Sikh and Hindu history are inseparable. Every educated person knows that Hindu families dedicated their eldest son to the Guru's path and generations of Sikhs fought with extraordinary courage against Mughal oppression to protect faith and people.
Waheguru 🙏
Kapil Dev on Sikhism: do listen in how Hindu families in Punjab historically sent their first-born son to fight for the land as a ‘warrior’ and that was an initiation for them to be called a ‘Sikh’ 🪯
“My own Massi’s elder son became a Sikh”
In Japan, where summer heat can be dangerously intense, this kindergarten installed a large retractable sunshade so the children can safely enjoy outdoor play in the shade.
As a devotee takes blessings from Maa Ganga in Rishikesh, a foreigner nearby quietly follows, showing how bhakti touches hearts beyond language and culture.🙏🏻🧡🚩
Dacoit Daku Hasinahad disguised herself during a religious pilgrimage.
So what did Punjab Police do? No drones. No facial recognition. No Hollywood-style manhunt. They simply set up a stall offering free ₹10 Frooti to pilgrims.
A little later, she reportedly removed her face covering to enjoy the free mango drink… and was arrested.
Moral: 1. Anything “FREE” has a strange magnetic pull in our country.
2. More than technology, the best policing is about understanding human psychology.
Her name is Sucheta Dalal.
Everyone remembers Harshad Mehta, the man who fooled the stock market and became a legend. Almost no one remembers the woman who caught him.
She was a business journalist at the Times of India in the early 1990s. She had trained as a lawyer, but she chose instead to write about money, and about the people who moved it.
In those years, one man ruled the market. Harshad Mehta, the Big Bull. Share prices did whatever he wanted them to do. He drove imported cars, lived in a sea facing penthouse, and the whole country treated him like a genius. Most journalists wrote adoring stories about him.
Sucheta Dalal did not. She looked at his sudden mountain of wealth and asked one simple question. Where was all this money coming from.
She began to dig. Quietly, through her contacts in the banks and the Reserve Bank, she followed the paper trail. What she found was staggering.
Mehta was pulling thousands of crores out of the banking system using fake receipts, borrowing enormous amounts of public money against paper that was worth nothing, and pouring it into the stock market to push prices higher.
On 23 April 1992, her story appeared in the Times of India. It revealed that the State Bank of India alone was missing hundreds of crores linked to Mehta.
The market crashed. The country erupted. It turned out to be one of the biggest financial frauds India had ever seen.
Because of her reporting, the system was forced to change, and a new watchdog was created to guard the stock market so this could never happen so easily again.
Years later a hit web series told the story of the scam, and millions learned his name all over again.
But long before the cameras, there was just one reporter who refused to be dazzled, and asked where the money came from.