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Showing posts with label biography. Show all posts
Showing posts with label biography. Show all posts

about Agra Fort, Uttar Pradesh



For a rich view of the rich history of the Mughal period, visit the fortified Agra Fort, one of India's most famous historical sites built entirely of red sandstone. Built in 1565 by Akbar, this historic tourist site in India has two elaborate gates: the Amar Singh Gate and the Delhi Gate. You can only enter through the Amar Singh Gate to open an ancient city full of gates, courts, corridors, palaces and mosques. It is one of the best places to visit in Agra.

Interesting fact: The castle was included in one of Sherlock Holmes' cases: "The Fourth Seal" and was the site of the film Jodha Akbar.
Entry fee: Indians- INR 40
Immigrants - INR 550
Open from: 6am to 6pm
Things to see: Jahangir Palace, Nagina Masjid, Moti Masjid, Mina Masjid and Zenana Mina Bazaar.
Created by: Akbar and Shah Jahan
Built-In: 1573

Red Fort, also known as Lal Qalʿah, also spelled Lal Kila or Lal Qila, a Mughal fortress in Old Delhi, India. It was built by Shah Jahān in the mid-17th century and continues to attract tourists. The castle was designated a UNESCO World Heritage Site in 2007.

The massive red sandstone walls of the castle, 75 feet (23 m) high, include a complex of palaces and entertainment halls, bright balconies, baths and indoor canals, and geometric gardens, as well as a magnificent mosque. Among the most famous buildings of this building are the Community Audience Hall (Diwan-i-ʿAm), with 60 red sandstone pillars supporting a flat roof, and a small Independent Audience Hall (Diwan-i-Khas). and has a white marble booth.

GOPAL KRISHNA GOKHALE (1866-1915)



Born in Kothluk, Maharashtra village, on May 9, 1866, Gopal Krishna Gokhale was raised in the home of his paternal grandfather. With the support of his older brother and daughter-in-law, Gokhale managed his education at Rajaram High School in Kothapur.

Because of his respect for his brother and his sense of empathy, Gokhale learned the value of self-sacrifice in order to avoid asking for material support. Sometimes he did not eat and read about street lighting to save his older brother as much money as possible. A hard-working student who went on to graduate from Elphinstone College, Bombay in 1884 at the age of 18, received a scholarship of Rs. 20 per month in his final year. His education affected Gokhale's life in many ways. Basically, his understanding of the English language allowed him to express himself without much doubt and clarity. Also, his appreciation and knowledge of history instilled in him respect for freedom, democracy, and the parliamentary system.


After graduating, he went on to teach, taking up the position of Assistant Master at New English School in Pune. Among the many achievements attesting to his talent and passion for teaching, perhaps the biggest was the compilation, a mathematical textbook in collaboration with his colleague, N. J. Bapat, became the most widely used and widely translated book in the world. Gokhale went on to become the first member of Fergusson College in Pune in 1885, with his highly regarded Deccan Education Society colleagues. He promised 20 years of his life at the college, as a teacher and board member. He was so good at teaching subjects of any variety, that he was known as "Professor to Order."
In 1886 he witnessed the entry of Gopal Krishna Gokhale into public life. At only 20 years old, he gave his public speech on "India under the British Rule" and was applauded for his expression and control of the English language. Gokhale soon moved on to public affairs. While donating articles to the English weekly Mahratta, he was seduced by the idea of ​​using education as a way to arouse nationalism in the people of India. At the time, Gokhale was promoted to secretary of the Deccan Education Society. Once in the light, there was no looking back. After being appointed to preside over the Bombay State Conference in 1893, he was elected to the Senate of the University of Bombay. In time, Gokhale came to devote all his time to the things that make up the common man: hunger, ways to fight the plagues, local government autonomy, land restitution and social cohesion. As a member of Pune Municipality, electing his president twice, Gokhale made the mistake of trying to solve the problems of the poor, and those who came to him with complaints about water supply, plumbing, etc. he faced a dilemma. Gokhale also published a daily newspaper entitled Jnanaprakash, which allowed him to express his views on political and social change.
In 1905, he founded the Servants of India Society, which trained people to be unselfish workers so that they could work for the common good. The desire to make a difference was so strong that the spirits of relatives promised a simple life of devotion to these causes. Among the many things the organization has done, there have been excellent services to help those affected by floods and famine, and to give themselves time to educate women in the community, so that they too can have a say. Many people influenced Gokhale and gave him the strength and discipline to bring his ideas to the forefront, but none other than Mahadev Govind Ranade, who was educated in 1887. Ranade trained him for 15 years in all aspects of public life, and taught him integrity, dedication to community service, and tolerance. These qualities, which Ranade helped incorporate into Gokhale, are those qualities that helped make Gokhale the man he is today.


