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King Charles leads minute's silence for Ahmedabad plane crash victims

King Charles leads minute's silence for Ahmedabad plane crash victims

Britain's King Charles III on Saturday led a minute's silence in memory of the Ahmedabad-London Air India plane crash victims after making last-minute amendments to his annual Trooping the Colour birthday parade, with black armbands commemorating the victims.
Buckingham Palace said the 76-year-old monarch wanted the alterations "as a mark of respect for the lives lost, the families in mourning and all the communities affected by this awful tragedy".
It saw all members of the royal family in uniform sporting black armbands as a mark of respect to the 241 passengers and crew who lost their lives in Thursday's London-bound plane crash in Ahmedabad.
Following the Air India incident this week, His Majesty has requested that members of the Royal Family in uniform at Trooping the Colour should wear black armbands, as will mounted Officers in the Procession and all liveried Mews staff, Buckingham Palace said in a statement.
The parade will also incorporate a minute's silence, to be observed after Their Majesties [King Charles and Queen Camilla] have exited the carriage and joined The Princess of Wales [Kate Middleton] on the dais, following the inspection of the parade," the statement said.
" The silence will be signalled by the sounding of a Last Post and Reveille. This will be as a mark of respect for all the lives lost, the families in mourning and the communities affected by the tragedy, it added.
In an earlier statement, King Charles had said he and Queen Camilla were desperately shocked by the terrible events in Ahmedabad.
"Our special prayers and deepest possible sympathy are with the families and friends of all those affected by this appallingly tragic incident across so many nations, as they await news of their loved ones, a Buckingham Palace statement noted in the wake of the tragedy.
"I would like to pay a particular tribute to the heroic efforts of the emergency services and all those providing help and support at this most heartbreaking and traumatic time," the statement added.
The amended Trooping the Colour followed the United Kingdom's flags being flown at half-mast on Friday on all royal residences and government buildings as a mark of respect.
The annual royal birthday parade includes an inspection of troops and parade, culminating traditionally in a Red Arrows Royal Air Force (RAF) flypast over Buckingham Palace watched over from the balcony by senior royals. King Charles III's birthday is on November 14, but traditionally the British monarch's public celebrations are held in mid-June during warmer weather.
The ceremony dates back to the 18th century and sees regimental colours being displayed in front of the monarch, with the colours of the Coldstream Guards to be presented at this year's parade.
The honour of Trooping their Colour rotates through the five Regiments of Foot Guards, and this year it was the Number 7 Company Coldstream Guards that took centre-stage. The King's son and heir, Prince William the Prince of Wales, was in uniform as Colonel of the Welsh Guards.
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One City. Five Iconic Spots. Endless Emotions—Welcome to Amritsar!
One City. Five Iconic Spots. Endless Emotions—Welcome to Amritsar!

Time of India

time4 hours ago

  • Time of India

One City. Five Iconic Spots. Endless Emotions—Welcome to Amritsar!

