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Messages - Sardar_Ji

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1581
Help & Suggestions / Re: how to spell?
« on: February 19, 2011, 05:51:28 PM »
Onion is just fine itself.

tu jama naayaak punjabi vich :hehe:

1582
Gup Shup / Re: all tym fav movie
« on: February 19, 2011, 05:22:14 PM »
Soch lo and Yeh zindgae sali <---- all tym fav.

1583
Jokes Majaak / Re: ghr koi nai hai..
« on: February 19, 2011, 05:10:46 PM »
Mohammed Rafi - Khilona Jaankar Tum To Mera Dil Tod Jaate Ho !!! ( Special Request By A Friend )

1584
Shayari / Re: Kal halki halki barish thi
« on: February 19, 2011, 04:46:00 PM »
halki da mama na howe ta

ghaint baiiiii....
athae agg laggiya payian  :break:

1585
Help & Suggestions / Re: how to spell?
« on: February 19, 2011, 04:30:48 PM »
sare ayi nalayak lagda  :woried:

1586
Help & Suggestions / how to spell?
« on: February 19, 2011, 04:18:39 PM »
Onion in punjabi - manu ganda dae spelling aah hon gae?


par kadae ganda matlab dirty vala ganda vee nikal ban janda.....................


jae tanu pata daso?

1587
Religion, Faith, Spirituality / AZAD PUNJAB
« on: February 19, 2011, 03:55:21 PM »
AZAD PUNJAB scheme, signifying a major shift in the kinds of political strategies to be pursued by Sikh political leadership in their efforts to enhance the political influence of their community, was a crucial turning point in the development of modern Sikh politics. With the introduction of the Montagu Chelmsford Reforms of 1919, politics became preeminently focussed on the legislature. Hindus, Sikhs, and Muslims all saw the legislative council as the principal political arena for gaining and maintaining communal advantages; and the communal allocation of seats in the council was the dominant political issue in the Punjab during the 1920`s and much of the 1930`s.Under the Reforms, Sikhs who comprised 13 per cent of the total population of the Punjab, were allocated 18 per cent of the seats; and Muslims, who comprised a majority of the population (55 per cent), 50 per cent of the seats.

The allocations satisfied no one in the province; Muslims attacked the Reforms as understating their majority; Hindus and Sikhs argued that the Reforms gave Muslims an absolute majority and left the other communities ineffectual. Disenchantment with the Reforms was particularly felt among the Sikh leadership.Although Sikh legislative council members sometimes supported pro-agriculturalist legislation initiated by the Muslim led Unionist Party, Sikh organizations and representations to various government commissions repeatedly called for greater representation in the council for the Sikh community.The Akali Dal, by mid1920`s an increasingly powerful force in the community, was particularly outspoken on the issue.

Concern for the `representational` issue in the Sikh community accelerated after the British Government, in the Communal Award of 1932, `froze` Sikh representation in the Punjab council at 19 per cent and further enhanced the Muslim majority in that legislature. Ironically, the Communal Award seemed to initiate a process which saw a decreasing emphasis on council representation as a means of community defence. Muslims, for example, saw little benefit from their majority in the Punjab. They still were a minority in India as a whole.

Sikhs simply refused to accept their consignment to permanent political subordination. Increasingly, adjustment of territorial boundaries to enhance a community`s political influence was stressed. In the 1930`s the notion of a separate territorial entity for their community began to gain ground among Muslims. In 1940, at its Lahore session, the Muslim League pushed forward a separatist territorial claim for the Indian Muslim community and demanded Pakistan as a separate sovereign State for Muslims.

Sikhs, too, began to echo this concern for territory as protection.As early as the Round Table Conference in 1931, Sikhs had raised the possibility of boundary redistribution being used as a means of resolving Punjab`s communal problem. In a memorandum to the Round Table Conference, Sikh delegate, Ujjal Singh, had stated that continued Muslim intransigence would force Sikhs to press for a territorial rearrangement of the province to consolidate the Sikh population and to create a province in which no single community would constitute a majority. Although this proposal had little initial following, the notion of territorial rearrangement acquired credibility as both the British Government and the Congress Party seemed to accept the idea in its general form.