Gokhale's visit to England expressed his concern over the mistreatment of Indians by the British government. In one 49-day period, he spoke in front of 47 different audiences, drawing in all of us. Before long, he was hailed as the most effective lawyer in the case of India. While Gokhale called for a gradual change in order to finally have the Safaj, or autonomy, of India, some of his contemporaries, who had the upper hand, wished to use force as a means of persuasion. Gokhale has maintained his balanced political views and made some changes for the betterment of India. He was instrumental in the formation of the 1909 Minto-Morley Reforms, which eventually became law. Unfortunately, the Reform Act became law in 1909 and it was disappointing to see that the people could not be given a fair democratic system despite Gokhale's efforts. The social cohesion he had been longing for was shattered when he realized that the Muslim community was focused on seeing itself as a separate unit. On the bright side, however, Gokhale's efforts were clearly not in vain. The Indians were now in a position to reach the highest levels of government, and their voices were heard on social issues.
Gopal Krishna Gokhale's years of hard work and dedication have done a lot for India, but sadly it has also damaged the life of this great leader. Excessive exertion and the accompanying fatigue only aggravated diabetes and asthma. The end came peacefully, however, on February 19, 1915. Pointing his finger to the sky and clasping his hands respectfully, Gopal Krishna Gokhale made his final statement to the audience, a farewell farewell.

know about Chandra Shekhar Azad 1906-1931



The Union's Minister of Culture opened the exhibition "Azad Ki Shaurya Gatha" which focused on the life of the immortal martyr "Chandrasekhar Azad" as part of the "Azadi Ka Amrit Mahotsav" at the Indira Gandhi National Center for the Arts (IGNCA), New Delhi.

About:

Chandra Shekhar Azad (1906 - 1931) was an Indian rebel.

He reorganized the Hindustan Republican Association under its new Hindustan Socialist Republican Army (HSRA) name in 1928 after the death of its founder, Ram Prasad Bismil.

He was involved in the 1925 Kakori Train Robbery, in an attempt to bomb Viceroy's Indian train in 1926, and finally the shooting of J.

He died at Alfred Park in Allahabad (now Prayagraj) on 27 February 1931.

He was best known for his self-proclaimed name Azad ("The Free").

He often used the pseudonym “Balraj” when signing tracts issued as general commander of the Hindustan Socialist Republic Army (HSRA).

know about Barindra Kumar Ghosh 1880-1959



(In 1864 Krishnadhan married Shimati Swarnalata Devi. The wedding was performed according to the rites of Adi Brahmo Samaj, in which Dr. Ghose had aspirations. The girl's wedding was an unforgettable event in the history of Brahmo Samaj. Keshub Chunder Sen. The bride party was full of members of the Bose family. The groom's party had a few, if any, relatives of the young man, because Krishna Dhun Ghose came from a Hindu family. He did not even tell his mother that he was taking a Brahmo bride. Find a father like Rajnarain Bose.
G.Gose and Swarnalata had six children, - five sons and a daughter: Benoybhushan, Manmohan, Aurobindo, a son who died young, Sarojini and Barindra Kumar.). Her mother Swarnalata was the daughter of a Brahmo religious and social reformer, scholar Rajnarayan Basu. Aurobindo Ghosh was a rebel and had faith in later life. His second older brother, Manmohan Ghose, was an English literary scholar, poet and professor of English at Presidency College, Calcutta and Dhaka University.
 (At the end of 1878 the whole family sailed to England - Dr. Ghosh, Mrs. Ghosh, their three sons and their daughter Sarojini. For Indian women it was almost impossible to cross the sea. Swarnalotta was pregnant. he decided to take her to England for examination and treatment. The family arrived at her destination early in 1879 (probably, on January 1).
He had brought his sons to England because he wanted them to be "fully raised by Europeans." He is survived by his sons and a priest from England and his wife, Mr. and Mrs. Drewett in Manchester and his wife - in the care of a London doctor, Dr. Mathew.
In 1880 Dr. Ghose returned alone from England to rejoin his ministry. He left Swarnalata and children in England. That same year Swarnalata returned to India with Barin and the newborn Sarojini. Dr. Ghose found it difficult to stay with his wife, as his attitude had deteriorated. He was therefore given a cottage in Rohini, a village two kilometers from Deoghar, where he lived with Barin and Sarojini while Dr. Ghose lived alone in Khulna. He eventually managed to persuade his wife to give up the Sarojin, but he ended up with Barin until Dr. Ghose stole it from him. He placed the two children in the care of a woman whom he had set up in a house in Calcutta. Every week, Drs. Ghose used to come to town to see his girlfriend and children, but he was always lonely, an unhappy man, and prone to heavy drinking.) Barindranath went to school in Deoghar, even after passing the entrance exams. in 1901, he joined Patna College. He received military training in Baroda. During this time, (late 19th - early 20th century) Barin was influenced by Aurobindo and led to a revolutionary movement. Barin was sent to Calcutta in 1902 to organize a reform movement.
RENEWAL FUNCTIONS
Barin returned to Kolkata in 1902 and began organizing many transforming groups in Bengal with the help of Jatindranath Bandyopadhyay. In 1906, he began publishing Jugantar, a weekly Bengali and a reform movement called Jugantar soon followed. Jugantar was built from the inner circle of Anushilan Samiti and began conversion activities.
Barin and Jatindra nath Bandyopadhyay contributed to the selection of many young reforms from across Bangladesh. The reforms formed the Maniktala faction in Maniktala, Kolkata. It was a secret place where they started producing bombs and collecting arms and ammunition. But they soon began to feel bitter within themselves in the military leadership. Banerjee.
After the attempted assassination of Kingsford by two rebels Khudiram and Prafulla on April 30, 1908, police intensified their investigation into the arrest of Barin Ghosh on May 2, 1908, along with several of his colleagues. The case (known as the Alipore Bomb Case) initially sentenced Barin Ghosh. However, the sentence was commuted to life imprisonment, and Barin was exiled to Andaman's cell in 1909 (released in 1920).
Releases and latest works
Barin was released during a general pardon in 1920 and returned to Kolkata and began his career as a journalist. He soon left journalism and established an ashram in Kolkata. In 1923, he left Pondicherry when his older brother Aurobindo Ghosh had founded the famous Sri Aurobindo Ashram. He was influenced by Aurobindo in terms of spirituality and sadhana, but Barin Ghosh was a student of Sri Sri Thakur Anukulchandra. Sri Sri Thakur had instructed his followers to help secure the release of Barin who used the code name 'Golghar' (behind the monument in Patna) in his revolutionary activities. Barin returned to Kolkata in 1929 and picked up journalists. In 1933 he started English every week, The Dawn of India. He was associated with The Statesman newspaper, and in 1950, he became editor of the Bengali newspaper Dainik Basumati. Barin ghosh who once prepared bombs to liberate his mother's land wrote the book "Bharat Kon Pathe" in 1936, in which he said the road to change was wrong and said it was better to get the unity of Barat Britain. He married a widow in 1933 and joined the Statesmanman where he met Governor Anderson He who died on April 18, 1959.

