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Ninna Dakhale Yaavaga Needutte? (When Will You Show Your Documents?)
Those queueing for aadhar-ration-cards between thumb-scans and monkey-tricks of servers who lose their lives–their documents you demand, When will you show your documents!?
My Mother
A gathering resolving to form Hawkers Union in Shillong, Meghalaya in 2016
Blood of Other Days
In the by-gone days of the other life Before the advent of the WORD Spilling the blood of foes Was the honour-code
I Want to be killed by an Indian Bullet
I heard the news long ago that they were looking for me; in the morning in the afternoon at night. My children told me; my wife told me.
My Invented Land
My native soil was created from tiny sparks that clung to grand mother's earthen pot which conjured savoury dishes I've been looking for all my life in vain.
Native Land
First came the scream of the dying in a bad dream, then the radio report, and a newspaper: six shot dead, twenty-five houses razed, sixteen beheaded with hands tied behind their backs inside a church . . .
Ayodhya: A Personal Account
The homogenisation of Indian culture and the seizure and erasure of history will only get stronger in times to come
The Sounds of Silence
The mystical desert of Jaisalmer, the majestic 12th-century fort palace, and a juxtaposition of sounds and silences from 20 different countries the story of a unique 'museum' within a museum
REQUIEM FOR A DREAM
The Equator Line (TEL), a themed, quarterly magazine of non-conformist writing blazed a brilliant trail of its own before shutting down
Through the Looking Glass
Nearly 40 years on, Govind Nihalani's memorable social and political satire Party unravels the hypocrisy of India's urban elite and raises vital questions about art
Inglorious Miners
The rat-hole miners involved in the Uttarakhand rescue operations are well aware that soon they will fade from people's memories and will have no option but to go back crawling inside dark tunnels
Rethinking Development in the Himalayas
Several reports published around the UN climate change conference, COP28, warn that the threats to the Himalayas from climate change are more direct and immediate
Saving Languages
Many threatened languages in the country might become critically endangered in the near future. A few from some tribal communities, especially women, are doing their bit to preserve and document their mother tongues
Painful Silence
Palestinian women have had to suffer the adverse impacts of war, while living within a deeply conservative and patriarchal society
Lopsided Language
Coverage of the Israel-Palestine war raises the larger question of bias in media representations
UNPROMISED AND PROMISED
Calls for a Greater Israel are gaining currency since the Hamas attack. But any move to do so would only lead to a wider regional war
Science of Electioneering
Unmasking the factors the BJP has used in every election since Modi became the supremo
END OF AN ERA?
A resurgent BJP may have hurt the Congress, but it has also belittled the importance of regional and smaller parties in national politics
A WELFARIST TURN?
In the recent state elections, political parties went all out to woo voters with welfare schemes. The verdicts, however, prove that populist policies sans good governance won't necessarily bring electoral dividends
BUCKING THE TREND
Madhya Pradesh will be a walkover for the Congress. Chhattisgarh will be tougher.
Ayodhya: Many Cities, Many Histories
ONCE simply a mound of land nourished by the Sarayu River and smaller streams, Ayodhya has seen its fate change repeatedly.
Shades of Justice
Two women—one black, the other white—are under trial in the films Saint-Omer and Anatomy of a Fall
Golden Lessons in Zen
You don't travel to Japan. Japan travels to you
Rekindling Hope
The Supreme Court verdict in the Bilkis Bano case that rescinded the remission of 11 convicts raises hope for a democratic India
Men in the Guise of Gods
Rama faces the greatest challenge of his legacy today and it is caused by humans who consider themselves gods, accountable to no one
The Slow-burning SOUTH
The Ram Janmabhoomi movement has taken its time to seep into the southern states, but undercurrents have always existed
The Dark Mien
Hindu scriptures differ on the skin colour of Ram. Was he white, blue, bluish-grey, black or even green?
What Does Ram Mandir Mean to an Ordinary Indian?
It's a moment in history that shows that, as a country, we have faith in our institutions
Eye on Polls?
The Ram temple inauguration may certainly influence the processes and outcomes of the upcoming General Elections
A Paper City
The contemporary Ram Janmbhoomi politics that began in the 20th century can be broadly categorised into three periods1949, 1980s and post-2014