Hindu Vivek Kendra
A RESOURCE CENTER FOR THE PROMOTION OF HINDUTVA
   
 
 
«« Back
February Month Articles

February Month Articles

  • Continuing CPM savagery : BMS man butchered
    • by Organiser
      Continuing its murderous orgy against the Sangh Parivar, CPM goons attacked and butchered V.K. Shaju, Zonal Joint Secretary of BMS and a worker at the Kerala Feeds Factory at Kallettinkara, near Irinjalakuda in Thrissur district on February 12 in broad daylight at 7.30 am. ......
  • Civil rights groups should not defend Naxalites -Dr Raman Singh
    • by Deepak Kumar Rath
      The Rambhau Mhalgi Prabodhini organised a national seminar in New Delhi on February 14, 2007 on "Innovative Strategies to Counter Naxalism: Experiment of Salva Judum." The seminar was held in four different sessions throughout the day which had eminent speakers drawn from a wide spectrum of on-field workers to policymakers to law enforcers. ......
  • Braving the heights
    • by Claude Arpi
      While India's political leaders are busy negotiating a 'deal' to demilitarise Siachen, its people are showing utmost respect to one of the bravest soldiers who rescued the glacier from Pakistani hands. Recently, I attended a function at the district headquarters of Villipuram in Tamil Nadu to felicitate Captain Bana Singh, one of the three living recipients of the Param Vir Chakra. ......
  • Cheney's Far From Sweet Message To Musharraf - International Terrorism Monitor
    • by B. Raman
      After his official visits to Japan and Australia, the US Vice-President, Dick Cheney, stopped over in Islamabad on February 26, 2007, for talks followed by a lunch with President Pervez Musharraf. His plans to stop over in Islamabad were not announced in advance by the Pakistan Foreign Office and the US State Department due to concerns over likely threats to his security in the background of the recent incidents of suicide terrorism or attempted suicide terrorism in Pakistani territory. ......
  • Cousins sought `training in Jihad,' prosecutors say
    • by Jeff Coen
      Two Chicago-area cousins linked to a terrorism conspiracy last week traveled to Egypt in 2004 and planned to head to Pakistan for military training, federal prosecutors told a judge Monday. ......
  • Tying Bharat Mata up in knots!!
    • by News Today
      One of the greatest economists the world has ever known and one who is in the run for Nobel Prize for revolutionary economics - Sitaram Yechury, has come out with the following statement in his recent avant-garde article titled 'Tying Bharat up in knots' in the Hindustan Times: 'The culmination of the RSS's countrywide celebrations marking the birth anniversary of its longest serving Sarsanghachalak, M S Golwalkar comes ominously close on the eve of the 5th anniversary of the 2002 genocide in Gujarat. ......
  • Intolerance will destroy Irish society
    • by Irish Independent
      Sir - Philip Watt's letter (SI, 18/02/07) on Muslims in Ireland, whilst maybe well meaning, skirted around the issue at hand which is: how can Ireland avoid the problem, common in other EU countries, of rising radicalism amongst young Muslims? ......
  • Maoist thuggery
    • by The Pioneer
      The news from Nepal continues to get worse with each passing day. Although the interim Government headed by Prime Minister G.P. Koirala now includes representatives of the Communist Party of Nepal (Maoist) and claims to be running the affairs of that country, in reality Prachanda's thugs were calling the shots. This is evident from the manner in which farmland belonging to the monarchy, which has been denuded of all authority and power, is being grabbed by Maoists for "redistribution among landless farmers". ......
  • Congress culture of arrogance will lead to the party's doom
    • by K. Natwar Singh
      The Election Commission's announcement of the U.P.elections has put an end to the insane and unseemly hurry of some sections of the Congress Working Committee to impose President's rule in U.P.Full marks to Prime Minister Manmohan Singh for standing his ground and for once asserting himself. Credit should also be given to M/s.Pranab Mukherjee and Law minister Hansraj Bharadwaj for strengthening the hands of the Prime Minister. ......
  • Aurangzeb Road
    • by Fitzgerald
      The Danish Embassy in India is located on Aurangzeb Road in New Delhi. So there is still a road in India that is named after the most ruthless and cruel of the many ruthless and cruel Muslim rulers, oppressor and mass-murderer of Hindus. Why is there a road by that name? Change it, for god's sake. ......
  • Sleeping with the enemy
    • by P R Ramesh
      Beginning shortly after midnight on Sunday, TV channels were kept busy airing images of burnt coaches of the Samjhauta Express, of charred bodies, of children searching for parents and of grown-ups looking for their near and dear ones. They and their families deserve our deepest sympathies. ......
  • Congress, CBI collude to help Mr 'Q'
    • by The Pioneer
      The political executive and the Central Bureau of Investigation have been caught trying to protect Italian businessman Ottavio Quattrocchi's interests for the second time since the Congress came to power at the head of the UPA Government. Early last year, the CBI had allowed Mr Quattrocchi to walk away with Rs 21 crore after his London bank accounts, which had been frozen in July 2003 after the then NDA regime had made out a case that the money was part of the Bofors payola, were unfrozen. ......
  • Govt's Q cover-up akin to account defreeze plot
    • by Abraham Thomas
      The deliberate suppression of news about the detention of Italian businessman Ottavio Quattrocchi for 17 days bears a stark similarity to the way the Government kept under wraps its move to defreeze the two London bank accounts maintained by Quattrocchi. ......
  • Home-grown al-Qaeda plots 'rising in UK'
    • by The Age
      More than 2,000 home-grown al-Qaeda terrorists are plotting suicide attacks in Britain, the Sunday Telegraph newspaper reported, citing a secret intelligence document. ......
  • Four Into Two
    • by M.J. Akbar
      Do you know what Quattrocchi means in Italian? Four eyes. I have this from an extremely reliable source. Actually, the source isn't that exciting, but the information is correct. And what does Ottavio indicate? ......
  • Mass marriage to bring back Dalits to Hindu fold: TTD
    • by NewKerala.com
      One of the prime objectives of the mass marriages performed by the Tirumala Tirupathi Devasthanam (TTD) was to bring Dalits into Hindu fold while re-kindling their faith in ancient Vedic culture, TTD board chairman K Karunakara Reddy said here today. ......
  • Official abduction
    • by The Pioneer
      It was an incident even the Pakistani establishment's devoted fan club in Delhi - hyperactive since the Samjhauta Express terrorist strike of February 19 - would be hard put to defend. Seven Pakistani survivors of the train attack were being treated at one of India's best medical facilities - Delhi's Safdarjung Hospital. Many of them had serious burn injuries. One seven-year-old boy was on the ventilator. ......
  • Quattrocchi at last held in Argentina
    • by The Pioneer
      The ghost of Bofors once again appears poised to return to the centrestage of Indian politics with the detention in Argentina of Italian businessman Ottavio Quattrocchi, accused in the Rs 64 crore gun deal scam. ......
  • An open letter to Kasuri
    • by B Raman
      I read with interest the following agency report, dated February 22, 2007, on some observations made by you regarding the need for co-operation between the intelligence agencies of India and Pakistan: 'Intelligence agencies of India and Pakistan will have to work together if South Asia is to live in a civilised manner,' Pakistan said on Thursday, emphasising that such a cooperation is possible if governments push it. ......
  • Fanatics demand, we concede
    • by Kanchan Gupta
      Flipping through a recent issue of *Time*, I came across an interview with Hungarian-born Holocaust survivor and Nobel laureate Imre Kertesz, better known for his novels *Fatelessness, Kaddish for a Child Not Born* and * Liquidation*. During the course of the interview, Kertesz, with touching humility, makes two interesting points which are, in many ways, inter-linked. In response to a question, he says, "It is not always worthwhile to compromise." .....
