Ruchi Pritam 🇮🇳
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Ruchi Pritam 🇮🇳
@RuchiPritam
Author- Journey Through India’s Heritage; The Little Brown Girl; Grandeur of the Cholas; Ancient Jain Legacy of TN; Cambodia; @MirandaHouse_ @clc_du alumina

We are helping this boy reclaim his lost childhood. Everyone must know his story - that is directly linked to the controversial comment recently made by a Allahabad high court judge The boy is Vivek At the age of 10, he went missing from home. While playing with some strangers, he boarded a train with them and ended up 10-s of kilometres away from his village That group took him to a madrassa in Muzaffarnagar. Vivek was enrolled, ritually circumcised, renamed Mohd Umar, made to memorise Quran daily Eight years passed All this while, Vivek told madrassa managers the name of his village and his parents. But no effort was made to reunite him with his family When he turned 18, madrassa decided to send him to a Gulf country for labour work. When Vivek went to passport office, his fingerprint revealed his Aadhaar-linked details - his real name and his address in a village in UP’s Hardoi Passport official alerted the pradhan of a nearby Hindu village who alerted the police. Eventually, Vivek’s parents were traced and he was reunited with his family @KanoongoPriyank took cognisance of the incident, raided the madrassa and issued directions asking all government-aided madrasas in UP to disclose how many children of Hindu parents were enrolled with them As revealed yesterday, none has complied. Instead, an Allahabad High Court judge made a controversial remark on Kanoongo over this very order I contacted Vivek recently. He is now 20 He wants to resume his education He is practically illiterate and works as welding labour We - @SewaNyaya and @RashtraJyoti - are going to help Vivek return to school He will reclaim the years stolen from him. Will share details soon.




Bharat Dress Code 1. All companies operating in India must allow Bindi, Sindoor, Dhoti and other Indian dresses and traditional wearables. They are all part of Bharat's dressing norms for ages. They have been common till recently, and better suited to climate of India. In fact, a modern Dhoti or Veshti would be wonderful dress for entire world - healthier, easier to make, easy to maintain, more functional. If Arabic nations can allow or rather give preference to their traditional dresses in offices over western dresses, why not India? 2. They can enforce standardizations to make sure no one Bollywoodizes them. 3. Hijab must be banned. Be it burqa or head-scarf. Why? Because it has become part of a conversion racket to enforce Islam on non-Muslims, in India and across globe. People hostile to Hindus have been even celebrating a stupid World Hijab Day when they force Hijab on non-muslims. Workplaces must make sure they no way allow any such conversion agendas. 4. Similarly, skull-cap is for prayers. No one must be allowed to wear them in workplace. 5. Overall, Bharat is Bharat. It is neither a colony of Britain, nor a laboratory for conversions. Any decent dress or wearable that is free of colonial or conversion agendas must be encouraged. And all conversion-mindset stuff must be banned.








Duke of Devonshire's exclusive Mayfair bookshop occupied as fury grows over his decision to raise rents to Irish farmers from £500 to £5,000 His ancestors stole this land in 1753; this mad rent rise will force farmers off land that they have cultivated for hundreds of years










