Miscellaneous

  • A Telephone for You

    A Telephone for You

    Yesterday the General Manager of the Delhi Telephones, Mr. P.C. Jauhri, offered a gift to the citizens of the capital (Statesman, 20th May). “A telephone for the asking”, he announced grandly to the wonder and amazement of the long suffering Delhiwallas, many of whom have gone gray waiting for his gift from the Gods in…

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  • Where serfs are taking on sahibs

    Where serfs are taking on sahibs

    Can the Hindu caste system, which has always held India’s 576,000 villages together, survive the coming of modern farming? Evidently not, if one looks to the prospering Punjab, where the familiar trinity of tractors, combines and electric power is rapidly displacing human labour. Strip away the age-old economic basis for caste – the exchange of…

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  • Manohar Singh Gill remembers Tshering Dorje, his Lahaul-Spiti brother

    Manohar Singh Gill remembers Tshering Dorje, his Lahaul-Spiti brother

    The Tribune, Tribute | November 22, 2020 In 1959, the Chinese suddenly attacked an Indian police patrol in Ladakh. Chief Minister Partap Singh Kairon immediately created a border district beyond Manali, across the Rohtang Pass (13,050 feet). We had to walk over the Pass and all over this mountain district of two valleys, Lahaul and…

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  • Remembering Kalkat, the farm officer

    Remembering Kalkat, the farm officer

    The Tribune, Chandigarh | February 1, 2018 The success of Punjab’s Green Revolution is well known and, I think today, that Dr Kalkat and others were not adequately recognised. The Punjab Agriculture University at Ludhiana was set up in 1960 by Sardar Pratap Singh Kairon. Mr PN Thapar, ICS, was the first Vice-Chancellor. A remarkable…

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  • Blame it on the machines

    Blame it on the machines

    The Tribune, Chandigarh | March 21, 2017 After the results of the UP assembly polls, EVMs are in focus. Losers claim EVMs were “rigged,” while ECI swears by the safe and tamper-proof system. Critics say the core issue is democracy and the transparency of the electoral process. In early 1997, when I was the Chief…

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  • A Story Of Many People

    A Story Of Many People

    Outlook | July 26, 2010 While still in college, I read Nirad C. Chaudhuri’s Autobiography of an Unknown Indian. The social history of Bengal portrayed in it left a powerful impression on me. Now, I have come across another memoir by a Bengali intellectual, Ashish Bose. A distinguished scholar, Bose spent a life-time at the Institute…

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  • Honour Killing

    Outlook | March 22, 2010 I am impressed with what Sujit Saraf, from IIT and Berkeley, has achieved in this book. Sultana Daku lived and died long before I was born. He was hanged on July 7, 1924. Amazingly, as children we’d somehow heard this magical name. How it had filtered from the UP Terai…

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  • The Scattered Ashes of a Legend

    The Scattered Ashes of a Legend

    Outlook | November 3, 2008 Empire’s marionette, Duleep Singh could only align his life with an idle absurdity. Maharaja Ranjit Singh ruled the Punjab for forty years, 1799-1839. For six years after his death, his sons, the Sikh sardars, the Dogra rajas of Jammu, and the Brahmin generals of Meerut, all his creations, fought and…

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  • Remember ’83?

    Remember ’83?

    Outlook | March 5, 2007 Meticulously researched and produced, it gives the entire history of India’s one-day matches. This will be manna for all schoolboys. Indians love a tamasha. With so many religions, and gods, 365 days are too few for celebrations. The entry of one-day cricket two decades ago has added to it. In…

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  • What A Raja Has To Do

    What A Raja Has To Do

    Outlook | September 18, 2006 Good for a long train or air journey. The tale is interesting and amusing, and describes a period which, thank God, can never be again. When they took over India, the British strangely allowed 600 oddballs to rule with absolute authority, and total irresponsibility, over principalities from a few villages,…

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  • The Lion in Winter

    The Lion in Winter

    Outlook | January 30, 2006 Classic reissue, of import to both those from the Punjab and those whose lives it shaped. For 50 years, Khushwant Singh has towered over Indian writing like a colossus. Novelist, short story writer, historian, editor and journalist, above all an agent provocateur par excellence, he is impossible to ignore. The History…

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  • Heir and How

    Heir and How

    For Outlook | March 21, 2005 There are minor errors of dates and facts, which OUP shouldn’t have allowed. But it’s a small blemish on a fine farewell offering. The world has seen many empires, but among them the empire of the Great Mughals stands out like the North Star, ever visible, and the most glorious.…

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  • This is It, Isn’t It Mr Dar?

    This is It, Isn’t It Mr Dar?

    Outlook | November 1, 2004 In a way, the little book is a serious history of elections, and our ways with democracy. Talented cartoonists, like good doctors, are necessary to maintain the social health of a society. Unless we can laugh at ourselves, and not just in the park, we cannot be a stable people.…

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  • Telling A Tale, Tellingly

    Telling A Tale, Tellingly

    Outlook | February 14, 2004 Privy to political intrigues and personalities’ quirks, this autobio is a say-some if not a say-all. A public servant rarely writes his autobiography because he is hoping to be recalled till his last day. I have seen ministers from Nehru’s days remaining silent for decades in the hope even of…

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  • Pictorial Traverse

    Pictorial Traverse

    Outlook | February 9, 2004 A brave attempt to present 150 years of India’s social, political and cultural history through photographic images This is a brave attempt to present 150 years of India’s social, political and cultural history through photographic images. Images do linger for long in the national psyche but their overuse blunts the…

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