  • Covering for Islam
    • by Robert Spencer
      On Sunday morning, a cab driver in Nashville named Ibrahim Ahmed picked up two college students, Andrew Nelson and Jeremy Invus, at a city bar and drove them to the campus of Vanderbilt University. Along the way, the three got into an argument, apparently leaving Ahmed enraged: after they paid their fare and left his cab, he tried to run down Nelson and Invus. Nelson eluded the cab, but Ahmed hit Invus, who was seriously injured. .....
  • Buddha goes green
    • by The Pioneer
      It is ironical that West Bengal Chief Minister Buddhadeb Bhattacharjee should have offered to accord official status to Urdu as the State's second language on a day that is commemorated on both sides of the Padma as 'Ekushey'. Mr Bhattacharjee may have forgotten the significance of February 21 - on that day in 1952 Bengalis of what is now Bangladesh braved bullets to protest the imposition of Urdu as Pakistan's state language with the explicit purpose of stamping out their cultural identity - but it remains indelibly etched in the collective memory of the vast majority of Bengalis. .....
  • Pak forcelifts survivors
    • by Pradeep Thakur, Indrani Bagchi & Megha Suri
      Seven survivors of the Samjhauta Express tragedy were forced on Thursday to leave Safdarjung Hospital on short notice and taken away to a waiting Pakistan Air Force aircraft to be flown back home. .....
  • Diary list payments to officials
    • by Chitrangada Choudhury
      The home Department has not responded to a three-month-old police request to file charges of corruption against public servants who investigators said received payoffs totalling more than Rs 1 crore for giving per missions to buildings that replaced an Oshiwara slum. .....
  • Ricochets From An Old Gun
    • by Lloyd Rudolph
      Investigation and Trial. Rajmohan, an established scholar of contemporary India, broke new ground in Gandhi scholarship by featuring Gandhi's private life, including re-examining his relationship with Rabindranath Tagore's niece, Saraladevi. Rajmohan Gandhi has a well-deserved reputation as a scholar of contemporary India and his book enhances that reputation. .....
  • Graph Of Civilisation
    • by Namrata Joshi
      At first glance, it's a beautiful necklace that would team perfectly with your pale green tussar sari. A closer look reveals a more intricate loveliness. The 28 chunky palm leaf beads have the Gita Govinda inscribed in their brittle folds. Jayadeva's devotional classic, lyrics composed in praise of Lord Krishna, find written expression in yet another exquisite form-that of a fish-shaped, palm-leaf tablet. Apparently, the scribe completed it in meena masha, the month of the fish, the last one in the Indian calendar. .....
  • Horseman Of The Apocalypse
    • by Amir Mir
      From the rugged, lawless terrain of the tribal areas out west to the spiffy environs of Islamabad, the suicide bomber has made the whole swathe of land his laboratory-devastating lives, ruining families, imparting a murderous edge to humdrum existences. .....
  • YSR pulls out gag order
    • by Roli Srivastava
      Chief Minister Y S Rajasekhara Reddy withdrew on Friday the controversial government order (GO), warning newspapers and their editors from carrying news items that "slander" his government's image. .....
  • Mumbai's great slum robbery
    • by Chitrangada Choudhury & Gigil Varghese
      It has now been four months since Maharashtra Police officers asked the state government for special investigators to probe a swelling tide of complaints into what they see as a builder-bureaucrat nexus crippling Mumbai's grand plan to remove slums. .....
  • Covering for Islam
    • by Robert Spencer
      On Sunday morning, a cab driver in Nashville named Ibrahim Ahmed picked up two college students, Andrew Nelson and Jeremy Invus, at a city bar and drove them to the campus of Vanderbilt University. Along the way, the three got into an argument, apparently leaving Ahmed enraged: after they paid their fare and left his cab, he tried to run down Nelson and Invus. Nelson eluded the cab, but Ahmed hit Invus, who was seriously injured. .....
  • Blogger gets 4 years for insulting Islam
    • by Nadia Abou El-Magd
      An Egyptian blogger was convicted Thursday and sentenced to four years in prison for insulting Islam, the Prophet Muhammad and Egypt's president, sending a chill through fellow Internet writers who fear a government crackdown. .....
  • Pakistan's antiterror strategy scrutinized
    • by David Montero
      For the sixth time in a month, Pakistan fell victim to a devastating suicide attack on Saturday, heightening concerns about the stability of a pivotal front in the war on terrorism. .....
  • Significant finds at Dwaraka
    • by T.S. Subramanian
      Ancient structural remains of some significance have been discovered at Dwaraka, under water and on land, by the Underwater Archaeology Wing (UAW) of the Archaeological Survey of India (ASI). Alok Tripathi, Superintending Archaeologist, UAW, said the ancient underwater structures found in the Arabian Sea were yet to be identified. "We have to find out what they are. They are fragments. I would not like to call them a wall or a temple. They are part of some structure," said Dr. Tripathi, himself a trained diver. .....
  • 'Rakhigarhi is the largest Harappan site ever found'
    • by ExpressIndia.com
      The excavations in Rakhigarhi, situated in Hisar, Haryana, have pushed back the history of civilisation by more than 500 years. "It is the largest Harappan site ever found," said the director of Archaeological Survey of India (ASI), New Delhi, Dr Amerendra Nath, while delivering a lecture on 'Rakhigarhi - A Harappan Metropolis' at the ICSSR Complex, Panjab University, today. The lecture was organised by the Department of Ancient Indian History, Culture and Archaeology, PU. .....
  • 'Treat Hindu terror acts, jihad on par'
    • by Anupam Dasgupta
      Two days after the Samjhauta Express blasts, social activist Teesta Setalvad took potshots at the administration demanding that Hindu right-wing fundamentalist groups like the RSS, Shiv Sena, Bajrang Dal and VHP be banned. .....
  • Horse-trading mantra
    • by Soli J. Sorabjee
      Horse-Trading, unethical means, defections are the favourite mantras of governors for recommending President's rule in a state. The Wamuzo ministry in Nagaland was dismissed on the ground of horse-trading and that MLAs were allured by money as stated in the governor's report. The governor of Karnataka recommended President's rule because "there was incredible lack of morality, horse-trading, employment of unethical means and political machinations". .....
  • China's Filthiest Export
    • by Jennifer L. Turner and Juli S. Kim
      The economic boom Deng Xiaoping sparked in 1980 brought millions out of poverty and turned China into the world's factory. However, by following in the footsteps of many western countries that opted to "pollute first and clean up later," China built its economic success on a foundation of ecological destruction. This environmental destruction is threatening the economy, human health, and social stability, as well as potentially causing irreparable damage to the water, soil, and forest ecosystems. .....
  • Govt starts communal quota in development schemes
    • by Akhilesh Suman
      The Union Rural Development Ministry has taken the lead in awarding communal quota in the country's development programmes. The Ministry has demarcated separate fund for the minorities in its various ongoing programmes. .....
  • Andhra plans 4 per cent quota for Muslims
    • by Omer Farooq
      In a bid to provide reservations to Muslims in Government jobs and education from the coming academic year, the Andhra Pradesh Government is planning to come out with a new Ordinance soon. .....
  • Urdu now 2nd language in Bengal
    • by Saugar Sengupta
      After getting a bloody nose from the Jamat-e-Ulema-I-Hind in the peasants' movement in Nandigram and realising that the agitation may affect the ruling Left Front's minority votes, the West Bengal Government is planning to win back Muslims through a host of schemes that include recognising Urdu as the second State language, besides launching a massive publicity blitzkrieg. .....
