मैं जानबूझकर ऐसी जगह छिपता था कि पकड़ा जाऊं.ताकि वो ज़्यादा परेशान न हो. वो जानबूझकर ऐसी जगह छिपता था कि मैं कभी पकड़ न पाऊं.आख़िरी बार वो जहां छिपा था उस खेल को बरसों बीत गये.मैं आज तलक उसे ढूंढ नहीं पाया.कितनी ही कोशिशें कर लों.कुछ लोगों की हमारे जीवन भीतर पुनरावृत्ति नहीं होती
Stop saying that i am from South India or i am from North India, Instead say that you are from the South Part of India or the North part of India. This small correction will make a difference and it unifies the Nation.
- Jagadguru Sri Sri Vidhushekhara Bharati Sannidhana.
Public memory is short. Few remember that 2005 saw 1300–1500 deaths due to encephalitis in eastern UP.
There was shock and anger because the numbers were unusually high. The scale drew global attention, with reports in international media and medical journals. Otherwise, many hundreds of deaths had been common in this region for decades, so much so that people had begun to accept it as part of life, and politicians largely looked the other way. This continued till 2017.
Then someone who was determined to change it took over. The new CM, Yogi Adityanath, himself from the affected region, made it a priority. The approach changed. Instead of treating encephalitis as an inevitable seasonal outbreak, the administration shifted focus to prevention, surveillance, and grassroots intervention.
Efforts ranged from strengthening hospitals and surveillance to addressing root causes through sanitation, clean water, vaccination drives, nutrition programs, and village-level health monitoring.
The results were striking. By 2024, encephalitis cases dropped to 116 and JE to just 5, with zero deaths reported. ZERO! A disease that defined eastern UP for decades has almost disappeared from the headlines.
This is one of the biggest public health success stories that did not receive the attention it deserved. Had this been achieved by states like Kerala or Bengal, it would have become a global story, with WHO and UNICEF showering awards and recognition. But since it is UP, it is quietly downplayed.
I’m saying this quite objectively, especially for those in the BJP who are taking the anti-UGC protests lightly.
It’s not an anger issue; it’s a disillusionment issue. There is a vast difference.
Anger is a strong emotional reaction to something perceived as wrong. It is intense but usually temporary and easier to address. Once the concern is addressed through acknowledgment, explanation, apology, or corrective action, the emotion subsides.
Disillusionment is the loss of belief or faith after realizing that something is not as good, honest, or ideal as once thought. It is more about realization and disappointment, not necessarily emotional rage. It is harder to address because it stems from a loss of trust. People no longer feel the system or institution is what they believed it to be. Repairing this requires long-term credibility, consistent actions, and rebuilding trust, not just a single response.
But here, even acknowledging the problem openly seems too much to expect, let alone making an effort to address it.
he took bullets from AK-47 but caught Kasab alive. this one step punctured the entire conspiracy theory.
otherwise, kasab came with kalawa on hand and some people were ready with books calling the attack "rss ki saazish"
तुकाराम ओम्बले अमर रहें!
Colleagues of Inspector Ashish Sharma broke down while giving tribute to him. Ashish Sharma sacrificed his life while fighting the Left Wing terrorists - naxals & maoists!
Om Shanti! 🙏🏽
If you eat momos and on your way back a dog bites you, it doesn’t mean the momos caused the dog bite. Two events happening close in time doesn’t automatically create causation.
India has one Centre, 28 states, and thousands of local bodies. Elections are always happening somewhere every single year. So a blast occurring during some election season is not evidence that elections caused the blast.
Here, we have arrests, confessions, seized explosives, CCTV trails, and documented radical networks. This is open intel, not guesswork.
Denying all of this and peddling conspiracy theories based on a third-rate shayar’s “pata karo chunav hai kya” as evidence only shows that you are part of the problem. You defend and enable radicalism in India.
This symbol of beauty now stands as a haunting emblem of a genocide.
Gratitude to @monalthaakar for weaving a masterpiece, a balm for the silenced, forgotten Hindu souls of the valley.
Thank you @AdityaSJambhale for a creation that hurts the heart and yet heals.
Thank you @bhashasumbli, your performance isn’t acted, it’s lived, it bleeds truth.
Thank you Manav Kaul and @AdityaDharFilms for breathing catharsis into pain.
And lastly that Shiv Shankar Bhajan scene… it mirrors a thousand lifetimes, whispering our collective ache with divine clarity.
A Big hug to whomever came up with the idea of using this Bhajan for the scene. Absolutely Cathartic.
This film doesn’t merely stir emotions, it transcends them, becoming a prayer in motion.
OVERWHELMED ❤️
Ricin is one of the deadliest poisons known. Tasteless, odourless, you wouldn’t even realise if it was mixed into your food or water.
Meet Dr. Ahmed Mohiuddin Syed, an MBBS from China. Using his medical knowledge, he had been extracting ricin from castor seeds for a long time to carry out what would have been one of the biggest mass poisonings in the world by mixing it in water and likely temple prasad in Delhi, Ahmedabad, and Lucknow.
He, along with two others, Mohd. Suhel and Azad, was arrested by the Gujarat ATS. They were in contact with ISIS handlers through Telegram. They were also in contact with Pakistani handlers who were dropping weapons for them through drones.
Another reminder that we don’t thank our anti-terror agencies enough. Their job is like that of a goalkeeper: you are noticed not for how many goals you save, but only for the ones you fail to stop. We will never know how many terror plots our agencies have foiled in the last decade. It must be many. There are so many radicals who want to harm us all the time, and yet we’ve seen mostly peace in civilian areas over the past decade. Hats off, and gratitude.