know about Bankim Chandra Chatterjee (1838-1894)


 

Bankim Chandra Chatterjee (1838-1894) The Poison Tree Indian Realism Benkim Chandra Chatterjee was an Indian writer born in Bengal. His education was mostly British, and he was one of the first to graduate from the University of Calcutta. His writing is the basis of his work using European style prose in the Benagli language, something that had never been done before. He incorporates national themes into his writing. He wrote Anandamath, a novel widely regarded as one of the most important literary works in India, featuring "Bande Mataram" ("Praise You, Mother"). "Bande Mataram" was so inspiring that it was adopted by a national organization. In his efforts, he incorporated Hindu heroes and patriotism that fostered national pride in some of his countrymen, but also distinguished some Muslim Indians. She has written some of her articles in her monthly magazine, Bangodarshan. His novel The Poison Tree (Bishabriksha) first appeared in that publication in 1873.

Early life and background 

Chattopadhyay was born in the village of Kanthalpara in the North 24 town of Parganas, Near Naihati, in the Bengali family of Brahmin, the youngest of three brothers, in Yadav Chandra Chattopadhyaya and Durgadebi. His father, a government official, became the Deputy Collector of Midnapur. One of his brothers, Sanjib Chandra Chattopadhyay was also a novelist and best known for his famous book "Palamau".

He attended Hooghly Mohsin College and later attended Presidency College, graduating with a degree in Arts [Law] in 1857. He was one of the first graduates of the University of Calcutta with Jadunath Bose. [6] He also obtained a law degree, in 1869.

Appointed as Deputy Collector, as Jessore's father, Chattopadhyay went on to become a Deputy Magistrate, retiring from government service in 1891. His years of service were fraught with setbacks that led him to clash with the ruling British Empire. However, he was made a partner, the Order of the Indian Empire in 1894.

Chattopadhyay's first letters were in the weekly newspaper of Ishwar Chandra Gupta ‘Sangbad Prabhakar. [7] Following the example of Ishwar Chandra Gupta, he began his writing career as a verse writer. His great talents showed him some clues, and they turned to myth. His first attempt was a level in Bengali that was sent with an announced award. He did not win an award, and novelette has never been published. His first published story was Life's Rajmohan. It was written in English and may have been translated with an award-winning novelette. [Citation needed]. Unable to obtain any praise for writing his novel in English, realizing the fact that he would not have a smooth writing career if he wrote in English, he turned his attention to Bengali texts. Durgeshnondini, his first love for Bengali and the first novel in Bengali, was published in 1865.

