[PDF] Download Breaking the Jewish Code: 12 Secrets that Will Transform Your Life, Family, Health, and Finances Best Book by Perry Stone. Dharma Texts, 'Breaking India Rajiv Malhotra Aravindan Neelakandan.pdf'. PDF WITH TEXT download. Download 1 file. SINGLE PAGE PROCESSED JP2 ZIP download. Download 1 file. TORRENT download. Download 12 Files download 6 Original. IN COLLECTIONS. Sanatan Dharma Texts.
Contents. Synopsis According to the book's promotional website breakingindia.com: India's integrity is being undermined by three global networks that have well-established operating bases inside India: (i) linked with, (ii) supported by China via intermediaries such as Nepal, and (iii) and being fostered by the West in the name of human rights.
This book focuses on the third: the role of, academics, think-tanks, foundations, government and human rights groups in fostering separation of the identities of and communities from the rest of India. In the introductory chapter of Breaking India, Malhotra writes: This book looks at the historical origins of both the movement and, as well as the current players involved in shaping these separatist identities. It includes an analysis of the individuals and institutions involved and their motivations, activities, and desired endgame. While many are located in the US and the European Union, there are an increasing number in India too, the latter often functioning like the local branch offices of these foreign entities. The co-author said: 'We wrote the book for all Indians for you and me because we do not want our children to end up in refugee camps.' Said that the book essentially focuses on '3-S':.
Subordination of India's independence. Surveillance of independent India.
Subversion of independent India Translation In December 2011, a version of the book titled Udaiyum India? Was released. In April 2014, a version of the book titled Bharat Vikhandan was released. On the 15th of February 2015, a version of the book titled Bharatha Bhanjana was released in Bengaluru by the noted Kannada litterateur. The book is translated to Kannada by Shri Lakshmikanth Hegde and edited by R. Jahagiradar, with a foreword by the renowned Kannada novelist. Reception.
Breaking India book release (Feb 2011) Positive response Several speakers at the book release gave a positive response to Breaking India. For example: eminent international jurist and Member of Parliament Shri said that the book is 'an eye opener, a warning to us' of not only of internal enemies but external ones too who are collaborating with dummies, proxies inside our border and trying to weaken India, break her unity, integration and ultimately to jeopardise our freedom, sovereignty, culture.
Columnist, public intellectual, and financial analyst said: he said that This work is long overdue. There have been a lot of efforts to expose the kind of machinations that's going on to pervert our nationalism, pervert our past, pervert our great heroes, pervert even our spiritual personalities like Thiruvalluvar. Criticism Philosophy master and christian social reformer (who was a topic in the book) wrote: The authors of Breaking India display a tremendous capacity for collecting data. Had they also the intellectual integrity to interpret fairly the people they critique, they might have won many hearts and minds.
The authors' goal is noble – to unite India – although they come across as terrorists, indiscriminately shooting every Western scholar, linguist, scientist, politician, philanthropist, and missionary who ever spoke out against the oppression of 'lower caste' Indians. 'Faultlines' that divide India can be bridged if the case for unity is made honestly, with grace and charity. After 650 pages, I was left with feeling that the authors heaped loads of insult on every intelligent Hindu who feels that caste and untouchability are wrong. Gita Ramaswamy writes: This doorstopper of a book is really one long polemical pamphlet. The authors' intention is historiographical confrontation with Bible-thumpers in Tamil Nadu, but what they lack is expertise in handling historical data and a professional approach. The problem is in analysing Dravidian and Dalit faultlines. They don't get wished away by denial.
One would expect the authors to analyse these faultlines, acknowledge the limited validity of conversions and identity politics, and discuss their limitations. Instead, they are in denial throughout and consequently fall into outrageous positions. See also. References.
Author by: Chad M. Bauman Language: en Publisher by: Routledge Format Available: PDF, ePub, Mobi Total Read: 29 Total Download: 293 File Size: 45,6 Mb Description: This volume offers insights into the current ‘public-square’ debates on Indian Christianity.
