A centre for civilisational values and policy research
Sep 14, 2011
In view of Shri L.K. Advani’s Jan Chetna Yatra, a national level preparatory meeting of state convenors of BJP...
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14/06/2010 / By Satish Misra
He never had an education and so was Sonia!
“Fundamentals of Indology wrong” , “Max Mueller a Swindler” – Interview with Prof Prodosh Aich
Indian Professor Prodosh Aich, calls Indologist Max Mueller a “swindler”. He describes yet another Indologist William Jones a “fraud”. He throws a serious challenge to Europeans scholars who wrote tomes on ancient India. In his book “Lies with long legs”, Prof Aich has unraveled and exposed many such self claimed Indologists who claimed to know ancient Indian texts. Seventy two year old Indian Professor, who studied in India and Germany Sociology, Ethnology and Philosophy, came to these startling revelations accidentally as his curiosity to know about “Aryans”, “Indo-Europeans and “Indo-Aryans” chanced him into new facts of the existing studies of ancient India and its people.
June 22, 2011 / Hiranmay Karlekar
Gurudev saw the nation as an instrument not of power but the realisation of the inner potential of humanity in peace, harmony and friendship. Not surprisingly, Rabindranath Tagore’s views on nationalism have been, or will be, discussed at a number of seminars, held or planned, during the events commemorating his 150th birth anniversary. The subject has stirred much debate in India and abroad, the focal point normally being his slim volume, Nationalism, first published in 1917. Based on the lectures delivered during his tour of Japan from mid-May to early-September 1916, and of the United States of America from September 1916 to January 1917, these are often interpreted to signify his rejection of nationalism per se. Such views are gross over-simplifications.
MoreThe BJP today claimed that the bugging episode of Pranab Mukherjee's office was an indication of the "mistrust" between the Union Finance Minister and Congress president Sonia Gandhi.
Friday, Jul 1, 2011
Mumbai: A day after three blasts shook Maximum City Mumbai, the city is back on track with people, though angry at the government's inability to stop the terror strikes, returning to their work and business. Though Mumbaikars are back at work as they feel that there is no other option, fear still lurks.
Updated Jul 14, 2011