Indian Review : English monthly started in 1889, published by G.A. Natesan & Co., Madras.
... published in The Indian Review of Madras. The text of Sri Aurobindo's essay consists of: (1) an elaborate title page with "proposita"; (2) an introductory passage headed "Vyasa; some Characteristics"; (3) a longer passage mostly on the same subject beginning "Vyasa is the most masculine of writers"; (4) a long passage beginning "It was hinted in a recent article in the Indian Review", dealing... editors have used this as the title of the section. Sri Aurobindo brought only two of the pieces to a satisfactory conclusion. One of them, "The Age of Kalidasa", was revised and published in The Indian Review (Madras) in 1902. The other, "The Seasons", was revised and published in Sri Aurobindo's own weekly review, the Karmayogin , in 1909. The other pieces were left in varying states of completeness... Malavas. Circa 1900-1903. Title taken from Chapter II of "A Proposed Work". The Age of Kalidasa. Circa 1898-1902. See Chapter II of "A Proposed Work". This piece was published in The Indian Review of Madras in July 1902, and reprinted as a booklet by Tagore & Co., Madras, around 1921. Sri Aurobindo revised the text and republished it along with Kalidasa's Seasons in a booklet entitled ...
... On the Mahabharata Early Cultural Writings Notes on the Mahabharata It was hinted in a recent article of the Indian Review, an unusually able and searching paper on the date of the Mahabharata war that a society is about to be formed for discovering the genuine and original portions of our great epic. This is glad tidings to all admirers of Sanscrit ...
... born out of a real fear that the loyalty of the Presidency to the British Government could no longer be taken for granted. The literary contributions of G. A. Natesan, editor of the renowned Indian Review, shedding light on the growth of public opinion of the period also deserve a brief note here, His first regular publication was the Indian Politics which appeared in 1898. Adorned with an ...
... part of it is not admissible. The Mother always insists on great reserve in writing publicly about the Asram, especially if it is done by inmates or sadhaks. 25 November 1935 Asked by the Indian Review, I sent them an article entitled "Socialism and the Indian Ideal". They are asking for permission to print it in their review as well as in booklet form. Can the permission be given? I think ...
... within, bhoga without,—Ananda, the divine delight of the purified soul, embracing both. Aliens in Ancient India We extract elsewhere a brief article on the above subject from the December Indian Review for which we had no space in our former issues. The ancient Indian treatment of foreign residents forms a curious contrast to the spirit of exclusion which is growing upon modern nations. We have ...
... the many striking lessons which the history of Nationalism in Egypt has for the new-born Nationalism in India. We confine ourselves at present to quoting the pointed remarks of historians in the Indian Review for September on the revelations of Wilfrid Blunt. Speaking of the riot which was made an excuse for British intervention he says:— "There, it is clearly brought home to the unbiassed readers' ...
... 1940 Talks with Sri Aurobindo 11 FEBRUARY 1940 PURANI: Paul Brunton has come out again with an article on Yoga in the Indian Review . SRI AUROBINDO: What does he say? PURANI: The same old thing—that Yoga must be practised for humanity, so that humanity may benefit. SRI AUROBINDO: He has always said that. PURANI: He says that now he is under ...
... for India, a few months after Zia presented Operation Topac to his top Generals, the Indian Page 96 intelligence agencies received a copy of Zia's speech delivered at the April conclave. The speech was reproduced in the April-June 1999 issue of the prestigious "Indian Defence Review" (IDR) as follows: "Gentlemen, I have spoken on this subject before, therefore... Kashmir and brought it back into international focus. Another incident, which brought the Kashmir -Afghan connection into focus was the hijacking of an Indian Airlines plane, IC 814, to Kandahar in December 1999. The three terrorists released by the Indian authorities in exchange for the safety of the passengers were all operating in Kashmir. One of them, Masood Azhar, formed the Jaish-e-Mohammed, based... initially fought against the Soviets in Afghanistan and later shifted their focus to the Indian forces in Kashmir after the Soviet withdrawal from Afghanistan. Zia sanctioned the covert provision of arms and training to Sikh separatists who were fighting for an independent state of Khalistan in Indian Punjab. It is said that India responded to Pakistan's covert programs in Kashmir and ...
... involved with the USSR, U.S. policymakers sought stronger ties with India's neighbor, Pakistan. 14 Major General Yashwant Deva, AVSM (Ret.), ''ISI and Its Chicanery in Exporting Terrorism,'' Indian Defence Review, 1995, p. 8; Altaf Guahar, op. cit., p. 1; Intelligence Resource Program, p. 2; B. Raman, op. cit., p. 2. 15 Intelligence Resource Program, p. 2. 16 Indranil Banerjie, op. cit.,... domestic intelligence collection operations inside Kashmir, and had numerous assets inside the Indian-controlled sector. Once the conflict started, all its assets in the region went underground, blinding the ISI to what was occurring, both militarily and politically. This included losing track of a division of Indian tanks. Part of the problem that faced the ISI was that prior to the conflict, it had devoted... of information on Indian intelligence activities in the region. The ISI also has a long history of providing logistical and military support to Islamic Kashmiri separatists.64 The major sticking point in the ISI's restructuring is the agency's reluctance to shut down the Kashmir division for two primary reasons: the ISI and the Pakistani government do not trust the Indian government and want ...
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