14 years apart, from being the youngest fan of @RCBTweets (you guys remember this?) to the fan who waited with me.
We simply cried on win. Those emotions simply kept going. Then we celebrated.
Cheers @RCBTweets@imVkohli@ABdeVilliers17@henrygayle and all the fans
@VoyageBliss My friend booked a ticket where availability is 250+
He wanted side lower
He got your seat
They can't provide a side lower in 250 seats. What nonsense
1) Lala Hukum Chand Jain (Haryana):
He was a brilliant mathematician and a high-ranking adviser in the court of the last Mughal Emperor, Bahadur Shah Zafar, in Delhi.He led the rebellion against the British in the Hansi and Hisar regions of Haryana.He and his close Muslim friend, Mirza Munir Beg, raised an army and fought bravely using simple weapons.The British captured a secret letter they wrote asking the Emperor for arms. On January 19, 1858, both friends were executed.
2) Netaji Lalchand Jain (Pendra, Chhattisgarh):A prominent businessman and local leader who heavily supported the INA.
3) Acharya Ganeshprasad Varni (The "Gandhi of Jainism"):
During the iconic Red Fort Trials where INA soldiers were being prosecuted by the British, defense fund assemblies were organized across https://t.co/FZ6KGVyPgi a major rally in Jabalpur, this renowned Jain ascetic famously donated his only blanket (Chadar) to be auctioned for the INA legal defense fund because he possessed no money.The blanket fetched an astronomical sum of ₹3,000 at the time, capturing the nation's emotion and vastly accelerating the defense fundraiser
4) Ajit Prasad Jain (A.P. Jain): A prominent freedom fighter and legal mind who later worked closely with national leadership
5) Seth Amarchand Banthia (The "Mangal Pandey of Rajasthan"):He belonged to a respected Jain family from Bikaner. He served as the chief treasurer of the Gwalior royal estate.When Rani Laxmibai of Jhansi and Tatya Tope captured Gwalior, their army was starving and low on money.
Jydaa janna h to book pad le
Factually incorrect when she says “just to buy the smallest things you have to go around…”
There’s a store right next to Malabar Hill Club which sells chicken, meat, cold cuts & it has been around for decades.Pan shops are all over selling eggs. Fishmongers deliver fish at your doorstep. In fact there is a fish market at Raj Bhavan. These folks are needlessly sensationalising things.
Even the restaurant statement is untrue there is Good Flipping Burger, Plate & Pint on Napeansea Rd, Light of Persia on Peddar Road, Thrusha at Walkeshwar all serving non veg.
Not denying restrictions in many buildings but to say this is a negative for Malabar Hill is factually incorrect @VishalBhargava5
When journalism is replaced by communal narratives, society suffers. Unfortunately, some sections of Marathi media seem to be heading in that direction
मला तुम्हाला प्रश्न विचारायचा आहे.
मी दुबई मध्ये सिंगापूर मध्ये आणि युरोपमध्ये बघितले होते. तिकडे मराठी मंडळ प्रसिद्ध आहे. सर्व मराठी लोक एकत्र येतात आपले सण साजरे करतात किंवा एकमेकांकडे जातात आणि इतकेच काय तर एकमेकांच्या जवळ राहण्याचा देखील प्रयत्न करतात.
आपल्या आजूबाजूला एखादा फ्लॅट खाली झाला तर तेथे लवकरात लवकर आपल्या एखाद्या मराठी कुटुंब राहायला आले तर बरे होईल असे त्यांना वाटते. आणि प्रत्यक्षात असे होत असते.
त यामध्ये मराठी लोक सिंगापूर किंवा गल्फ मधील स्थानिक लोकांना नाकारतात असा याचा अर्थ असतो का??
सिंगापूर मध्ये तमिळ लोक ज्या पद्धतीने एकमेकाला धरून राहतात किंवा गर्ल्स कंट्रीज मध्ये केरळा मधील लोक किंवा मराठी लोक आणि गुजराती लोक आपापल्यात कम्युनिटी बनवून जास्तीत जास्त ग्रुप तयार करून आपल्या लोकांबरोबरच राहायचा जास्त प्रयत्न करतात किंवा आपल्या लोकांनाच तिथे जास्त काम द्यायचा प्रयत्न करतात.
याचा अर्थ असा असतो का की यांना तेथील स्थानिक लोकांना आदर द्यायचा नसतो??