Kapalkundala (1866) is the first major book of Chattopadhyay. The heroine of the novel, named after a stupid woman in Madatimadhava kaBhavabhuti, is played partly behind Kalidasa's Shakuntala and partly following Shakespeare's Miriranda. The hero of this novel was Nabakumar. However, parallel parallelism is an unlimited analysis of critics, and Chattopadhyay's heroine could be completely her own. He had chosen Dariapur in the Contai Subdivision as the setting for this famous novel.

His next love, Morinalini (1869), marks his first attempt to put his story against the backdrop of great history. The book marks the departure of Chattopadhyay's first work, in which he was a love writer, in the future in which he aimed to promote the ingenuity of Bengali-speaking people and bring about a cultural revival of Bengali literature.

Chattopadhyay began publishing the monthly Bangadarshan magazine in April 1872, the first edition being completed almost entirely by his work. The magazine featured novels, stories, comic strips, historical and diverse essays, informative essays, religious discourses, criticism and literary reviews. Vishabriksha (Poisonous Tree, 1873) is the first novel of Chattopadhyay that appeared in succession at Bangodarshan.

Bangodarshan came out of the broadcast four years later. It was later revived by his brother, Sanjeeb Chandra Chattopadhyay.

Chattopadhyay's next great novel was Chandrasekhar (1877), containing two very unrelated sites. Although the situation has been reversed in the eighteenth century, this novel is not historical. Her next novel was Rajani (1877), which incorporates the structure of human history, with a blind girl in a position of position. Man-made structures were used in Wilkie Collins's "A Woman in White", and an example of a blind girl who played a major role was present in Edward Bulwer-Lytton's Nydia in "The Last Days of Pompeii", although Rajani's similarities do not end there.

At Krishnakanter Will (Will of Krishnakanta, 1878) Chattopadhyay produced a complex structure. It was a fine reflection of contemporary India and its way of life and corruption. In that complex, critics see similarities in Western novels.

Sachin Tendulkar



 You heard the announcement. You may not have heard of this game, but you have heard it sung. This song - billions of people have ever lived with it; one that would come from Wankhede and echo across the city and the seas. It is a name that continues to inspire many, not only in India, but also around the world, to take up the sport. Sachin Ramesh Tendulkar was that cricketer who had a personality and aura that encouraged any cricket tournament; however he ended up saying he was no bigger than the game. To the people of India, a 5'5 ”giant man was much more than that. He was emotional; a symbol of hope for a nation that revered him as a lesser God.


Ironically, among the highest honors and despite the foundation he was laid on, his humility and ability to excel all made him able to play very well internationally for more than two decades. After playing for generations, Tendulkar started playing Test cricket with a white shirt that could be easily used as a school uniform, and he got his final Tests with a Niche jersey that was impossible to buy over the counter, and would later be auctioned off for millions.


In short

Amid all the ongoing praise he has received in a highly changed era of cricket, commerce and so on, and in a sea of ​​statistics all of Tendulkar’s fascinating conversations, it is sometimes easy to forget that he was probably the most perfect batsman of his generation - combining natural talent and hard work and dedication; who saw the importance of shaping and polishing diamonds. This unusual combination of dedication and skill made him stand out from the crowd, making him the legend of Sachin Ramesh Tendulkar.


Tendulkar has been one of the main causes of the explosion of popular cricket in India which has led the Indian board to become the most powerful cricketer in the world. In a country already inclined to cricket, Tendulkar has given people a hero to look up to regardless of age, color, religion or denomination - as well as cricket from sport to religion on the continent.


Conference of all things cricket

In a game full of statistics, he owns almost all of the best record records he has, including those many runs in Test and ODI cricket, the biggest of these two genres, and the highest number of centuries in international cricket - presumably 100. Though hard work starts out. In his ODI, Tendulkar discovered that his career was at an all-time high when he was sent to play New Zealand in 1994 and hit a 49-ball 82, making the opening of his own. He went on to collect 49 Hundreds of ODIs at the end of his career - surpassing the second most leading nineteenth.

World Cup veteran

In addition, the work won a World Cup appearance, from 1992 to 2011, where he appeared twice in the finals (2003 and 2011), finally receiving the coveted trophy on that fateful night in Mumbai on April 2 I -2011, finds the right swan song in front of a crowd of people in Mumbai.


“You have borne the burden of the nation for 21 years; It's time to dump her and move on. "

- Virat Kohli's words after his idol Sachin Tendulkar finally got his hands on the World Cup.


Despite all the talk about Tendulkar's failure under pressure, his performance at major events was hard to ignore. In his last two World Cup matches, Tendulkar excelled at cheating with 4 (2003 final vs. Australia) and 18 (2011 final vs. Sri Lanka). However, his overall performance and contributions to the aforementioned tournament have played a major role in making India reach the finish line first. In the 2003 edition of the tournament, Tendulkar scored an astonishing 673 runs in the tournament, surpassing his record of 523 runs in the 1996 World Cup - a record that still stands. In addition, in the campaign to win the Indian World Cup in 2011, he also became India's top scorer and second overall, with 482 runs in the tournament with an average of 53.55, and two hundred in the league stages (against England and South Africa) and 2 most important fifty in knockouts (against Australia and Pakistan).


