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THE WARRIOR

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Everything posted by THE WARRIOR

  1. You pathetic FOOL Harmandar Sahib is NOT A MANDIR,ITS A GURU GHAR - GURDWARA,NOT A MANDIR!!Sikhi has no link to Hinduism or its lustful books ie:Vedas where it teaches about sex with animals,homosexuality and hundreds of other rubbish things,like the evil caste system!!! Would rather go Pakistan then Hindustan,Guru Nanak Dev Ji the 1st master was born there,we would never forget that land,the love Sikhs get in Pakistan they do not get in Hindustan,you can ask any Sikh leader who goes there,you flipping Hindustani Make sure it’s a one way ticket :nihungsmile: and send a postcard
  2. “Hindu python is trying to swallow the Khalsa” V'S There’s no competition, not in my eyes anyway.
  3. Forget what the nirmala wrote, we’re all nirmala’ here! Find out for yourself. No one can replicate your own experience on such issues unless you want them to.
  4. Only our understanding is "primitive and low level"
  5. NO HE AIN'T No one even mentioned RSS I thought you left the forum,due to the fact you felt that you had been exposed/unmasked Dancing Warrior or has Niddar sent you back agian, I missed you! And between you and your monkey brigade you couldn’t expose a banana without its peel! :nihungsmile:
  6. Warrior cultures and traditions in the old world maintained unshorn hair as a sign of Chivalry, Grandeur, Honour etc. In this respect it was an uplift of the common man to fight against the tyrants that ravaged the weak and helpless. Whilst kings and high priest of the era maintained signs of their order that could only be handed down by blood and lineage, Guru ji infused the Khalsa his children by giving them their identity, unshorn hair being one of them.
  7. A bartering mentality, all too common, I have done x and expect x back in return. Reminds me of another story I heard it many moons ago basically goes like this, A man leaves body and his soul is greeted by angels on the way to heavenly places he is taken up what appears to be never ending grand staircase. On the sides of this grand staircase there appears to be thousands and thousands of statues of what seems to be normal looking people. Eventually out of curiosity the man asks one of his guides about the statues, the angel replies “These are those that found it befitting to place their names etched in stone in holy places, like trophies of their charity for the world to see, ultimately suffering a fate befitting their mentality!!” The moral of the story!? Don’t announce how much you have given to the building fund! After your Akhand Parth’!! :nihungsmile:
  8. Climate threat to biodiversity The last mass extinction wiped out one-fifth of life on Earth Global temperatures predicted for the coming centuries could trigger a mass extinction, UK scientists have warned. The temperatures are within the range of greenhouse phases early in the Earth's history when up to 95% of plants and animals died out, they say. Experts examined the link between climate and diversity over 520 million years, almost the entire fossil record. They found that global diversity is high during cool (icehouse) periods and low during warm (greenhouse) phases. "Our results provide the first clear evidence that global climate may explain substantial variation in the fossil record in a simple and consistent manner," said Dr Peter Mayhew of the University of York. "If our results hold for current warming, the magnitude of which is comparable with the long-term fluctuations in the Earth's climate, they suggest that extinctions will increase." Warmer, wetter The research, published in Proceedings of the Royal Society B, compared data sets on marine and land diversity against estimates of sea surface temperatures for the same period. They found that four out of the five mass extinction events on Earth are associated with greenhouse phases (warmer, wetter conditions) rather than icehouse phases (cold, dry conditions). These include Earth's worst mass extinction 251 million years ago when some 95% of all species were lost. "We could - at worst - be experiencing that in the next century - only a few human generations down the line," Dr Mayhew told BBC News. "We need to know why temperatures and extinctions are linked in this way."
  9. However strongly we may feel about this we aren’t counsellors nor experts in this field speak to people who have experience and are qualified http://www.samaritans.org/ Phone Calls In the UK dial 08457 90 90 90. In the Republic of Ireland dial 1850 60 90 90, for the cost of a local call. Textphones (for the deaf and hard of hearing): in the UK dial 08457 90 91 92 International numbers Befrienders Worldwide covers 40 countries, offering confidential support for the suicidal and those in emotional crisis. Full details of Befrienders Worldwide are available on their website, www.befrienders.org.
