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Mental_sachinodu
Hero Username: Mental_sachinodu
Post Number: 11788 Registered: 10-2008 Posted From: 208.85.130.5
Rating: N/A Votes: 0 (Vote!) | | Posted on Tuesday, September 17, 2013 - 09:28 am: |
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Strike 1: The writer is a bohra muslim, bohra muslims are not true muslims. he is just a hindu pawn
 the world of appearances may or may not be real, or both may and may not be real - or may be indescribable; or may be real and indescribable, or unreal and indescribable; or in the end may be read and unreal and indescribable - its all Syadvada |
   
Awara1984
Junior Artist Username: Awara1984
Post Number: 958 Registered: 12-2010 Posted From: 125.16.29.3
Rating: N/A Votes: 0 (Vote!) | | Posted on Tuesday, September 17, 2013 - 08:19 am: |
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Happy Birthday to Modi Satyaki was a Yadava warrior and a lifelong disciple of Krishna. He also hero worshipped Arjuna and fought in the Kurukshetra battle on the side of Pandavas, choosing to go against the majority of the Yadava clan who had sided with the Kauravas. It was widely believed in those times that the Kauravas would prevail over the Pandavas due to the former’s superior armory and larger army. Yet Pandavas won almost an impossible battle. This might sound as an afterthought now, or even as history being written conveniently, but this was the unflinching truth of those ancient times. Satyaki was a hopeless romantic who believed that the mighty Kauravas would eventually be defeated. He dreamt an impossible dream of Vasudeva Krishna redeeming mankind in the battle of Kurukshetra. After the battle of Kurukshetra, Satyaki went on to rebuild the capital city of Anarta Kingdom, Anartapur. From here began the tumultuous journey of India, for had Stayaki not rebuilt this ancient city, who knows what fate would have in store for us today? Many millennia later, the ancient city of Anartapur was rechristened as Vadnagar in Mehsana district of the western state of Gujarat. Damodardas Moolchand Modi was an ordinary grocer who lived in considerable poverty with his wife and six children in Vadnagar. In post-independent India, there were millions of such families who lived an unremarkable life and died an unsung death. Nothing worthwhile came out of millions of such existences. Damodradas’s third son ran a tea stall near the bus terminus of Vadnagar like thousands of other kids in India who were forced to labour in order to help their families sustain a livelihood. This kid in Vadnagar had no chance of going beyond the tea stall and abject poverty, for that was the only commodity which was in abundance in Nehru’s socialist republic of India. Consider the impossible odds that were stacked against him. He had no proper education, no family pedigree and no money to survive beyond one day. For all intents and purposes, this boy should have had a fate similar to any other tea stall boy of India. After all, how many tea stall vendors does India recognise or remember? To move out of abject poverty and beyond a tea stall towards a path of service to the nation as a Pracharak, is a minor miracle itself, for not many in India get such an opportunity at redemption. One need not go far to understand the magnitude of this minor miracle, for we have the examples of the other 5 children of Damodardas who have lived an ordinary unremarkable life, which should have also been the logical trajectory of his third son. Then, a relatively young Pracharak aged 37 was bequeathed to Gujarat BJP in 1987. That was the era of two titans in Gujarat BJP – Vaghela and Keshubhai – who literally ruled the state unit as their personal fiefdom. Once again, this 37 year old Pracharak should have simply had an ordinary political career which should have possibly ended either as a corpoartor in the local municipal or at best as a legislator in the state assembly. Understand the odds that were stacked against him – he had no money power, no pedigree and worst of all he had no dominant caste backing. He came from a Other Backward Caste which itself was a miniscule minority in the state of Gujarat – a severe handicap in the Indian political scenario, which is even more enhanced in an upper caste-dominated party like BJP. To rise from an ordinary Pracharak to the chief strategist of the 1995 electoral success of BJP in Gujarat was another miracle brought about by his sheer talent and hard work. His persistence against all odds helped him to become the third pole of Gujarat BJP by mid-1990s, despite all the visible handicaps. Yet there was no halo around his head even then and he should have ended up as a mid-level political manager in the right-wing party of India. This was the trajectory that was chosen for him by the party when he was banished to Delhi as he had started to grow too big for Keshubapa’s comfort. For all we know, he should have ended up as just another manipulator in the corridors of power of Dilli, but destiny had other plans for him. In the aftermath of the Bhuj earthquake, Gujarat’s BJP Government was facing one of the toughest challenges in its chequered history and once again he was given the unenviable task of leading Gujarat out of this morass when he was suddenly made the Chief Minister of the state on October 7, 2001. In less than four months after assuming the CM’s office, Gujarat witnessed one of its worst riots in the aftermath of the Godhra train burning. From that day onwards, began his battle against fate. His first challenge was to win the 2002 Assembly elections, which he did in style despite not having the backing of any dominant caste-matrix. From then on, he went on to win two more terms in 2007 and 2013 against a million odds. He went against every known conventional political judgement in India – not giving free power to farmers, ruthlessly pursuing the path of justice even against his core-vote pullers of Hindu organisations and refusing to give away doles to get easy votes. Yet he kept on winning in his battle against fate. Every known political-intellectual entity in India was ranged against one man for more than a decade. From Dilli media houses to local NGOs, everybody was against him. The entire political spectrum, from the Left to centre to even the Right, including Sangh-affiliated groups, have stood against one man. The “secularists” led by Congress and consisting of such luminaries as Mulayam Singh Yadav, Nitish Kumar and Sharad Pawar have visceral hatred towards one man. The elite editorial class and the Dilli cocktail circuits have run a massive hate campaign against one man. The lone superpower of the world today is against one man. Even his own party superiors in Dilli have tried every trick in the book to belittle him. Yet, he keeps on winning his battles against fate. A lesser man would have conceded defeat long ago. A lesser man would have accepted his fate. A million things could have gone wrong and a million things may yet go wrong in this one man’s journey from a tea stall in Vadnagar to 7 Race Course Road, Delhi. He is trying to conquer fate. He has the audacity to dream an impossible dream of liberating India in the battlefield. Such a man cannot be defeated, as Satyaki discovered to his delight in the battle of Kurukshetra. Narendra Bhai, please accept janam din ki shubh kamnaayein from an ordinary Indian! Your life has taught me the lesson that I am not just an ordinary Indian after all, for a very ordinary Gangu Teli can still defeat a Raja Bhoj, even in this post-modern, extremely cynical and heavily manipulated India of 2013. |
   
Awara1984
Junior Artist Username: Awara1984
Post Number: 957 Registered: 12-2010 Posted From: 125.16.29.3
Rating: N/A Votes: 0 (Vote!) | | Posted on Tuesday, September 17, 2013 - 08:03 am: |
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http://ibnlive.in.com/group-blog/the-india-blog/3581/why-guj arati-muslims-are-with-modi/64627.html sickulars come on start the music |
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