Without a doubt, Tendulkar's fine memory of the World Cup lasts a time when he finally received the medal he had been waiting for for the best part of twenty years and less, and, of course, the moment he won the World Cup.


Implementation

There are so many stories about how Tendulkar was introduced to cricket, we may not know the full truth. According to legend, his younger brother, Ajit, Sachin \ "who lived with him in a dream", took him to Sharadashram School in Mumbai and introduced him to Ramakant Acharekar, his first coach, at the age of eleven with the intention of focusing on him energy in something productive.


Since then, Tendulkar's life has been food, sleep, cricket.


He changed schools, trained hard, played many match trucks, and soon, the name Sachin Tendulkar became popular on the other side of Mumbai. There were whispers, whenever he was said to be playing a school game, as crowds gathered to watch him beat. From a young age, he will fulfill his expectations, as he is best known for earning 326 * in a record-breaking 664 record with Vinod Kambli - the highest co-operation of any type of competitive cricket at the time.


It was only a matter of time before he became part of the Mumbai team and made his home appearance. However, he was certainly too young to face the top throwers, and this raised a lot of eyebrows. However, when Dilip Vengsarkar, the Indian captain at the time, watched him fight Kapil Dev on the net, the case of a child prosecuted was quickly escalated. He first appeared at home at the age of 14, and struck for centuries in the Ranji and Duleep trophy debut. He continued to accumulate in the runs, and the Indian call showed up, a few years later.


Young people on the battlefield

After playing several times at home level, it was a popular opinion that Tendulkar was ready, at the age of 16, to play international cricket. He was taken to a Test team to visit Pakistan in November 1989, and was told to face some of the fastest bowlers in his backyard.


Ram Singh Dungarpur is said to have chosen Tendulkar on the trip, while Sachin first appeared in Karachi, aged 16 and 205 days. He was fired by his first partner Waqar Younis for 15 years, and with his confession, he thought he was not ready for the full international standard at the time. However, in the final test in Sialkot, Tendulkar was hit in the nose by a Waqar Younis guard.


It has now become a myth to cricketers around the world, that he turned down medical treatment, watched him, wiped the blood off, and continued to beat. He went on to combine 57 slides that will help India successfully draw the Test match. Tendulkar, although not born with a bat as he was at home level, had shown the severity of the hunger required at the world level by hitting and kept on the Test side.

Victory in Paradise

After the trip to Pakistan, Tendulkar traveled to New Zealand, scoring 88 more in one Test match, missing out on being the Test captain for the 12th time. He finally reached the line when India visited England in 1990, as they finally scored 119 * goals in the fourth innings in Manchester, digging India out of the hole and giving them a good chance of winning the game when there was a lot of sessions to beat. After scoring 100 goals in Manchester, he went on to score goals freely on the Australian tour, starting with 148 in Sydney and becoming the youngest batsman to win a Test 100 in Australia, as well as 114 in the bouncy WACA wicket, the most famous takeaway and a specialist, like his best Test innings.


After a series of fun plays in his first tour of the tour, Tendulkar was hailed as a natural talent and history of adaptability. He has continued to excel overseas, visiting South Africa in 1996/97, to score 169 points in Cape Town in a battle against years of Mohammad Azharuddin. It was a game won by India, but Tendulkar had brought India into a bad situation and showed a gap in winning power between him and his peers so much so that Allan Donald, who had threatened India’s top, admitted he felt like clapping for less. He had already shown off his batting ability in South Africa, having previously scored 111 (in a total of 227 teams) in 1992 on the crucial run of 1,000 runs in Johannesburg.


After a series of far-flung games, a solid home record has been given. He got his first Test at home in Chennai, scoring 165 smoothly playing England to lead his team to an innings victory. Little did he know that several of his knocks would reach the ground. In 1998, when the Tendulkar race against Warne was highly anticipated in the Australian-India home series, Tendulkar developed a coaching technique to sweep Warne out of the leg and knocked out the trick in the Chennai test by completely beating Warne in his 155-second innings. India went on to win the Test series 2-1 against Australia who won it all.


Strategies

“I was deeply moved by his approach. I’ve never seen myself play, but I feel, that this fella plays the same way I did. ”


Sir Donald Bradman, the last striker, once told his wife that he felt like Tendulkar was playing the same way he had been doing. It was probably the last compliment a batterer trusted to get.


