Showing all 9 books
This book deals with the status of Dalit Theology among grass roots Dalit Christians in thier struggle against caste oppression within and outside Church. This work is an attempt to count the oppressed status of Dalits, the inadequate sharing of the potentials, insights and thought forms of Dalit Theology which are contextual and liberational. It provides suggestions to develop Dalit Theology a Practical theology of shared praxis to challenge caste and caste ...
Between the Lines is a classic among books on politics. It set a new trend in reporting which uncovered the dark, vicious conspiracies behind the events. Never before had reporting been so candid and so revealing. The author had benefited from a ringside view which he had in the sixties and the seventies as Press Officer to Home Minister, Govind Ballabh Pant and his successor, Lal Bhadur Shastri.
For the first time, you can read the full story about why the ...
This book contains articles that were written over the past three years on social, political and international issues.
As a young law graduate in Sialkot (now in Pakistan), Kuldip Nayar witnessed at first hand the collapse of trust between Hindus and Muslims and like multitude of population he was forced to migrate to Delhi across the blood-stained plains of Punjab. From his perilous journey to a new country and to his first job as a young journalist in an Urdu daily, Nayars account is also the story of India. From his days as a young journalist in Anjam to heading Indias ...
This is a monumental work, spread over five decades and more, from August 1947 to 2003. All the articles of Kuldip Nayar on relations between India and Pakistan, with special focus on Kashmir, have been included in this volume. It is a history of wars and accords, of enmity and amity, of failures and successes. Many situations you would like to know are discussed as they happened, phase by phase. His main thrust of writings is on changing the dismal scenario, ...
Bhagat Singh (1907-1931) lived at a time when India’s freedom struggle was beginning to flag and when Mahatma Gandhi’s non-violent, passive resistance to partial liberation wa beginning to test the patience of the people. The youth of India was inspired by Bhagat Singh’s call to arms and enthused by the defiance and dare-devilry of the army wing of the Hindustan socialist Republican Association to which he and his comrades, Sukhdev and Rajgure, belonged. ...
Bhagat Singh’s life is one of the supreme ironies of history. He did not believe in the cult of the bomb and the pistol, Yet he was arrested for throwing a bomb in the Central legislative Assembly. And he was hanged in 1931 for killing a police officer with a pistol. He lived at a time when the cry for freedom was tearing India apart. Sarfaroshi ki tamanna ab hamare did mein hai-the song the Bhagat Singh and his comrades sang during their trial-gave a voice to ...