
Brave BSF Jawans to be Honored on 79th Independence Day for Valor in Operation Sindhu
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| Govt to honour jawans martyr during OP Sindoor; Gallantry medals awarded to jawans for exemplary bravery in the operation. n18oc_indiaNews18 Mobile App - https://onelink.to/desc-youtube

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Ganesh Chaturthi 2025: Date, Shubh Muhurat & Religious Significance Explained
Last Updated: Ganesh Chaturthi 2025 falls on 27 August. Know the auspicious puja time, rituals, and spiritual significance of worshipping Lord Ganesha on this sacred day In Sanatan Dharma, every auspicious beginning starts with the invocation of Lord Ganesha, the remover of obstacles. It is believed that without Ganpati Bappa's blessings, no task can be completed successfully. This makes Ganesh Chaturthi a festival of profound religious and spiritual importance. Let us explore when Ganesh Chaturthi will be celebrated in 2025, the auspicious time (shubh muhurat) for worship, and its deeper significance. When Is Ganesh Chaturthi In 2025? According to Pandit Kalki Ram, a noted astrologer from Ayodhya, UP, the Chaturthi Tithi of the Bhadrapada month begins at 1:54 pm on August 26, 2025 and ends at 3:44 pm on August 27, 2025. As per the Udaya Tithi (sunrise-based calculation), Ganesh Chaturthi will be observed on 27 August 2025 (Wednesday). Auspicious Time For Ganesh Puja The most auspicious time to perform Ganesh Chaturthi Puja will be from 11:05 am to 1:29 pm on August 27. During this window, devotees can perform ritualistic worship (puja) and offer prayers to Lord Ganesha. Chaturthi Tithis during the Krishna and Shukla Pakshas, Bhadrapada Shukla Chaturthi holds a unique place in the Hindu calendar. It is believed that Lord Ganesha incarnated on this very date, which is why Ganesh Chaturthi is celebrated with grandeur across India. On Ganesh Chaturthi, devotees install clay idols of Ganpati Bappa in their homes or local pandals. Depending on regional traditions, the deity is worshipped for 5, 7, or 10 days, after which the idol is immersed in water with due reverence. To seek Lord Ganesha's blessings: According to Hindu tradition, sincere worship on this day is said to eliminate obstacles, bring peace, and help fulfil pending wishes and endeavours. Ganesh Chaturthi is not only a celebration of devotion and joy, but also a time for introspection, fresh starts, and spiritual upliftment. Whether you're performing a grand puja or offering prayers at home, the blessings of Vighnaharta will surely grace your path. view comments 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.


Time of India
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Indian Express
3 hours ago
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Sagari Chhabra's exhibition featuring invisible battles that played key role in India's freedom
Against the backdrop of India's 79th Independence Day, the quiet hall of the Art Gallery at Kamaladevi Complex, India International Centre, at New Delhi's Lodhi Gardens comes alive with voices from another time — voices that fought, bled, and sacrificed, yet remain absent from the history most of us know. The exhibition Hamaara Itihaas Archives of Freedom Fighters, on from August 9 to 23, is founded and curated by award-winning filmmaker and writer Sagari Chhabra. This exhibition features India's first and perhaps only international archive with a dedicated focus on women freedom fighters. Its purpose is as much to inspire as to educate, and to remind us that independence was won not only in the streets of India but beyond the borders, across the continents. Since 1995, Chhabra has been gathering oral testimonies, fragile letters, faded photographs, rare revolutionary publications like Bande Mataram and Talvar — by Madam Bhikaiji Cama, photographed fading faces, and pieced together the overlooked geography of India's independence movement. From the history of Mahendra Pratap's establishment of the First Provisional Government of India in Kabul in 1915, to Shyamji Krishna Varma's India House in London that provided a roof for all the nationalists to gather under — all the stories dismantle the notion that India's independence was fought on home soil alone. One of the exhibition's most striking sections centres on Netaji Subhas Chandra Bose's Indian National Army (INA) and its legendary Rani of Jhansi Regiment. Recruited largely in Malaysia (Malaya) and Singapore during World War II, these women underwent rigorous military training, shouldering rifles and marching in step with their male counterparts. Through photographs collected and captured by Chhabra, the visitors are introduced to Gowri Sen, who reportedly signed a petition in blood when the regiment was disbanded; Rasammah Navaratnam, whose mother was firmly against her decision of joining the INA, but was later persuaded by Captain Lakshmi Sahgal, who was the commander of Rani of Jhansi regiment; and Yamuki, who escaped an unwanted marriage to 'die for a cause', yet was never granted recognition or pension by free India. 'Most of these women had never had a reunion, never received a pension. Recording their experiences became my life's mission. It is a privilege, and an honour,' says Chhabra. The archive reaches far into Myanmar, where many INA veterans remain stateless to this day, denied citizenship by both India and Myanmar. Photographs by Chhabra capture the faces of Lt Perumal with his wife Mehrunnisa, standing before the remnants of an INA office in Yangon. The Gallery has many more stories — Tokyo Cadets trained for aerial warfare, one of them being Gandhinathan, who was photographed by Chhabra in Kuala Lumpur in 2004, the secret operatives in Malaysia, teenagers in the Balak Sena of Thailand, all getting trained through their youth to achieve a nation's dream of freedom. The exhibition also honours women who stitched their defiance into prison flags, who ferried messages for underground networks while raising children at home. It tells stories of Bengal's Pritilata Waddedar, who chose cyanide over capture, Gandhian activist Sushila Nayyar, who balanced her belief in non-violence with acts of resistance, and women prisoners who raised a Tricolour flag inside Lahore Women's jail in 1942. Running alongside the exhibition is the screening of Chhabra's 45-minute-long documentary Asli Azaadi, released in 1997 and daily walk-through at 5.30 pm led by the curator herself. Her storytelling bridges the gap between the dust of the past and the pulse of the present. For her, this is not just an act of remembrance but a rewriting of history from the margins. Hamaara Itihaas stands as a reminder that freedom was never a gift — it was seized, demanded, and defended by countless known and unknown heroes. Their battles, fought in jungles, jails, and faraway cities, deserve to be part of the nation's collective memory.