By the time Tendulkar started playing Test cricket, the raw talent was clear, but his process needed to be polished. With a high body power that could be overlooked as a 16-year-old, Tendulkar was leaning on his belt in his position, which resulted in his head falling to the side, especially while playing to look at his leg. Years ago, however, Tendulkar developed a process that is ready to be used in a shooting simulator.


Sachin Tendulkar was in charge of the bat when he saw some of the most aggressive bowlers in their youth: McGrath, Fraser, Walsh, Ambrose and Pollock. In addition, swing-bowling artists such as Wasim Akram and Waqar Younis, spin legends such as Warne and Muralitharan, and express-pacers approaching powerful engineers including Brett Lee, Allan Donald and Shohib Akhtar, were high in their power during Little Master's reign. . Tendulkar not only survived the ambush of the millennium revolution, but also played his best cricket this season. How? It was all based on solid rock and solid rock formations.


The key was playing late. With the solidarity built into the usual opening first, his indiscriminate opposition and skepticism of the ball until he reached with a small back and punchy (almost zero) following that, made his basic process almost out of the air. This allows him to take the late course on the field and play football as quickly as possible. In addition to that the amount of energy and strength he was able to produce despite using low grip was one of several things for a man to lower his jaws.

Sachin's post-injury procedure was special in pulling and hitting, but it was very tight and strong, never allowing the upper part of the lower arm to leave the chest while driving, and allowing him to play ball under his eyes. The V's lower arm grip, though low, allowed him to watch the ball directly at the bat, giving him the freedom to find spaces with surgical accuracy, and to make shots at a crucial moment with the grace of a trapeze artist.


The back and across movements of the trigger and the still head are required to get a good view of your stop stop and to leave or play properly. Since his eye was the stump for delivery, he had a simple and productive way to leave the balls out of the eye line - and without the stump line. In addition to the logical mathematical calculations, this multi-faceted, multi-functional method forms the basis of Sachin Tendulkar's mythology.


Captain cuts

Tendulkar was made team captain in 1996 at the age of 23, but with 7 years of experience behind him. A poor record, egos of older players to handle, and a host of internal conflicts, would not have significantly reduced Tendulkar's action with the bat, as he continued to hit runs despite India being shut down by the opposition. In his second position as captain, which put him out of the competition, India lost the Test series to South Africa at home and Tendulkar's form hit a high note, and he dropped out of the captaincy. Sourav Ganguly took over the reins as leader in 2000, hoping to form a new Indian team amidst a stalemate that has plagued the cricket world.


Back to business

1998 was the year of Tendulkar as a striker; the year in which he played the most respected knock in his career, including his most famous ODI innings. He scored 143 points in the Coca Cola Cup league stages to take India to the Sharjah final, and then beat 134 in the final against Australia to take on India on their own. That same year, he almost made one effort in Chennai, almost netting 4 innings against Pakistan during the war, before leaving with India 17 left to win. India went on to lose the match, but Tendulkar was the man of the match for his good performance.


Tendulkar lost his father during the 1999 World Cup, returning home from England. He returned to hit 140 against Kenya, handed over a hundred to his father and gave birth to his habit of looking up at the sky a century later. In 2001, he won a 100th Test in Australia which determined the final series of franchises in India, which led to him winning a legend as Indian cricket redeemed itself in small game-fixing pits.


However, the following year he saw Tendulkar pass in a shocking manner, as he fought in New Zealand and the West Indies, before capturing 193 in Leeds to surpass Sir Don Bradman's 29th century figure. Tendulkar is back in his 2003 World Cup time, hitting 673 runs in a Man of the Tournament match on his side. India ended up losing in the final, but Tendulkar set a World Cup record that has been unparalleled so far. In addition, he undoubtedly played the innings of the biggest World Cup innings when he hit 75-ball 98 against Pakistan in Centurion while chasing 274 in the battery range of Wasim Akram, Waqar Younis, and Shonab Akhkhtar.


Tendulkar continued to hit runs, with a strange daddy here and there to satisfy his craving for dissatisfaction. This includes 194 * with Pakistan in Multan, 241 * in Sydney in 2004 and 141 against Pakistan in 5 ODI matches in 2004. However, India lost Tendulkar due to an elbow injury that sidelined him for the rest of the year. He returned at the end of 2004 to play Australia with a dead rubber band at Wankhede, and led India to a consolation victory with 55 goals at the minefield.


‘Endulkar’ and its debunking

After further surgery on his shoulder, he returned to the DLF trophy in Malaysia in 2006. He got a hundred on his return, a 40th century ODI, and used his work - he allowed his bat to speak in front of the "Endulkar" shenanigans.

After a turbulent period in Indian cricket, where the Greg Chappell incident took place, India was left to ruin the World Cup release in the first round in 2007. However, after Chappell's dismissal and MS Dhoni's recommendation as captain by Tendulkar, Indian cricket got its feet on it and again Tendulkar started to get runs and achieved great distances every time he took the bat.


