A homecoming of sorts for yoga
Throughout history, certain ideas have travelled beyond boundaries and transformed societies.
Throughout history, certain ideas have travelled beyond boundaries and transformed societies.
Having studied, in the sixties, at two of Bengal’s iconic institutions, and having observed the paths these have traversed, some thoughts crossed my mind for consideration of the new government.
History remembers the phrase anyway because it captured something people desperately wanted to believe: that those who ruled France had become incapable of understanding the ambitions, anxieties and frustrations of ordinary people.
There was a time when financial markets valued companies on the basis of what they produced, what they earned and what they could reasonably be expected to achieve.
The anti-defection law was meant to end the era of the “Aaya Ram, Gaya Ram” politician. Four decades later, it has produced constitutional alchemists seeking ever newer ways to turn defection into legality.
The Australian electorate has spoken decisively. In what can only be described as a stunning political outcome, Prime Minister Anthony Albanese’s Labour government has secured a commanding second term, expanding its majority in Parliament and defying the global trend of incumbent fatigue.
Romania stands at a critical juncture. The outcome of the first round of its presidential re-run has expos ed a stark political divide, not only within the country but also mirroring wider currents across Europe.
In our globalized age when higher education is on a dangerously slippery slope with government highhandedness creating distress among teachers and students alike, when academic and creative freedom is up against walls of indifference and hate, it is heartening to hear Gurudev Rabindranath Tagore delivering his first lecture in English in Madras on 9 February 1919.
It is one thing to revel in the fact that you have become the world’s policeman. It is another thing altogether to enforce that policing role upon the world.
The situation remains complex, and significant challenges persist. However, the evidence increasingly shows that sustainable engagement, rather than coercion or militancy, offers the more credible foundation for stability and progress in Kashmir.