In 1942, the proposals of the Cripps Mission granted the principle of territorial sovereignty as a means of communal protection in so far as they gave provinces the right of non-accession to the proposed Indian Federation to be created at the end of World War II. At the same time, the Congress seemed to concede the principle in a Working Committee resolution which stated that it would be unthinkable to compel "the people of any territorial unit to remain in the Indian Union against their declared and established will." The demand for a territorial rearrangement to enhance Sikh political influence was revived in 1943 by the Akali Dal in the form of the Azad Punjab scheme, which was the brainchild of Giani Kartar Singh.Like the earlier formulation, the scheme called for the detachment of Muslim majority districts from Punjab to create a new province, Azad Punjab, in which the Sikh population was maximized and in which no single community, constituted a majority.

The Akali Dal president. Master Tara Singh, said that Azad Punjab "shall comprise Ambala, Jullundur, Lahore divisions, and out of the Multan division, Lyallpur District, some portion of Montgomery and Multan districts." In this way, Sikhs, it was argued, would achieve the balance of power in the province and would gain the maximum benefit from their numbers. Territory became the key to preservation of the Sikh community.

Hindus and Muslims, Master Tara Singh pointed out, could look to their coreligionists in other provinces where they constituted majorities, but Sikhs had no such alternative and required this form of protection until something better was proposed.As radical as the Azad Punjab scheme was and despite its popularity in the Sikh community, it was quickly shuttled aside by events. As the possibility of the partition of the Punjab grew, the scheme became less and less meaningful.The spectre of Muslim domination was replaced by the fear that the Sikh community would be split between India and Pakistan.

Territorial rearrangement took a still more radical twist as increasing numbers of Sikhs began to demand an independent Sikh State, a demand ultimately lost in the politics surrounding Partition. The quick demise of the Azad Punjab scheme is not a true measure of its significance. As the first popular formulation of territorial rearrangement as a means of protection for the community, it set a pattern that continued to persist in Sikh politics for a long time.

References :

1. Brass, Paul R., Language. Religion and Politics in North India. Delhi, 1975
2. Nayar, Baldev Raj. Minority Politics in the Punjab. Princeton, 1966
3. Harbans Singh, The Heritage of the Sikhs. Delhi, 1983
4. Khushwant Singh, A History of the Sikhs, vol. 2. Princeton, 1966
5. Gulati, Kailash Chander, The Akalis: Past and Present. Delhi, 1974



1588
Religous Videos / Devaay Jaagdey rehan gae
« on: February 19, 2011, 09:06:04 AM »
new punjabi movie - deevay jagday rehan ge - 1/9



pRT 2

new punjabi movie - deevay jagday rehan ge - 2/9


3

new punjabi movie - deevay jagday rehan ge - 3/9


4


new punjabi movie - deevay jagday rehan ge - 4/9


5

deevay jagday rehan ge - 5/9 (Embedding disabled, limit reached)

6


new punjabi movie - deevay jagday rehan ge - 6/9 (Embedding disabled, limit reached)


7

new punjabi movie - deevay jagday rehan ge - 7/9 (Embedding disabled, limit reached)

8

new punjabi movie - deevay jagday rehan ge - 8/9 (Embedding disabled, limit reached)

9

new punjabi movie - deevay jagday rehan ge - 9/9 (Embedding disabled, limit reached)

1589
Jokes Majaak / Re: Mand Saab 4 you
« on: February 17, 2011, 10:26:27 PM »
thore din phela mae ayi shayer dekhya c ta sochya anti da naam edit kar dena par mae sochya ni anti ta arrayi ous da nam ni karna edit tae post ni kita................. X_X

anti jee thank you!