Sachin Tendulkar continued to break many records in the next few years: he became the highest scorer in Test cricket, surpassing Brian Lara's record of 11,953 runs in Mohali against Australia. In December 2008, he chased an unexpected turn in a dry season in Chennai, knocked down 387 England tackles and hit a successful run of 103 *, and gave the Indian community much-needed comfort following the terrorist attacks in Mumbai on 26 November 2008.


After winning a series of Test series in England (2007), Tendulkar made a positive contribution to the controversial tour of Australia, where India lost 1-2, but it was a series that would have won India if it had not been for the shocking reception of a lawyer, showing great importance in context. of the series. In a subsequent CB series, Tendulkar turned all lovers by willow, scoring 117 * in the first final in Melbourne and 91 in the second final in Brisbane to lead India to their first ODI tournament on Australian soil. Tendulkar regained his former form and continued to score freely in all competitions, hitting 50 and 51 in South Africa's biggest Test in 2010 - another series in which India drew 1-1 but certainly threatened to win in Cape Town when the battle went awry. Tendulkar vs. Steyn has proven in all its hatred. He was named the ICC and ODI Player of the Year for 2010.


On February 24, 2010, Tendulkar became the first to reach the ODI conference to score 200 goals, scoring 200 * against South Africa in Gwalior, which is nearly two points ahead of a single year (163 retirees injured against New Zealand and 175 against and Australia). The landmark has been set several times since ...


Entering the 2011 World Cup with a lot of energy, Tendulkar contributed to the campaign with a victory of 482 runs, the second highest in the competition, and lifted the World Cup at home. He was surrounded by Wankhede, covered with tricolor on his shoulders - one of the most enduring portraits of a World Cup and perhaps in World Cup cricket history.


World Cup Hangover

After a dream come true at the 2011 World Cup, a blow came. Tendulkar, still trapped in the 900th century, seemed to be waiting too long ahead as he missed the line on the two-night Test trip to England and Australia, where he approached the line but failed to cross the line. After waiting a year, he finally reached the milestone in the Asia Cup league match against Bangladesh in Mirpur, beating his 100th international international to help India reach just 290 for India's bowling defeat in a critical period and allowed the match. His 51 defeat against Pakistan in the same tournament has been his last ODI match as he announced his retirement from ODI cricket on December 23, 2012, ending his career, so far, as the top scorer in over a century. way.


The nation is weeping

On November 16, 2013, 24 years and a day after he started playing in the Test, Tendulkar called a tearful match at Test cricket at Wankhede Stadium in Mumbai. His 200th Test match, against the West Indies, ended in a win for India, as Sachin gave a good hand over 74 slips. Wankhede was shocked and horrified when he was caught slipping and had to return to the tent. However, his evocative speech after the game, in which he mentioned that the songs "Sachin Sachin will come back to my ears until I breathe my last", revived the crowd into a new song - probably the last.


A few selected souls may have even watched Don's bat. Growing enthusiasm, cracking of the ears, and tears when an unwanted person begins to sing with the crowd is the combined cocaine of this generation. The whole nation is at the top, where that icon stopping the show holds a willow and adorns a million - Sachin Tendulkar ....

Mother Teresa


 

Mother Teresa was the founder of the Order of the Missionaries of Charity, a Roman Catholic church dedicated to helping the poor. Considered one of the most active people of the 20th century, he was ordained as Santa Teresa of Calcutta in 2016.

Who was Mother Teresa?

Nun and missionary Mother Teresa, better known as the Catholic Church as Santa Teresa of Calcutta, dedicated her life to caring for the sick and the poor. Born in Macedonia to parents of Albanian descent and teaching in India for 17 years, Mother Teresa heard a "phone call" in 1946. His order established a hospice; for the blind, the elderly and the disabled; and a colony of lepers.


In 1979, Mother Teresa received the Nobel Peace Prize for her charitable work. She died in September 1997 and was honored in October 2003. In December 2015, Pope Francis saw the second miracle performed by Mother Teresa, and opened the way for her to be ordained as September 4, 2016.


Mother Teresa's family and a small life

Mother Teresa was born on August 26, 1910, in Skopje, the present capital of the Republic of Macedonia. The next day, she was baptized as Agnes Gonxha Bojaxhiu.


Mother Teresa's parents, Nikola and Dhanafile Bojaxhiu, were of Albanian descent; His father was a businessman who worked as a construction contractor and a supplier of medicines and other goods. The Bojaxhius family was a devout Catholic family, and Nikola was deeply involved in the local church and city politics as a champion of Albanian independence.


In 1919, while Mother Teresa - then Agnes - was only eight years old, her father suddenly fell ill and died. Although the cause of his death is still unknown, many have concluded that he was poisoned by political enemies.


