Os soldados israelenses logo após estuprarem e torturarem os membros da flotilha, disseram para os reféns que "eram autorizados por Deus a fazerem aquilo e que lhes foram conferido o direito de fazerem o que quiserem contra aqueles que não eram do povo escolhido, porque estes eram sub-humanos".
Se tiveram a coragem de fazer isso com europeus, imagina o que não estão fazendo com um palestino para no futuro, traficar seus órgãos?
É preciso de pressão imediata pela sua soltura.
RELEASE DR. ABU SAFIYA!
@AbdullahReads_@SunniIbrahim1 The language that lowlife barelvi is using, Alamgir would've had him castrated. Always jealous like their Leader Ahmed raza khan
@Delhiite_ All part of one world order, it's a pity majority of people are failing to see this and still busy getting distracted and polarised by communal issues.
@ryan_stefa@rasgullii Read the meaning of Shahadah once again. Rest all is justifying weak faith with excuses.
These Saints worked hard all their lives doing da'wah & calling people towards Allah.They reached out to people & taught them.Enjoin good,forbid evil,That's the purpose of life on this Earth
@Phantom5673@x_Aliwayzz01 Think before you type nonsense, do some research. He's obviously rejected by the Deoband Madarsa and has been continously challenged by the mainstream scholars for a debate.
@S_VikramAditya@funny_Democracy You wouldn't have got the deep fried Indian version ,if it weren't for ' Invaders' or Portuguese ' Colonialists . So boycott Samosa ,Many delicacies and desserts and adopt only things with pure ' Indic' origins.
@S_VikramAditya@funny_Democracy Nice strawman. I never called it a "Muslim invention."The Persian sanbosag reached the subcontinent through Persianate Muslim networks, and India later transformed it into the potato samosa. History isn't rewritten by slogans.
@S_VikramAditya@funny_Democracy Amazing how "invaders" quietly became "trade" once the sources caught up with you. History is clear: Persian sanbosag reached India through the Persianate world, then evolved into the Indian samosa. Your politics changed; the evidence didn't.
@S_VikramAditya@funny_Democracy You're mixing etymology with ownership. You conclusion is propaganda,not history. Foods evolve through trade, migration and cultural exchange.History records cultural exchange,not your 'creator vs invader' fantasy
@S_VikramAditya@funny_Democracy For you it's invaders,for others,it's Conquerors and they made this land their home & ruled it.Loot is taking wealth and carting it off to foreign lands.Learn the difference.Not just samosa,many delicacies were brought by Muslim dynasties & it got assimilated into Indian cuisine
@S_VikramAditya@funny_Democracy Potato was brought to India by Portuguese. Even then, Sambosa/Samsa/Samosa used to be stuffed with other Vegetables by Muslim cooks to be served as Snacks much before potato was used as a stuffing.
Five men accused of cooking chicken & drinking beer on the Ganges in Varanasi got same-day bail. In March, 14 Muslim men accused of consuming non-veg on a boat had spent over 2 months in jail.
How did the two cases unfold so differently? @Onkeyta_ tracks.
https://t.co/Hr9lpm2tKl
His name was Shankar Laxman.
He was born in 1933 in Mhow, a small army town in Madhya Pradesh.
He began as a footballer.
After joining the Indian Army, he switched to hockey and took the one position few wanted, the goalkeeper.
In an era when goalkeepers had little more than pads and courage to face a rock hard ball, he became one of the finest the game had ever seen.
He represented India at three consecutive Olympic Games.
Gold in 1956.
Silver in 1960.
Gold again in 1964.
In the 1964 Olympic final against Pakistan, he was named the player of the match after one of the greatest goalkeeping performances in hockey history.
Such was his reputation that Pakistani officials were widely quoted as saying, “Give us Shankar Laxman, and we will beat you.”
In 1966, he captained India to the Asian Games gold medal, becoming the first international hockey goalkeeper to captain his national team.
The hockey world called him the Rock of Gibraltar.
Then, in 1968, he was left out of India’s Olympic squad.
Deeply hurt, he walked away from the game.
When protests led to calls for his return, he refused.
He continued serving in the Army until his retirement in 1979.
Years later, gangrene developed in one of his legs.
Doctors advised amputation.
He appealed for help from hockey authorities, but none came.
Shankar Laxman died in 2006 in his hometown of Mhow.
He was cremated with full military honours.
In the end, it was the Army that remembered one of India’s greatest hockey players.
Follow for stories India deserves to remember.