Amritsar literally means 'pool of nectar'. This place is the perfect blend of religious heritage, history, and is a cultural epicenter of Punjab as well. This is considered a holy spot as the holy shrine 'Golden Temple' of Sikhism is located here, but one cannot mistake this place as just a holy place—it is much more than that. Amritsar also holds deep historical significance as it is a mark of all that the country endured to be free today, and the best part of Amritsar is its Punjabi culture, rich in energy and positivity. Let's deep dive into what makes 'Amritsar' a much-loved spot: Golden Temple (Sri Harmandir Sahib) Topping the charts is definitely the holy shrine of Amritsar. The Golden Temple was founded in the 16th century by Guru Arjan Dev and was completed by Maharaja Ranjit Singh in 1809. This temple is famous worldwide for its breathtaking beauty—it has gold-plated domes and is surrounded by the Amrit Sarovar, creating a great reflection of the temple in the water. This holy temple also distributes langar (a free meal) to almost 50,000 people a day, and people can also join in the preparation of the langar, also known as Sewa. One can also visit the Central Sikh Museum, which houses rare manuscripts and Sikh heritage artefacts and is also free to enter. The best part is that this temple is open 24/7, so one can visit this temple anytime of the day. Jallianwala Bagh This place would send chills down your body! A dark day in history—on April 13th, 1919, Brigadier-General Dyer ordered his troops to open fire on an unarmed assembly of people. According to British reports, it is said that around 379 people were killed, but Indian reports say that almost 1,500 people were killed, with 120 bodies retrieved from the well located there. This place was preserved by the government and now is known as 'Jallianwala Bagh', where one can see red brick walls with bullet marks, a Martyr's Well which is enclosed, and the Flame of Liberty which honors the dead. In the gallery present here, one can look at paintings and letters of this time and also see a nightly light and sound show narrated from Udham Singh's perspective. One can visit this place from 6:30 am to 7:30 pm. Partition Museum This museum was inaugurated on 25th August 2017 and was the world's first 'people's museum', which was built to preserve the stories, letters, and objects donated by survivors of the Partition. This museum comprises items from pre-partition, 1947 violence, and post-partition rehabilitation, and one can also listen to the recorded oral histories as well as interactive media stations. This museum gives us a glimpse into what our ancestors went through and the instability they lived in. One can visit this museum from Tuesday to Sunday (10 am to 6 pm). Gobindgarh Fort This fort is located in the heart of Amritsar and was originally built in 1760 by the Bhangi Misl (sovereign states of the Sikh confederacy) and was renamed by Ranjit Singh in the early 19th century. This iconic fort also has a living museum and, through exhibits and shows, tells thousands of stories and legends about Punjab. You can see shows like Sher‑e‑Punjab, which features the story of Maharaja Ranjit Singh, the Coin and Weapon Museum, the Pagri Museum, and the craft bazaar (Phulkari, juttis). One can also go on rides like the camel cart, Segway, children's skill games, and delve into the delicious Punjabi food at the cafeteria. This place was once the sanctuary of the Kohinoor and provides a home to the impressive collection of old and rare currencies and a replica of the famed jewel (The Kohi-Noor) here. This fort is open daily, but the entry is chargeable. Wagah Border Ceremony The Wagah Border is located on the Grand Trunk Road. This place hosts the energetic 45-minute ceremony celebrating the daily flag lowering on the border. Here, you can witness the choreographed drills, patriotic songs, and crowd chants, which will definitely give you a sense of pride for your country—that it still stands with its head held high even after all it went through. This border holds great importance as it marks the division of the Punjab region during the Partition of India in 1947. This border is also known as the Attari-Wagah Border, with Attari being the Indian side of the border. The border opens here at 10 AM for seating; the ceremony begins 30-40 minutes before the sunset. Get the latest lifestyle updates on Times of India, along with Friendship Day wishes , messages and quotes !

Holidays in August 2025: Major festivals and celebrations this month; Raksha Bandhan, Janmashtami, Navroz and more
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Holidays in August 2025: Major festivals and celebrations this month; Raksha Bandhan, Janmashtami, Navroz and more

