The Dark Day of Khalistani Brutality: When a Wedding Celebration Turned Into a Massacre
On 8 May 1988, a Hindu family in Panipat, Haryana, was celebrating a wedding. The atmosphere was filled with joy as relatives and guests gathered for the occasion.
Suddenly, three Khalistani terrorists arrived on motorcycles and opened indiscriminate fire with submachine guns on the unarmed guests.
The cowardly attack claimed the lives of 13 innocent Hindus on the spot, including four women and two young children. More than 31 others were seriously injured in the hail of bullets.
This was not merely a crime—it was a brutal act of terrorism and a deep wound on humanity. It stands as a grim reminder of the devastation unleashed by Khalistani extremism during that period.
Recorded in the pages of history, the Panipat wedding massacre remains one of the most horrifying examples of the inhumanity and cowardice of Khalistani terrorists an atrocity that should never be forgotten.
Yet, Hindus often seem to suffer from a habit of forgetting such tragedies far too quickly.
Shri @nitin_gadkari ji, Any answer to this video, or even these boys are Anti National?
These boys should be given awards for saving the lives of people. Imagine a car at 100 hits this swimming pool, all are gone, even if they have a seat belt in the second row
@narendramodi
@sidhant USA & UK both these countries are shit on earth they don't care about other countries life.. these both countries are responsible for mass massacre, wars, instability around globe for nearly 2 centuries
Video from the Austrian pavilion at the Venice Biennale:
Artist Florentina Holzinger hangs upside down inside a giant bronze bell. She swings back and forth and literally “rings” the bell with her own body.
This is part of a large-scale installation about the climate apocalypse. The bell with a person inside symbolizes a warning about the coming flood.
The Biennale officially opens on May 9, 2026, but the performance has already begun.