Friday, December 28, 2007

Life How Lived Is What Counts,Other Things Just Sounds...


Life isnt always a basket full of joys..
sometimes life can be a Roller coaster ride for u,
but the very next moment it could be a morn.

sometimes life can lift u up to the sky,

but on the other day can drop u in dirt.
sometimes life can bring surprises to be cheerfull of,
but at the same time can give shocks difficult to forget off.

life can be a celebration for u,
and it could be a condolence too.
life can be ur mate,
or it could also be a fate to be shamefull off.

runner up behind the winner,

mud after the rains.
death after life, silence after cries...is what nature decides.
see the other side of life,
and be delighted of.
roses can't be imagined without the thorns, so acknowledge this gift of god along with its wrongs.

think optimistic and get ebullient about,

see the rainbow that follows the rains.

see the opportunities that u get in life to prove urself,
think someone has to win coz there can only be a single maestro,and learn from it.

think about what all u get through this life of urs,
but not what life gonna take away from u.

life is for once,and gives tons, your loving ones,ur dear ones ,is what counts, all the other things are immaterial and just sounds.

copyright@squandered...

Just For Laughs...Gag : )

I need'nt say anything about the post,u just check
and have ur cup of coffee,i m offering to [:)]




Tuesday, December 18, 2007

World may wind up...


World may wind up...

Souls may rise up,

Things can live up…

Human can drown,

Why’s so morn.


Live the day around you...

Fulfill your dreams,

Don’t let them go...

Once given a lose,

All goose...


Think of misery

& be happy about Ur luxury...

Don’t think about what u don’t have

Think of what u by now has...

Coz u’re not the one only, whose slave


Grow with desire

Head without fear...

Live with pleasure

Die with contentment

As if ur one who’s been pretended


Do of ur best

Don’t think of the rest

Give yourself utmost significance

Leaving behind others approaching u askance

Ur life, Ur the milord is what suffices…


So here I m…


I live on my priorities

And this is what matters me most

U think I m rude

But I m not the one to choose

U may go a circle path

U’ll come up the way to me again…


So better you opt the way I admire

Coz I m not the one gonna fulfill your desire

U live your way, that’s perfectly not ma concern

But if u come to me

U gotta dig up your grave


And come out of it…

With not even a single sign of dirt,

Havin attitude over it...

Come to me and I’ll furnish Ur strength

Coz yeah I m the only one whose breaths


By the time u ve been surrendered

It’s up to me to dynamite u...

To rip out Ur mannish out of Ur spirit

To give Ur existence a path

When Ur not just a body of flesh

But a spirit with desires of race…


copyright@squandered..

Saturday, December 15, 2007

I Do Belong...


Somewhere I do belong,
In the darkness of sorrows.
In the sadness of grieve,
Or to those deadly lonesomeness.

Ya I have found myself only at this juncture,
I’d tried to barge in through d contentment.
But there was not a zilch of to identify with,
I belong to only the nightfall.

I can’t say m born to see the dusk,
But the dawn itself got veil away from me.
It doesn’t wants anymore of ma shadows over it,

Coz it makes it murky too.

copyight@squandered....

Tuesday, December 11, 2007

I Just Called to Say I Love You




No new years’s day
To celebrate
No chocolate covered candy hearts to give away
No first of spring
No song to sing
In fact here’s just another ordinary day
No april rain
No flowers bloom
No wedding saturday within the month of june
But what it is
Is something true
Made up of these three words that I must say to you

I just called to say I love you
I just called to say how much I care
I just called to say I love you
And I mean it from the bottom of my heart

No summer’s high
No warm july
No harvest moon to light one tender august night
No autumn breeze
No falling leaves
No even time for birds to fly to southern skies
No libra sun
No halloween
No giving thanks to all the christmas joy you bring
But what it is
Though old so new
To fill your heart like no three words could ever do.

I just called to say I love you
I just called to say how much I care
I just called to say I love you
And I mean it from the bottom of my heart.

I just called to say I love you
I just called to say how much I care
I just called to say I love you
And I mean it from the bottom of my heart

Of my heart
Of my heart
...

