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PM praises Nalanda weaver for innovation

PM praises Nalanda weaver for innovation

Time of India3 days ago
Patna: Prime Minister Narendra Modi on Sunday paid tribute to revolutionary freedom fighter Khudiram Bose for his bravery, patriotism and martyrdom. He also lauded Naveen Kumar of Nalanda for modernising his family's handloom business through the use of new technology.
Speaking during his monthly 'Mann ki Baat' programme, the PM recalled the hanging of the 18-year-old freedom fighter in Muzaffarpur jail on Aug 11, 1908. "His face was full of pride. There was no trace of fear. Thousands of people had gathered outside the jail to bid a final farewell to a brave man. His sacrifice still inspires," Modi said, adding that August is also the month of revolution.
"It was dawn. Every street, intersection and movement in Muzaffarpur seemed to have stopped at that time.
There were tears in the eyes of the people, but there was fire in their hearts. People had surrounded the jail where an 18-year-old youth was paying the price for expressing his patriotism against the British. That brave, courageous youth was Khudiram Bose. At the age of just 18, he showed such courage that shook the whole country," Modi said.
Quoting contemporary newspaper reports, he said, "When Khudiram Bose moved towards the noose of hanging, there was a smile on his face."
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The PM said it was after countless such sacrifices and centuries of penance that the country finally attained independence.
He also took the opportunity to highlight the achievements of Naveen Kumar, a handloom weaver from Nepura village in Nalanda. He praised him as a role model for how traditional artisans can adopt innovation while preserving heritage.
Describing Naveen as an inspiration for others, Modi said, "His family has been associated with this craft for generations and is now taking this art forward by adopting new technology."
He added that Naveen, the secretary of the Nepura Primary Weavers' Cooperation Committee, has also ensured that his children are educated in handloom technology and they are now employed with major brands.
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IAS Medha Roopam education: How this St. Stephen's economics grad and shooting champion became NOIDA's first woman DM
IAS Medha Roopam education: How this St. Stephen's economics grad and shooting champion became NOIDA's first woman DM

Time of India

time39 minutes ago

  • Time of India

IAS Medha Roopam education: How this St. Stephen's economics grad and shooting champion became NOIDA's first woman DM

Medha Roopam becomes NOIDA's first woman District Magistrate. On a July night when Uttar Pradesh shuffled its bureaucratic deck, a historic headline broke at dawn: Medha Roopam had become NOIDA's first woman District Magistrate. For a district used to concrete, cranes, and power corridors, the news carried a different kind of weight—a glass ceiling quietly shattered by a young IAS officer who had built her life on precision, grit, and an unflinching sense of purpose. Medha Roopam: An IAS in the making Born in Agra in 1990, Medha grew up in a family where public service wasn't a career choice, but almost a genetic inheritance. Her father, Gyanesh Kumar, an IAS officer from the 1988 batch and later India's Chief Election Commissioner, embodied the quiet dignity of governance. Family gatherings were less about small talk and more about how policy decisions altered lives on the ground. Her schooling began in Naval Public School, Ernakulam, later moving to St. Thomas School, Thiruvananthapuram for higher secondary education. The south Indian ethos of rigour and discipline left its mark. But it was at St. Stephen's College, Delhi University, that her worldview sharpened. As an Economics (Honours) student, Medha dissected fiscal policies, growth paradoxes, and the chasm between planning tables and poverty lines. She cracked the UPSC Civil Services Examination in 2013, bagging an All India Rank 10 with Psychology as her optional subject—a blend of data-driven analysis and human understanding that would become her leadership style. by Taboola by Taboola Sponsored Links Sponsored Links Promoted Links Promoted Links You May Like Brain tumor has left my son feeling miserable; please help! Donate For Health Donate Now Undo Medha Roopam: The markswoman's discipline Long before the corridors of power, Medha mastered another kind of focus—the kind that comes with holding a rifle steady. She trained in the 10-metre air rifle event during her school years and rose to win three gold medals in the Kerala State Shooting Championship, representing the state in national-level tournaments. The sport taught her precision, patience, and an ability to filter out chaos—all qualities that would later serve her well in districts where governance was often a high-stakes balancing act. Medha Roopam's career: A path of precision, pressure and balance Medha Roopam's administrative journey has been less about polished boardrooms and more about rolling up sleeves in Uttar Pradesh's toughest districts. She started out in Bareilly and Meerut, learning the real grammar of governance—not from textbooks, but from chaotic field offices and public grievances that arrive faster than solutions. As District Magistrate of Hapur, she wasn't one for token announcements. Under her watch, the Ayushman Bharat scheme didn't just sit in files; more than 1.3 lakh golden cards reached real hands, and immunisation drives stopped being photo-ops and started touching nearly every household. Then came Kasganj, where nature tested bureaucracy. Floodwaters swallowed roads and cut off villages, but Roopam ditched the SUV and rode a tractor through submerged lanes, coordinating rescue and relief on the spot. In a state where disaster management often means meetings and memos, she chose mud and knee-deep water. Later, as Additional CEO of Greater NOIDA Authority, she swapped flood zones for land deals and investor impatience. Jewar Airport and Film City projects brought their own storms—land disputes, community pushback, and deadlines that didn't care about bureaucracy's pace. Roopam learned to walk the tightrope between ambition and ground reality, keeping projects moving without letting promises sink in red tape. A new chapter in NOIDA Now, as NOIDA's first woman DM, Medha steps into a district where ambition runs faster than traffic, expectations are high, and every decision is under a magnifying glass. Yet, her journey—from economics classrooms to rifle podiums to disaster-hit villages—suggests a style of leadership that is grounded, people-focused, and unafraid to act when it matters most. For NOIDA, this is not just history being made—it's a chance to watch how a scholar, shooter, and civil servant might redraw the boundaries of governance in one of India's most restless cities. TOI Education is on WhatsApp now. Follow us here . Ready to navigate global policies? Secure your overseas future. Get expert guidance now!

