chakde India

I cannot really get over this movie. If Lagaan was infused patriatism, this one is so natural.

A must watch movie. The guy who acted as the Hockey federation administrator (famous dialogue – arree.. these are Indian woman? what good are they? how can they wear nicker wicker and play? they are fit only for kitchen) makes you readily get angry and feel like slapping him. He is complete with the body language eating “good day” biscuits and sipping tea in government expense.

Sharukh Khan is under played and sans his usual antics so turns out to be a likable guy. Director gets all the credit for his role.

Some more dialogues in the movie.

“sabko ek bar maafi hota hain – every one gets pardoned atleast once – Kabir khan’s friend.

“sabko”? – “everyone?” (Kabir khan)

I really do not want to disclose the important dialogue of the movie which is the scene where Kabir khan meets the girls first time – you must watch it.

But the guy who acts as “Shukla ji” is awesome as well.

Shukla : Naam..? (Name?)

actor : ho?

Shukla: Naam? thumhara naam kya hain? (name, what is your name)

actor: Suimoi (sleepy)

Shukla: halath nahin.. naam kyan hain (I am not asking your condition, asking for your name)

second actor : uska naam Suimoi kherketta (Her name is “Suimoi”)

Shukla: thum log Raam leela waletho nahin? Abni ground haali nahain hain (are you guys some sort of a drama troupe? sorry the ground is not free now)

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In the heart of Silicon Valley, a strange movement is taking shape.

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At last a 10-year-old dream comes true: A.R. Rahman

Cont…

At last a 10-year-old dream comes true: A.R. Rahman

Saturday, October 13, 2007
09:53 IST

Veteran music composer A.R. Rahman is all set to perform live in the capital Nov 17 and thanks Fever 104 FM for making his long cherished dream come true.
“I wanted to come and perform here in Delhi but somehow things didn’t work out, but now with the help of Fever 104 FM I’ll get a chance to perform and jive Delhi audience,” said A.R. Rahman at the first anniversary bash of Fever 104 FM.
The concert will take place after 35 days of talent hunt, which will be conducted by Fever 104 FM, starting Oct 12 to Nov 17. Of all the entries, 10 singers will be shortlisted for the semi final round. The lucky five, who will clear the semi final round, will be sent to Chennai to meet the maestro who will chose one of them to perform on stage with him.
Currently, Rahman is busy with international assignments. He has composed music for Shekhar Kapur’s ‘Elizabeth – The Golden Age’, which is releasing Friday. In the film he worked alongside renowned composer Craig Armstrong.
“It has been a nice experience working with Craig and Shekhar,” said Rahman who is also doing a project in London but he refused to talk about it.
Rahman, whose songs in ‘Rang De Basanti’ and ‘Guru’ still enthrals the music lovers, is looking forward to Ashutosh Gowariker’s period drama ‘Jodhaa-Akbar’ for which he has scored the music.

 

I hate mobile phones

10 yrs of regular mobile use raises cancer risk

Ten years of regular mobile use is enough to increase the risk of cancer and the risk could be more when you use it for longer periods, Swedish scientists warn.

Mob user

The damaging effect of cell phone use has been suspected for long. While some studies have earlier shown that people who use cell phones for long periods face the risk of developing malignant brain tumours, some had said they did not find such evidences.
The latest study by researchers at University Hospital in Orebro and Umea University analysed the results of 11 previous studies carried out around the world. They examined long-term users because cancer can take more than a decade to develop.
They said almost all studies in the past had discovered an increased risk of cancer.
In the new study, the researchers said they found that long-term users had double the chances of getting a malignant tumour on the side of the brain where they held the handset.
An hour a day on a mobile phone is thought to be enough to increase the risk, reported the online edition of the Daily Mail.
The analysis revealed that those who have used their phones for at least a decade are 20 per cent more likely to contract acoustic neuromas (a type of brain tumour) and 30 per cent more likely to get malignant gliomas (a common brain tumour).
The study published in the latest issue of the journal Occupational Environmental Medicine showed that the risk is even greater on the side of the head the handset is held. Long-term users were twice as likely to get the gliomas and two-and-a-half times more likely to get the acoustic neuromas than other people.
Children should be discouraged from using mobiles because their thinner skulls and developing nervous systems made them especially vulnerable. Adults should exercise caution, the scientists warned.

