Long before Oxford came into existence, Nalanda and Vikramashila were attracting scholars from across Asia. Indian merchant guilds connected distant markets through sophisticated trade networks. Indian textiles clothed the world. Indian steel was prized…. https://t.co/8rBTAgoOrb
His body had wasted away. Every ounce of flesh was gone. His ribs protruded through his skin. He no longer had the strength to move.
When the British realized that this 25-year-old revolutionary would not break, they tried to force-feed him by inserting a tube through his nose. The tube mistakenly entered his lungs instead of his stomach.
Milk filled his lungs.
He writhed in agony, coughed blood, and suffered unbearable pain—but he refused to end his hunger strike.
On September 13, 1929, inside Lahore Jail, a young revolutionary laid down his life after 63 days without a single grain of food.
Yes, 63 days.
History often remembers the execution of Bhagat Singh, but many have forgotten the comrade who died in Bhagat Singh’s arms.
His name was Jatindra Nath Das—known to the nation as Jatin Das.
A skilled bomb-maker by training, he ultimately turned his own body into a weapon of resistance.
He could have sought mercy. He could have accepted food. But his demand was simple:
“Stop treating Indian political prisoners like animals.”
The British believed hunger would crush his spirit. They failed to understand that his resolve was stronger than iron.
As his condition deteriorated, the colonial authorities resorted to extreme cruelty. Prison doctors and guards restrained him and forced a feeding tube through his nose. The procedure caused immense suffering, but his determination never wavered.
When news of his martyrdom spread, the entire nation mourned.
As his body was transported from Lahore to Calcutta, thousands gathered at railway stations along the route to pay their respects with flowers.
In Calcutta, more than 600,000 people reportedly joined his funeral procession.
Subhas Chandra Bose personally helped carry his bier.
Yet today, how many remember those 63 days of sacrifice?
Before his death, Jatin Das is remembered for saying:
“I am no saint. I am just an ordinary man who wishes to die for the dignity of his country.”
People may debate how India won its freedom. But one truth remains undeniable: the foundations of that freedom were laid upon the sacrifices of countless young patriots like Jatin Das.
India’s independence was not handed out as charity.
It was earned through suffering, courage, and sacrifice.
Every Indian should know the price that was paid for the air of freedom we breathe today.
Remember Jatin Das.
Remember the 63-day hunger strike.
Remember the young man who chose death over surrender.
Note: Historical accounts agree that Jatin Das died on 13 September 1929 after a 63-day hunger strike in Lahore Jail, becoming one of the most revered martyrs of India’s freedom struggle.
Over the past 40 years of celebrated IT industry in India, not one globally dominant OS was created in India.
Not one top chip was created.
Not one top global email system was created.
Now, no world dominating AI tool or LLM.
That's where GenZ needs to challenge themselves!
Pakistani military just massacred Kashmiris in PoK. Innocent civilians targeted in Rawalkot. Hundreds dead. There seems to be no limit to how far Asim Munir will go. The world cannot keep pretending not to see.
1st World Yogasana Championship 2026 (Ahmedabad, India)
India hosted and dominated the inaugural event (June 4–8, 2026), with 522 athletes from 79 countries competing. India won 102 gold medals and a total of 114 medals, showcasing overwhelming dominance.
But no liberal influencer and anti modi YouTuber will ever make videos on this piece of news.
They will definitely point out that Happy Index of Pakistan is higher than India according to some Tom dick harry reports.
In A First, India Deploys 12 Nuclear Warheads In Big Policy Shift: ReportThe SIPRI report claims this is the first time India's nuclear arsenal has been classified as operationally deployed, rather than stockpiled.
https://t.co/H6zRguc5pZ
BIG BREAKING NEWS - TMC MP Kalyan Banerjee heckled at Airport.
Crowd started chanting "Chor Chor" slogans.
Security personnel rushed to safely escort him amid the political tension.
Jim Sarbh has singlehandedly redeemed Parsis from Indian cinema which has caricaturized them on screen.
Always some grumpy old man with some funny exaggerated surname shouting in weird made up Gujarati laced accent.
Even real Parsi actors like Boman Irani were always in funny Parsi role. Yes, some played Parsis like Sam Manekshaw like Vicky Kaushal & Milind Soman. Good effort.
Jim Sarbh changed all that when he played Homi Bhabha. A real Parsi playing a great Parsi changed the game. He brought back the class and punch Parsis had when they ruled Bombay. Xerxes in Titan story is latest from him.
After all that, he is kinda the go to guy if you want to show a story related to this community.
He is a good actor which never gives a boring shot on screen. I can see some established big names will hesitate in envy to share screen with him if he gets more space. Hopefully we see him more.
#Annamalai said it will be a coalition government was coming.
He saw the #Vijay wave when almost everyone else missed it.
He stood against #EPS, and people are now realizing his judgment was right.
Everyone except TNBJP seems to be realizing it now.
"Women are only interested in makeup and shopping, that's all they think about."
CJP spokesperson Vijeta Dahiya's misogynistic view on women has triggered widespread outrage online.
The remarks have sparked a massive backlash, with social media users calling out the CJP spokesperson for his sexist comments.
Shaurya Chakras awarded for exceptional gallantry:
— Officer, 6 PARA SF for Op Bihali
— Officer, 5 PARA SF for Op Keller
— MARCOS Officer for Op Keitsun
— Officer, 7 PARA SF for Op Halkan