favourite scene till date is the Tiger x Pathaan crossover in Pathaan. “That’s our favourite scene of all time. It was complicated but Sidharth (Anand, director) had a very clear vision of what he wanted. It was a challenge and we did it well.”
Among the challenging scenes for yFX team was the ice-based action scene in the second half of Pathaan. “While Dubai action block and the train sequence were complex, the biggest challenge was to get the action on the ice right. Pathaan is one of the most complex films that we have done till date,” she concludes.
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The Good...
January 26, 2023 (Thank you, Kathy Sabino! I was stuck in 2022!)
Yesterday was Republic Day in India. The day in 1950 when the constitution of a new, independent India came into effect. Interesting that I find two different meanings of the holiday on Google. The other: that it is the day in 1930 that the Indian National Conference committed to independence.
We learned, the hard way, that it is not an ideal day to travel! With no explanation offered (and combined with my ignorance about the holiday), our original two flights to Varanasi were cancelled last week- then one of the replacement flights (from Delhi to Varanasi) was changed to 30 minutes earlier departure. We thought we’d make it—but we didn’t understand the madness of Delhi airport. We had to shift terminals (two different airlines)—and that is like shifting to a completely different airport. 30 minutes to travel from one to another—as we watched the window for our connection whither away. Finally, it was explained that airspace was being cleared from 10-12 for an airshow celebrating the holiday. Ah. Welcome to India. This must have been decided last week: thus, the cancellations and changes.
It all worked out fine. We checked into a nice Radisson near the airport (a little pricey for us- but we were exhausted and stressed.) We ordered in pizza, drank beer from the minibar (Republic Day a “dry day” for the city)- and best of all, I took advantage of the hot shower and STEAM ROOM in the spa. After a month of dicey hot water and bucket baths—it was glorious.
Now on to Varanasi, which promises to be an adventure, so I wanted to get caught up.
The last week has been one of big highs and big lows. I think I’ll focus on the highs, for now.
Last Saturday, we traveled with three students to border villages to interview Partition survivors and others with family stories from relatives who have passed. At every stop we were welcomed with incredible warmth and hospitality. We met one Partition survivor—the great grandfather of our travel companion Hardeep. This gentleman was twenty at the time, (making him now 95/96). His wife and infant daughter traveled by train across the border (a risky journey—many trains arrived at their destination full of slaughtered men, women, and children). He traveled on foot with a kafila. Of course, the wife and daughter would arrive long before he did—and the husband and wife made a plan to meet at a certain bridge near their destination. Days later, they were reunited—all safe. He told us he left many Muslim friends back in Pakistan—and he pulled out a well-worn diary to show us their phone numbers. They remain in touch to this day.
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After that interview, we visited various homes of our student hosts. One village we visited was Batala. By a rather incredible coincidence, I had received a message that morning from a friend, Umar, who Sarah and I met in Islamabad back in 2015. He had arranged for us to interview his grandfather, a Partition survivor. Due to tight security in Pakistan, it was the one interview I was able to attend for our 2015 project, and I fell immediately in love with the grandfather. I remember his story of traveling on a train to Pakistan with his uncle. The train was attacked, and they were separated. For days, they did not know if the other had survived. Finally, they made it to a refugee camp, where they waited for the women and children of their family to join them. It took several weeks, in which time they had no information about the welfare of those family members.
Umar messaged me that morning to tell me that it was the one-year anniversary of his grandfather’s death. He wondered if we had a copy of the interview and expressed his regret that he didn’t ask for it at the time. I promised to look into it and asked him what village his grandfather had emigrated from. Batala. I couldn’t believe it. We were going there that day! He did not know the specific address. But I promised to send a picture and to say a prayer for his grandfather. I sent these pictures of the green fields around Batali, and he wrote back that his grandfather shared how he used to sneak into those fields to get fruit as a boy. Umar said, “ This is so calming for me to see—in a strange way I feel connected to this place.”
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In addition to the family visits on that day, we visited a special border corridor open to Indian nationals wishing to visit one of the Sikh sacred sites now in Pakistan. This was one of the tragedies of Partition. The Punjab is the home of the Sikhs and the origin of their religion. When Radcliffe drew his line, many of the most sacred sites (including the birthplace of the first guru) were in Pakistan. We were not allowed to cross over (only Indian citizens.) But we could see, up close, that harsh metal fence cutting through the fields.
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Our last stop was at the shores of the Ravi River. One lonely soldier seemed to be in charge of that outpost—and the poor guy was in a shower stall bathing at the time of our stop. We tried to steer clear and give him some privacy! The spot was breathtaking—and we looked across to Pakistan on the opposite shore. I imagined the refugees from both sides stealing across –most likely at night—praying that they and their families would cross safely.
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The next day we were off to the border villages again, this time with director Emanuel and student Priya, who has been serving as one of our translators. Again, we were welcomed with unparalleled hospitality. The interviews with Partition survivors were gatherings for the whole family. One of my goals for this project is to connect young people with the stories of those who came before them—and I was happy to see family members young and old sitting and listening as their elders talked.
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And wow, do they talk! It is as if these stories have been waiting to burst forth for decades. Once each got started, the stories poured out. We only got occasional translations, and that was fine. The stories were recorded and collected—that was the objective.
I have nicknamed the first woman we interviewed the Apple Dumpling Lady. I remember seeing those folk dolls from New England with faces created out of dried apples. Her face reminded me of one. What an incredible face! She was, as far as we could calculate, 88--and sharp as a tack (as have been all of the survivors so far.) At the end of the interview, I went to thank her and she blessed me. I loved her.
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Later that day, we arrived at the house of a friend of Emanuel’s. After a warm welcome from the family, a son visiting from Canada told us that they had arranged for us to interview the couple next door: both Partition survivors and both in their 90’s. “Would you like to go to them, or would you like them to come to us?” I said that considering they were in their 90’s, wouldn’t it be best if we went to them?!
We walked across the road and entered the traditional courtyard (complete with cows.) We were welcomed by generations of the family, and then ushered into a small room in which a man and a woman wrapped in layers of blankets and shawls (it was very cold!) sat on charpoys. They had both emigrated in 1947- both at 13 years old. They married two years later and have been married for 73 years. He told us that she traveled by foot and had more stories—so he let her do most of the talking. While I didn’t understand much, I did learn that she was one of three daughters in the family. She traveled on foot with her sisters and her parents. They left most of their valuable possessions in Pakistan (like so many, they assumed they would return after things cooled down.) Her father said, “If I reach India and my wife and daughters are safe, everything I value will be with me.” At night, she said, the women in the kafila slept in the middle, encircled by the men, who took turns keeping watch. They all made it safely across the border after 22 days. “Your father did what he said he’d do”, I said. She nodded—her eyes filling with tears.
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Every visit includes the essential group photo. And then, often, individual photos with various family members or groups.
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Also- the random people we pass by who want a photo with us, or one with us and their children. I should have quite a collection by the end of this journey.
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