Some of the major Indian festivals and celebrations will be held in August 2025. Let's take a look at some of them: Nag Panchami is a Hindu festival during the monsoon. People worship snakes, mainly cobras, as divine protectors. Devotees offer milk, sweets, and prayers to snake idols or live snakes. The festival is linked to stories from the Mahabharata and Shree Krishna. Jhulan Purnima is a joyful festival celebrating the love of Krishna and Radha. It is marked by swinging rituals that symbolise the cycle of time. It is observed mainly in West Bengal and Odisha. Devotees decorate swings, sing bhajans and join in prayers. The festival promotes unity, devotion and cultural bonding. Raksha Bandhan celebrates the bond between brothers and sisters. On this day, sisters tie a rakhi on their brothers' wrists, praying for their wellbeing. In return, brothers give gifts and promise lifelong support. The festival now includes cousins, friends and even community helpers. In 1905, during Bengal's partition, Rabindranath Tagore used Raksha Bandhan to promote Hindu-Muslim brotherhood against the British divide-and-rule policy. Independence Day marks India's freedom from British rule in 1947. It reminds us of the sacrifices made by freedom fighters and the birth of India as a free, democratic nation. The day unites people of all backgrounds. Flag hoisting, cultural events and patriotic songs inspire responsibility towards the nation. Navroz, the Parsi New Year, means 'new day' and marks a fresh start for the Parsi community in India. It stands for renewal, hope and spiritual reflection. Families wear new clothes, pray at fire temples and enjoy traditional food together. People visit relatives, exchange sweets, give to charity and honour their rich Zoroastrian culture. Krishna Janmashtami celebrates the birth of Shree Krishna, believed to be the eighth form of Vishnu. Devotees fast, sing bhajans and pray through the night. At midnight, baby Krishna's idol is placed in a cradle. The festival marks the victory of good over evil. It includes cultural events like Dahi Handi and Rasa Lila. Ganesh Chaturthi is a 10-day Hindu festival celebrating Shree Ganesha's birth. He is known as the remover of obstacles and god of wisdom, success and new beginnings. People worship Ganesha with sweets like modak, songs, prayers and decorated idols. The festival ends with idol immersion. It brings all Indian communities together and symbolises cultural unity. Onam is Kerala's biggest harvest festival, starting on August 26 this year and ending on September 5. It marks the return of King Mahabali, a kind ruler from mythology. People believe his rule brought peace and equality. Onam also welcomes the harvest season with joy. The festival includes boat races, floral art, folk dances and big feasts. August 2025 will see many regional and cultural festivals as well. Friendship Day (August 3) is popular among youth and students. Tendong Lho Rum Faat (August 8) in Sikkim honours a hill that saved lives. Manipur observes Patriots Day (August 13) for its freedom fighters. Hartalika Teej (August 26) is when women pray for marital happiness. It is especially celebrated in states like Rajasthan, Madhya Pradesh, Chhattisgarh and Sikkim. National Sports Day (August 29) celebrates Dhyan Chand's birthday. Schools generally host sporting activities and competitions.

What Bhagat Singh's ‘Why I Am an Atheist' taught me about my own belief
What Bhagat Singh's ‘Why I Am an Atheist' taught me about my own belief

