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Punarnava

Punarnava

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About The Book

About the book - Charles' Visit to the Temple Charles was under immense stress. He wanted a divorce from Diana at any cost. He received word that Diana was ready for a divorce. He suddenly got up and went to the Swami Narayan Temple in Nitze, North London, to pay his respects. What he found there is best known to him. He applied a tilak (a mark of the forehead) to the priest and simply said, ""I liked it.""
Prejudice and Archaeology
It should be written that Shivaji and Afzal Khan were close friends. A gathering was organized at the Archaeological Congress for communal unity to sing the praises of their friendship. Shivaji thought of a prank. He wore a tiger claw on his hand to tickle Afzal Khan. A better history of communal unity could not have been written. At the gathering, the two embraced. Shivaji only reached Afzal Khan's stomach, who was well-built. Shivaji took advantage of this and began tickling Afzal Khan. Afzal Khan's laughter escalated into uproarious laughter, and he collapsed and rolled around. He suffered a heart attack and collapsed on the spot. Afzal was buried there. Therefore, this grave should be celebrated as a memorial for communal unity. Upon hearing the suggestion to write a history of communal unity at this Archaeological Congress, the Archaeological Congress fell silent. The topic of the meeting was changed.

About The Author

Born in a village farmer's family, author Chandraswar received his schooling in the village and his college education in the village. Born in Patna, the capital. He became associated with the Sangh Parivar there, and then with the JP-led Bihar movement. Prominent leaders of the movement, Ram Bahadur Rai and Govindacharya, took him by the hand and brought him to the Vidyarthi Parishad. After a few days, he became disillusioned with politics. He meditated for a year in a cave in Rishikesh. He began his journalism career with the Patna-based daily Alkatha. He held the editorial charge of Nepal Sandesh and Dainik Aaj. He became the executive editor of the Hindi Sentinel. He occasionally wrote for Dharmayug and Navbharat Times. He was the executive editor of the Ranchi-based daily Ranchi Express. He edited the Parliamentary Political kosh, Jharkhand One, and Jharkhand Two. The articles that readers are introduced to here are not new, but years old. When you read them, you will not only feel like walking through those valleys of history, but also experience events resurfacing, appearing before you as new. The old will become new and rejuvenated.

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