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Socratic Egghead’s Gown
read more →: Socratic Egghead’s GownOutlook | October 23, 2006 Last Wednesday, more than 50 years after he was a graduate student in St Johns’ College, Prime Minister Manmohan Singh walked the Senate House lawns in a ceremonial procession escorted by the chancellor, the Duke of Edinburgh, to receive an honorary degree from this 800-year-old university. I went to Queens’…
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What A Raja Has To Do
read more →: What A Raja Has To DoOutlook | 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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Don’t Call The Cavalry
read more →: Don’t Call The CavalryFor Outlook | July 3, 2006 Lutyens’ Delhi is under siege and no one cares. It’s an unholy coup d’etat. I have lived for many years in Lutyens’ Delhi, and for almost two decades worked within the one square kilometre of the capitol complex. Still, every time I go up Rajpath and see the great presidential palace,…
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Memories of Tarn Taran
read more →: Memories of Tarn TaranThe Sunday Tribune, Chandigarh | June 4, 2006 June 1, 2006 is a happy day for me and all who have some connection with Tarn Taran. In the last 20 years, six new districts have been created by different governments, almost all south of the Satluj. Tarn Taran, which had the strongest claim, unfortunately was…
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Of Ajit Garh and Tarn Taran
read more →: Of Ajit Garh and Tarn TaranThe Tribune, Chandigarh | May 4, 2006 When Punjab was again divided in 1966, I was DC, Ambala. I proposed the creation of Ropar district in new Punjab. This was accepted. A decade later, Chief Minister Zail Singh changed the name to Roop Nagar. I could not see the rationale. Mohali township was started by…
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Requiem For Ranthambhor
read more →: Requiem For RanthambhorFor Outlook | February 27, 2006 Tigers roamed here once. Now, it’s a jungle of caterwauling tourists. Ranthambhor and its tigers were recently in the news. Poaching seems to have all but exterminated the already limited numbers. Horror and anxiety led to immediate, apparently energetic steps: the mantra of a CBI inquiry, the naming of central…
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History, To Wit
read more →: History, To WitFor Outlook | February 20, 2006 The cartoons are a perceptive history of independent India from earliest times to now such as no one has done before, not even Nehru. Like most harassed Indian citizens, I usually start my day with a smile, thanks to R.K. Laxman. In these times of shrill politics, he is able…
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The Lion in Winter
read more →: The Lion in WinterOutlook | 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
read more →: Heir and HowFor 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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Bus to Nankana
read more →: Bus to NankanaThe Asian Age New Delhi | November 27, 2004 Yesterday was Guru Nanak’s birthday. All over this country, and around the world, people gathered to celebrate this remarkable figure of the Sufi-Bhakti tradition. Guru Nanak strove with all his might to promote the unity of God, the brotherhood of man and the equality of men…
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This is It, Isn’t It Mr Dar?
read more →: 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
read more →: Telling A Tale, TellinglyOutlook | 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
read more →: Pictorial TraverseOutlook | 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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Roll Call Of The Luminaries
read more →: Roll Call Of The LuminariesOutlook | December 29, 2003 Every graduate course prescribes a book of essays. This book deserves to be there. I once chanced upon Churchill’s Great Contemporaries. I read the essays again and again, always with profit and pleasure. Churchill’s prose and his perceptive observation of the great and famous, whom he saw at close range, surprised…
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Royalty in Flannels
read more →: Royalty in FlannelsOutlook | May 12, 2003 Recently, I had the chance of an extensive tour of Saurashtra. Raj Kumar College in Rajkot, set up in 1870 as the first of the Prince’s colleges created by the British to educate future maharajas, invited me for their annual day. Jet Air left at 6.10 am sharp. The service…
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The Finger Is In Place
read more →: The Finger Is In PlaceOutlook | April 28, 2003 The whole world uses fingerprinting, do they know the footprints lead to Nadia? Shakespeare said of rulers, “The evil lives after them, the good is oft interred with their bones.” We love to talk of the wrongs done by the British. Yet it would be churlish not to accept their…
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Mogulnama: Rangoon Dur Ast
read more →: Mogulnama: Rangoon Dur AstOutlook | April 7, 2003 In a well-researched book, Cheema resurrects the six major padshahs of the period 1707-1857. We all grew up on Mughal history. Babar, Ibrahim Lodi and Panipat; Akbar and Fatehpur Sikri; Shahjahan and the Taj; and, of course, the austere, pious but narrow-visioned Aurangzeb. This great drama was played out from…
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Batman Forever
read more →: Batman ForeverOutlook | May 25, 2002 That’s Tendulkar, with brilliance on the field and modesty on his sleeve. It is odd for a former CEC to write on cricket and Sachin. But I have some qualifications to do so. I was a small-time cricketer and a fairly mean left-arm medium-pace bowler, though nothing like Wasim Akram!…
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Birds, Bees And Squirrels
read more →: Birds, Bees And SquirrelsOutlook | February 11, 2002 Indians have hardly any curiosity about the external world. Perhaps they are more focused on the interior self and future salvation. To them all birds are generally chhiris. Their specific knowledge is limited to crows, kites and kabootars (pigeons). Flowers are lumped as phool, trees as darakhat. We all suffer…
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His Princely Detachment
read more →: His Princely DetachmentOutlook | October 15, 2001 Madhavrao Scindia, like his father, held a liberal, tolerant, catholic view of cultures and people. Madhavrao Scindia is no more, hurled from the sky by a cruel destiny. A young and energetic life with many possibilities in the future has been snuffed out suddenly, literally out of the blue. After…
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Sun, Salmon And Cambridge Spires
read more →: Sun, Salmon And Cambridge SpiresOutlook | September 3, 2001 Former CEC M.S. Gill on an English summer, lazy flashbacks … and lots of cricket. Sitting in the garden of an elegant two-hundred-year-old house, within sight of college spires, a cool zephyr gently blowing, I feel a million miles away from the Election Commission. How could it be otherwise? The…
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Living On Hot Air
read more →: Living On Hot AirFor Outlook | September 1, 2001 It was absurd to give MPs a salary of Rs 400 per month in 1954. Were they expected to live on air? Under the Indian Constitution, Parliament is authorised to determine the salaries and allowances of key functionaries such as the President, the Vice-President, judges, Union ministers, and the members…
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End Of An Insurrection
read more →: End Of An InsurrectionFor Outlook | August 13, 2001 She was hope for women down there. Her death symbolises victory for oppression. Phoolan Devi is dead. Brutally shot down on her doorstep, coming home from Parliament for lunch. Sitting on a balmy summer day on the river bank in Cambridge, I find it difficult to believe. But it is…
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The Hardy Boys, Before Exile
read more →: The Hardy Boys, Before ExileFor Outlook | June 25, 2001 Lives of an inimitable people, documented in inimitable Khushwant style If I am not mistaken, Khushwant and Raghu had done a small book on the Sikhs as an introductory primer long ago. This is a much more ambitious effort for the coffee tables, away from the Punjab, particularly beyond India.…
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Complex: a national commitment
read more →: Complex: a national commitmentThe Tribune | September 23, 1991 The foundation stone of Goindwal Nucleus Industrial Complex was laid in 1981 after considering the objectives of providing employment in rural, backward areas to youth. The historical and religious importance of Shri Goindwal Sahib was a significent factor in deciding the location of India’s first Nucleus Industrial Complex. A…