  10. http://www.punjabheritage.org/material-her...d-in-ww-ii.html Italy: Homage to Indian soldiers killed in WW II Written by adnkronos.com/AKI/English Wednesday, 10 October 2007 Nearly 6,000 Indian soldiers died in Italy during World War II and many of them lie buried in five war cemeteries around the country, including Cassino - the site of the one of the major battles fought against the Germans towards the end of the war. They came from all of India's major faiths, Hindu, Muslim, and Sikh. Some were as young as 16 years old. Yet all of them died over 60 years ago, fighting in a continent and for a country that wasn't their own. These are the 5,782 Indian soldiers who died in Italy during World War II fighting against the Nazis and Italian Fascists. For the first time since 1945, their contribution to the liberation of Italy has been commemorated in a special ceremony. "We in India are celebrating 60 years of independence this year," said Rajiv Dogra, the Indian ambassador to Italy in an interview with Adnkronos International (AKI). "So as we celebrate independence, we want to remember all these acts that led to freedom for other people and the Indian soldiers fight, effort and sacrifice here which led to freedom in Italy." Dogra was speaking at a ceremony to honour the sacrifice of Indian soldiers last Thursday at the Commonwealth War Grave Cemetery in Cassino, about 120 kilometres south of the Italian capital Rome. Cassino was the site of one of the fiercest battles fought between Allied troops and German forces between 1943 and 1944. Among the 4,000 Allied troops buried at the cemetery are 431 Indian soldiers. Their tombstones include their names, their religion and their ages. Some have inscriptions in Urdu, Hindi and Punjabi. Others are simply anonymous, referring only to an "A soldier of the Indian army" - testament to the many unknown Indian soldiers killed in the battle at Cassino. A total of 50,000 Indian troops fought on Italian soil and almost half of them were injured in battle. Of the 20 soldiers who received the former British Empire's highest award for bravery, the Victoria Cross, for combat in Italy, six were given to Indian soldiers. The troops from the subcontinent were crucial in the liberation of cities such as Bologna, San Marino, Ferrara, Lucca and Florence. "Indian soldiers were there in Florence, they were there in the Uffizi Gallery," said Dogra, referring to the world famous museum in the central Italian city which includes works by Renaissance masters like Michelangelo. "Otherwise all those artefacts, those precious paintings, those wonderful monuments, they would not have been here for us to appreciate," he said. Indian and Italian soldiers laid wreaths at the cemetery last Thursday as a sign of respect for the sacrifice made by the Indian forces over 60 years ago. The Italian deputy defence minister Emidio Casula as well diplomats from other countries in the British Commonwealth also attended the event. One special guest was Alessandro Cortese de Bosis, 81, a retired Italian ambassador who served as a liaison officer to the 8th Indian Infantry Division during the war. He was only 18 when he fought alongside the Indian troops. "I think at this moment when we speak about a clash of civilisations, of a dialogue between religions and various communities and the integration of foreign immigrants in this country, let's remember that Indian soldiers and Pakistani soldiers, over 20,000 of them were casualties in the war and they fought for the liberation of my country," de Bosis told AKI. De Bosis is an honorary member of The Punjab Frontier Force Association and still maintains contact with many of the Indian veterans of the war, whom he describes as "among the best soldiers". While the cemetery at Cassino and four others in Italy are filled with many tales of courage and sacrifice, the deployment of Indian soldiers to Italy in World War II also spawned love stories. Indian diplomat, Birender Lall, was 28-years-old when he decided to volunteer for the British Indian Army in 1943. He was sent to the southern Italian port city of Naples, where a young Italian woman, Romilda Schettini, spotted him from the balcony of her uncle's house. "I fell in love with him and he didn’t even know me. It was love at first sight,” said Schettini as she recalled how her romance began with Lall. A year later, Schettini married the young Indian soldier, first at the British consulate and then at the Naples town hall, wearing a sari. “Many people have asked me to make a movie,” said Schettini, in an interview with AKI. “It seems common today but in 1944, my case was very rare,” said the 84 year-old, who now goes by the name of Mrs. Lall. After the wedding the couple moved to India and spent 27 years there, bringing up her three daughters, Ushabella, Mirabella and Tarabella. The family eventually returned to Italy in 1974 and Birender Lall died four years later. “He was my universe, “ she said. "The marriage changed my life completely." “Even now that I have been back in Italy since 1974, I feel I am an Indian.”
  11. Life sentences for Delhi police The case has generated saturation media coverage Ten policemen in the Indian capital, Delhi, have been given life prison sentences for the murder of two businessmen 10 years ago. Prosecutors had called for the death penalty. The victims, Pradeep Goyal and Jagjit Singh, were shot dead in their car in broad daylight. The police involved argued that they mistook them for gangsters. The police planted a pistol in the car and claimed the occupants had opened fire first. Criticism The officers were found guilty last week. The incident happened in one of Delhi's most famous areas, Connaught Place. "I am happy with the verdict," Pradeep Goyal's wife Neema said. But Jagjit Singh's brother said the men should have been given the death sentence. "I want the sentence to be changed". The case has highlighted criticism of police abuses. The campaigning lawyer Colin Gonsalves, who runs the Delhi-based Human Rights Law Network, accused the police of being "trigger happy". "The judiciary over the last 10 years has turned a blind eye to killings by the police mainly because it's poor people who are executed," he told the BBC after the men were found guilty.
  12. The picture falls far short of a lot of the offensive material that is allowed to be displayed, broadcast and supported on this site. “what is good for the goose, is good for the gander” :nihungsmile:
  13. To react instantly out of powerful emotion is one type of karma, not to react and think about what you should have done and the desire to still do it is another type of karma the worst of the two. “Bramgyanis” and types don’t carry baggage of karma even the desire to remove karma adds karma there is no good or bad karma this is only a morality issue. Karma is karma full stop. Enlightenment comes by removing All karma full stop. What may be seen as positive karma still bounds you to the endless cycle of life and death, only my realising the true Guru can you off load all karma, you don’t need to know how the Guru works and exactly how its done just faith in knowing it will be done for you, in the best possible way with your interest in mind. :nihungsmile:
  14. The great strive for purity is a useless one it only becomes a moral dilemma within ones life. Purity isn’t salvation it just adds to the subconscious ritual one becomes enslaved by. Purity and morality are great partners and work well together however they differ from spirituality and consciousness which are totally different and another path, and in my opinion a better one.
  15. An infusion of facts fiction with a twist of masala of personal bias!
  16. I especially like the part “Rishia’ Munia’ Avtara’ da” :nihungsmile:
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