  • Letters to PM, for the record
    • by Praful Kumar Singh
      Congress president Sonia Gandhi, it seems, has a penchant for writing letters for the record. Usually, these are timed with upcoming elections. The politics of intervention in state policies - through letters leaked on purpose - adopted by Ms Gandhi is aimed at controlling the mounting public anger over different decisions taken by the UPA Government from time to time. .....
  • First among equals?
    • by Jaya Jaitly
      Today, we are left with the position of the chairperson of the UPA, which is not designated through a rule or resolution of Parliament. Nor is there any provision in the Constitution that provides for a post of chairperson of a post-election alliance when the person is not the Prime Minister. .....
  • The Peace Train Blast: Was Lashkar-E-Jhangvi Involved? - International Terrorism Monitor
    • by B. Raman
      It would seem that while the majority of the 68 passengers killed in the explosions-cum-fire in two coaches of the Samjotha Express (Peace Express) at Deewana, near Panipat, on the night of February 18, 2007, were Pakistani nationals, more Hindus than Muslims were killed. This fact emerges from a scrutiny of the proceedings in the Pakistan National Assembly relating to the carnage. .....
  • Profile Of A Terrorist
    • by Investor's Business Daily
      A new Gallup poll finds that richer, better-educated Muslims are more likely to be radicalized. This explodes the myth of the poor, dumb terrorist. .....
  • A plea for sanity: A letter sent to the President of the UCC
    • by Dexter Van Zile
      I write to you both in my capacity as Christian Outreach Director for the David Project Center for Jewish Leadership and as a lifelong member of the United Church of Christ. As you are aware, I have been highly critical of the stance the UCC and other mainline Protestant denominations in the U.S. have taken in regards to the Arab/Israeli conflict. .....
  • RSS bid to make US-born Indians 'confident'
    • by Pawan Dixit
      The Rashtriya Swayamsewak Sangh (RSS) has embarked on a mission to convert non-resident Indians from 'American Born Confused Desi' (ABCD) into 'American Born Confident Desi'. .....
  • Samajwadi Party withdraws support to UPA
    • by The Hindu
      As Uttar Pradesh inched towards possible imposition of President's rule, the Samajwadi Party withdrew its support to the United Progressive Alliance (UPA) Government at the Centre. The party has 42 MPs in the Lok Sabha and 16 in the Rajya Sabha. The Budget session of Parliament is due to begin on February 23. .....
  • Indian soldier died rescuing passengers
    • by Dawn
      An Indian soldier onboard the fire-bombed train to Pakistan died while rescuing trapped passengers from blazing carriages, officials said on Tuesday. .....
  • Laden's associates may be behind train blasts
    • by B Raman
      It seems that while the majority of the 68 passengers killed in the explosions-cum-fire in two coaches of the Samjhauta Express at Deewana, near Panipat, on February 18 were Pakistani nationals, more Hindus than Muslims were killed. .....
  • Priests sell baptism certificates
    • by IBNLive.com
      Baptism is one of Christianity's most sacred rites symbolising purification and a person's admission to the religion. But for some priests baptism has become a money-spinner. .....
  • India 360: Are priests corrupt?
    • by IBNLive.com
      Baptism is a religious ceremony for purifying and initiating people into Christianity. Once converted, the devotee receives a Baptism certificate as proof of being Christian. .....
  • NGOs And Their Accountability
    • by P.N. Benjamin
      Money has been flowing into the NGO sector, but very few of the charitable outfits allow public scrutiny of their accounts. So, one of the recommendations of the Veerappa Moily-chaired second Administrative Reforms Commission is to bring the NGO-sector in the purview of the proposed three-member Rashtriya Lokaukta. It has put the spotlight on the vexatious issue of the accountability of Non-Governmental Organisations (NGOs). .....
  • NSCN-K puts Cong in a spot - 'Imkong paid us Rs 5 lakh'
    • by H. Chishi
      Nagaland's worst-kept secret tumbled out today when the NSCN (Khaplang) claimed to have received a "donation" from the Congress, thanked it for being generous and conjectured that the party was courting it with an eye on the elections next year. .....
  • New worry: Are Maoists, LeT in cahoots in J&K?
    • by M Saleem Pandit
      Between trying to maintain peace and improving its tarnished im­age following the fake en­counters, Army now has another headache to deal with - a Maoist and Lashkar-e-Taiba nexus in Kashmir. .....
  • Maoists hindering move to democracy
    • by Varghese K George
      Sujata Koirala, a working committee member of the Nepali Congress, has said Maoists have gone "out of control" and become an impediment to the Himalayan country's transition to a full-fledged democracy. .....
  • Surprising disclosure
    • by The Asian Age
      National security adviser M.K. Narayanan surprised the world, and more so India, with his long speech at the security conference in Munich where he disclosed for the first time that terrorists had manipulated the stock markets to generate funds, and had used legitimate banking channels to fund their operations. In a speech that can at best be described as a major disclosure, he spoke of the Habib Bank in Pakistan as an established banking channel. .....
  • Musharraf a crook backed by Bush: Thackeray
    • by ExpressIndia.com
      Shiv Sena chief Bal Thackeray on Wednesday said India should have no relations with Pakistan under any circumstances, and alleged that President Pervez Musharraf has the tacit support of US President George W Bush. .....
  • No quick fix solution to Kashmir: Advani
    • by ExpressIndia.com
      Cautioning against any 'quick-fix' solution to the Jammu and Kashmir issue, the main opposition BJP told Pakistan that people of India would not accept any surrender on Kashmir. .....
  • Terrorists in North-East India get support from America
    • by Kunal Ghosh
      The recent terrorist strikes in the USA on September 11, 2001, in which the World Trade Centre and Pentagon were "crash-bombed" by large airplanes, have brought a new resolve in the global community to root out terrorism from all parts of the world. The Americans are playing a leading role in building a world coalition against terrorism. This is the best time to remind the Americans that Baptist Christian terrorists are active in India's North-East and they derive their financial support from the southern parts of the USA where the Baptist Church has a strong following. .....
  • Islamabad's Men in New Delhi
    • by H. Balakrishnan
      I regret to state that the sum and substance of the Article is goading 'Hamlet' to continue in the Congress tradition of sacrificing National Security interests at the altar of 'peace with Jhadistan at any cost'!! .....
  • A foreign policy challenge
    • by G Parthasarathy
      The year 2006 ended with India facing a strange dilemma in conducting its foreign policy, when Iraq's Shia leaders, with American acquiescence, executed former President Saddam Hussein. This untimely and unwise move, with Iraq under foreign occupation is bound to increase sectarian tensions, with the country hovering on the brink of a civil war. .....
  • 'Malabar will turn into Kashmir'-Congress Leader
    • by Haindava Keralam
      These words are not quoted from any leaders of Hindu organizations, but by Former Minister Aryadan Mohammed in a meeting of the KAPT union. He blamed the party for helping these forces become stronger under their rule. .....
  • Don't treat Mumbai, Malegaon, Deewana blasts as isolated incidents
    • by B Raman
      Sixty-six innocent civilians were killed following explosions in two coaches of the Samjhauta Express going from Old Delhi to Attari on the Indo-Pakistan border around midnight on February 18. The incident took place near the Deewana railway station, about 100 km from Delhi. This train was started in 1975 to facilitate travel by poor Muslims in the two countries to visit their relatives. .....