Dedicated to the great maestro
Steive Wonder

Experience gloominess around


Everything looks different in the dark
Sometimes I imagine that things that are standing still are moving
And they are not; it is only in my mind
The dark sometimes can be frightening
The dark is like a burned paint
The dark must grieve alone for its lost friend
No one around to hear its silence
But the silence so peaceful that tears the heart
I look back as I am walking to see if anyone is following me
But thanks god no one is
Only the sound of my footsteps I hear
The trees in the dark looks strange to me, I only see a dark shadow

Friday, August 17, 2007

Formulator Of The Indian Constitution-Dr.Bhimrao Ambedkar


Dr. Bhimrao Ambedkar (Hindi: डा. भीमराव अंबेडकर, Marathi: बाबासाहेब भीमराव आंबेडकर) (April 14, 1891 — December 6, 1956) was a Buddhist revivalist, Indian jurist, scholar and Bahujan political leader who is the chief architect of the Indian Constitution. Born into a poor Untouchable community; he spent his life fighting against the system of Hindu untouchability and the Indian caste system. He is also credited for having sparked the Dalit Buddhist movement. Ambedkar has been honoured with the Bharat Ratna, India's highest civilian award, given for the highest degree of national service.
Overcoming numerous social and financial obstacles, Ambedkar became one of the first "untouchables" to obtain a college education in India. He went on to pursue higher studies in Columbia University,New York,United States and England, where he earned law degrees and multiple doctorates for his study and research in law, economics and political science. Returning home a famous scholar, Ambedkar practiced law for a few years before he began publishing journals advocating political rights and social freedom for India's untouchables.


A legacy that remade Indian socio-political history

Ambedkar's legacy as a socio-political reformer, had a deep effect on modern India. In post-Independence India his socio-political thought has acquired respect across the political spectrum. His initiatives have influenced various spheres of life and transformed the way India today looks at socio-economic policies, education and affirmative action through socio-economic and legal incentives. His reputation as a scholar led to his appointment as free India's first law minister, and chairman of the committee responsible to draft a constitution. It is arguably because of his profound understanding of India's history, and his meticulous research into India's ancient democratic traditions, that India today is a democratic republic with one of the fairest and most equitable Constitutions in the world. Ambedkar's work guaranteed political, economic and social freedoms for untouchables and other ethnic, social and religious communities of India. He passionately believed in the freedom of the individual and criticised equally both orthodox casteist Hindu society, as well as exclusivism and narrow doctrinaire positions in Islam. His polemical condemnation of Hinduism and attacks on Islam made him unpopular and controversial, although his conversion to Buddhism sparked a revival in interest in Buddhist philosophy in India.
Ambedkar's political philosophy has given rise to a large number of Dalit political parties, publications and workers' unions that remain active across India, especially in Maharashtra. His promotion of the Dalit Buddhist movement has rejuvenated interest in Buddhist philosophy in many parts of India. Mass conversion ceremonies have been organized by Dalit activists in modern times, emulating Ambedkar's Nagpur ceremony of 1956. He also served in the legislative councils of British India.


Early life

Bhimrao Ramji Ambedkar was born in the British-founded town and military cantonment of Mhow in the Central Provinces (now in Madhya Pradesh). He was the 14th and last child of Ramji Maloji Sakpal and Bhimabai Murbadkar.[1] His family was of Marathi background from the town of Ambavade in the Ratnagiri district of modern-day Maharashtra. They belonged to the Hindu Mahar caste, who were treated as untouchables and subjected to intense socio-economic discrimination. Ambedkar's ancestors had for long been in the employment of the army of the British East India Company, and his father served in the Indian Army at the Mhow cantonment, rising to the rank of Subedar. He had received a degree of formal education in Marathi and English, and encouraged his children to learn and work hard at school.
Belonging to the Kabir Panth, Ramji Sakpal encouraged his children to read the Hindu classics, especially the Mahabharata and the Ramayana.[1] He used his position in the army to lobby for his children to study at the government school, as they faced resistance owing to their caste. Although able to attend school, Ambedkar and other Untouchable children were segregated and given no attention or assistance from the teachers. They were not allowed to sit inside the class. Even if they needed to drink water somebody from a higher caste would have to pour that water from a height as they were not allowed to touch either the water or the vessel that contained it. This task was usually performed for the young Ambedkar by the school peon, and if he could not be found Ambedkar went without water.[1] Ramji Sakpal retired in 1894 and the family moved to Satara two years later. Shortly after their move, Ambedkar's mother died. The children were cared for by their paternal aunt, and lived in difficult circumstances. Only three sons — Balaram, Anandrao and Bhimrao — and two daughters — Manjula and Tulasa — of the Ambedkars would go on to survive them. Of his brothers and sisters, only Ambedkar succeeded in passing his examinations and graduating to a bigger school. His native village name was "Ambavade" in Ratnagiri District so he changed his name from "Sakpal" to "Ambedkar" with the recommendation and faith of a Brahmin teacher who believed in him.[1]

