@sardesairajdeep So to be ‘Vishwaguru’, India has to get in the middle of every spat in the world?
You disprove the belief that maturity usually comes with age. At this rate, you’ll soon catch up with Rahul Gandhi.
India enters the big 5 in manufacturing toppling South Korea. At current growth rates, even considering rupee depreciation, India will displace Japan to become the world's third largest manufacturer (> $1 trillion) by 2029.
Also,
1960: $3 billion -> 2015: $328 billion
2015: $328 billion -> 2025: $781 billion
So India has added as much in manufacturing in the last 10 years as it added in the last 70+ years.
@sagarikaghose@abhishekaitc Tactics are often tailored to match the vindictive, conniving, scumbag low-life they are being used against.
The people of Bengal voted to crush every Tolamul criminal, including the head of the serpent.
Stock up on popcorn 🍿 - it’s going to be a 5 year movie, at least!
@yrf The theme of Alpha is R&AW and ISI working TOGETHER?? Once again, that hackneyed Aman ki Aasha BS?
The woke lobby will never, ever learn.
Have to thank @kamaalrkhan for saving me ₹1500. He’s right. It’s an Alpha disaster loading.
https://t.co/jlLB0x88xa
Her name is Subhasini Mistry.
She was married at the age of twelve. By the time she was around twenty-three, her husband Sadhan Chandra, a vegetable vendor near Kolkata, had died from a treatable illness.
The family could not afford medical care.
She was left with four children, no formal education and almost no money.
In the months that followed, the family slipped into extreme poverty. At one point, she had to place her eldest son in an orphanage because she could not feed him.
After her husband’s death, she made a promise to herself.
No one else in her village would die because they were too poor to afford treatment.
For a woman who could not read or write, it seemed impossible.
But she started anyway.
She worked as a domestic servant. She worked as a farm labourer. She sold vegetables on the roadside, the same work her husband had done.
For nearly twenty years, she saved whatever she could.
Part of that money went toward educating her son Ajoy. He eventually became a doctor.
With her savings, she bought a small plot of land in Hanspukur.
In the 1990s, with her son treating patients and villagers contributing whatever they could, she opened a small medical centre there.
They called it Humanity Hospital.
It began in a single room.
Today, it has dozens of beds and treats hundreds of patients every week, many of them free of charge.
In 2018, the woman who had never received a formal education was awarded the Padma Shri by the President of India.
She could not save her husband.
So she spent the next four decades helping thousands of other families save theirs.
Follow for stories India deserves to remember.
@yrf EXACTLY the kind of 💩 from Bollywood I thought I’ll NEVER have to watch, after Dhurandhar set a new high bar for film-making.
A tattoo on a kid stays the same even when she is fully grown? Like Manmohan Desai’s ‘Mard’?
And ‘wolf’ ki beti ‘wolf’ hoti hai? Not a giraffe? 🤦🏻♂️
He is a Monk of Ramkrishna Mission.
First time I have heard somebody of Ramakrishna Mission's Sanyasi to speak the truth so boldly.
Enough with Ahinshaa of Md. Gandhi tought to us !!