PM Modi Reignites India's Civilisational Sense Through Chola Legacy
PM Modi Reignites India's Civilisational Sense Through Chola Legacy

News18

timean hour ago

  • News18

PM Modi Reignites India's Civilisational Sense Through Chola Legacy

PM Modi spoke of the Chola empire as being the 'cradle of democracy' Prime Minister Narendra Modi's tribute to the civilisational legacy of the Cholas was a significant and a profoundly symbolic moment for India as a whole. It concretised India's civilisational aspirations to emerge as a great and decisive power in the comity of nations. That aspiration is legitimate for any nation or people which have existed, on a civilisational scale and proportion in the past. The mighty Chola Temple of Gangaikonda Cholapuram has stood for a thousand years signifying that aspiration. It was an aspiration that led India, in the Chola era, to become master of the oceans and to disseminate her philosophy, thought, culture and coveted products across the Far East. Diplomat-historian KM Pannikar, in his analysis of the 'Determining Periods of Indian History', argues that there 'are some periods which shape the course of the future more than others, when events of far-reaching importance are crowded together so that the centuries that follow seem to be working out the ideas generated at that period…Also, it may happen that discoveries, achievements or decisions taken at such a crucial period mark so definite a change as to give a new character to the ages that follow. These are the determining ages of the history of a country, a region or a civilisation". The Chola era was certainly a 'determining period" in the flow and evolution of Indian civilisation. The apogee then achieved had a far-reaching and multifaceted impact. It was an impact that was not confined to India but was spread across a vast region covering large parts of Southeast Asia and the Far East. The Chola Empire's spread and influence contributed to a unique synthesis and blending which enabled the evolution of a rich cultural and religious diffusion across Southeast Asia in which Hindu deities such as Shiva and Vishnu were central and defining. One is reminded of the words of that profound scholar of India's civilisational past, D Devahuti, who argued that the spread of Indian culture happened through a 'continuous flow of forceful ideas, and institutions". The Chola era ensured a continuous flow of ideas and of institutions that had a lasting impact, visible even today. As one heard PM Modi speak, one was reminded of the words of Gurudev Rabindranath Tagore, spoken a hundred years ago, 'Do you know your own mind? Your own culture? What is best and most permanent in your own history? You must know at least that, if you are to save yourselves from the greatest of insults, the insult of obscurity, of rejection. Bring out your light and add it to this great festival of lamps of world culture." While speaking on the greatness of the Chola legacy, PM Modi was, as if asking us similar questions, asking us to rediscover these defining epochs that shaped our civilisational consciousness of the past. For decades after independence, the 'best and most permanent" in our history was ignored, omitted and suppressed. Eras recalling which would generate a collective national pride and self-esteem were relegated to the margins or dismissed as over-readings and false projections. Take the case of those legions of Indian scholars, in pre-independent India, who painstakingly traced sources and tracked new findings to establish the impressions of civilisational India left behind in lands that lay beyond India. However, in a free India these scholars, historians and thinkers, each formidable through their own achievements, were forgotten. The saving of ourselves from a history of rejection and insult that colonisation brought in its wake, the talking back that could be done, standing on legacies such as the Cholas was not done. The Chola legacy could certainly reinstate that civilisational sense and consciousness and yet, successive governments, especially in Tamil Nadu, ignored its symbolism and its pan-India appeal. It is an appeal that can also move the vast Indian diaspora across the same region that came under the Chola spell in the past. The Bay of Bengal was referred to as the 'Chola Lake' – Chola Samudram, because of the Chola control of sea routes and trade. The Chola empire was truly civilisational in nature. Its expanse, its reach, its cultural spread and trade outposts turned it into a formidable power and presence across India and vast swathes of Southeast Asia. The Cholas also played a significant role in the spread of civilisational India's cultural footprints, leaving India's cultural and religious expressions and traces all across this region. While addressing the Adi Thiruvathirai Festival at Gangaikonda Cholapuram, PM Modi made several significant remarks about the essence and the foundational ideals of the Chola empire. These significance from the past must drive our present national quest for the rise of a civilisational India. The Chola age was indeed a golden era of Indian history. PM Modi spoke of the Chola empire as being the 'cradle of democracy". He was alluding to the unique Chola era Utthiramerur inscriptions, in Kanchipuram, which elucidated the democratic rights and duties of the people, of