Ramji Sakpal remarried in 1898, and the family moved to Mumbai (then Bombay), where Ambedkar became the first untouchable student at the Government High School near Elphinstone Road.[2] Although excelling in his studies, Ambedkar was increasingly disturbed by the segregation and discrimination that he faced. In 1907, he passed his matriculation examination and entered the University of Bombay, becoming one of the first persons of untouchable origin to enter a college in India. This success provoked celebrations in his community, and after a public ceremony he was presented with a biography of the Buddha by his teacher Krishnaji Arjun Keluskar also known as Dada Keluskar, a Maratha caste scholar. Ambedkar's marriage had been arranged the previous year as per Hindu custom, to Ramabai, a nine-year old girl from Dapoli.[2] In 1908, he entered Elphinstone College and obtained a scholarship of twentyfive rupees a month from the Gayakwad ruler of Baroda, Sahyaji Rao III for higher studies in the USA. By 1912, he obtained his degree in economics and political science, and prepared to take up employment with the Baroda state government. His wife gave birth to his first son, Yashwant, in the same year. Ambedkar had just moved his young family and started work, when he dashed back to Bombay to see his ailing father, who died on February 2, 1913.

Pursuit of education


A few months later, Ambedkar was selected by the Gayakwad ruler to travel to the United States and enroll at Columbia University, with a scholarship of $11.5 per month. Arriving in New York City, Ambedkar was admitted to the graduate studies programme at the political science department. After a brief stay at the dormitory, he moved to a housing club run by Indian students and took up rooms with a Parsi friend, Naval Bhathena.[3] In 1916, he was awarded a Ph.D. for a thesis which he eventually published in book form as The Evolution of Provincial Finance in British India. His first published work, however, was a paper titled Castes in India: Their Mechanism, Genesis and Development. Winning his degree and doctorate, he travelled to London and enrolled at Gray's Inn and the London School of Economics, studying law and preparing a doctoral thesis in economics. The expiration of his scholarship the following year forced him to temporarily abandon his studies and return to India amidst World War I.[3]
Returning to work as military secretary for Baroda state, Ambedkar was distressed by the sudden reappearance of discrimination in his life, and left his job to work as a private tutor and accountant, even starting his own consultancy business that failed owing to his social status.[4] With the help of an English acquaintance, the former Bombay Governor Lord Sydenham, he won a post as professor of political economy at the Sydenham College of Commerce and Economics in Mumbai. He was able to return to England in 1920 with the support of the Maharaja of Kolhapur, his Parsi friend and his own savings. By 1923 he completed a thesis on The Problem of the Rupee. He was awarded a D.Sc. by the University of London, and on finishing his law studies, he was simultaneously admitted to the British Bar as a barrister. On his way back to India, Ambedkar spent three months in Germany, where he conducted further studies in economics at the University of Bonn. He was formally awarded a Ph.D. by Columbia University on June 8, 1927