After her father's death, Agnes became very close to her mother, a devout and compassionate woman who instilled in her daughter a deep commitment to help the poor. Although he was not rich at all, Drana Bojaxhiu extended an open invitation to the city's poor to dine with his family. "My child, never eat one mouth unless you share it with others," she advised her daughter. When Agnes asked who these people were eating with, her mother replied in the same way, "Some of them are our relationships, but they are all our people."

Education and Quantity

Agnes attended the monastery's primary school and then the government-run schools. As a girl, she sang in the local choir Sacred Heart and was often asked to sing solo. The church made an annual trip to the Black Madonna Church in Letnice, and it was on this one trip at the age of 12 that she first experienced religious life. Six years later, in 1928, 18-year-old Agnes Bojaxhiu decided to become a nun and traveled to Ireland to join the Sisters of Loreto in Dublin. It was there that she adopted the name Sister Mary Teresa after Santa Thérèse of Lisieux.


A year later, Sister Mary Teresa moved to Darjeeling, India, a time of novitiate; in May 1931, he made his First Profession of Vows. After that, she was sent to Calcutta, where she was assigned to teach at St Mary's High School for Girls, a school run by Loreto Sisters and dedicated to teaching girls from the poorest Bengali families in the city. Sister Teresa learned to speak Bengali and Hindi fluently as she taught geography and history and devoted herself to reducing girls' poverty through education.


On May 24, 1937, he embarked on His Last Work of Promises in a life of poverty, purity and obedience. As was Loreto's Nazarene tradition, she took the title "Mother" when making her last vows and thus became known as Mother Teresa. Mother Teresa continued her teaching at Saint Mary's, and in 1944, she became the school's principal. Through his grace, generosity and unwavering commitment to the education of his disciples, he tried to lead them to a life of devotion to Christ. "Give me the strength to be the light of their lives, so that I may finally lead them to you," he wrote in prayer.


Drive Inside the Fence '

On September 10, 1946, Mother Teresa heard a second call, a "telephone call" that would change her life forever. He had boarded a train from Calcutta to the Himalayan hills fleeing when he said that Christ spoke to him and told him to stop teaching and to work in the Calcutta slums to help the very poor and most sick people in the city.


As Mother Teresa took the oath of allegiance, she could not leave her palace without official permission. After about a year and a half of recruitment, in January 1948 he finally received permission to make this new vocation. In August, donating a blue and white sari to wear in public for the rest of her life, she left the Loreto palace and wandered into town. After six months of basic medical training, he traveled for the first time to the Calcutta informal settlement without the aid of "unwanted, unwanted, neglected."


Missionaries of Charity

Mama Teresa quickly translated her call for concrete actions to help the city's poor. He started an open school and established a home for the poor in a dilapidated building and convinced the city government to donate his work. In October 1950, he gained the official recognition of a new congregation, the Missionaries of Charity, founded by only a few members - most of whom were teachers or students of St.


As the congregations of her congregation grew and donations came in from India and around the world, the scale of Mother Teresa's relief efforts greatly increased. During the 1950s and 1960s, he established a leper colony, an orphanage, a nursing home, a family clinic and a network of health clinics.


In 1971, Mother Teresa traveled to New York City to open her first American gift house, and in the summer of 1982, she traveled privately to Beirut, Lebanon, where she crossed between Christian East Beirut and Muslim West Beirut to help children of both religions. In 1985, Mother Teresa returned to New York and spoke at the 40th anniversary of the United Nations General Assembly. While there, he also opened the Gift of Love, a home for those living with HIV / AIDS.


Awards and tribute to Mama Teresa

In February 1965, Pope Paul VI awarded the Decree of Praise to the Missionaries of Charity, which inspired Mother Teresa to begin worldwide expansion. At the time of her death in 1997, Charity's missionaries numbered more than 4,000 - more than a thousand volunteer volunteers - and 610 foundations in 123 countries around the world.


The Decision of Praise was just the beginning, as Mother Teresa received various awards for her tireless and practical help. He was awarded the Jewel of India, the highest honor bestowed on Indian citizens, and the now-defunct Soviet Union Gold Medal of Peace. In 1979, Mother Teresa was awarded the Nobel Peace Prize for her work in "bringing relief to the poor."


Criticism of Mother Teresa

Without this widespread praise, Mother Teresa's life and work did not go unnoticed. In particular, he criticized his vocal acceptance of some of the most controversial teachings of the Catholic Church, such as contraception and abortion. "I feel like the biggest obstacle to peace today is abortion," Mama Teresa said in her 1979 Nobel speech.


In 1995, he publicly called for a "no" vote in the Irish referendum to end the country's constitutional ban on divorce and remarriage. The strongest criticism of Mother Teresa can be found in Christopher Hitchens' book The Missionary Position: Mother Teresa in Theory and Practice, in which Hitchens claimed that Mother Teresa promoted poverty in her own right and gave a reason for the preservation of institutions and beliefs.