Drawing on ethnographic fieldwork as well as rigorous analyses, it discusses the myriad histories of Christianity in India, its everyday practice and contestations and the process of its indigenisation. It addresses complex and pertinent themes such as Dalit Indian Christianity, diasporic nationalism and conversion.
The work will interest scholars and researchers of religious studies, Dalit and subaltern studies, modern Indian history, and politics. Author by: B R Deepak Language: en Publisher by: Vij Books India Pvt Ltd Format Available: PDF, ePub, Mobi Total Read: 44 Total Download: 953 File Size: 43,7 Mb Description: During the deep globalization of the 1990s and early 2000s when China adapted well to the global changes by making various structural adjustments, India’s ambivalence to undertake similar revolutionary changes made her to muddle through the forces of globalisation. Now, when new forces of globalisation in the form of Trans Pacific Partnership (TPP), Transatlantic Trade and Investment Partnership (TTIP), One Belt One Road, and various economic unions or communities throughout the globe are taking shape, will India’s own initiative adapt well to these processes and reap maximum benefits? Or will India muddle through again and lose yet another opportunity and remain as an onlooker to these global geopolitical and economic restructuring?
Will India recalibrate its foreign, defence and trade policies and align it to these changes? Will India continue to let the weak domestic drivers determine its foreign and economic policies?
India and China: Foreign Policy Priorities, a collection of 50 essays looks into Indian and Chinese foreign policy approaches towards various bilateral and multilateral issues, which include the border, Brahmaputra water, maritime security, defence diplomacy, South China Sea, ‘One Belt One Road’, BRICS, terrorism, joint military exercises, New Development Bank, Asia Infrastructure Investment Bank etc. Besides, there are essays focussing on US’s ‘rebalancing to Asia’, Chinese responses to US reconnaissance close to Chinese island reclamation activities in the South China Sea, China’s spat with Japan over Senkaku/Diaoyu Island and TPP have been looked into from the perspectives of various stakeholders.
Besides, the volume also covers some other major areas of India-China relations such as trade and investment, high level visits, people to people exchanges, historical ties etc. The essays are of particularly significant, for they help to understand some of the recent foreign policy approaches and responses from India and China towards some of the extremely important issues concerning bilateral and multilateral engagement. Author by: Carl Vadivella Belle Language: en Publisher by: Flipside Digital Content Company Inc. Format Available: PDF, ePub, Mobi Total Read: 94 Total Download: 731 File Size: 42,6 Mb Description: In 1938, noting that the bulk of the Indian population formed a 'e;landless proletariat'e; and despairing of the ability of the factionalized Indian community to unite in pursuit of common objectives, activist K.A. Neelakanda Ayer forecast that the fate of Indians in Malaya would be to become 'e;Tragic orphans'e; of whom India has forgotten and Malaya looks down upon with contempt'e. Ayer's words continue to resonate; as a minority group in a nation dominated politically by colonially derived narratives of 'e;race'e; and ethnicity and riven by the imperatives of religion, the general trajectory of the economically and politically impotent Indian community has been one of increasing irrelevance. This book explores the history of the modern Indian presence in Malaysia, and traces the vital role played by the Indian community in the construction of contemporary Malaysia.
In this comprehensive new study, Carl Vadivella Belle offers fresh insights on the Indian experience spanning the period from the colonial recruitment of Indian labour to the post-Merdeka political, economic and social marginalization of Indians. While recent Indian challenges to the political status quo - a regime described as that of 'e;benign neglect'e; - promoted Indian hopes of reform, change and uplift, the author concludes that the dictates of political discourse permeated by the ideologies of communalism offer limited prospects for meaningful change. Author by: Chad M. Bauman Language: en Publisher by: Oxford University Press Format Available: PDF, ePub, Mobi Total Read: 67 Total Download: 643 File Size: 46,6 Mb Description: Every year, there are several hundred attacks on India's Christians. These attacks are carried out by violent anti-minority activists, many of them provoked by what they perceive to be a Christian propensity for aggressive proselytization, or by rumored or real conversions to the faith. Pentecostals are disproportionately targeted.
