
Hamburg to host India Week 2025 with 70+ events, celebrating bilateral partnership
According to the release posted on Tuesday, the celebrations will feature over 70 events across business, culture, society, and knowledge, with the theme of 'Positioning Partnerships.'
The event, set to take place between June 23 and June 29, promises to deepen the ties between India and Germany through dialogue, discovery, and cultural celebration.
The week-long event will officially commence with a high-level Senate Reception at the historic Hamburg City Hall on June 23, featuring keynote addresses by the Ambassador of India to Germany, Ajit Gupte and the German Ambassador to India, Philipp Ackermann.
As per the release, acclaimed Indian actress Shabana Azmi will also deliver a keynote speech, setting the stage for a series of engagements reflecting the bilateral relationship's richness and diversity.
India Week Hamburg 2025 is structured around four key pillars--Business, Culture, Society, and Knowledge-- each designed to foster collaboration and innovation, with a strong focus on economic partnership, skilled migration, green innovation, and cultural collaboration, the release added.
The key highlight of the event includes the Hamburg India Business Day on June 24, co-hosted by the Indo-German Chamber of Commerce and Hamburg business leaders, focusing on innovation and logistics.
A German-Indian Innovation Night on the same day will spotlight AI, tech startups, and cross-border collaboration.
The Curry and Culture - India Food Fest on June 29, a public celebration of Indian cuisine, music, and dance, alongside exhibits by leading Indian and German artists.
In addition, there will be strategic communication sessions, workshops on Ayurveda, and exhibits by leading German and Indian artists.
The programme will also feature discussions on legal reform, sustainable mobility, women in green jobs, LGBTQIA+ inclusion in the labour market, and the future of German small and medium-sized enterprises (SMEs) in collaboration with India.
India Week Hamburg is a series of events that has showcased the close ties between Hamburg and India since 2007. It highlights the diversity of Indian culture and explores topics from politics, business, science, and society, aiming to strengthen exchange and cooperation. (ANI)
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The Hindu
12 minutes ago
- The Hindu
50 years of Rajinikanth: Behind the ‘family-friendly' superstar's turn towards gritty narratives
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It certainly wasn't just the hits; even a prudently sourced hit-to-flop ratio tells that a five-decade-long career in films cannot be chiselled with accurate script choices alone, but an anchored approach to adapt, to have the courage to go where the winds of time take you. In fact, 'Rajinikanth' is a phenomenon Shivaji aggressively brought to life by constantly adapting to the market forces. 'Naan sonnadhayum seiven, solladhadhaiyum seiven' He may not have had any say in being cast as a villain in the initial phase of his career, but 1979's Bhuvana Oru Kelvi Kuri was one of the early markers of what followed for Rajinikanth in the next few years (and a career-defining collaboration with director SP Muthuraman). Although cast in supporting roles quite waywardly, films like Bairavi, Mullum Malarum, Priya, and Aarilirunthu Arubathu Varai featured the star in author-backed roles that brought out the performer in Rajini. 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And Bollywood welcomed him with open arms. The southern storm took over North Indian theatres with many Hindi films, some remakes of his Tamil films (John Jani Janardhan) or other Tamil films (Dosti Dushmani), some shot simultaneously in Tamil and Hindi (Jeet Hamaari), and some were straight Hindi films (Meri Adalat, Bewafai, Asli Naqli, Hum). Once again, most of these Tamil and Hindi films were action dramas. But, the more surgical manoeuvres came in the 90s, when Rajinikanth solidified his stronghold over the coveted, elusive demographic — the Tamil families. The experience of working with a myriad of filmmakers in the 80s came in handy as the superstar began tailoring the formula behind the pulpy masala fiction that filmmakers of today carry as the bible of Tamil mass cinema. Take, for instance, the move to do Veera with director Suresh Krissna. 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Mint
an hour ago
- Mint
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Indian Express
an hour ago
- Indian Express
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