the elector and of the elected, a thousand years ago, making it the first such a democratic document. In many ways Rajendra Chola can be considered to be the first global Indian monarch. Military, naval and cultural strength defined the reigns of Rajaraja and Rajendra Chola. In his classic 'Hindu Colonies of the Far East', RC Majumdar observes how Rajendra Chola controlled ports along the entire East Coast of India, and of how the 'mastery over the ports of Kalinga and Bengal gave the Chola king well equipped ships and sailors" which could ply across oceans and establish Chola presence and outposts. The Chola empire's control, under Rajendra Chola, of 'almost the whole volume of maritime trade between western and eastern Asia" and its control of regions across Sumatra, Malay peninsula, and Kedah, known in ancient Tamil lore as Kadaram – earning him the sobriquet of 'Kadaram Konda" – one who has won Kadaram, remains a significant and historic record of Chola naval prowess. While listening to PM Modi's inspiring address on the essence, the richness and the enduring grandeur of the Chola legacy, when he spoke of the 'Chola heritage, deeply rooted in unwavering devotion to Lord Shiva" as having become 'immortal," one could not but help think that had it not been for the Chola impact, civilisational India's presiding deities Shiva and Vishnu would not perhaps have become integral to the civilisations of Southeast Asia. Several leading scholars have attested to the spread of the cultural ideals of civilisational India through the medium of Shiva and Vishnu. Raghuvira, a leading scholar-philosopher of civilisational India observes that 'Visnu and Siva have a long history, both in India and outside India" and of how 'they have inspired mighty monuments in brick and stone, in bronze and ivory and in the fashioning of hearts and actions of men". In Kedah – Kadaram, for instance, KA Nilakanta Sastri, writes of the traces of a Shiva temple whose architecture and style represented the transition from Shiva temples found in South India to those which eventually evolved in Java. PM Modi's reiteration of the centrality of Shiva worship in the Chola era, brought these links to mind. The closing years of Rajendra Chola's reign, Sastri points out, 'formed the most splendid period" of the Cholas, 'the extent of the empire was at its widest and its military and naval prestige stood at its highest." Intense worshippers of Shiva, the Cholas were also patrons of Buddhism. RC Majumdar records, from Chola inscriptions, that in or around the 21st year of Rajaraja Chola's reign, at the start of the 11th century, king of the Sailendra empire, around present-day Sumatra, Chudamanivarman, 'commenced the construction of a Buddhist Vihara at Nagapattana, modern Negapatam" [Nagapattinam], when a village was granted by the Chola king for its upkeep." King Chudamanivarman, 'died shortly after, and the Vihara was completed by his son and successor, Sri-Maravijayottungavarman." The symbolism of a mighty Indian monarch, an ardent Shiva worshipper, granting villages for the construction and upkeep of a 'Buddhist sanctuary, erected in India by a Sailendra king", was significant. The deepest symbolism was when PM Modi brought the sacred water of Ganga from the north and offered it at Gangaikonda Cholapuram. It was a reiteration of the fundamental and essential unity of India, the civilisational state. The same act in the past, of Rajendra Chola's expedition to the north, to the banks of Ganga in Bengal, and the march back to his capital, of his erecting the 'liquid pillar of victory" – 'Jalamayam Jalasthambham" in the 'form of the tank of Colaganga" was an unprecedented moment in the history of civilisational India. PM Modi's reiteration of that civilisational act from the past, was a reiteration of the fundamental unity of India – cultural and spiritual, which remains undiluted and unbroken. For any nation aspiring to recover its civilisational status and self, such moments are assertively reinvigorating. top videos View all Of the Chola era, its most famous chronicler Nilakanta Sastri writes, that it was the 'most creative period" in the history of South India, during which 'in local government, in art, in religion and letters, the Tamil country reached heights of excellence never reached again in succeeding ages". The height achieved in maritime activity and foreign trade, was also unprecedented. Narendra Modi at Gangaikonda Cholapuram, was redirecting our collective consciousness towards that past, with the intent of letting its memory and sense propel our future quest towards a comprehensive national and civilisational resurgence. The author is chairman, Dr Syama Prasad Mookerjee Research Foundation, and a member of the National Executive Committee, BJP. The views expressed are personal and solely those of the author. They do not necessarily reflect News18's views. view comments Location : New Delhi, India, India First Published: July 30, 2025, 14:55 IST News opinion Opinion | PM Modi Reignites India's Civilisational Sense Through Chola Legacy Disclaimer: Comments reflect users' views, not News18's. Please keep discussions respectful and constructive. Abusive, defamatory, or illegal comments will be removed. News18 may disable any comment at its discretion. By posting, you agree to our Terms of Use and Privacy Policy.