  • Japan's Hindu linkages still alive
    • by RxPG News
      One can also see the influence of the Indian epic Ramayana in the traditional Japanese dance forms of 'Bugaku' and 'Gigaku'. .....
  • Teachers beat boy for wearing rudraksha mala
    • by Vijay Times
      Two teachers of a private school near here landed in trouble after they allegedly snapped the " rudraksha mala" worn by a student and also beat him up for wearing it police said. Cases have been registered against Armstrong and Neethianand on charges of beating up K. Saravanachandran of class seven at C.K Mangalam near here, police said. .....
  • Pakistan Has Key Role In Saudi-Sponsored 'Sunni-Block'
    • by Syed Saleem Shahzad
      Pakistan will play a pivotal role in a Saudi-devised strategy to build a strong Sunni block to counter the perceived growing influence in the Middle East of Shiites led by Iran, diplomatic sources in Islamabad have told Adnkronos International (AKI). The strategy includes the creation of a multinational Muslim peacekeeping force comprising troops from core Organisation of Islamic Countries (OIC) member states, said the sources, speaking on condition of anonimity. .....
  • Parzania, the late entrant in pseudo-riot politics
    • by Vaidehi Nathan
      The secularists fit the description of the 'corpse-eating ants.' They feed on the dead, conduct commerce over it and out of the profit wear crowns and build palaces, not to speak of careers. There have been many a TV journalists who have won awards for the coverage of the Gujarat riots, by repeatedly showing only the wailing Muslim. .....
  • A time to heal
    • by Sri Sri Ravi Shankar
      Dalits allowed inside temples in Bhilwara and Jagannath Temple in Orissa is a welcome development. Places of worship should be open to all communities and religions. Nobody has a right to bar people from entering the house of God. Unless the savarnas and the Dalits effect a reconciliation, society will suffer from cycles of revenge and counter-revenge. .....
  • India, Pakistan seek peace after bombing
    • by Matthew Rosenberg
      Leaders of India and Pakistan pressed ahead Monday with their peace process, hours after twin bombs - apparently intended to disrupt their relations - sparked a fire that killed 66 people aboard a train that links the two rivals. .....
  • India doesn't buy Pak 'promise' on Siachen
    • by Rajat Pandit
      The ice on the Siachen Glacier-Saltoro Ridge region will take some more time to melt. With the trust deficit with Islamabad yet to be bridged, India is not too impressed with Pakistan's "promise" that it will not grab positions vacated by Indian soldiers on the glacial heights. .....
  • Shudder street
    • by Imran Ahmed Siddiqui
      A profusely-bleeding French tourist, Chimgainy Yoan, was found in Sudder Street on the night of February 4, his throat slit. His story is a heady cocktail of dope, drink and disaster. But not as heady as the street. .....
  • 'Pak secretly agrees to give Saudis N-bomb'
    • by Pramit Pal Chaudhuri
      Pakistan has agreed to provide Saudi Arabia nuclear weapons and missiles last month, according to an Israeli intelligence website debka.com. .....
  • Looking back at history
    • by Rana Siddiqui
      Not often does an exhibition of Indian paintings serve a historical purpose. Hardly a painting exhibition in Delhi now has any recall value either. The only recent venture that comes to mind is Mahakranti, an insightful exhibition of 120 historical cartoons covering the period from 1855 to 1860. Mounted by Professor Pramila Sharma, it aimed at showing the conspiracy that triggered the 1857 Uprising. .....
  • Indian civilisation '9,000 years old'
    • by Rajyasri Rao
      Marine scientists in India say an archaeological site off India's western coast may be up to 9,000 years old. The revelation comes about 8 months after acoustic images from the sea-bed suggested the presence of built-up structures resembling the ancient Harappan civilisation, which dates back around 4,000 years. .....
  • Hobson's choice for UPA Govt
    • by Swapan Dasgupta
      The Opposition, it is often said, doesn't win elections; Governments lose them. In the past three months, the Opposition has done nothing spectacular to alter the terms of the political debate. Unlike, say the period from 1990 to 1994, when the BJP set the agenda through the Ram Janmabhoomi movement, the political battles of today are being fought on the agenda of the UPA Government. .....
  • The truth about Aurangzeb
    • by Francois Gautier
      Fact, the Trust which I head, is holding an exhibition on 'Aurangzeb as he was according to Mughal documents', from February 16 to 20 at New Delhi's Habitat Center, the Palm Court Gallery, from 10 am to 9 pm. .....
  • SIMI a secessionist outfit: SC
    • by ExpressIndia.com
      In a stinging observation, the Supreme Court described the banned Students Islamic Movement of India (SIMI) as a 'secessionist movement'. .....
  • Give peace a chance
    • by Irfan Husain
      It almost comes as a surprise to learn that one of the most influential books in the world, particularly in the field of warfare, was written well over 2,000 years ago. Sun Tzu's Art of War has come to be recognised as an essential work for generals and commanders, as well as for rulers. More and more, it is being studied by corporate executives for tips about leadership qualities. .....
  • Seva and Hindu organisations
    • by Hindu Vivek Kendra
      One of the canards against Hindu organisations is that they do not undertake any seva to the community. The reason for this canard is that the objective of the secular intellectuals is to demonise Hindu organisations and in the process demonise Hinduism. .....
  • First Attack by Al Qaeda in Japan?
    • by Alexis Debat and Maddy Sauer
      There was a scare today at a U.S. military base outside Tokyo when two small explosions occurred shortly after 11 p.m. there. While no one was injured, investigators are looking at the possibility that it was an attempted terrorist attack. .....
  • The Not-So-Great Commission: A Brief Analysis of WCC's Missionary Code Plan
    • by Tim Mitchell
      The other day, I was looking around www.Crusadewatch.org when I found an article about a Christian group that's determined to implement a new code of conduct for missionaries. The World Council of Churches (WCC) held a meeting in Geneva in early January 2007 to discuss guidelines that will reduce aggressive evangelism that stirs conflicts in regions such as Africa and India with majority populations that are not Christian. .....
  • Kashmir militants feel the squeeze
    • by Barbara Plett
      During a recent trip to Pakistan, the head of a Kashmiri alliance demanding freedom from Indian rule made waves by calling for an end to the armed struggle. .....
  • Politics of Dalit Conversion
    • by SandeepWeb.com
      This BBC report barely manages to conceal its glee over a recent farce ceremony where "hundreds of Hindu Dalits" converted to Buddhism or Christianity. .....
  • Five star Muslim villages on the way
    • by Haindava Keralam
      UPA Govt. is hell bent to appease the Muslims in the country by introducing bizzare appeasement measures day by day. .....
  • People must point out my mistakes: Modi
    • by The Times of India
      Is Hindutva icon Narendra Modi sounding increasingly circumspect and politically correct as elections in Gujarat approach? Has he stopped talking about minority appeasement, for instance? No, says the man himself. "My language is what it was." .....
  • Kashmir Compromised & Pandits Forgotten ?
    • by Pawan Durani
      I would surely be recommending the autobiography of General Musharraf to everyone. And Indians in particular. Not for the reason that you would imagine that it is well written, not for the reason of its wide publicity, but for the reason that it gives an insight into the cunning and non trustworthy behavior of General Musharraf. .....
  • The mysterious saga of Sister Khadijah
    • by Sean Webby and Brandon Bailey
      Khadijah Ghafur sat silently in hijab and correctional jumpsuit, facing a judge, a lengthy prison term and the complete collapse of her elaborate plans. .....
  • Why Left takes Islamism lightly
    • by Daniel Pipes
      Those of my political outlook are alarmed by Islamism's advances in the West. Much of the Left approaches the topic in a far more relaxed fashion. .....