1590
Pics / Re: my gf my jaan
« on: February 17, 2011, 09:50:40 PM »
fateh tu meri id to kyon reply kari ja reha  :angry: :angry:

jadon mae tahnu comment karda kitae fateh ta ni reply karda  :angry: :angry: :angry: :angry: :angry:

1591
Help & Suggestions / Re: Mashoori wastae
« on: February 17, 2011, 09:30:13 PM »
Check out main page. If you topic gets a rating or if you get a "thanks" for your topic, it will appear on the frontpage. That will definitely help you reach exposure (mashoori hoyugi).

thank you ji... mae dekhya ni c kyu k ana color full jaya ni lagda.............

mae sochaya kitae pj dae code bahar niklae pae  X_X

1592
Help & Suggestions / Re: Mashoori wastae
« on: February 17, 2011, 09:26:39 PM »
How about putting this latest thing at the bottom of page instead of lengthening the activity stream stuff.. ke nai?

Nalle kujh colorful ja howe heading.. oh jyada sohna nai laggega?


agree wid ya ! color full hona chayi da :hehe:

Dhanwadh ji!


1593
Pics / Re: my gf my jaan
« on: February 17, 2011, 09:02:46 PM »
gaint bai  :rockon: bhabi ghaint aa  :excited:

1594
jadon mae saver uth da ta meri mata jee sarane kahre hundae tae... aah awaj sunayi dindayi putt uth putt uth putt uth kam tae jana , ja pher school jana ............... tae mae mummy ji - bas 2 min hor  :loll: :pagel:

1595
Help & Suggestions / Re: Mashoori wastae
« on: February 17, 2011, 08:48:10 PM »
ha ha ha bai ji samajh aun nu mai kehra motor banhan di theory likhi a jo smajh ni ayi :laugh:
Mai sidhe te saaf shabda ch likhya k is tra da sec nai hona chahida koi fayda nai

kyu ni hona chayi da veer , faiyada kyu ni

ess dae bahut faiydae nae :

1. ik ta apa prunae topic nu bar -2 dekhan di vajae nae topic dekha gae.
2. duja ada karn na koi naya topic banaya hao ous da pata lag janda... har roj di date jae sare apna topic da link othae paun gae ta............. topic sab di nigah hath ao ga.

3. ess tra karan dae bahut faidae ............... :hehe:

hun shatayi naal app di vote haan vale pase karo bhaji  :excited:

1596
Gup Shup / Re: punjab gov. di kursi
« on: February 16, 2011, 08:42:39 AM »
jaroor 22ji manpreet badal nu ess war moka diwa dena apan.... jae ous nae b kush na kita na pher sachi galh bai ji apna b itbar uth jana gov. ........ jida hor bakiyan sajna da uthya pya..........  8->


 dhanwadh admin ji

1597
Help & Suggestions / Re: Mashoori wastae
« on: February 16, 2011, 08:38:04 AM »
baki janta eh sochdi e bai ji k har banda ehi soch k topic bnaunda k usda matter vadia e te oh ehi chahega k sare usnu parhn v so jis tra hun main page te topics di bharmar rehndi e use tra us section vich hoyegi. Kyo ji thik e k nai hun tuc topic bnaunde eh nai sochoge k eh matter ina zroori ta nai k sare is nu parhn.
Han agar admin chohn ta oh kuj khas topics nu khas jgah de sakde ne. Je users de hath sab de dita fer pai jane khilare. Dhanwad ji.


22ji maaf karna par manu thodayi galh samj nayi....

baki 22ji ana jaroor dass dae o k tusi meri valh dayi galh karde o na :hehe:

Dhanwadh ji.

1598
Help & Suggestions / Re: Mashoori wastae
« on: February 16, 2011, 08:36:27 AM »
Agreed.

Waisse jado appan nawa topic banaunde aa, it displayes in the bottom of the home page, however, it doesn't update regularly. It needs to be fixed!

Zida tusi khandae oh na jee oda kar laindae aa !

1599
Help & Suggestions / Re: Mashoori wastae
« on: February 15, 2011, 08:33:23 AM »
jhanda sihha tu banda great par kam sare ayi karda late :hehe: 

thank you bai kise nu ta changa lagai sadayi suggestion  :rockon:

1600
PJ Games / Re: When was the last time you..
« on: February 13, 2011, 09:40:00 PM »
4 months ago..


when was last time u had lassi? :cooll:

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