Jump to content

England should give south Asians reparations


Torontobboi
 Share

Recommended Posts

Muslims who had the kohinoor were foreigners and not Indians and neither did they discover it. Kohinoor is a indian diamond which was discovered by Indians and owned by ancient hindu kingdoms.  

The Muslims then invaded India and took everything from the hindu kingdoms including their diamonds. 

The Afghans then took the diamond while looting delhi.

Ranjit Singh then took the diamond back during the sikh Afghan wars.

Then we all know how the brits took it

So how can any muslim invaders make a claim in the kohinoor?

Muslims making a claim on the diamond is no different to the brits claiming it as theirs. 

It should be returned to where it was originally found 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

18 minutes ago, puzzled said:

Muslims who had the kohinoor were foreigners and not Indians and neither did they discover it. Kohinoor is a indian diamond which was discovered by Indians and owned by ancient hindu kingdoms.  

The Muslims then invaded India and took everything from the hindu kingdoms including their diamonds. 

The Afghans then took the diamond while looting delhi.

Ranjit Singh then took the diamond back during the sikh Afghan wars.

Then we all know how the brits took it

So how can any muslim invaders make a claim in the kohinoor?

Muslims making a claim on the diamond is no different to the brits claiming it as theirs. 

It should be returned to where it was originally found 

Dude its the symbol of power, whoever has power has the KohiNoor

Link to comment
Share on other sites

A few months back I went to the sikh empire exhibition in London and if I'm being completely honest I was a bit sad and emotional looking at all our things behind glass cases. 

Maharaja Ranjit singhs swords, rani jind kaurs jewellery, shastars, puratan paintings everything   

Link to comment
Share on other sites

3 minutes ago, RajKaregaKhalsa1 said:

Akaaaaaaal!

I respect this Singh so much. I wish that we all have the courage one day to do something like he didn't, standing up againsf oppression and Beadbi.

Absolutely,  iv never seen this video before, was recommended it on YouTube today 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Guest GuestSingh
3 hours ago, puzzled said:

I like what this Singh did at the auction ??

But I can see some sikhs getting offended and not agreeing and saying things like "there are other peaceful ways of doing it"  "there was no need for him to react like that" 

yh..theyre the ones whod just sit down, do nothing and watch everything be sold. cowards.

seen this singh on tv before...dont like his rapping/music but he's one of the few whos passionate about it so respect to him for this.

if most apne were there, theyd all be doing bhangra and setting up langar stalls....

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Join the conversation

You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.

Guest
Reply to this topic...

×   Pasted as rich text.   Paste as plain text instead

  Only 75 emoji are allowed.

×   Your link has been automatically embedded.   Display as a link instead

×   Your previous content has been restored.   Clear editor

×   You cannot paste images directly. Upload or insert images from URL.

Loading...
 Share


  • advertisement_alt
  • advertisement_alt
  • advertisement_alt


  • Topics

  • Posts

    • There is nothing wrong with starched pagg. The Guru is omniscient (all-knowing). You think he doesn't know our intentions? If somebody wears a starched pagg but still respects it as a crown then whats wrong with that? People think that starch automatically makes people lose their respect for their pagg but thats just false.  And dont make this a caste thing I’m Rajput Jatt sikh (not an ounce of Tarkhan or anything else) and we all starch our INDIAN style punjabi paggs (patiala shahi), but respect them as our crowns and our literal lives. A respected starch pagg is better by far than a freshly tied one which people just disrespect. And people forget that these are not ready made or pre-tied turbans. You still tie them initially but just of course not as frequently. What’s wrong with that?  When your relationship is that strong with the Guru then you know what he means. Speak to him directly, explain why and ask him if it’s okay. Btw I know people who dont starch their turbans (all punjabi/morni style btw) and they just wear it again the next day without tying it if they have toed it really nicely the day before. 😂 You cant really even tell who had tied it and who just wore it again without starch. At least we’re open about it. Bhul chuk maaf    
    • Its called a “fifty” becuase when Singhs were fighting in the British army, they would recieve an 8 metre pagg, with a cour four base, because the base layer was half (50%) of the main turban, it’s called a fifty. The practise of tying a keski under your main one is now seen as pretty weird (except for a patka), but the small coloured strip inder the pagg is still used as a fashion statement since its pretty visually appealing. And so, people now just tie a small little “kung-fu strip” sort of thing under their pagg to imitate that effect.
    • Found how to do it. For anybody else wondering, heres how. No one even helped me btw. So much for Guru Ji’s lhalsa always ready to help (and having their Singhs’ backs smh). (Notes: Aim to do this on a hot summer’s day, and dedicate a full day to this, since you only have to do this once every 4 months at least (normally the turban will stay in shape until you wish to untie it and physically pull it open again). This helps it to dry faster, since you have to starch it, HALF DRY IT, pooni it, tie it and then wear it for around four hours for the rest of it to dry, all in the same day. It’s a one day process but it serves you for months). This works for both the UK/Kenyan style (starch is best for this style) as well as the normal Punjabi paghs (such as Patiala shahi, wattan wali and morni paghs). Not sure about dumallas though. Probably not . Pagg Starch: 1) Boil 6 cups of water in a saucepan on low heat (always low heat) 2) Seperately dissolve 4 tablespoons of maida (all purpose flower) with a little water until it is 100% smooth.  You could also use rice or corn starch. Add more water if it is not a smooth liquid 3) Once completely smooth, pour this mixture through a strainer (to make it even smoother) into the boiling water. 4) Now continuously stir it until it goes completely see through. Keep on stirring it on the low heat until it goes totally transparent (it can take a little while to cook, but the pagg will last you for months!) It will at become a thick paste first, but keep stirring until it becomes see through and thinner.    5) Once it’s transparent, pour the starch (again through a strainer) into a big enough, clean bucket to cool down. 6) Once cool, take a clean, dry turban and completely and mix it in with the starch for around 5 minutes. Make sure that it is all evenly and completely soaked and wet with the starch. (Most people use mal-mal material, but I use full voile and I have used Rubia too. They’re all fine. Maybe use Rubin for smaller turbans and mal mal for larger ones) 7) Leave it out in the sun to HALF DRY ONLY!!!!!!! (Don’t ever let your starched turban fully dry before you tie it. If you do, then you will have to spray/ sprinkle water on it which will weaken the starch and ruin the turban) ONLY HALF DRY THE TURBAN IN THE SUN!!! 😎 Once HALF DRY ONLY take the now semi damp turban, and fold/pooni and then tie it like normal (straight on your head, with no base layer such as a Keski or patka underneath). Leave it on your head for around 4 hours just to fully dry and it will be ready and set for months now. Like I said, do try to tie your dastar every day, but if you can’t or really don’t want to, I hope this helps! Like I said this works on both the traditional Punjabi/Indian style paggs, and the more recent UK/Kenyan style paggs. It does for my morni pagg, but the first larr slips up in to the pagg. This is normal dw. Wjkk, Wjkf
    • I guess easier ways of learning have taken precedence. There are so many Youtube channels and podcasts available that people are more ready to listen for knowledge at their own leisure. There are so many great kathas available online that take months to listen, so that people may not really get the time to come here and write.
    • *Bump The current conflict (w/ Iran getting involved) is being orchestrated by a 3rd party in my opinion. We all are going to blame the Jewish community (how they run the banks, how they are brutal and etc.) but they have a point in this conflict.  As soon as people start finding about the truth that's when the real movement will begin. 
×
×
  • Create New...

Important Information

Terms of Use