Fight against untouchability


As a leading Dalit scholar, Ambedkar had been invited to testify before the Southborough Committee, which was preparing the Government of India Act 1919. At this hearing, Ambedkar argued for creating separate electorates and reservations for Dalits and other religious communities. In 1920, he began the publication of the weekly Mooknayak (Leader of the Silent) in Bombay. Attaining popularity, Ambedkar used this journal to criticize orthodox Hindu politicians and a perceived reluctance of the Indian political community to fight caste discrimination.[4] His speech at a Depressed Classes Conference in Kolhapur impressed the local state ruler Shahu IV, who shocked orthodox society by dining with Ambekdar and his untouchable colleagues. Ambedkar exhorted his own community, the Mahars, to abandon the idea of sub-castes, and held a joint communal dinner in which the principle of segregation was abandoned. Upon his return from Europe, Ambedkar established a successful legal practise, and also organised the Bahishkrit Hitakarini Sabha (Group for the Wellbeing of the Excluded) to promote education and socio-economic upliftment of the depressed classes.[4]
He was highly critical of the practice of untouchability in Indian Muslim Society, lending credence to the view that he was not exclusively against Hindus or Hinduism, but was speaking of reforming social evils. In his acclaimed publication "Pakistan and the Partition of India", he writes that, while Islam speaks of "brotherhood", the practice of slavery and the observance of caste discrimination were rampant in Muslim society in South Asia, such as the Ashraf/Ajlaf caste divide and the severe discrimination against the Arzal castes or Dalit Muslim untouchables[5][6].
In 1926, he became a nominated member of the Bombay Legislative Council. By 1927 Dr. Ambedkar decided to launch active movements against untouchability. He began with public movements and marches to open up and share public drinking water resources, to which until then untouchable communities had no access; also he began a struggle for the right to enter Hindu temples, forbidden till then by upper caste communities. He led a satyagraha — non-violent protest and civil disobedience — in Mahad (Marathi:'महाड') to fight for the right of the untouchable community to draw water from the main water tank of the town.[4] [2],[3],[4],[5]. There he held a conference and drew parallels between his movement and the events that led to the convening of the Estates-General in Versailles on 5 May 1789, which led to the French Revolution, brought down the French monarchy and forced the Roman Catholic Church to undergo a radical restructuring.
On January 1, 1927 Ambedkar organised a ceremony at the Koregaon Victory Memorial near Pune, which commemorated the Indian soldiers who had died in the Second Anglo-Maratha War, in the Battle of Koregaon. during Here he inscribed the names of the soldiers from the Mahar community on a marble tablet. In a Depressed Classes Conference on December 24, he condemned the ancient Hindu classical text, the Manusmriti (Laws of Manu), for justifying the system of caste discrimination and untouchability. Ambedkar and his supporters burned copies of the texts. In 1927, he began his second journal, Bahiskrit Bharat (Excluded India), later rechristened Janata (The People). He was appointed to the Bombay Presidency Committee to work with the all-European Simon Commission in 1928. This commission had sparked great protests across India, and while its report was ignored by most Indians, Ambedkar himself wrote a separate set of recommendations for future constitutional reforms. He was injured in an accident that occurred during a visit to Chalisgaon on October 23, 1929, which he had undertaken hoping to help the untouchable community, which was facing a social boycott from orthodox Hindus; he was confined to bed there till the end of the year.[7]

HE WAS A MAN OF SUBSTANCE TO BE OF THANKFUL FOREVER.

Wednesday, August 15, 2007

When Harry Met sally-----movie[WHMS]

starring -Billy Crystal & Meg Ryan
When Harry Met Sally!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
Movie!!!!!!!
yup!!

Quite interesting name besides!!!!!!!!!!!
Liked the movie to certain extent,not really to certain..but to a great extent....i found the story quite practical..and ya interesting too..The infantile behaviour of Meg and earnest attitude of Billy alongside the ongoing affairs between them..makes the movie do exceptionally well and
drive the story to a plot where u really blowing in the winds of charm.
I had a nice experience watching the movie , if m' supposed to be concise, I 'd liked the movie.
i would definitely like to mention some Quotes episodes of the movie.....

Harry Burns: There are two kinds of women:high maintenance and low maintenance.
Sally Albright: Which one am I?
Harry Burns: You're the worst kind.You're high maintenance but you think you're low
maintenance.

Monday, August 13, 2007

Buddha and his Dhamma


I have gone through many rounds of Birth and death,looking in vain for the builder of this body.Heavy indeed is Birth and Death again and again!!
But now I have seen you,housebuilder,you shall not build this house again.Its beams are broken;its Dome is shattered;self will is extinguished;NIRVANA shall be attend.

Sunday, August 12, 2007

Amateur's Prose

Well being the first time m creating any blog of mine.feels quite ambiguous what to write here..still pushing hard m' mind to put something visible(gettin a bit of pyscho i guess),legible,decipherable,comprehensible and at the same time understandable..coz everyone can't read ur mind ,nd i think one shudnt do so!! as well. coz mind relly gets very cozy sometimes nd drags itself out of itz perimeter.
but when ur mind is at itz peak nd is contineously spawning ideas nd views for which u desire to get discerned nd valed .........
U got to articulate dem nd put dem across the humankind( m' trying to flee from the gender specifications).
so here m' tryin to put away everything m' mind crafting me to engrave .
This is what human mind is all about .now itz again compeling me to contradict whatever i conveyed before.so anything i can recall at this very moment is there is zilch which can restrain the pace of mind.running,dashing,whizing,darting......nd goin on nd on nd on.............!!!!!