Why i am an atheist and other works
Material type:
- 9789387022812
- 954.035092 SIN
Item type | Current library | Call number | Status | Date due | Barcode | Item holds |
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Gandhi Smriti Library | 954.035092 SIN (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Checked out to Bhawana Abhay Porwal (Dr.) (17061970BHAW) | 2025-03-03 | 164299 |
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954.035092 RER Re-reading Hind swaraj: modernity and subalterns/ edited by Ghanshyam Shah | 954.035092 SHO New Icon: Savarkar and the Facts | 954.035092 SHO New Icon: Savarkar and the Facts | 954.035092 SIN Why i am an atheist and other works | 954.035092 SPE Speaking of Gandhi's death/ edited by Tridip Suhrud and Peter Ronald Desouza | 954.035092 SPE 2nd ed. India remembered | 954.035092 TOG Together they fought: Gandhi-Nejru correspondence 1921-1948/ edited by Urna'yengar and Lalitha Zackariah |
Why I am an Atheist and Other WorksBhagat Singh is a name that became synonymous with revolution in India’s struggle for independence. This young boy brought about a change in the way people thought about freedom. He was well read and fought extensively for rights – his own, his comrades’ and his countrymen’s. A discussion with a friend soon turned into a matter of self-assessment for Bhagat Singh, leading to a discourse on why he chose to be an atheist. Even in the face of death at a very young age, his uncanny observation leads to his putting forth some pertinent questions. On another occasion, he was disappointed with his father’s plea in Court for his innocence and chose to write a letter to him. This book is a collection of eighteen of his valued writings from within the walls of prison and outside it, which show us the resolve in his words, and the bravery in his acts subsequently.An Indian Spy in PakistanKhushwant Singh wrote in the preface to the hardbound edition published in 1990 of this true account of Mohanlal Bhaskar’s mission to find out about Pakistan’s nuclear plans: ‘He was betrayed by one of his colleagues, presumbly a double agent, and had to face the music on his own. The interrogation, which was done by the army and police, included torture of the worst kind imaginable. Many of his comrades went insane or ended their own lives. Large portions of his stories describe the methods used in gory and spine-chilling detail but there were also lighter moments with dacoits, prostitutes, pimps and dope smugglers in the same jails....’ He witnessed history unfolding from Mianwali jail: ‘... when Sheikh Mujibur Rehman was brought there, and had his grave dug and then refilled when Bhutto released him to return in truimph to Bangladesh. From his cell he watched Indian bombers and fighters knock out Pakistan’s airforce from the skies
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