Watch the full conversation here: https://t.co/OxUfgs0JKY
For Chinki Sinha, war is never elsewhere. Armed with James Baldwin's politics of love, she finds hope in protests, reads from her grandfather's stolen diaries, finds herself locked up in a brothel, and goes to Kashmir to cover silence. Blurring the lines between journalism and poetry, fashion and politics, and the mechanics of storytelling with the art of hanging out, all at a time of claustrophobic conformity.
Outlook Editor Chinki Sinha joins Nandini Sen Mehra, Culture Editor at NRI Affairs, on Pause with Nandini. @NRI_Affairs is a media platform for overseas Indians and South Asians, part of a broader effort focused on community transformation and advocacy. It aims to mobilise overseas Indians around social justice causes, including environmental justice, socio-economic justice, gender equity, immigrant rights, anti-discrimination, and more.
Nandini Sen Mehra is the author of Whorls Within (Amaryllis, 2021) and Unburden (Penguin, 2022), co-authored with Nithya Shanti.
@chinkis
As he was wheeled away, the plane erupted…everyone clapping and cheering for the doctors. One of them had a little baby too, who was bawling and protesting, but mum was busy saving lives :) @airvistara
Exceptional Vistara crew in a medical emergency on flight UK773. A young man was quite unwell, a couple of seats ahead of me. He had trouble breathing, hyperventilating, retching, seizures.
One minute they’ve settled in to watch their favourite show or catch up on sleep and the next, they are fighting to keep a stranger alive, even while they are off duty. A moving, contemplative experience. I hope Shahib makes a quick and complete recovery.
I just contributed to the @BitGiving campaign,Help Create India’s First Museum of the Photographic Arts. Check it out at https://t.co/u3TjjI5UmX #museocamera