அமாவாசை

அமாவாசை
– மங்கை


இத்தனை நாள்
வெள்ளைதான் அழகென்று
நினைத்த நீ கூட
இன்றென்னாட்டு பெண்கள்
கண்மணி நிறம் பார்த்து
கருத்தம்மா ஆனாய்
நிலவே!

தேடல்

thedal

இரவு வாசல்

இரவு வாசல்
– மங்கை
இரவு வாசலிலே
நட்சத்திரப்புள்ளி வைத்து
கோலம் போடத் தெரியாமல்
விழித்துக் கொண்டு நிற்கும்
பெண் நிலவு!
 

உன்னுடன்

இரவு நீ
தெருவில் நடக்கும்பொழுது
உன் கூடவே வரும் நிலவு
இப்பொழுதெல்லாம் வரவில்லைதானே
அவளிடம் சொல்லிவிட்டேன்
உன்னுடன் வாழ்க்கை முழுதும் வரும்
உறவு நான் மட்டுமேயென்று !

k

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vivekananda s chicago speech

I often admired vivekananda’s life,writings n speech.k I like 2 share His artics n coming days.this speech made the world2 turn back at india.

The World Parliament of Religions

Swami Vivekananda’s Address to the World Parliament of Religions September 1893

parliament of religions

Sisters and Brothers of America,

It fills my heart with joy unspeakable to rise in response to the warm and cordial welcome which you have given us. I thank you in the name of the most ancient order of monks in the world; I thank you in the name of the mother of religions, and I thank you in the name of millions and millions of Hindu people of all classes and sects.

My thanks, also, to some of the speakers on this platform who, referring to the delegates from the Orient, have told you that these men from far-off nations may well claim the honor of bearing to different lands the idea of toleration. I am proud to belong to a religion which has taught the world both tolerance and universal acceptance. We believe not only in universal toleration, but we accept all religions as true. I am proud to belong to a nation which has sheltered the persecuted and the refugees of all religions and all nations of the earth. I am proud to tell you that we have gathered in our bosom the purest remnant of the Israelites, who came to Southern India and took refuge with us in the very year in which their holy temple was shattered to pieces by Roman tyranny. I am proud to belong to the religion which has sheltered and is still fostering the remnant of the grand Zoroastrian nation. I will quote to you, brethren, a few lines from a hymn which I remember to have repeated from my earliest boyhood, which is every day repeated by millions of human beings: “As the different streams having their sources in different paths which men take through different tendencies, various though they appear, crooked or straight, all lead to Thee.”

The present convention, which is one of the most august assemblies ever held, is in itself a vindication, a declaration to the world of the wonderful doctrine preached in the Gita: “Whosoever comes to Me, through whatsoever form, I reach him; all men are struggling through paths which in the end lead to me.” Sectarianism, bigotry, and its horrible descendant, fanaticism, have long possessed this beautiful earth. They have filled the earth with violence, drenched it often and often with human blood, destroyed civilization and sent whole nations to despair. Had it not been for these horrible demons, human society would be far more advanced than it is now. But their time is come; and I fervently hope that the bell that tolled this morning in honor of this convention may be the death-knell of all fanaticism, of all persecutions with the sword or with the pen, and of all uncharitable feelings between persons wending their way to the same goal.

Swami Vivekananda

– Welcome Address to World Parliament of Religions September 11th 1893

“The soul has neither sex, nor caste nor imperfection.”

freedove-cge.JPG

Swami Vivekananda on Women

 

“The soul has neither sex, nor caste nor imperfection.”

“The best thermometer to the progress of a nation is its treatment of its women.”

” There is no chance for the welfare of the world unless the condition of women is improved.”

“Woman has suffered for aeons, and that has given her infinite patience and infinite preserverance.”

“The idea of perfect womanhood is perfect independence.”

