I saw this and apart from the deviousness of Kejri, the following struck me: Vishwas says that Punjabis will NEVER accept a Hindu CM because Punjabi's worldwide will not. Punjabi is an emotion! So let me understand this. Sikhs are a majority in one state and they will NOT accept
a non-Sikh Leader. Kashmiris have a Muslim majority SO of course they will NOT accept a Hindu CM. Nagaland has a Christian majority so of course they will have to have a Christian CM. But, Hindus, who are in a majority in India are supposed to and HAVE accepted..
a Parsi COAS, a Jewish General who helped win a war, Sikh COAS, Sikh Presidents and PM, Christian power behind the PM's throne, sundry Christian CMs because ... because we are supposed to show our secular credentials all the time?
I love the fact that Hindus are like this.
That we accept even people from even miniscule minorities having the opportunity to become our PM, President, COAS, Cricket captain etc.
But just for once, I wish that the commentariat and the chatterati would take their hypocrisy and shove it.
If you claim that a Hindu cannot
become the CM of Punjab because Sikhs worldwide wouldn't accept it, then you have no right to preach to Hindus when they start getting reactionary and wanting a "Hindu Rashtra".
Sharing a bit about my literary influences here. As a writer. Thanks to @BoredMallu for seeding this.
I have read pretty much the gamut (more reflective of my age than anything else) from the Russians to the Brit classicals to Victor Hugo, Tolkien, to Maclean, PGW, Wilbur Smith
@BoredMallu John Grisham, Sidney Sheldon, Perry Mason, Agatha Christie, Louis L'Amour, Sherlock Holmes, Kalki etc etc.
When writing however, I realized that there were five authors who have had a major impact in the way I structure the book and my thought process.
They are, in no particular order,
PG Wodehouse
Jeffrey Archer
Kalki
Louis L'Amour
Alistair Maclean
I especially like a quote attributed to Louis L'Amour where he says "I think of myself as a storyteller, a modern day troubador". That always appealed to me.
1/ I just love professionalism. In whatever field it is displayed. Be it a man making a dosai or someone ironing clothes, or the CEO of a company.
There is something abt seeing a professional ay work that warms the cockles of my heart.
This is the story of one such person, Saqib.
2/ Saqib is a barber by profession. Last week, I had booked a barber through Urban clap to show up at 10:30 AM. He never did. When we called him up at 12:00, he said that he was with another customer and would reach at 1:00 PM. We had to cancel.With Saqib, the experience was diff
3/ He called up last night to confirm the place and time. We had asked for him to show up at 7:30 AM. At 7:25 AM, the bell rang. I saw an immaculately dressed gentleman with a strolley, standing outside.
1/ I went to a Hanumanji Temple today. Had darshan, circumambulated thrice and then sat down.
The sounds were soothing, reassuring. There were three ringing of bells. The chants of Rama Rama Hare Hare, Krishna Krishna Hare Hare.
There was a mother with her two young kids...
2/ She had a 8 yr old boy and perhaps a 2 year old girl and was trying to teach them some mantras.
I closed my eyes. I could then hear sounds more distinctly. The sounds of anklets on the feet of girls, the whispers and murmurs of the crowd, the sounds of feet ...
3/ brushing against the floor as people walked around the shrine.
I could hear the mantras that the mother was teaching her kids.
And I realized that I was actually outside time.
What do I mean, you ask?
I felt like this could have been any time, over the last 5000 years.
Continuing my reading. Savarkar took in Gandhi's studird silence in Jati Das' death during a hunger strike in jail. Nor did he support Bhagat Singh's hunger strike. He had however called a murderer, A full Rashid as his "Dear Brother"
This I shall leave without comment.
Read Gandhiji's words on his decision to support the British during WW1.
Does this even sound lucid?
THREAD
Watched a short feature on how the "pagan" Roman Empire became Christian. Some very interesting lessons there for Hindus.
Christianity initially spread, apparently, through Paul and through his trading networks. He also targeted women converts. 1/n
They slowly converted and kept their heads down. This did lead to families getting divided since Christianity had the US vs Them mentality. So Christian converts in families would look askance at their non-Christian family.
Sounds familiar? 2/n
Then there is the Great Plague in the 2nd Century CE. The Chrisitians use that to provide "social service networks" and get more converts that way.
Reminds anyone of what happened after the Tsunami?
3/n