  • One Year Later, Golden Mosque Is Still in Ruins
    • by Marc Santora
      It has been a year since Sunni insurgents ripped a hole in the glorious dome here of one of Iraq's most sacred Shiite shrines, shattering its 72,000 golden tiles and unleashing a tide of national sectarian bloodletting. Not a single brick of the mosque has been moved since. .....
  • Journalism, ethics and society
    • by M.V. Kamath
      We are living in another world, not the world of Mahatma Gandhi, who has been quoted as saying that "the sole aim of journalism should be service". Were he alive today he would be laughed out of court. Service is for the birds. .....
  • India's proud scientific heritage
    • by M.V. Kamath
      When a suggestion was made some time ago that Vedic Mathematics should be introduced as a subject for study at the college level in India, there was a lot of derisive laughter among some of our pseudo-intellectuals, not to speak of 'secularists' whose knowledge of Sanskrit was questionable and a sense of inquiry non-existent. The idea had to be dropped in the face of determined opposition. .....
  • PM's latest sop: Muslim villages first
    • by Rajeev Ranjan Roy
      Already facing flak for pursuing appeasement policy and Prime Minister Manmohan Singh's 'Muslims first remark', the Centre is set to embark on another pro-minority scheme that could trigger fresh controversy. .....
  • Our mosques are importing jihad
    • by Mary Ann Sieghart
      Gina Khan is a very brave woman. Born in Birmingham 38 years ago to Paki-stani parents, she has run away from an arranged marriage, dressed herself in jeans and dared to speak out against the increasing radicalisation of her community. .....
  • A troubling look inside radical Islam
    • by Jonathan Last
      Ross, he was a young counterterrorism expert just breaking into print. I had edited some of his work. He seemed like a normal fellow. But as we spoke, he told me a remarkable story. .....
  • Militants 'forged' ID of Army man to buy SIM, set off cell-bomb
    • by Majid Jahangir
      A J&K police investigation into a militant attack, where a roadside bomb was triggered by a mobile phone in Baramulla last year - the first such attack in the Valley - has sent alarm bells ringing across the security establishment. It has been found that militants fraudulently procured the cellphone's Subscriber Identity Module (SIM) card on a fake Army man's name, photograph in uniform, unit name, address and even faked a certificate with a stamp of his superior, a Lieutenant Colonel. .....
  • Karunanidhi and Sai Baba - do symbols matter any more?
    • by M. Anand
      Karunanidhi, the only confirmed atheist among our political long distance runners, has virtually diluted his anti-God and anti-Godmen stand when he shared a public platform with Sathya Sai Baba, the Godman with probably the largest number of followers in this country. And went on to equate him with the Almighty since he was noble hearted and was serving humanity. .....
  • Across Arab World, a Widening Rift
    • by Anthony Shadid
      Egypt is the Arab world's largest Sunni Muslim country, but as a writer once quipped, it has a Shiite heart and a Sunni mind. In its eclectic popular culture, Sunnis enjoy a sweet dish with raisins and nuts to mark Ashura, the most sacred Shiite Muslim holiday. Raucous festivals bring Cairenes into the street to celebrate the birthdays of Shiite saints, a practice disparaged by austere Sunnis. The city's Islamic quarter tangles like a vine around a shrine to Imam Hussein, Shiite Islam's most revered figure. .....
  • CBI finds the going tough in 'political cases'
    • by Vishwa Mohan
      Political cases are proving tough nuts for CBI. Though the agency is working round-the-clock on cases like the Nithari killings, it is having to duck and weave when it comes to "regime-sensitive" cases like those involving railway minister Lalu Prasad, BSP supremo Mayawati and former Chattisgarh CM Ajit Jogi. .....
  • Caste-based politics
    • by M.V. Kamath
      First it was ideology that separated Indians. The Indian National Congress under the leadership of Jawaharlal Nehru wanted "a socialist pattern of society" whatever that meant. That the socialist pattern turned out to be a pattern for bureaucratic corruption is another matter. At least Nehru was sincere and whatever errors and mistakes he might have made he still deserves our respect for giving a lead to the setting up of Non-Alignment Movement and at home the Indian Institutes of Technology and Management. .....
  • ISI's new strategy
    • by Wilson John
      The arrest of a Nepalese gun runner in Baramullah early this month is unraveling clues that confirm the expanding network of terror in and around India, aided by Pakistan based terrorist organisations like Lashkar-e-Tayyeba (LeT) and the ISI. .....
  • D'Souza Knows Not
    • by Private Paper
      I greatly appreciated your just and thoughtful critique in "The Enemy at Home." As a woman from South Asia, originally from a "traditional Muslim" community, and now domiciled in the U.S., I have much to say to Mr. D'Souza - but feel there's no use in doing so. I have seen him on TV and believe he will not be open to a differing opinion, not even if it comes from a Muslim woman from one of the cultural groups at the heart of his thesis. So I address this to you. .....
  • Liberties aid the enemy within
    • by Paul Murray
      The spotlight this week on the imperialist Muslim group Hizb-ut-Tahrir has shown Australians the very personification of the enemy within. .....
  • Teens raped at gunpoint
    • by The Telegraph
      A gang of five raped two tribal teenagers of the same family holding their relatives at gunpoint in a Murshidabad village last week. .....
  • How to Evangelize Tibetan Buddhists in the West
    • by Michelle Vu
      As thousands of Tibetan Buddhists and admirers of the religion prepare to welcome the Dalai Lama this spring to the United States, a missionary group is setting out to educate Christians about the eastern religion and how to share Christianity with Buddhists. .....
  • It's an open letter
    • by Muslim-Refusenik
      The Trouble with Islam Today is an open letter from me, a Muslim voice of reform, to concerned citizens worldwide -- Muslim and not. It's about why my faith community needs to come to terms with the diversity of ideas, beliefs and people in our universe, and why non-Muslims have a pivotal role in helping us get there. .....
  • Muslims aren't the only voters
    • by Swapan Dasgupta
      Opinion makers, such as they are, hunt in a pack. It, therefore, probably needed the Mumbai municipal poll results to persuade the less compliant section of the editorial class that Manmohan Singh's claim to be regarded as the Indian of the Year is feeble and that opinion poll results don't always translate into reality. .....
  • Govt-Kalam ties fraying at edges
    • by The Times of India
      President A P J Abdul Kalam's decision to return the file seeking elevation of Justice Jagdish Bhalla to the Kerala High Court marks a certain fraying of relations between Rashtrapati Bhawan and government as the father of India's missile programme nears the end of his tenure as the President. .....
  • Karunanidhi and Sai Baba - do symbols matter any more?
    • by M. Anand
      Karunanidhi, the only confirmed atheist among our political long distance runners, has virtually diluted his anti-God and anti-Godmen stand when he shared a public platform with Sathya Sai Baba, the Godman with probably the largest number of followers in this country. And went on to equate him with the Almighty since he was noble hearted and was serving humanity. .....
  • Soniaji, if you really care about the aam aadmi...
    • by Tavleen Singh
      If Sonia Gandhi were no longer on speaking terms with her handpicked prime minister, you might understand the rationale for writing him a letter. If he were getting too big for his tiny boots you might understand why he needed to be publicly admonished. What other reason could have prompted his boss to write an admonitory letter to our gentle Sardarji and then leak it to the press so that the whole country now knows that Soniaji is displeased with allowing more Foreign Direct Investment (FDI) in the retail sector? .....
