Indian guy proposes marriage in a mall
For some strange reason (Bushmills?),I found this video incredibly funny
Weekend Mega Linkfest:Nov 22,2013
Some off beat reads for the weekend:
The Fearless Extortionists (Mediacrooks)
How I became a Fort conservationist (Open)
Will Mulayam Singh Yadav be the PM in 2014? (Tehelka)
A radioactive death (OutlookIndia)
The unstoppable boys of Punjabi Pop (Caravan)
News Laundry interviews Hartosh Bal (Newslaundry)
BR Shetty:Building a healthcare empire (Forbes)
This entire country is about to be wiped out by climate change (BusinessWeek)
Bill Marriott:Sixty years a hotelier (Economist)
10 of the best quotes ever as per Reddit users (Marketwatch)
How women change men (Atlantic)
Summer in Sikkim (Ghummakar)
On Sachin and the Bharat Ratna (GreatBong)
Movie Review:Ram Leela (VigilIdiot)
In Pictures:When Sachin batted for the last time (UnrealTimes)
Using data to hire,fire and promote (Atlantic)
Whats it like to fail (Priceonomics)
The many faces of Hindi movie Maa (Jabberwock)
Just love this Irish Single Malt-As good and if not better than most Scotches
We thought it was holy
This post is in continuation of my This is India ! series
Once while I was conducting a tour in Vasai fort and telling the group about how old the fort was, a man said he had seen older items in his village. This man was in his eighties and I thought he was simply bragging. But a few months later, I checked out his village on an impulse. He lived in a far-flung area called Kiravali village. To prove his point, he took me to the village temple, where a stone tablet was being used to break coconuts.
I, along with a team, began examining the tablet. It was about 126cm in length and 56cm in width. It was extremely old and seemed to have an image carved on it. The image was, however, faint and unclear so we began cleaning it with tamarind leaves and oil. Once we were done, we were shocked. The image carved was that of a donkey copulating with a woman. We later learnt that the tablet dates back to 1268 AD, the era of the Shilahara dynasty, which ruled a large part of Maharashtra. It was probably used as a warning sign to ward off intruders. The old man was amused to learn of it: “And all this while we thought the tablet was holy and were praying to it.”-from Open