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Our Corrupted Media

Corrupted Media

Our Media is getting Corrupted & Politically Inspired day by day from past few months
I notice that Media is only working for Politicians not for the Truth. Politicians
are hiding the truth and advertising them for their profits by using Media.

31 October 2011

There is more than 7 page advertisement
on date 31 October; Pages are filled with the Full Page, Half Page Description
& Photographs of INDIRA GANDHI only Indira Gandhi & Their Political
party Achievement’s.  Every media is trying to show about Indira Gandhi. Because that was death day of Indira Gandhi

But who cares about the other Heroes
Who only & only Live & Die for India & Indian People.

On the same day the Hero name Sardar
Vallabhbhai Jhaverbhai Patel
was born on
31 October 1875 – 15 December 1950but there is no Information about them on any News Channel
or on any Newspaper.

This Media Celebrate
Rajiv Gandhi Birthday, Mahatama Gandhi Birthday but don’t care about those
Revolutionary Heroes who left their Families fought for freedom of India.

Do you ever find these names In Newspapers
or in News? Do you know about the Real Heroes of India?

Vinayak Damodar Savarkar

May 28, 1883 – February 26,
1966

He as an Indian freedom fighter, a
revolutionary and politician. He is credited with developing the Hindu
nationalist political ideology Hindutva. Savarkar was a poet, writer and
playwright. He launched a movement for religious reform advocating dismantling
the system of caste in Hindu culture, and reconversion of the converted Hindus
back to Hindu religion.

Shaheed Udham Singh

December 26, 1899 – July 31,
1940

Was a Indian independence activist, best known
for assassinating Michael O’Dwyer in March 1940 in what has been described as
an avenging of the Jallianwalla Bagh Massacre.

Bhagat Singh and Udham Singh along with
Chandrasekhar Azad, Rajguru and Sukhdev, were the more famous names out of
scores of young firebrand freedom fighters in the early part of 20th-century
India.

Madan Lal Dhingra

18 February 1883-1909

He was an Indian revolutionary freedom fighter.
While studying in England, he assassinated Sir William Hutt Curzon Wyllie, a
British official, hailed as one of the first acts of revolution in the Indian
independence movement in the 20th century.

Bipin Chandra Pal

November 7, 1858 – May 20,
1932

He was an Indian nationalist. He was among the
triumvirate of Lal Bal Pal. Bipin Chandra Pal was a teacher, journalist,
orator, writer and librarian, he was famous as one of the triumvirate of three
militant patriots of the Congresses – the “Pal” of Lal Bal Pal. The
trio were responsible for initiating the first popular upsurge against British
colonial policy in the 1905 partition of Bengal, before the advent of Gandhi
into Indian politics. Pal was also the founder of the nationalistic journal
Bande Mataram.

Bal Gangadhar Tilak

23 July 1856–1 August 1920

He was an Indian nationalist, teacher, social
reformer and independence fighter who was the first popular leader of the
Indian Independence Movement. The British colonial authorities derogatorily
called the great leader as “Father of the Indian unrest”.

 

Ram Prasad Bismil

1897-18 December 1927

ismil was his pen name. He was a member of the
Arya Samaj and also of the Hindustan Republican Association. He was a great
poet and several inspiring patriotic verses are attributed him. The poem
Sarfaroshi ki Tamanna is popularly attributed to him, although it has been
suggested that Bismil Azimabadi actually wrote the poem whereas Ram Prasad
“Bismil” immortalized it

Batukeshwar Dutt

18 November 1910 -20th of
July, 1965

Batukeshwar Dutt was an Indian revolutionary
and a freedom fighter in the early 1900s. He is best known for having exploded
a few bombs, along with Bhagat Singh, in the Central Legislative Assembly in
New Delhi on 8 April 1929. After they were arrested, tried and imprisoned for
life, he and Bhagat Singh initiated a historic hunger strike protesting against
the abusive treatment of Indian political prisoners, and eventually secured
some rights for them. He was a member of the Hindustan Socialist Republican
Association.

