No matching items found
The demonic prowess of catastrophe is piercing and unbending. But there are a few who employ the courage of their conviction and free-flowing confidence
The deep-rooted puritanical belief that human suffering is always the fallout of human misdemeanour is misleading, if not entirely wrong. It is merely, one feels,
If death had had the luxury of breaks, it would have definitely taken one on Wednesday. The king is dead. And he did commit a wrong. He left a slot empty forever. The great Indian actor, Dilip Kumar, passed away in Mumbai on Wednesday morning.
When grief explodes the ordinary crouch, the extraordinary take it by the horns, and see a newness of purpose in taking on full blast the unrelenting assault.
I am a journalist and I know that some members of my fraternity do exaggerate, do distort, do fictionalise, do sensationalise and do not always speak the truth.
Knowledge undoubtedly is power, my friend believes. And I fully agree with the age-old contention. In keeping with that standpoint, he invests a good deal of his money in books.
If we didn’t have words we wouldn’t have had this life of ours. We are all creations of words. If man hadn’t invented words I would have been like the unattended piece of gravel waiting to be pounded by time,
Avinash Bhaduri, a brilliant writer and a warm human being and an incredible host, has been fighting poor health and a poorer life. The cause: drugs.
I was a schoolboy and intolerant. I still don’t know why it was the way it was. I used to land up fighting over insignificant issues. I often used to get punished for bad behaviour.
When I tell people that I seriously believe that some animals can see trouble coming and some human beings can predict the future they laugh. But I can’t. Let me draw on my experiences.
Shaadaab S. Bakht, who worked for famous Indian dailies The Telegraph, The Pioneer, The Sentinel and wrote political commentaries for Tehelka.com, is Gulf Today’s Executive Editor.