PM Modi not able to say 'Trump is lying' as U.S. President will lay bare truth: Rahul Gandhi
PM Modi not able to say 'Trump is lying' as U.S. President will lay bare truth: Rahul Gandhi

The Hindu

timean hour ago

  • The Hindu

PM Modi not able to say 'Trump is lying' as U.S. President will lay bare truth: Rahul Gandhi

Congress leader Rahul Gandhi on Wednesday (July 30, 2025) said Prime Minister Narendra Modi cannot state that U.S. President Donald Trump is lying about his role in bringing about a ceasefire between India and Pakistan, as if he does so, the American leader will lay bare the truth. Follow the Parliament Monsoon session Day 8 LIVE updates Congress general secretary Priyanka Gandhi Vadra said Prime Minister Modi should state clearly in Parliament that the U.S. President is lying. The remarks by the Gandhi siblings came after Mr. Trump repeated his claim about playing a role in bringing about a ceasefire between India and Pakistan. Asked about Mr. Trump's latest remarks repeating his claims and that India is preparing to face higher U.S. tariffs between 20 and 25%, Mr. Gandhi said, "It is obvious, the Prime Minister has not said that Trump is lying. It is obvious what has happened. Everyone knows, he is not able to say it. That is the reality." "If the Prime Minister says it, then he (Trump) will say openly and will lay bear the truth, so that is why the PM is not able to say anything," the Leader of Opposition in the Lok Sabha said. Mr. Gandhi said Mr. Trump is making the remarks to put pressure on the Indian government for the trade deal. "Now, you see what kind of trade deal happens," he told reporters in the Parliament House complex. Asked about Mr. Trump repeating his claims, Priyanka Gandhi said, "If you hear the words used by the prime minister and the external affairs minister carefully, they are vague. They should say it directly. Rahul ji said yesterday also, he (Modi) should say that the US president is lying. He should say it in Parliament." Earlier, Congress president Mallikarjun Kharge said the PM doesn't have the guts to tell Mr. Trump that he is lying and that "daal mein kuch kala hai (there is something fishy)". "Our policy has been that we have never accepted any sort of mediation by a third party in negotiations, and it is unacceptable to us even today. Why did they agree? What were the reasons? They should tell the country," Mr. Kharge told reporters in the Parliament House complex. "He (Modi) did not even take Trump's name even once in his two-hour speech. He should have condemned Trump's remarks and said that he is trying to distort the image of the country," Mr. Kharge said. In a no-holds-barred attack in the Lok Sabha on Tuesday, Leader of Opposition in Lok Sabha Rahul Gandhi had dared Prime Minister Modi to categorically rebut US President Trump's India-Pakistan ceasefire claims. "If Modi ji has even 50 per cent of the courage that Indira Gandhi had, then clearly he must say in Parliament -- Donald Trump is lying," he had said. Mr. Modi, who spoke after Mr. Gandhi, affirmed that no leader of any country asked India to stop Operation Sindoor but lamented that while the nation got support from the entire world, the Congress and its allies could not stand behind the valour of the nation's soldiers. Speaking with reporters after the debate ended, Mr. Gandhi said, "Narendra Modi did not clearly say that Trump is lying. Trump has said 29 times that he brought about a ceasefire, but Narendra Modi did not respond to it." Since May 10, when Mr. Trump announced on social media that India and Pakistan had agreed to a full and immediate ceasefire after a long night of talks mediated by Washington, he has repeated his claim on several occasions that he helped settle the tensions between India and Pakistan. However, India has been consistently maintaining that the understanding on cessation of hostilities with Pakistan was reached following direct talks between the Directors General of Military Operations (DGMOs) of the two militaries. In a nearly 35-minute phone call with Mr. Trump last month, PM Modi had firmly stated that India does not and will "never accept" mediation and that the discussions between Indian and Pakistani militaries on cessation of military actions were initiated at Islamabad's request. India launched Operation Sindoor on May 7, targeting terror infrastructure in Pakistan and Pakistan-occupied Kashmir in retaliation for the Pahalgam attack that killed 26 civilians. India and Pakistan reached an understanding on May 10 to end the conflict after four days of intense cross-border drone and missile strikes.

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