
And I hope none of us do, not enough at least to take to the streets and create yet another crisis, to add to the long list we already have. But whether a Ram temple stood there at the site of the Babri mosque when Babur came a-visiting-that’s what I do not care about. Families who lost a loved one are still alive. Lest people misunderstand, I am not saying we forget or not care for giving justice to those who died as a result of the riots that happened post-Babri mosque demolition. I do not buy this need to address generational hurt argument because it is most frequently used to perpetrate historical wrongs, justifying today’s hatred by citing events that happened long long ago-in essence saying “No matter what you do, I will hate you cause the cause for my hatred happened in the past, even though my grand-dad was not born then. And he is not protesting.Īnd what about the wrongs taking place now, as we speak? Have we reached a stage that our present is so perfect that we need to look four hundred years back to correct something bad done then? Why worry whether Babur looted us in the middle ages when there are a gang of Commonwealth Master Gogos in Delhi, under the guise of organizing an international sporting event, pillaging the coffers of our country at this moment? No one, save A K Hangal, is around who remembers what went down. Of course there will be a section of people who will disagree: ” The wrongs of history need to be rectified, even though they may have occured hundreds of years ago.” To them I say-So Babur knocked down a Hindu temple and built a mosque over it. And, as a nation, display the maturity to move on with our lives, so that we may deal the follies of today-Trinamool Congress, Neetu Chandra and the recall of Sreesanth. In the same way, I hope that when the Babri Masjid verdict comes out, we as a nation can treat it as yet another 90s folly (I personally found the whole spectacle of grown men dressed in costumes, brandishing arrows and moving on automobiles and calling them “raths” ridiculous even then and this is the person silly enough in the early 90s to detect potential in Avinash Wadhawan after seeing him in “Balma”). Now we realize how utterly foolish all of it was. Sadak Dialogues and Songs, Vol.There was a time, in the early 90s that we believed, with a passion, that adding jhankar beats to a song was as important as adding salt to food, that Farheen (the heroine of Jaan Tere Naam) would become the next Madhuri Dixit, that Vinod Kambli would be a better batsman than Sachin Tendulkar and tie-die, spandex, acid-wash jeans would be the future of clothing. Sadak 2 Original Motion Picture Soundtrack Sadak & Beta - Bengali Original Motion Picture Soundtrack Sadagara Original Motion Picture Soundtrack - EP

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