Drawing on extensive interviews, ethnographic work, and a vast scholarly literature on interreligious violence, Hindu nationalism, and Christianity in India, Chad Bauman examines this phenomenon. While some of the factors in the targeting of Pentecostals are obvious and expected-their relatively greater evangelical assertiveness, for instance-other significant factors are less acknowledged and more surprising: marginalization of Pentecostals by 'mainstream' Christians, the social location of Pentecostal Christians, and transnational flows of missionary personnel, theories, and funds. A detailed analysis of Indian Christian history, contemporary Indian politics, Indian social and cultural characteristics, and Pentecostal belief and practice, this volume sheds important light on a troubling fact of contemporary Indian life. Author by: Martin A. Klein Language: en Publisher by: Univ of Wisconsin Press Format Available: PDF, ePub, Mobi Total Read: 34 Total Download: 245 File Size: 40,6 Mb Description: “Martin Klein has brought together recent work on the abolition of slavery, from Ottoman Turkey to Thailand and from South India to West Africa.
This anthology builds on the recent scholarship on both slavery in Asia and Africa and the end of slavery as a world-wide historical phenomenon. Whereas other anthologies have tended to focus on either Africa or Asia, this project brings together in one volume case studies and methodological approaches concerning both regions. Breaking the Chains will be an important part of the relatively sparse literature on emancipation in comparative and global context.”—Richard Roberts, Stanford University Because the American history of slavery and emancipation tends to be foremost in Western minds, few realize that traditional forms of servitude still exist in a variety of places around the world: children are sold on the streets of Bangkok, bondage persists in India despite official efforts to abolish it, and until 1980 slavery was legal in Mauritania.
Breaking the Chains deals with emancipation in African and Asian societies which were either colonized or came under the domination of European powers in the nineteenth century. In these societies, emancipation involved the imposition on non-European societies of an explicitly European discourse on slavery, and, in most cases, a free labor ideology. Most of the slave masters described in these essays were not European and found European ideas on emancipation difficult to accept.
Against this backdrop, the essayists (many of whom contribute their own non-Western perspective) focus on the transition from slavery (or other forms of bondage) to emancipation. They show that in each case the process involved pressure from European abolition movements, the extension of capitalist relations of production, the concerns and perceptions of the colonial state, and the efforts of non-Western elites to modernize their cultures. Klein argues that the Asian and African experience has much in common with the American experience, particularly in efforts to control labor and family life. The struggle to control the labor of former slaves has often been intense and, he suggests, has had a continuing impact on the social order in former slave societies. Author by: Sanjeev Sabhlok Language: en Publisher by: Breaking Free of Nehru Format Available: PDF, ePub, Mobi Total Read: 35 Total Download: 831 File Size: 55,9 Mb Description: The book discusses the impact of Nehruvian socialism on freedom in India.
It reflects on India s post-independence experience and finds that India needs to move well beyond socialist paradigms towards freedom and innovation if it wishes to retrieve its status as a great nation. It then traces the causes of India`s political and bureaucratic corruption, its poverty, and its large, illiterate population. The book then proposes numerous ways to transform India`s governance thorough competitive, freedom-based, solutions. Solutions recommended range from a re-write of the Indian Constitution in order to make it simpler and clearly focused on freedom, to the radical restructure of the Indian public services based on modern public sector reforms across the world. It advocates state funding of elections, raising the salaries of politicians significantly, freeing the labour market, imposing carbon taxes on pollution, seeking compensatory payments from developed countries for their prior carbon emissions, and complete privatisation of school and university education. It argues that India can, and should, aspire to be the world s best in everything it does.
I believe that no Indian should settle for anything less than that. Author by: Satya S.