Five Italians passionate about Indian dance, Svamini Atmananda Giri, Ms. Martina Meenakshi Argada, Ms. Lucrezia Maniscotti, Ms. Valeria Vespaziani, Ms. Rosella Fanelli performed ‘Trigalbandi’, which included Kuchipudi, Bharatanatyam and Kathak. It is wonderful to see Indian dance forms drawing global interest.
Alkali metal promotion in hydrogenation catalysis! @NatureComms
We elucidate the promotional effect of alkali metal(s) in hydrogenation reactions, providing a unified framework for rational design of efficient hydrogenation catalysts! 🔬
https://t.co/cktgjhFSG8
#WATCH | Delhi | South Korean President Lee Jae Myung says, "India and South Korea signed an MoU on the linking of electronic payment systems, allowing both our citizens to pay using the local QR code system when visiting each other's countries. A measure that will make the mutual visits all the more convenient."
The Chemistry Department of the Chinese University of Hong Kong is hosting a summer camp for admissions in 2026. If you are interested in pursuing a PhD at the Chinese University of Hong Kong, you’re welcome to apply for this summer camp.
Krishna dancing on Kaliya Naag was never about defeating a snake. Kaliya poisoned the Yamuna …. and Yamuna symbolises the mind and emotions. When unchecked instincts, ego, and fear dominate us, the mind turns toxic too. That’s why Krishna doesn’t attack. He steps onto the hood … rising above instinct instead of getting entangled in it. Krishna appears childlike because true strength is calm and aware, not aggressive. And he dances, because balance and rhythm control chaos better than force ever can. Each hood of Kaliya represents repeated habits and ego patterns. Krishna stands above all of them — not fighting one by one, but mastering the whole structure. This leela teaches one simple truth: what poisons us doesn’t always need destruction … it needs conscious control.
“योगस्थः कुरु कर्माणि” Established in balance, act with clarity.
This isn’t mythology. It’s a lesson in inner mastery. . . . .