Sukhdev Thapar

15 May 1907 to March 23,
1931

He is best known as an accomplice of Bhagat
Singh and Shivaram Rajguru in the killing of a British police officer J.P.
Saunders in 1928 in order to take revenge for the death of veteran leader Lala
Lajpat Rai due to excessive police beating.

Chandrasekhar Azad

July 23, 1906 – February 27,
1931

Chandrashekhar Sitaram Tiwari, often called,
Panditji was a revolutionary. After the Indian Rebellion of 1857, he was the
first among many Indian revolutionaries to use arms in their fight for
independence against the British rulers. A devout Brahmin, he believed that it
was his “dharma” (duty) to fight for others. He also believed that a
soldier never relinquishes his weapon.

Keshava Baliram Hedgewar

April 1, 1889 – June 21,
1940

He was the founder of the Rashtriya Swayamsevak
Sangh (RSS). Hedgewar founded the RSS in Nagpur, Maharashtra in 1925, with the
intention of promoting the concept of the Hindu nation. Hedgewar drew upon
influences from social and spiritual Hindu reformers such as Swami Vivekananda,
Vinayak Damodar Savarkar and Aurobindo to develop the core philosophy of the
RSS.

Shivaram Hari Rajguru

August 24, 1908 – March 23,
1931

He was an Indian revolutionary from Maharashtra
and belonged to the Deshastha Brahmin community. Rajguru was born in a place
named Khed near Pune. It was later renamed as Rajgurunagar in his honor. He is
best known as a colleague of Bhagat Singh and Sukhdev in the eliminating of a
British police officer J.P. Saunders at Lahore in 1928 in order to take revenge
for the death of veteran leader Lala Lajpat Rai due to excessive police
beating.

Madan Mohan Malaviya

25 December 1861 – 12
November 1946

Malaviya was born at Allahabad, Uttar Pradesh
on 25 December 1861, in a Brahmin family of Brijnath and Moona Devi. He was the
fifth child in a family of five brothers and two sisters. His ancestors, known
for their Sanskrit scholarship, originally hailed from Malwa and hence came to
be known as ‘Malaviyas’. His father Pandit Brijnath was also a learned man in
Sanskrit scriptures, and used to recite the Bhagvat Katha to earn a living

Lala Lajpat Rai

January 28 1865- November 17
1928

Born in Dhudike, on 28 January, India in 1865
in a Hindu Family, Lajpat Rai created a career of reforming Indian policy
through politics and writing.  (When studying law in Lahore, he continued to
practice Hinduism. He became a large believer in the idea that Hinduism, above
nationality, was the pivotal point upon which an Indian lifestyle must be
based.) Hinduism, he believed, led to practices of peace to humanity, and the
idea that when nationalist ideas were added to this peaceful belief system, a
non-secular nation could be formed.

Shaheed Bhagat Singh

28 September 1907 – 23 March
1931

Was an Indian freedom fighter, considered to be
one of the most influential revolutionaries of the Indian independence movement

Born to a Jat Sikh family which had earlier
been involved in revolutionary activities against the British Raj in India,
Singh, as a teenager, had studied European revolutionary movements and was
attracted to anarchism and communism. He became involved in numerous
revolutionary organizations. He quickly rose through the ranks of the Hindustan
Republican Association (HRA) and became one of its leaders, converting it to
the Hindustan Socialist Republican Association (HSRA). Singh gained support
when he underwent a 64-day fast in jail, demanding equal rights for Indian and
British political prisoners.

 

These are true Indian Heroes
and Lots of others also even I don’t know their Names there are lots of people
who did for India, for Indian peoples. But why these names
never published in newspapers because they are not related with any corrupted
party & media don’t find any profit to publish their names in Newspapers & News Channels.

Media can publish 30 Min
advertisement to promote a political party but they don’t have time to remember
these heroes what a shame.

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