@Rich_Cooper I don't know if they're lying, but at least they have the sense to keep their private matters from turning into a public circus, unlike that clown shoving a mic in their face, spewing profane, idiotic questions just to harvest views.
एक प्रवक्ता महोदय का कहना है ब्राह्मणवादियों तक बुद्ध की सोच पहुँच नहीं पाई और इसलिए ब्राह्मणवादियों ने बुद्ध को विष्णु का अवतार बताकर उन्हें बोतल में बन्द कर दिया। क्या यह सच है? आइए जानते हैं।
When it comes to bravery Garhwali are no less than anyone in Bharat. One unarmed Garhwali man taking on armed group, his feet sliped otherwise the sword assaulter would have remembered the punch his entire life.
@PyaraUKofficial पैसा पहुँच गया है क्या तुम्हारे पास, जो "जय पहाड़, जय पहाड़ी" से भी दिक्कत होने लगी है?
अपने लोगों के साथ खड़े नहीं हो सकते, तो कम से कम उन्हें कमज़ोर तो मत करो। उन हुड़दंगियों को तो उनके राज्य में पूरा समर्थन मिलता है, और तुम उल्टा अपने ही लोगों को ग़लत ठहरा रहे हो।
Grow a spine
These Nangs wearing Nihang attire are now openly challenging Uttrakhand CM.
This is what happens when you appease criminals; they get emboldened.
Is someone really funding them to create disharmony?
Either way, it is time Sikhs of Uttrakhand come forward to oppose these criminals disguised as Sikhs.
@ayeejuju Logistics.
Stacking the boxes of these during transportation can lead to deformation of the bottles, which may affect their sales. These bottles are also more prone to damage compared to upright neck bottles, thereby reducing transportation efficiency.
The Sikh Khanda evolved from Sanatan roots in the Indian civilizational matrix-
Central Khanda : Ancient Sanskrit term khadga. Durga & Kali wield it as symbol of knowledge cutting ignorance/evil — same meaning in Sikhi (truth vs falsehood).
Chakkar : Classic Chakra of Vishnu — eternity, cosmic order, oneness (Akal Purakh / Brahman). Represents infinity in Sanatan iconography.
Two Kirpans : Builds on ancient Raja-Rishi ideal — balancing worldly power & spiritual wisdom, seen in Hindu kings and dharma traditions.
The Chola Shiva Trishul (in the post) is pure Sanatan art. Visual similarity exists because Sikh symbols grew organically from shared Punjabi-Dharmic culture Vedic/Puranic martial & spiritual heritage.
Gurus refined these symbols for Khalsa — like Buddhism/Jainism did with Vedic roots — without erasing the eternal Sanatan framework.
@puneet_sahani@the_lama_singh@danvir_chauhan@JaipurDialogues@HPhobiaWatch@Lotus_indrajit
The unnecessary पूजा सामग्री at these altitudes is mindless
A strong implementation is needed
What we do is postmortem by collecting it but the question is how do we control it at the foothill?
#CarryMeBack Kedarnath dham & many other places need this rectification
उत्तराखंड में एक बार फिर निहंग सिखों का तलवारों से स्थानीय लोगों पर हमला करना और गुरुद्वारे में कब्जा करना विवाद छिड़ चुका है। बिलकुल वैसे ही जैसे कुछ समय पहले उत्तराखंड बनाम हरियाणा का विवाद तूल पकड़ गया था।
क्या वाकई पर्यटकों में Civic Sense की कमी है ? और आखिर वो कौन लोग हैं जो दो लोगों के मामूली से झगड़े को राज्य बनाम राज्य की लड़ाई में झोक रहे हैं।
@himanshi__bisht
First 10 days it was 1 ton
In the next 5 days it’s 1ton
#carrymeback gaining momentum
If you wish to learn how you can replicate #Carrymeback at any pilgrimage or trek route along with Drive me back
Register here - https://t.co/Px1blQwup4
#HealingHimalayas
His name was Jaspal Rana.
He was one of the greatest shooters India has ever produced. He died on June 12, 2026, in a Delhi hospital at the age of 49.
He had felt chest discomfort during a World Cup in Munich in May, returned home and underwent a medical procedure. He did not recover.
Jaspal Rana was born in 1976 in Uttarkashi, in the hills of Uttarakhand. His father, an officer in the Indo-Tibetan Border Police, introduced him to shooting as a boy.
By the age of twelve, he was already competing at the national championship level and had won a silver medal.
In 1994, at the World Championships in Milan, he won the junior world title in the 25 metre standard pistol event with a world record score.
He later revealed that he had competed through severe pain and was scheduled for surgery the very next day. He refused to take even painkillers before the event.
He was eighteen years old.
That same year, he received the Arjuna Award.
What followed was one of the finest careers in Indian sport.
He became India’s most successful athlete in Commonwealth Games history, winning fifteen medals, including nine golds, across four editions of the Games.
He also won eight medals at the Asian Games. At Doha in 2006, he won three gold medals and equalled a world record.
He represented India at the 1996 Olympics and received the Padma Shri in 1997.
When his competitive career ended, he did not leave the sport behind.
He became a coach and helped shape the next generation of Indian shooters. Among those he mentored were Manu Bhaker and Saurabh Chaudhary.
In 2020, he received the Dronacharya Award, becoming one of the rare Indians to be honoured both as an athlete and as a coach.
He spent his entire life on the firing line, first as a champion shooter and later as a teacher.
Indian shooting lost one of its greatest marksmen. The athletes he trained will carry his legacy forward.
Follow for stories India deserves to remember.