Fakhruddin Ali Ahmed, Fifth President of India: A Champion of Labor Rights and National Unity
The journey of Dr Fakhruddin Ali Ahmed from a lawyer and activist to a prominent politician and eventually the fifth President of India
The journey of Dr Fakhruddin Ali Ahmed from a lawyer and activist to a prominent politician and eventually the fifth President of India
Md Umar Ashraf 23 फ़रवरी 1881 को पंजाब के जालंधर ज़िले में एक […]
निशा डागर अगर बात करे भारतीय स्वतंत्रता की क्रांति और उन क्रांतिकारियों की […]
Md Umar Ashraf 1903 में पूर्णिया के मझगांव में मुहम्मद ताहा के घर […]
Tarique Anwar Champarni आज की युवा पीढ़ी की राजनीतिक विमर्श राजीव गाँधी के […]
मुहम्मद सैफ़ुल्लाह कॉमरेड अब्दुस्सलाम का जन्म एक मध्यवर्गीय परिवार में दरभंगा जिले के […]
Shubhneet Kaushik मार्टिन लूथर किंग ने 1958 में अहिंसा और सत्याग्रह के सिद्धांत […]
विक्रम सिंह डाला जिन्हें अपनों ने ही ठुकराया प्रायः ऐसा कहा जाता है […]
हिन्दुस्तान की सरज़मीं पर बड़े बड़े उल्मा पैदा हुए, लेकिन उनका नाम दीनदारों […]
Jayant Jigyasu आरक्षण के प्रणेता, उत्तरप्रदेश के पूर्व मुख्यमंत्री (9 जून […]
3 नवम्बर 1933 को कर्नाटक के चित्रादुर्गा में जन्मे करीम जाफ़र शरीफ़ 21 […]
आज लगभग 7 हज़ार ब्रांच, करीब 10 हज़ार एटीएम और 70 हज़ार […]
Abdul Gafoor, who worked for the harmony between Hindus and Muslims, which […]
The abolishment of the Office of the Caliph on March 3rd, 1924 is marked as a turning point in history. To fully appreciate the significance of this anniversary, we must take ourselves back to Istanbul.
After independence, Maulana Abul Kalam Azad became the first education minister and implemented creative and constructive programs and schemes in the educational arena. During the Indian Freedom Struggle and even in the post-independent era, Moulana Abul Kalam Azad longed for harmony between Hindus and Muslims till he breathed his last on 22 February 1958.
When Dr. Mukhtar Ahmed Ansari became the President of the Indian National Congress in 1927 at the invitation of Mahatma Gandhi, he spent all of his wealth on the Indian National Congress activities, which left him almost bankrupt.
Allah Bux Soomro opposed and condemned the resolution for the division of India. Both the British rulers and the Muslim League leaders were angry with him because of his attitude towards independence and his staunch anti communal approach.
जंग-ए-आज़ादी मे हिन्दुस्तानीयों की कीयादत करने वाले, हिन्दुस्तान की सबसे बड़ी और ख़ुफ़िया […]
Allama Inayatullah Khan Mashriqi opposed the division of the nation. Even after independence, he conducted several service activities.
The family says that when in 1931, Pandit Jawaharlal Nehru had hoisted the Indian Tricolour on the banks of Raavi river for the first time, at the same time, Maulana Ludhianvi hoisted the same flag at Sahi Jama Masjid in Ludhiana in the presence of over 300 British policemen and was arrested.
During the Bengal famine, Sahir Ludhianvi wrote a poem which has a couplet:
In 1839, Samuel Morse, reputed as the telegraph pioneer, laid the first telegraph lines connecting Washington to Baltimore. In India, the same year, O’Shaughnessy completed 21 miles of a telegraph line wrapped around trees and vast stretches which included a river crossing of 4 miles as an experiment.
Democracy is an occidental idea. A Hindu cannot comprehend it as long as he is a Hindu. It is against his religious belief. The divisions of Varna are the basis of his religion. He cannot see without distress a Brahman or Kshtriya serving a Sudra. A Brahman may beg or even may die, yet he will never touch a dish from which a Sudra has partaken food.
Allama Iqbal Letter to Mahatma Gandhi, declining the offer of Vice-chancellorship of Jamia Millia Islamia, Aligarh, 29th November 1920.
Why do we celebrate the Republic Day of India on 26 January?
Zafaruddin Bihari: A scholar and Former Principal of Madrasa Shamsul Hoda
Syed Mohammad Moin ul Haq, a name that resonated with brilliance and intellect, emerged from the humble town of Asthawan, Nalanda district in 1881.
The photograph shows Mirza Ilahi Bakhsh, or Shahzada Muhammad Hideyat Afza, in 1862. This man was from the Royal house of Mughals who had helped the British in 1857 and played an instrumental role in the surrender of Bahadur Shah Zafar at Humayun’s Tomb. For his ‘services’, the British recognized him as the Chief Representative of the Royal Mughal Family in 1858. Mirza was also granted jagirs at Meerut and Delhi with a pension of Rupees 22,830 P.A.
The report was prepared by Reuters and shows that Indian Muslims, Hindus, and Sikhs living in Europe did not accept the partition in 1948