WHAT IS THIS CBSE?????? YOU HAVE GIVEN ME 7 IN CHEMISTRY THEORY WHILE I AM GETTING 55 ACCORDING TO THE MARKING SCHEME
@cbseindia29@dpradhanbjp
it's the system's incompetence that so many students like me are unable to match the eligibility criteria for admissions into colleges
Proto-Elamite?
The Pashupati seal has an elephant, a water buffalo and a rhinoceros. Ancient Elam was centred in southwestern Iran. Elephants, water buffalos and rhinoceroses are not native to ancient Elam. BTW, they are native to India. Also, the figure is seated in a Yogic posture. Is Yoga also Elamite now? Seriously?
Your profile says you are a professor. I don't mean to sound rude, but your students deserve a refund. And seriously, Western universities need to improve their hiring practices.
Some say #Dhurandhar is propaganda🤦🏻♂️
Year 2001. December 13. The capital, Delhi, lay wrapped in winter fog. The clock showed 11:50 a.m. Inside the Parliament House—the temple of India’s democracy—an important session was in progress. Present inside were Prime Minister Atal Bihari Vajpayee, L. K. Advani, and almost all the top leaders of the country. Outside, guarding their security, was CRPF woman constable Kamlesh Kumari.
She was part of the “Bravo Company,” entrusted with securing the outer gates of Parliament while the session was underway. Kamlesh Kumari was stationed near Gate No. 1, right beside Building Gate No. 11. Suddenly, a white Ambassador car sped toward the gate. Its registration number was DL 3CJ 1527.
Her sixth sense immediately warned her. Normally, no VIP vehicle violates protocol and rushes in like that. She saw the car breaking through the security cordon and heading straight toward the gate. She had no sophisticated weapon in her hands—only a wireless set. But her heart was filled with indomitable courage.
She instantly realized this was no ordinary vehicle—it was a terrorist attack. Casting aside all concern for her own life, she ran toward the gate with just one aim: the car must not be allowed inside. She shouted warnings to the other security personnel and managed to shut the gate.
The terrorists understood that their plan had failed. Their disguise had been exposed. Enraged, they opened indiscriminate fire at Kamlesh Kumari. Not one or two—eleven bullets tore into her chest and abdomen. The ground of Parliament House was soaked in blood.
Yet her sacrifice was not in vain. Because of her alertness, the rest of the security forces got crucial time to take position. One of the terrorists was a suicide bomber who planned to enter Parliament and blow himself up. Had that bomber succeeded in entering, India’s history might have been very different today.
Kamlesh Kumari collapsed, but before falling she ensured that the terrorists could not advance even a single step further. It was because of her courage that the deadly blueprint of Pakistan-backed Lashkar-e-Taiba and Jaish-e-Mohammed was foiled that day.
Kamlesh Kumari hailed from Sikandarpur village in Kannauj district of Uttar Pradesh. She joined the CRPF in 1994. Her husband, Avdhesh Kumar, and her two daughters, Jyoti and Shweta, were her entire world. Yet, when the nation called, she valued duty above her own family.
On Republic Day in 2002, the Government of India posthumously awarded her the Ashoka Chakra—the highest peacetime gallantry award. She was the first woman constable in India to receive this honor.
After her death, her family went through an extremely difficult time. When political debates delayed the execution of Afzal Guru, the mastermind of the Parliament attack, Kamlesh Kumari’s family, in anguish, announced their decision to return the Ashoka Chakra. They said, “If the nation for which Kamlesh gave her life delays punishing her killer, then what value does this medal hold?”
Finally, after Afzal Guru was executed in 2013, her family accepted the honor once again.
Kamlesh Kumari was not just a constable—she was an invisible wall of India, upon which the very first удар of terrorism crashed. She proved that it is not weapons, but courage, that is the greatest weapon of all.
Source: Wikipedia – Kamlesh Kumari Yadav
Everyone’s chasing scale.
We’re chasing sense.
I’m looking for a Co-founder for Sattvavarta (https://t.co/n3ZcwWAj6t) —
someone who believes the next revolution won’t come from code,
but from consciousness.
#CoFounder#Sattvavarta#Leadership (image: google)
तेजस्वी ने नहीं किया टेंट वाले का भुगतान
पेसे मांगने पर धमकाया रहा है
RJD प्रत्याशी अरविंद सहनी के समर्थन मे सरायरंजन विधानसभा मे की थी रैली
👉जीतने से पहले ही लोगों के पेसे डकारना शरू