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Thursday, April 21, 2022

Incredible India


 

Sriranjani Santhanagopalan - Edayya Gathi - Chalanattai

Kruthi Bhat - paralOka sAdhanamE manasA - pUrvikalyANi - tyAgarAja

Dr. M. Balamuralikrishna - Concert No 40

This concert has 13 files. Please click below

Dr. M. Balamuralikrishna - Concert No 40

rarest flower





G. N. Balasubramanian - Concert No 25

This concert with 17 files accompanied by Violin    : Mysore T. Chowdiah and Mridangam : Ramanathapuram C.S. Murugabhoopathi
Please click below





Madurai Mani Iyer - Concert No 21

This was a concert in a marriage in 1960 with 12 files. Please click below 

Madurai Mani Iyer - Concert No 21






Madurai Mani Iyer - Concert No 20

This concert with 12 files, was at Music Academy in 1965 accompanied by Govindaraja pillai and Ramabadran. Please click below

Madurai Mani Iyer - Concert No 20






Wronged, Yet, The Hindu Is Always Wrong.

 


Around the final quarter of 2019, a group of women, mainly Muslims, began occupying one of the key roads connecting Noida and Delhi. Not far from where I live, this gathering at Shaheen Bagh became a hotbed for resistance against a  law the government had passed. The women and children were the puppets, for the strings were being pulled from somewhere else.


The women were cheered on as icons, and one of them even made it to the Time magazine, for she had led the agenda of the Left, that of the Hindu always being wrong. A Hindu can be forced to convert, kidnapped, harassed, raped, and even murdered in Pakistan, Afghanistan, and Bangladesh, but if a Hindu in India, as a Prime Minister, decides to merely fast track their citizenship amongst that of five other minorities from the three countries, he is wrong. The puppets are right. The rioters are right. The arsonists are right. The Hindu is wrong and, thus, must be wronged.

Last year, around this time, we were consumed by the farmers’ protest in Singhu, a little far from where I live, but as we all realised the magnitude of the Delta variant, another lesson awaited us, that of Hindus always being wrong.

Illegally squatting on a national highway, the farmers were hailed as heroes of the democracy, for they were resisting reforms that would have benefited a sector that makes up for 15 per cent of our GDP and 50 per cent of the working population. They were not questioned for the protest gathering, nor how the Covid norms were sent for a toss. In Uttarakhand, where the average Hindu assembled for the Kumbh Mela in far fewer numbers than pre-pandemic times, they were again called wrong. There was a toolkit as well to peddle the wrongness of the Hindu.

A Hindu aspiring to burst crackers on Diwali is wrong. A Hindu wanting to burn the effigy of Ravana on Diwali is wrong. A Hindu wanting to play Holi is wrong. A Hindu wanting to carry out a procession during Ram Navmi is wrong. The people pelting stones on that procession, however, are right. What does one make of these scattered attacks on Hindu festivals?

This is where we are today. A strategic attempt is underway to silence the average Hindu. The government is responding as well, perhaps in clearer words than ever. The answer to pelting stones is in demolition drives of illegal properties in the troubled pockets but is that a sustainable solution. I don’t think so, and while we can agree to disagree, I request you consider this perspective. To punish swiftly is great, but to deter rioters is what the objective must be.

The women were icons, the farmers were heroes, but the Hindus in Ram Navmi processions, pelted with stones, were wrong because they dared to assert themselves culturally. That’s what the media wants you to believe. That’s what the political opposition wants you to accept.

This charade can’t go on unchecked. This charade must be called out.

Until next week. 
Tushar Gupta 
from Swarajya

T. N. Seshagopalan - Concert No 24

This concert at IIT on 16. 1. 1983 with 12 files was accompanied by M. Chandrasekar and C.S. Murugabhoopathi. Please click below

T. N. Seshagopalan - Concert No 24




Dr. M. Balamuralikrishna - Concert No 39

This concert has 13 files. Please click below

Dr. M. Balamuralikrishna - Concert No 39

The Victoria Crowned Pigeon is considered the largest of the living pigeon species, and can be found on mainland New Guinea. The only larger member of the pigeon family would have been the Dodo.





T. N. Seshagopalan - Concert No 23

This concert ha 11 files consisting Papanaasam sivan keerthanais accompanied by Lalgudi G Jayaraman, Karaikudi Mani and T. H. Vinayakram.  Please click below

T. N. Seshagopalan - Concert No 23

The beautiful crest on the heads of cockatoos is one of the things that sets them apart from other parrots. However, they share the longevity of many members of the parrot family, and have a very similar life span to humans.



T. N. Seshagopalan - Concert No 22

This concert with 20 files was ar Ramanavami festival on Dec 1983 accompanied by Lalgudi Jayraman-Violin andUmayalpuram K Sivraman-Mridangam Please click below


The Himalayan Monal is the national bird of Nepal.