“Soul has no sex, it is neither male nor female. It is only in the body that sex exists, and the man who desires to reach the spirit cannot at the same time hold sex distinctions. (CW ,V.4, P.176)

It is very difficult to understand why in this country [India] so much difference is made between men and women, whereas the Vedanta declares that one and the same conscious Self is present in all beings. You always criticize the women, but say what have you done for their uplift? Writing down Smritis etc., and binding them by hard rules, the men have turned the women into manufacturing machines! If you do not raise the women, who are living embodiment of the Divine Mother, don’t think that you have any other way to rise.

In what scriptures do you find statements that women are not competent for knowledge and devotion? In the period of degeneration, when the priests made the other castes incompetent for the study of the Vedas, they deprived the women also of all their righ ts. Otherwise you will find that in the Vedic or Upanishadic age Maitreyi, Gargi, and other ladies of revered memory have taken places of Rishis through their skill in discussing about Brahman. In an assembly of a thousand Brahmans who were all erudite in the Vedas, Gargi boldly challenged Yagnavalkya in a discussion about Brahman. Since such ideal women were entitled to spiritual knowledge, why shall not the women have same privilege now? What has happened once can certainly happen again. History repeats itself. All nations have attained greatness by paying proper respect to women. That country and that nation which edo not respect women have never become great, nor will ever be in future. The principal reason why your race h! ! ! ! as so much degenerated is that you have no respect for these living images of Shakti. Manu says, “Where women are respected, there the gods delight; and where they are not, there all works and efforts come to naught.” There is no hope of rise for that fam ily or country where there is no estimation of women, where they live in sadness. (V7. p.214-15)

when people are discussing as to what man and woman can do, always the same mistake is made. They think they show man at his best because he can fight, for instance, and undergo tremendous physical exertion; and this is pitted against the physical weak ness and non-combating quality of woman. This is unjust. Woman is as courageous as man. Each is equally good in his of her way. What man can bring up a child with such patience, endurance, and love as the woman can? The one has developed the power of doin g; the other, the power of suffering. If woman cannot act, neither can man suffer. The whole universe is one of perfect balance. (CW V.2,p.25-26)

If you do not allow one to become a lion, he will become a fox. Women are a power, only now it is more evil because man oppresses woman; she is the fox, but when she is no longer oppressed, she will be the lion (CW vol.7,p.22)

[Talking to an American audience] I should very much like our women to have your intellectuality, but not if it must be at the cost of purity. I admire you for all that you know, but I dislike the way that you cover what is bad with roses and call it good. Intellectuality is not the highest good. Morality and spirituality are the things for which we strive. Our women are not so learned, but they are more pure.

Not until you learn to ignore the question of sex and to meet on a common ground of common humanity will your woman really develop. All this is the cause of divorce. Your men bow low and offer a chair, but in another breath they offer compliments. They sa y, ’Oh, madam, how beautiful are your eyes!’ What right have they to do this? How dare a man venture so far, and how can you women permit it? Such things develop the less noble side of humanity. They do not tend to nobler ideals.

We should not think that we are men and women, but only that we are human beings, born to cherish and to help one another. No sooner are a young man and a young woman left alone than he pays compliments to her, and perhaps before he takes a wife, he has courted two hundred women. Bah! If I belonged to marrying set, I could find a woman to love without all that! (CW Vol. 5, p. 412-413)

Men and women in every country, have different ways of understanding and judging things. Men have one angle of vision, women another; men argue from one standpoint, women from another. Men extenuate women and lay the blame on men; while women exonerate men and heap all the heap on women. (CW V.7, p.378)

“In the West its ideal is wife, in India in the mother”.

“In India the mother is the center of the family and our highest ideal. She is to us the representative of God, as God is the mother of the universe. It was a female sage who first found the unity of God, and laid down this doctrine in one of the first hy mns of the Vedas. Our God is both personal and absolute, the absolute is male, the personal, female. And thus it comes that we now say: ’The first manifestation of God is the hand that rocks the cradle’.” (CW V.4 p.170)

Swami Vivekananda

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