Many a queries are there on my earlier article ‘Prithviraj Chauhan -his last days’. Infact this very article was written by me to meet queries of this sort only by my readers. Now that I have been able to collect some more astonishing material on this through some new additions to my library, feedback by my readers and certain features on the subject appearing in media channels, I am working on completing a new writeup titled as ‘Prithviraj Chauhan -his last days (3) which hopefully should meet different questions on the topic raised by large number of my readers. The article is tobe published shortly.
July 3, 2008
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neelkanth |
history |
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It is the different individual faculties of a person which control and command his/her activities. Such activities are further based on factors, besides patience and faith, like the company of friends one has and also the life partner. The great poet Tulsidas has elaborately highlighted these areas in his Ram Charitra Manas emphasizing that in the event of some crisis or the other a man has to test his own amount of patience, he has to trace the remedy to the problem in his religious faith, he has to see whether his friends are really faithful to him and that he has to try his trust in his wife. He said it in a particular context of the story but the narration holds good for every body. All may look good, friends or relatives, but the factor as to how serious they are in conducting friendship as a true relationship can be tried only in times of crisis. Reference of wife covers a woman associate and there again the real test takes place only when there is some grave problem confronting an individual. One’s own faculties like patience and faith intact, a person is lucky if he/she has a company of trusted friends.
June 15, 2008
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neelkanth |
cursory, factor, woman |
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I rely upon and relish interacting with my laptop, it is joyful. Problem ofcourse starts when it starts behaving erratic pointing out errors after errors and working on their solutions gets worse confounded as it hardly leads to any conclusion. I get confused. From compatibility angle I have to use some different internet browser which helps on many counts but results into several new difficulties. These difficulties mainly emerge for the reason that one browser doesn’t tolerate the other. Who is to blame ? Is it that after working on computers for more than three decades I am still an amateur. Search engines, help, support, customer service all fail to deliver me any results. My problem is that my laptop is directly linked to my health and I lose my form feeling uneasy the moment my computer goes out of order or starts behaving irritatingly. Possibly the universal truth that something that interests you so much has a full length potential to equally behave otherwise.
June 4, 2008
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neelkanth |
Random, Technology |
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2 Comments
Questions are raised every now and then on my writeups on Prithviraj Chauhan on various aspects of his life and valour. It may help me if the questions are elaborate enough to give them proper coverage. I am thankful to my readers. The latest questions raised by Neerja Gupta, Ritika and Krupz are in relation to whether courtship between Prithviraj and Sanyokta was a take over from their earlier acquiantance or it was a sudden event and that how he died. These questions are joined by certain other readers putting their query more or less in the same manner. Historians differ on these points and theirs are the views contradictory to each other. Picking up all these varying versions together read in the context of events in totality, what is normally summed up is that (1) Both of them didn’t meet earlier but as Sanyokta had heard of chivalrous roles of Prithviraj, she developed a feeling of love for him which culminated into Prithviraj picking her up forcefully from the Swayamber that was organised by her father Jai Chand and (2) Prithviraj was a sharp shooter with a capacity to shoot his target with an arrow merely on hearing his voice. It was done at the instance of Chand Bardai, the court poet of Prithviraj. Mohd Ghori somehow escaped, took a revenge, got both him and Chand Bardai blinded, took them away from the country where they were killed. This is supposed to be correct in view of the fact that Mohd Ghori is said to have survived 6 years after the said shoot out. The other version is that Mohd Ghori was shot dead on the spot by arrows of Prithviraj.
May 11, 2008
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neelkanth |
history, love, romance |
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5 Comments
Pensioners are nobody’s babes unless they assert themselves is what they are getting constrained to realise in the context of this community being denied their due continuously. Traditionally interpreted as some sort of an exgratia, pension issue is treated as such only by the respective powers that be always pushing back downward the very natural concept that it is as good a basic factor as any fundamentally strong issue. If welfare measures are to count, they are infact the ones who need and deserve more on that count. Resource wise whatever they get residually in the name of pension is too meagre an amount to meet their requirement at an advancing age demanding so much of medical care and liabilities that remained unattended during their period of active service. What is more a matter of concern is that pensioners themselves are not found offering the required assertiveness and they remain confined to looking up to those who have tendency to take the issue as a secondary matter. Strengthwise numerically the pensioners are in much bigger a number now, thanks to Voluntary Retirement Scheme, and they are quite capable of being counted as a force but mere force or numerical strength by itself is not enough unless the required activity is generated with an accelerated movement. Pensioners in general or those from Banking Industry or particularly those from State Bank of India may have to garner and mobilise their ranks not limpingly but vigorously to secure the rights which are very much otherwise due to them.Sustained struggle, and not an apologetic approach, is the answer to such problems.