  • Muslims demand benefits
    • by Akhilesh Suman
      Thousands of Pasmanda (OBC and Dalit) Muslims gathered here on Saturday under the banner of All India Pasmanda Muslim Mahaj to demand speedy implementation of Sachar Committee Report and to protest against the "conspiracy" of the elite upper caste Muslims to deny them the benefits of reservation. .....
  • With friends like these
    • by The Economist
      As George Bush prepares to send more troops to Iraq, his critics all over the Western world are bringing more protesters onto the streets-and the range of people who are angry enough to fill the icy air with chants of rage seems broader, and in some ways stranger, than ever. .....
  • 'Women's issues important while implementing Sachar'
    • by Rediff.com
      Problems faced by Muslim women in the country must be taken into consideration while implementing the recommendations of Sachar Committee, the chairman of the National Commission for Minorities said on Saturday. .....
  • Minister resigns, son takes over
    • by The Asian Age
      Jharkhand health minister Lal Hemandra Pratap Dehati on Friday resigned from the UPA government, and his son Bhanu Pratap Sahi was sworn in as minister in the Madhu Koda government. .....
  • 2 posts for Montek in global bodies
    • by Deccan Chronicle
      The deputy chairman of the Planning Commission, Mr Montek Singh Ahluwalia, holds two other posts in US-based organisations: one is with the Commission on Growth and Development set up by the World Bank, and the other is under the US Institute of International Finance to oversee capital flows and fair debt restructuring in emerging markets. .....
  • The victimhood trap
    • by Husain Haqqani
      The world's 1.4 billion Muslims seem overwhelmingly enraged by the war in Iraq and the suffering caused by US military intervention. But there appears to be little outrage against the sectarian bloodletting that has led to more Iraqi casualties than war directly involving American troops. .....
  • Rao days come to haunt PM
    • by The Economic Times
      Former West Bengal finance minister Ashok Mitra's revelations about the role of American pressure in the selection of the finance minister in PV Narasimha Rao's government in 1991 were on Monday used by the BJP to corner Prime Minister Manmohan Singh. .....
  • Oh my God! What a change!
    • by B.R. Haran
      When His Holiness Sri. Sathya Sai Baba visited the Tamil Nadu Chief Minister M.Karunanidhi at his residence, some of us felt that he should have avoided the visit and some of us felt that, this visit could bring in a change in the mentality of the Dravidian leader. I also received a few responses for my previous write-up (Dravidianism surrenders to Hinduism! .....
  • A deal we're ignorant of
    • by Kanchan Gupta
      Never mind the bunkum about peace and good relations between Pakistan and India that one gets to increasingly hear from neo-converts to Sufiana. At the ground level, little has changed in Pakistan and as much was evident on Monday when rallies were organised across that country to mark 'Kashmir Solidarity Day'. .....
  • Appropriating Gandhi for personal glory
    • by Virendra Kapoor
      It was a party conference funded by the tax-payers. The recent two-day meet in New Delhi on the rather lofty theme of 'Peace, Non-Violence and Empowerment: Gandhian Philosophy in the 21st Century' cost the Government tens of crores of rupees. Delegates from far and near were flown in and housed in five-star comfort, far removed from the much-vaunted Gandhian simplicity. Foreign dignitaries from some 80-odd countries and a couple of Nobel laureates came down for the conference timed to mark the centenary of the Mahatma's Satyagraha in South Africa. .....
  • Afghan schools take on the Taliban
    • by Laura King
      Even before the winter wind had scattered the ashes of their village school, the people of this poor hamlet in eastern Afghanistan decided they had to fight back. .....
  • Enter the Dutch 'Infidel,' Faithful to Herself (Q.& A. with Ayaan Hirsi Ali)
    • by Laurie Goodstein
      As a 22-year-old Somali Muslim, Ayaan Hirsi Ali disappeared en route from Nairobi, Kenya, to an arranged marriage in Canada, and fled to the Netherlands. A decade later, she won a seat in the Dutch Parliament, where she became known as an advocate for women and a critic of Islam. She collaborated with Theo van Gogh on a movie that depicted abused women with passages from the Koran written on their skin. .....
  • Gunbattle In Delhi Area
    • by The Asian Age
      The special cell of the Delhi Police has claimed to have arrested four alleged Jaish-e-Mohammad terrorists - one Pakistani national and three Kashmiris - after an encounter in which about 50 rounds of bullets were fired from both the sides. However, no one was injured in the cross-firing and all the terrorists were arrested. .....
  • Sanjay Dutt greeted by protests at TADA court
    • by Syed Firdaus Ashraf
      As actor Sanjay Dutt arrived at the special TADA court in Mumbai on Tuesday morning, he was met by protesting families of the other accused in the 1993 Mumbai blasts case. .....
  • 71% say they're proud to be Indians
    • by Rashmee Roshan Lall
      Nearly two-thirds of all Indians are fiercely proud of 'Mera Bharat Mahaan' but more than half of India believes the caste system is a "barrier to social harmony" and is holding the country back, according to a BBC poll to be published on Monday. .....
  • German Indologist claims to have decoded Indus scripts
    • by Zee News
      Renowned German Indologist and scientist of religion, Egbert Richter Ushanas today claimed that he has unravelled the mystery of Indus Valley scripts by decoding major seals and tablets found during various archaeological excavations. .....
  • It could have been a bloody Monday in Delhi
    • by Rediff.com
      It could have been a bloody Monday for Delhi had the four Jaish-e-Mohammad militants, who were planning multiple strikes at crowded markets, not been arrested from the national capital territory after a late-night encounter, police claimed. .....
  • To Tame The Wild
    • by Saikat Datta
      A few months ago, Dattaraj Khandeparker, a taxi driver-cum-guide at the Doodhsagar Falls in Mollem, South Goa, couldn't tell one spider from another. To be honest, he couldn't have cared less as he took batches of tourists through the Mollem National Park, something he had been doing for the last three years. But a chance meeting between him and other guides at Mollem and the range forest officer, Amar Heblekar, changed their lives. Heblekar decided to turn this motley band of high-school dropout tour operators into wildlife experts. .....
  • This inner voice too needs hearing
    • by Tavleen Singh
      My inner voice has been giving me a hard time again. In this new dawn of shining secularism, when ''succular'' (sic) thinkers, writers, artistes and politicians tell us daily that India's social fabric has been saved from being ripped asunder by the ''communal'' BJP, my inner voice has been urging me to speak up. Stand up, it says, and point out that the word Hindu is being used as a term of abuse. .....
  • Appeasement takes hold again in Europe
    • by Paul Sheehan
      Last September Robert Redeker, a French high-school philosophy teacher and author of several scholarly books, published an opinion piece in Le Figaro entitled "What should the free world do in the face of Islamist intimidation?" .....
  • Patna as Azimabad?
    • by Dipak Mishra
      Bihar's "name game" politics received a fresh lease of life on Sunday when RJD chief Lalu Prasad made a demand to change the name of Patna to Azimabad. .....
  • Struggle unfinished
    • by Expressindia.com
      His humble and practical bearings put you at instant ease. For, years of patriotic struggle and a charitable disposition have made Mohan Ranade a name to reckon. One of the leaders of the Goa Liberation Movement, 77-year-old Ranade, goes down memory line to relive the struggle. .....
  • Caste-based politics
    • by M.V. Kamath
      First it was ideology that separated Indians. The Indian National Congress under the leadership of Jawaharlal Nehru wanted "a socialist pattern of society" whatever that meant. That the socialist pattern turned out to be a pattern for bureaucratic corruption is another matter. At least Nehru was sincere and whatever errors and mistakes he might have made he still deserves our respect for giving a lead to the setting up of Non-Alignment Movement and at home the Indian Institutes of Technology and Management. .....
