Hijab, in contrast to Burqa, is something so trivial and accepted every single place in India that there is no point asking for permission for it. India is not like Europe where covering the hair of a woman makes her stand out.
I mean, we have to credit the authors of this psyops for making the requisite effort for choosing the right vocabulary & associated toolkit. In other news (which is not even news anymore), a girl in Tamil Nadu committed suicide on account of the pressure to convert. Nobody cares.
In another recent news (again not news anymore) a man was murdered in Gujarat for making a social media post about how Krishna is the greatest of all, in the very region that was once ruled by Krishna. Again, nobody cares because murder is less of an issue than clothing.
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There is a great gap between the spoken “Hindi” and the literary Hindi. Unfortunately, few people have the reading habit in Hindi, especially for books.
It would really help if we prepare word lists to extend the used vocabulary in Hindi, like those in English for the GRE exam.
The same can be said for other Indian languages. The reading habit in Hindi is perhaps a bit stronger than other Indian languages, which are at a still more advanced state of decay. Focused interventions and supporting material, like word lists, grammar and composition will help.
I lost count of the number of times I started listening to a Hindi conversation on a podcast or video, and got put off by the obscene adulteration of language by the speakers. Sometimes half the sentence is in English. How is that acceptable to native speakers, I don’t know!
Today, I realized that I know several Telugu people who talk to their children only in English. They don’t even live abroad in an Anglophone country. Just in India. The children talk to the parents in English. These are the elite section of the society. I’m pissed off man!
A lot of the times, it is just about showing off their Anglobabies. Every middle-class Telugu family has a dozen people in the circle of relatives or friends who are settled abroad, mostly in the USA. It is all about trying to identify with that in-group of Phoren kids.#facepalm
I get so annoyed just thinking about these Anglo-wannabes. Why!? The children can easily pick up English if they spend a couple of years abroad at some time. They are the fricking elite. But they are raising deracinated children who will be clueless and lost in life afterwards.
We have our fair share of stupid fanatical Islamists in India, but this assessment is way off the mark. There are dozens of countries in the world which are ~ 100% Islamic: Iran, Uzbekistan, Egypt and so on. Would it be ok for those people if their country collapses? Not at all.
We should seriously take a chill pill in India and reason with the Muslims like they are Indians. Being Indian is what they are. They cannot rub it off. If they go to the Gulf, they are called Hindi (Indians). Heck, even Pakistanis are called that. They cannot rub it off.
Despite the fanatical idiots, the vast majority of Muslims in India are quite comfortable in their Indian skin and want to see their country progress as a civilization. If we look east, they will see Indonesians, Malaysians who all own up to their full civilizational history.
ASI is doing its job precisely as it was expected to, and in line with the intentions with which it was set up. It was set up by a crooked British racist, Alexander Cunningham, with the objective of distorting India’s past and separating Buddhism from Indian living culture.
General Cunningham set the precedent for how the ASI is supposed to operate: he himself ransacked and looted a wide array of archeological artifacts, which are now in the possession of the British museum.
“This notion of a Buddhist golden age as having preceded the corrupt Hindu present ultimately served as a ‘legitimizing discourse about Britain’s civilizing mission in India’.”
This is precisely the motive for which the ASI was established.
But anyway, the Indian concept of Chakravarti is not similar to the Chinese concept of Heaven’s throne, or the Islamic concept of the Caliph, or the European concept of Ruler of Christendom. They are all different. We must understand how the Indian kings called themselves.
See this example of Raghu’s Digvijaya, that is narrated by Kālidāsa in his Raghuvamśa. The Chakravarti typically reinstates the same kings as rulers in the territory that is conquered by him. See the examples of Raghu’s exploits in Vanga and Kalinga.
Thanks for this articulated viewpoint. The only problem with it is that 100% rubbish view of Indian history manufactured by the British colonial Raj. Did Indians never have a strong native power that unified the geography? Only foreign invaders unified it, Mughals or the British?
The idea that India is a disjoint jigsaw puzzle of a geography, that was barely ever unified except by the (superhumanly) strong external powers and that too for only brief periods of time: this was just a convenient and self-congratulatory propaganda prepared by the British Raj.
The British needed this propaganda to impose their rule on Indians, which they did for a period of 90 years (1857-1947). That’s a tiny blip in Indian history. Even during this period, we must remember they were only indirectly administering 50% of the land under princely states.