May 9, 2008
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neelkanth |
Labour, banks, bi, pension, sbi |
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Trade Union, organised and system based as it is today, is now a career and not just a mission of service as it used to be when the movement in that direction had a take off. There are records indicating that Trade Union movement in India started after 1923 but it is not correct on the face of the fact that it was already launched by the then Bank employees belonging to the then Imperial Bank of India (now State Bank of India) who emerged as such on amalgamation of the 3 Presidency Banks operating in the country. As a mission or as a career both ways this should be possible for the current generation of leaders to keep in mind that how difficult a task it might have been for the leaders to organise a struggle for workers cause those days. A synopsis signifying the take off level of the movement is given below. This is the day when we have to remind ourselves that whatever working class in the country is there it is there because of those martyrs. We salute them.
| Ist May’ 1886 |
Workers in America unitedly protested and raised their voice against 18 hours a day work which was practically unlimited in several cases. This very day they had a massive demonstration at Chicago demanding 8 hours a day work at the maximum. Police tried to crush the movement and 6 workers were killed in the violence. |
| 4th May’ 1886 |
In another demonstration, there was bomb blast killing number of police men and also the workers. |
| 1889 |
A large scale meeting of employees and their representatives was organised at the behest of International Labour Organisation at Paris where it was unanimously decided to observe May Day (Ist May) in the memory of the employee martyrs. |
May 1, 2008
Posted by
neelkanth |
Labour, banks |
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3 Comments
Azamgarh branch of State Bank of India is a tourist attraction particularly for those who are interested in freedom movement of India. It has a memorial named after Kunwar Singh, the legendary warrior who fought against the then British rulers in mid 19th century. Traditionally belonging to a local rulers family he was the one who organised a strong morcha against foreign rule in the country and was able to capture several districts around Varanasi from their clutches. The mutiny march led by him to places like Rewa, Banda, Ballia, Ghazipur and Gorakhpur besides several other centers where Mangal Pandey was already recognized as a big terror became his concentration point in organising more and more of strength to foster the cause of freedom movement. On many an occasions he fought even single handedly and was able to overpower the enemies. Mangal Pandey and Kunwar Singh are the two names which are the subject matter of folklore forming part of stories in the families nearby Varanasi and Azamgarh even today. Kunwar Singh was in advancing age but even at the age of 80 he was a terror for the British army. British historian Holmes described him (the old Rajput, as he called him) as an extraordinarily sstrong fighter. He continues to be an inspiration whenever there is a talk on freedom movement of the country. Freedom was hardly possible if men like Kunwar Singh were not there.
April 23, 2008
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neelkanth |
history |
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4 Comments
Tantiya Tope, the great lieutenant of Nanaji Deshmukh was tortured and hanged to death by the then British rulers in Company Garden at Kanpur by the then British rulers. Now that a new startling version of the history has come to light that he was not hanged at all and lived long years of life after the incident, the entire history connection with the movement has taken entirely a new turn. It is also said that it was some one else who was hanged in place of Tantiya Tope. Whosoever might that man have been, he was certainly a great martyr for the reason that he died for the cause of the country and that he opted to save Tantiya Tope by disguising himself as such. The battle Tantiya Tope fought for the country and the tortures he had to undergo in the process in the hands of the British are the great parts of the history which factor none can erase. It looks satisfying that he survived the death sentence disappearing obliviously to remote places but how come the historians were ignorant of such a reality till now. The local history of Kanpur contains volumes on this subject mentioning him as a great martyr. Memoral Well in Company Garden of Kanpur and the big banyan tree by which he is said to have been hanged silently wear a testimony to this. History is truth and only truth on facts it is said but when there are clashes in describing the events it certainly causes suspicions on facts. After all history relating to mutiny in India is not a matter of thousands of years, it is spread over between two centuries and this should not be difficult to ascertain necessary factual reality.
April 21, 2008
Posted by
neelkanth |
celebrities, history |
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3 Comments
Trying hard to write my posts on this favourite site of mine but have landed no where during the last several days. This one I am taking as a test without knowing as to what finally emerges in the matter. I just feel so shuddering on the very thought that this site may not remain functional. The support system of WordPress which I have been trying to apply for redressal of the problem too is closed. Am unable to ascertain any cogent reason for so ticklish a problem. Publishing this post is from the point of view of reaching a finality whether or not it works. I am yet to see this after I finish these scribblings of mine. I have already marked certain comments as spam deleting a few others even remotely doubted contents wise. The big problem lies when there are comments made by the readers in several varying languages and as I see it may not be possible for a blogger to know all the languages of the world.
April 21, 2008
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neelkanth |
cursory |
operation, problem, spam |
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Technorati Tags:
bliss,
ignorance,
tension
Knowing a thing and not knowing it at all are phenominally two different factors but both have a capacity to give satisfaction, satisfaction to one who is knowledgeable and satisfaction to one who has no knowledge at all. There is lot to learn when you travel places from one location to other deriving informations both geographically and environmentally besides the social levels. Those who travel and have seen places and met different people do possess a thrilling experience to share with others. On the other hand there are people who did not move out of their village and never saw a city but they too do not lack the very realisation that they are much away from unnecessarily deriving knowledge on different counts which results into mental tension. I know some such persons who never had left their home on an outing and obviously they are the people who are conveniently without any worry which might have been caused to them had they known many a things about others. The great poet Tulsidas wrote Sabse bade hain moorh jinahin na vyapi jagat gati meaning thereby that those who are not to bother about acquiring knowledge on any count from outside are quite free of any sort of uneasiness. You go to interiors in remote areas, come across persons who are destitutes suffering from hunger and naturally develop a serious anxiety on that count which is always likely to take a turn of discomfort to you. You are unaware of such a situation, you are mentally all free with no sort of any strain on your mind. It ofcourse doesn’t justify ignoring the people who are in difficulty but situationally this is what matters from tension point of view. While touring in Orissa, I was told numerous stories on poverty stricken people in Kalahandi where for days together men, women and children in a family had to depend on tree leaves as their food. Such a version kept hovering around my mind for days together.Desirable or otherwise, the very fact that keeping ignorant of an unpleasant scenario enables a person to remain blissfully out of a worry can not be denied.
April 1, 2008
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neelkanth |
cursory |
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