  • American pie in Nepal
    • by Sandhya Jain
      On January 28, Delhi's unpretentious Paharganj locality played host to thousands of Nepali Maoists, almost half of whom crossed over from the neighbouring country, while the rest were already residing in India. Held under the banner of the Nepali Jan Adhikaar Suraksha Samiti (Bharat), the 4700-strong gathering included representatives from each of the Himalayan kingdom's 75 districts, most being the cadre of the Nepal Communist Party (Maoist). .....
  • Guv's remarks against Sanskrit cause students to rebel
    • by The Times of India
      Governor T V Rajeswar would not have imagined that his well-meaning advice to students of Sampurnanand Sanskrit University (SSU) for career building would invite their uncontrolled ire, forcing him to leave the place unceremoniously under security cover. .....
  • The longest-running reality show
    • by Sarah Kass
      Why are the Palestinian people the world's only permanent refugees? Why do the hundreds of millions of dollars the UN and the European Union invest in the Palestinian people year after year result not in Palestinian prosperity but only in persistent Palestinian poverty? .....
  • Dravid attends RSS function; Left unhappy
    • by Sutirtho Patranobis
      The Left parties have expressed their displeasure over Indian cricket team captain Rahul Dravid attending a function organised by an RSS-affiliated body in Nagpur in January. .....
  • 'When did yoga become fascist?'
    • by Hindustan Times
      We ran a news item about how the left parties had an issue or two about Rahul Dravid attending a "Surya Namaskar " session. Many people wrote in to express their dismay. .....
  • Can't trust them!
    • by Afternoon Despatch & Courier
      When the Government of Karnataka took over the management of religious places in the state for five years, little did the people know that it would result in the closure of 15,000 places of worship. The Right to Information Act helped concerned citizens find out what happened in the course of five years. .....
  • Stop pandering to separatists
    • by G Parthasarathy
      The Manmohan Singh Government appears to believe that separatists, armed, financed and trained across our borders, can be won over by a policy of appeasement. This was evident in the approach to ULFA in Assam, which was let off the hook by an ill-advised ceasefire when the Army had its cadre on the run. There is a similar approach to the separatists of the "moderate" All Parties Hurriyat Conference in Jammu & Kashmir. .....
  • Hindu businessman kidnapped, killed in Pak
    • by The Times of India
      A Hindu businessman has been kidnapped and murdered in Pakistan's Sindh province, and police suspect the killing could be part of a campaign by the banned Harkat-ul-Mujahideen militant group to target Hindus in the region. .....
  • Religious mapping over, ministries asked to use data
    • by Rediff.com
      Ahead of the possible tabling of the action-taken report on the Sachar committee findings in Parliament, more than a dozen ministries are being asked to use a new religion-based demographic statistics for executing minority welfare programmes. .....
  • Will secularists of India counsel like Irfan Hussain in Pakistan?
    • by S. Gurumurthy
      "Seen through Hindu eyes, the Muslim invasion of their homeland was an unmitigated disaster. Their temples were razed, their idols smashed, their women raped, their men killed or taken slaves. When Mahmud of Ghazni entered Somnath on one of his annual raids, he slaughtered all 50,000 inhabitants. Aibak killed and enslaved hundreds of thousands. .....
  • Beauty of secularism
    • by The Colonel
      When I was working with a pub­lication group, I visited the famous Sabarimala temple in con­nection with the release of a book on this temple. The chief priest of the temple was very courteous and allowed me to go as far as a Christian like me was permitted. .....
  • An Indo-Arab blunder?
    • by Mustafa El-Feki
      When I compare how India used to view the Palestinian question, back when I was counsellor to the Egyptian Embassy in New Delhi 25 years ago, with how it does now, I cannot help but wonder how things change. I was posted in New Delhi in the late 1970s and early 1980s, when India was a major supporter of the Palestinian cause. The very idea of having diplomatic ties with Israel was offensive to most Indians. .....
  • Politics dominates Satyagraha celebrations
    • by Sunil Prabhu
      At a conference on Monday to mark 100 years of Mahatma Gandhi's satyagraha, international leaders attended but the Indian opposition was left out. The NDA was not invited for the function. .....
  • Who owns the Mahatma?
    • by Kanchan Gupta
      Nothing in Johannesburg bears the remotest resemblance to what this South African city looked like a hundred years ago. At least, the images captured in records of the time are far removed from what we see today, as are the social and political realities that separate today's South Africa from that which shaped the destiny and politics of an unheard of Gujarati lawyer who is now remembered across the world as Mahatma Gandhi. .....
  • India's top bureaucrats to need US seal of approval
    • by Jatin Gandhi
      Indian bureaucrats now need an American stamp of approval before they can qualify as top brass. Starting this year, three US-based universities will train officers at different stages of their careers and only those who get a 'satisfactory' report will be empanelled for promotion. .....
  • Squaring the imperial circle
    • by Premen Addy
      Albert Einstein was reported to have said that god never played dice with the universe. May be not. But the President of the Immortals, as the novelist Thomas Hardy chose to describe Him, does permit Himself the occasional joke on us lesser beings. .....
  • Carnage in Assam-II
    • by Jagmohan
      Exasperated by the attitude of the Central and the state governments, a writ petition was filed in the Supreme Court by Sarbananda Sonowal, former president of All Assam Students Union, challenging the validity of the IMDT Act. In its order of 15 July 2005, the court declared the Act unconstitutional. .....
  • Carnage in Assam-I
    • by Jagmohan
      For the ghastly drama enacted during the last few days in Assam, in which about 70 innocent persons were done to death in cold blood, the United Liberation Front of Asom is squarely responsible. But no less responsibility rests upon those who, by virtue of their vote-banks-politics and acts of misgovernance, have brought this organisation into being and allowed it to develop its lethal fangs. .....
  • Gandhi's truth
    • by The Pioneer
      When Mohandas Karamchand Gandhi, while addressing 3,000 Indians who had gathered at Empire Theatre in Johannesburg on September 11, 1906, proposed that the discriminatory Transvaal Asiatic Law Amendment Ordinance should be opposed through passive resistance, few would have realised that he was unveiling a novel political philosophy that would, in the years and decades to come, have a profound impact on leaders across the world. .....
  • Weaving a New Dream
    • by Shalini S. Sharma
      Weavers from remote villages of Rajasthan, Uttarakhand and Assam recently got a chance to showcase their talent at no less a place than the very mecca of fashion-Paris. This, thanks to Rangsutra, a company which has brought 1,000 weavers from these regions together as shareholders in the organisation. Each, with a capital of Rs 1,000, embarked on a journey of weaving their dreams into reality in 2004. .....
  • The Law In Stone
    • by Madhavi Tata
      It's a seat of justice like no other-not a court, panchayat or the neighbourhood police station, but a large black rock sitting in the middle of Chinnapachila village in Visakhapatnam district. Named Peddarayi/ Dharmapeetham by the villagers, it is believed to possess divine truth-eliciting properties. Locals come to the Peddarayi with their disputes and find them being resolved in minutes. .....
  • Woven In The Master's Image
    • by John Mary
      When 'master' weaver P. Gopinathan laid the foundation for his handlooms in a Kerala village some 30 years ago, there were very few inducements to cushion his start-ups. The government tax rebate for handloom fabrics and Khadi and Village Industries Board grants were the sole incentives. Gopinathan organised women, gifted them his small plot to set up looms and taught them weaving. .....
  • Bull's Eye
    • by Rajinder Puri
      As India relentlessly proceeds towards acquiring superpower status, Indians are being encouraged to seek out-of-the-box solutions to hasten progress. In my own humble way, I too have proposed a measure to help improve governance. .....
