The greatest heist in indian history.... Our very history !!!

warrior monk

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Those who want more knowledge about our culture and the rapacious behavior of muslims and other assorted barbarians please visit www.hinduwisdom.com a nice website run by NRIs about Hinduism and its degradation well i found the website 4 years ago and have found it extremely helpful .
 

roma

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I believe you have heard of Orientalists and Anglicists debates in early 1800s. Orientalists were in favour of education in Indian languages and Anglicists in favour of English and finally Lord Macaulay's wish prevailed, his initial plan was creating a breed of self hating brown Indians through Western education but his western education did something else. But anyway, the present world dominance of English language is not because of Brits but Americans. I heard few decades back there was obsession in Europe to learn French as a second language but they have slowly shifted towards English.
everything you wrote is fine and i am only adding a different aspect to it

what i feel is that whichever the case, whether orientalists or anglicists won between teh two of them,
India would still have prevailed .
our inclination towards saraswati and not so much for sports , our motivation etc, has created á
mental frame of mind in which it wouldn't have made a difference

as for the french language , even teh french are learning english
english has won over french - hands down , in europe
 

Peter

Pratik Maitra
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Palas were the last great patron of Buddhism in India. Buddhist persecution by Hindu kings part looks rather fishy to me. I have heard similar stories about Guptas, provided the Gupta emperors themselves funded the foundation of Nalanda University. Leftist generally tries to portray Buddhism as a some social movement against Hinduism, reading about lifetime or teaching about Buddha, you will never get a glimpse of anti-Hindu thing. Even Buddhism didn't eradicated with the reign of Shunga dynasty but flourished until the invasion of Bakhtiyar Khilji.
Sen dynasty introduced rigid social norms so they could protect their own interests. They had dethroned the Pals who were quite popular and so to enforce their rule over Bengal they needed to change the way society worked here. It had more to do with their own interests rather than Hinduism.
 

Peter

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everything you wrote is fine and i am only adding a different aspect to it



as for the french language , even teh french are learning english
english has won over french - hands down , in europe
English is actually a mixture of French and german. 40/29 % of English words are of French origin.

List of English words of French origin - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia



Money (from the French 'monnaie'), bottle (from the French 'bouteille'), chair (from the French 'chaise'), table (from the French 'table'), chamber (from the French 'chambre'), air (from the French 'air'), flower (from the French 'fleur'), fork (from the French 'fourchette'), garden (from the French 'jardin'), lamp (from the French 'lampe'), farm (from the French 'ferme'), forest (from the French 'forêt'), hotel (from the French 'hôtel'), brick (from the French 'brique'), image (from the French 'image'), plate (from the French 'plateau'), story (from the French 'histoire'), odour or odor (from the French 'odeur'), stranger (from the French 'étranger'), beef (from the French 'boeuf'), vinegar (from the French 'vinaigre'), parent (from the French 'parent'), herbs (from the French 'herbes'), arm (from the French 'arme'), army (From the French 'armée'), source (from the French 'source'), grand (from the French 'grand'), joy (from the French 'joie'), fluid (from the French 'fluide'), ray (from the French 'rayon'), bicycle (from the French 'bicyclette'), tube (from the French 'tube'), car (from the French 'char'), eagle (from the French 'aigle'), lake (from the French 'lac'), mountain (from the French 'montagne'), lion (from the French 'lion'), voyage (from the French 'voyage'), lizard (from the French 'lézard'), bullet (from the French 'balle'), hero (from the French 'héro'), hazard (from the French 'hasard'), cave (from the French 'cave'), current (from the French 'courant'), carbon (from the French 'charbon'), autumn (from the French 'automne'), case (from the French 'cas'), pedestal (from the French 'piédestal'), parachute (from the French 'para-chute'), habit (from the French 'habitude'), altitude (from the French 'altitude'), attitude (from the French 'attitude'), final (from the French 'finale'), revenge (from the French 'revanche'), itinerary (from the French 'itinéraire'), orange(fruit) (from the French 'orange'), ticket (from the French 'étiquette'), barrel (from the French 'baril'), retard (from the French 'retarder'), appeasement (from the French 'apaisement'), aviation (from the French 'avion'), miracle (from the French 'miracle'), tablet (from the French 'tablette'), pincer (from the French 'pincer'), tennis (from the French 'tenir'), exercise (from the French 'exercice'), repetition (from the French 'repétition')), proposition (from the French 'proposition'), police (from the French 'police'), apartment (from the French 'appartement'), atrocity (from the French 'atrocité'), ignorant (from the French 'ignorant'), arrogant (from the French 'arrogant'), large (from the French 'large'), brave (from the French 'brave'), stupid (from the French 'stupide'), luminous (from the French 'lumineux'), to push (from the French 'pousser'), to touch (from the French 'toucher'), to cry (from the French 'crier'), to gain (from the French 'gagner'), to join (from the French 'joindre'), to pray (from the French 'prier'), to marry (from the French 'se marier'), to divorce (from the French 'se divorcer'), to return (from the French 'retourner'), to sign (from the French 'signer'), to mention (from the French 'mentionner'), to paint (from the French 'peindre'), to pave (from the French 'paver'), to launch (from the French 'lancer'), to visit (from the French 'visiter'), to reduce (from the French 'réduire'), to obtain (from the French 'obtenir'), to promise (from the French 'promettre'), to admit (from the French 'admettre'), to appear (from the French 'apparaitre'), to disappear (from the French 'disparaitre'), to vomit (from the French 'vomir'), to train (from the French 's'entrainer'), to refuse (from the French 'refuser'), to invent (from the French 'inventer'), to mock (from the French 'se moquer de'), to emerge (from the French 'émerger'), to install (from the French 'installer'), to reject (from the French 'rejetter'), to guard (from the French 'garder'), to treat (from the French 'traiter'), to secure (from the French 'securiser'), to attack (from the French 'attaquer'), to complete (from the French 'compléter'), to consider (from the French 'considérer'), to advance (from the French 'avancer'), to arrest (from the French 'arrêter'), to distract (from the French 'distraire'), to partake (from the French 'partager'), to forfeit (from the French 'forfait'), to reflect (from the French 'refléter'), to render (from the French 'rendre'), to adore (from the French 'adorer'), to engage (from the French 'engager'), to navigate (from the French 'naviguer'), to evoke (from the French 'évoquer'), to compromise (from the French 'compromettre'), to reinforce (from the French 'renforcer'), to negotiate (from the French 'négocier'), to cascade (from the French 'cascader'), to appreciate (from the French 'apprécier'), to pulvarise or to pulverize (from the French 'pulvériser'), to clarify (from the French 'clarifier'), to restore (from the French 'restaurer'), to refine (from the French 'raffiner'), to pardon (from the French 'pardonner'), to excuse (from the French 'excuser'), to adjust (from the French 'ajuster'), to glorify (from the French 'glorifier'), to (e)rase (from the French 'raser'), to enrich (from the French 's'enrichir'), to depart (from the French 'départ'), to contain (from the French 'contenir'), to maintain (from the French 'maintenir'), to envelop (from the French 'envelopper')
 
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Simple_Guy

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According to pakishaitanis, leftist historians Romila Thapar and Irfan Habib are heroes!

Sad state of medieval history? | TNS - The News on Sunday

The dawn of Jadunath Sarkar's era (1870-1958), a prominent Indian Bengali aristocrat and historian, brought a communal angle into Indian historiography which atomised the discourse of history. Jadunath's analysis of the Mughal downfall reeked of a one-dimensional and facile understanding of the medieval period of Indian history, which was to have a pervasive impact. This impact of course was palpable on the history books written by Ishwari Parshad, Tiripathi, Tara Chand and V.D. Mahajan.

Interestingly their books have, until quite recently, been prescribed for undergraduate and graduate students as mandatory texts. The umpteen pirated editions of these books were printed and circulated in Pakistan without impunity. As a parenthesis, it is pertinent here to mention that in India, with the emergence of such historians as Romilla Thapar and Irfan Habib, the influence of Jadunath Sarkar has been dispelled to a certain extent.
 

Simple_Guy

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Dated article but reveals more of this heist

'Marxist historians have never concealed their political agenda' : Guest Column - India Today

Sumit Sarkar's "The Many Worlds of Indian History" - a chapter in his Writing Social History (OUP 1997) - presents the most lucid and honest insight into how the ICHR's Soviet-style 1972 mandate to give a "proper direction" to historical research in India has been appropriated by those who are now craftily feigning victimhood.

Sarkar bluntly admitted well before the BJP was in power that it was the Congress-communist alliance forged by S. Nurul Hasan that was the original revisionists. It ensured Sir Jadunath Sarkar was out and Comrade Sumit Sarkar in.
 

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