The Partition Museum in Delhi now pays tribute to the unacknowledged pain of Sindhis. It blends oral histories, archival material, memory artifacts, and contemporary art from a scattered culture.
In tactical terms, the shirtless protest was worse than a self-goal. Suddenly, the fiascos of the AI Summit were forgotten, and the Youth Congress’s disruption became the issue.
IAF is fine with accepting the aircraft with 'must-haves', even if some other steps remain pending, which may take at least another year, it is learnt.
Hindus are not a protected group. When they are driven out for religion it is always discussed in divided form. Sindhis Punjabis Bengalis Kashmiris. These identities were not relevant. They were driven out for being Hindu
There should be one on Kashmiri Pandits too. Also will the print dare do opinion pieces on them? Human interest stories? Or are those only reserved for if you are a muslim?
Hindus are not a protected group. When they are driven out for religion it is always discussed in divided form. Sindhis Punjabis Bengalis Kashmiris. These identities were not relevant. They were driven out for being Hindu
We don’t even know the tiny fraction of stories told by those who lived through the horrors of 1947 – in the Punjab, Kashmir, Sindh, or elsewhere.
This is one reason I consider the Partition Horrors Remembrance a meaningful step towards remembering past wounds as a first step towards healing.
There should be one on Kashmiri Pandits too. Also will the print dare do opinion pieces on them? Human interest stories? Or are those only reserved for if you are a muslim?