  • Jesus in 'yogic posture' to adorn church hall
    • by DNA
      In a fusion of Indian and Western spiritual streams, an idol of Jesus Christ resembling the Buddha meditating under a 'bodhi' tree is to be consecrated in a Church prayer hall at a lakeside hamlet near here shortly. .....
  • Marine militants
    • by J Dey
      Intelligence reports with the Mumbai police indicate that 500 Lashkar-e-Taiba (LeT) terrorists trained by the Pakistan Navy and the Inter Services Intelligence (ISI) will attack prime targets in the city on January 26. The terrorists will infiltrate the city posing as fishermen, gaining entry into India from Kori Creek in the Rann of Kutch. .....
  • Suicide attack in Islamabad hotel kills 3
    • by Rediff.com
      Three persons were killed and five others injured on Friday in a suicide bomb attack at Marriot hotel in Islamabad, where the Indian High Commission planned to hold a Republic Day reception later in the evening. .....
  • Teaching English in Japan
    • by interac-lds.blogspot.com
      Interac is the biggest provider of assistant language teachers for government schools in Japan. They earn 500,000 Yen (5,000USD) per teacher per month and pay him 250,000 salary. Where does the rest of the money go? You'd never guess. .....
  • Metallurgy in ancient Bharatam was advanced
    • by TR Anantharaman
      Eminent Metallurgical engineer and former rector of the Banaras Hindu University Prof TR Anatharaman said that ancient India contributed a lot in the field of metallurgy. .....
  • Hindu temple supports Muslim women
    • by Naveen Nair
      Fifty-three-year-old Jameela and 17-year-old Ansila are both Muslims but their lives revolve around a Hindu temple at Cherthala in Kerala's Alappuzha district and the Raja Rajeswari temple has become the only support for the two women. .....
  • Cattle smuggling for slaughter unchecked
    • by Rashme Sehgal
      NGOs, including People For Animals (PFA) and People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals (Peta) India, are up in arms against the police and the Society for Prevention of Cruelty to Animals (SPCA) for failing to stop the large-scale smuggling of animals into the capital for purposes of slaughter. Activists from Peta and PFA believe several thousand animals are being crammed into lorries and being brought into the capital every night. .....
  • Bangladeshi criminals take refuge in Kolkata: Reports
    • by Zee News
      Most of Bangladesh's underworld dons, wanted criminals and politicians with godfather image have taken refuge in Kolkata, the capital of West Bengal, to escape the on-going police raids, media reports claimed. .....
  • Christian Yoga, Clergy, and Faithful of Christianity Indirectly Promoting Traditional Yoga
    • by Swami Jnaneshvara Bharati
      Whether there is or is not such a thing as "Christian Yoga," it has become a quite controversial topic recently. Many so-called Yoga teachers claim that Yoga is just a physical fitness or alternative health program, and therefore has no conflict whatsoever with Christianity. Meanwhile, many Christians argue that Yoga is a religion and should therefore not be practiced in any form by the Christian faithful. Still other Christians bridge both of these views by creating a new category that they call "Christian Yoga." .....
  • Dinesh the Dhimmi
    • by Serge Trifkovic
      Nearly two years ago the Jihadist lobby in the United States made a concerted affort to have my book The Sword of the Prophet banned from National Review Online. Jihadi activists gathered around CAIR claimed the book defamed Islam and its "prophet." When it did not get immediate satisfaction from National Review, CAIR instructed its partisans to pressure the Boeing Corporation to withdraw its advertisements from the magazine. .....
  • Talks offer & 'threats'
    • by The Telegraph
      Hours after the Jamait Ulema-i-Hind chief said he was ready for talks with the chief minister if sent a written invite, Siddiqullah Chowdhury was allegedly threatened with "dire consequences" for addressing rallies against land acquisition. .....
  • Pakistan Taleban vow more violence
    • by BBC News
      Pro-Taleban militants have been strengthening their hold in Pakistan's tribal areas following controversial peace deals with the authorities. Haroon Rashid of the BBC's Urdu service is one of the few reporters working for a Western media organisation with access to the area. .....
  • 'Yoga lite' stretches into public schools
    • by CNN News
      In Tara Guber's ideal world, American children would meditate in the lotus position and chant in Sanskrit before taking stressful standardized tests. .....
  • The Left is onside with hate
    • by Pamela Bone
      Why is it, asks British journalist Nick Cohen, that apologies for a militant Islam, which stands for everything the liberal Left is against, come from the liberal Left? Why are you as likely to read about the alleged conspiracy of Jews controlling American foreign policy in a literary journal as in a neo-Nazi hate sheet? .....
  • Veil off - one woman's 'life-changing' decision
    • by Yahoo News
      Egyptian ex-fashion model Naira El-Sheikh wore 'hijab', the Islamic headscarf, for more than five years. Her friends considered her 'an icon' for choosing 'piety' over anything else. .....
  • Why are we embarrassed to show love for India?
    • by Jyoti Sharma
      Why is it that Indians do not wear love for their country on their sleeve the way Americans, British or Australians do? Unlike a US citizen who would wear 'Proud to be an American' tee to work, why does an Indian keeps his tri-colour toting zeal confined to a Team India match? Why don't we see more Indians wearing clothes, turbans or even bindis and dupattas in the colours of the nation? Why is it that no building proudly wears the Indian flag on its exterior a la the Nasdaq? .....
  • Kalam on why Sanskrit is important
    • by Syed Amin Jafri
      President A P J Abdul Kalam on Thursday termed Guru Raghavendraswamy of Mantralayam as a 'divine soul' and recalled the rich cultural heritage of Sanskrit in Indian history. .....
  • Koran in each gun box - Kerala arms haul
    • by S. Chandrasekhar
      Loudly proclaiming that they are alive and kicking and that they have graduated from stone age swords and axes to automatic assault weapons, the jehadis of Kerala have once again, marked their presence. In the biggest haul of arms in Kerala, Customs and Police officials seized 35 pistols and 47 air-guns from among a container consignment of 817 boxes on January 8. .....
  • The new amma in Karunanidhi's life
    • by Veeraraghav T M
      Tamil Nadu Chief Minister, M Karunanidhi, said to be a hardcore atheist and who had on several occasions reprimanded party men for flirting with religion now seems to have no problems with spiritual leaders. .....
  • Hindu body in US flays Centre for ignoring Kashmir
    • by The Times of India
      A US-based Hindu rights group has accused successive Indian governments of paying scant attention to the Hindu minority in Jammu and Kashmir where they are suffering "grievous violation" of human rights. .....
  • Yediyurappa defends Virat Hindu Samajotsavas
    • by The Hindu
      Deputy Chief Minister B.S. Yediyurappa wondered why the Virat Hindu Samajotsavas were being criticised when scores of Muslims and Christians were participating in the event. Speaking to presspersons here on Thursday, in an indirect reference to president of the Janata Dal (Secular) H.D. Deve Gowda's criticism of the Virat Hindu Samajotsava, he said critics should not view the event wearing "political" glasses. He made it clear that the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) was not organising the samajotsava. .....
  • UPA communalises economy
    • by Balbir K. Punj
      Ignoring the advice against the vivisection of developmental expenditure along communal lines, the UPA government is proposing that 15 per cent of all such expenditure, section wise, should be allotted to Muslims. It is being said that this rule would apply only in districts where there is a Muslim population of at least 25 per cent. .....


Home        Top
«« Back
 
 
 
  Search Articles
 
  Special Annoucements