Indian Express

time13 hours ago

  • Indian Express

What Bhagat Singh's ‘Why I Am an Atheist' taught me about my own belief

'It is cowardly to seek shelter in the idea of God.' The words struck me, not just for their audacity, but because they were written by Bhagat Singh, the revolutionary I had long revered as a fearless martyr. They appear in Why I Am an Atheist, his now-iconic essay, penned from prison in the final months of his life. To me, Bhagat Singh had always been a nationalist hero, not someone who would so boldly challenge faith. At first glance, the essay felt almost abrasive, a vain, unabashed dismissal of everything religion holds sacred. I scowled at what I perceived as Bhagat Singh's complete ignorance towards faith. What I as a believer considered to be a safe haven, the 'Shaheed-e-Azam' dubbed a mental crutch. But as I read more deeply, something unexpected happened: my mind, shaped by years of belief, began to stretch in ways I had not thought possible. After reading Why I am an Atheist and his other works, there was one thing I knew for sure: Bhagat Singh was not the man we came to know through the rosy lunettes of told history. Before he knew that he was a freedom fighter, the 23-year-old revolutionary knew that he was an atheist, writing words that could make any firm believer of God look inward. The textbook version of Bhagat Singh bears little resemblance to the man he believed himself to be. History books portray him as a fiery revolutionary figure, determined to free India from British rule. They recount his acts of defiance and his ultimate sacrifice, but rarely do they pause to examine the ideas that shaped him. His convictions, his intellect, and his inner conflicts are often lost beneath the weight of nationalist iconography. The essay introduced me to the mind of a 19-year-old man who was not just driven by the sentiment of boyish rebellion amid the freedom struggle, but one who questioned power and sought logic. Bhagat Singh was not a man of fiery speeches but of precise words, he did not shout at you from the page, but spoke gently of his firm convictions until he faced death head on – without fear, without prayer, without illusion. One of the most human moments in Bhagat Singh's collected writings is a letter he wrote to his father, Kishan Singh from jail. With his fate already sealed and death only months away, Bhagat Singh responded to his father's well-intentioned plea for clemency to the British authorities not with gratitude, but with sharp disapproval. It was the kind of defiance one might expect from any principled 23-year-old, but in Bhagat Singh's case, the stakes were unimaginably high. He saw his father's final attempt to save him not as love, but as weakness. 'Treachery,' he called it, refusing to compromise his convictions, even in the face of death. 'Father, I feel as though I have been stabbed in the back. Had any other person done it, I would have considered it to be nothing short of treachery. But in your case, let me say that it has been a weakness – a weakness of the worst kind.' An outburst of this extent was something I never thought I would witness from the legendary Bhagat Singh. What books and movies portrayed was a sepia-tinted image of a great man who made the ultimate sacrifice. However, after reading this letter, I saw him as a 23-year-old man mocking his father's choice as a parent, convinced that he knows better. In his letter to his father, Bhagat Singh angrily asserted that the last-ditch attempt to save his life diminished its purpose. He said he always wanted to be completely indifferent to the trial, saying that a politician should only defend himself from a political standpoint and never think about the legalities. Reading this letter was the first time I saw Bhagat Singh as a son and as a man with emotional depth. The essay, penned within the walls of Lahore Central Jail beneath the shadow of his looming execution, was his response to his fellow comrades in arms, including Batukeshwar Dutt, who questioned his lack of faith and thought he became an atheist because of his vanity. In his essay, Bhagat Singh explains that his atheism did not stem from vanity or superiority, but from realism, critical thinking, and lack of fear. Reading his essay, I came to the realisation that Bhagat Singh never viewed God as an evil idea, he was only against unconditional devotion. Bhagat Singh neither feared the consequences of his actions, nor did he fear death. He wrote that in his final days, after pondering for days, he chose not to pray. Most of faith is driven by the fear of what comes next, he explained, saying that once the noose is around his neck, he knows that his existence and his soul will cease to be. He said that as opposed to popular belief, he did not become an atheist after he gained recognition as a revolutionary. Despite being raised by an Arya Samaji grandfather and a Sikh father, Bhagat Singh questioned faith since he was a young boy when he was unaware of the depth of the atrocities happening under British rule. He looks back at difficult times in his life where he had the option to fall back on faith to spend his days in peace, but chose not to. This was not because of his ego but because he did not want to be trapped in a false narrative of fear and the promise of Divine rescue. For him, belief in God was not always about devotion, it was often about fear. Fear of the meaningless, fear of suffering and fear of death. He saw that people chose faith as a comfort, and the outward display of religion was only to make one feel centred in a chaotic world, filled with the unknown. One thing that resonated the most with me was that he did not challenge belief itself, but the involuntary reflex to believe without thinking. His atheism was not driven by anger, but by a refusal to be comforted by illusions. As a believer, Bhagat Singh's words were deeply uncomfortable to read. My mind understood the logic but was constantly in a frenzy to counter his words, to no avail. His essay made me ask myself – how much of my own faith is authentic, unaffected by fear or habit? Though somewhat offended at first, Bhagat Singh's atheism did not shake my belief, only illuminated it. His words made me realise that maybe I have always been somewhat of a sceptic. While I have never been a person who spent long hours at a temple or in a prayer, I did not spend those hours questioning the logic of faith either. For me, religion was always more about my memories than the metaphysics. My faith lives in the Diwali pujas I prepared for with my mother, the diyas I carefully placed across the house as my sister painted Lakshmi Charan near our front door, the crackle of Holika Dahan fire as we circled around it as a family. My faith was never built through theology, but through ritual, repetition and love. But now, Bhagat Singh's words made me question how much of a believer I actually was. Atheists have always been perceived as pessimists, mostly driven by rebellion, but such was not the case with Bhagat Singh. His version of atheism cuts through with precision of a scalpel. He chose to live, fight and die without Divine assurance, a clarity which is rare in most believers. Bhagat Singh's atheism did not make me feel threatened, but challenged me in the best way. He made me aware of the quiet spaces where the line between faith and fear blur. My faith found a room for thought and growth in this atheism. He made me understand that the essence of belief is not blind comfort: it is to have conviction without compromise.

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