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raju161
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Posted on 11-30-11 7:20
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https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=I_3rwY4i_74&feature=youtu.be
Last edited: 30-Nov-11 08:04 PM
Last edited: 30-Nov-11 08:05 PM
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raju161
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Posted on 11-30-11 8:06
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budmash
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Posted on 12-01-11 11:28
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Stiffler
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Posted on 12-01-11 12:17
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I have a confession. I have never cried watching any movies or anything to this date. I cried when I made it to 1/4 of this documentary; Not just reminscing what we were but also thinking what we have become!!
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lll_lll
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Posted on 12-01-11 4:33
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Must watch.. and while you are at it let your brothers, sisters, parents and friends view this documentary as well. Historical education and understanding is the first step to being free. If history is supressed or bent, then we lose our identity and who we are. Nepalese need to wake up and see the truth!!
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budmash
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Posted on 12-02-11 12:20
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Wonderful video! I wanted to thank the people who posted the video. But I wanted to thank the people who made the video even more.
The passion and self-righteous anger in the video was powerful. Which part of this video made you feel most emotional?
Last edited: 02-Dec-11 01:05 AM
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Homeyji
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Posted on 12-04-11 2:14
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"If my brother soldiers and the courtiers are not given to pleasure, my sword can strike in all directions. But if they are pleasure-seekers, this will not be my painfully acquired kingdom but a garden of every sort of people. But if everyone is aware, this will be a true Hindustan of the four jats, greater and lesser, with the thirty-six classes. Do not leave your ancient religion. Do not forsake the salt of the king" (King Prithvi Narayan Shah, 1774;)
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Homeyji
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Posted on 12-04-11 2:29
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Central to unity in Nepal was the figure of poet Bhanubhakta Acharya (18141868), who in the mid-1800s had written a version of the Hindu epic Ramayana in Nepali. Bhanubhakta had been known for writing in Nepali at a time when it was prestigious to write in Sanskrit, since his promotion as the "first" Nepali poet by his biographer Motiram Bhatta in the 1880s; these intellectuals 'rediscovered' him and recast him as a hero of the "Nepali jati'": a unifier along the lines of Prithvi Narayan Shah, but one who used the pen instead of the sword (Onta 1999).
Jati, which can be literally translated as "type" or "kind," was the word used at the time to describe the group of people who identified as Nepali, including high Hindu castes such as Bahuns and Chhetris, ethnic groups such as Magars, Gurungs, Tamangs, and low Hindu castes (Dalits), etc.; in the diaspora in India, all were members of the "Nepali jati," a concept of nation that existed across borders and without reliance on state structures (cf. Malkki 1995).
Thus, including Bhanubhakta in the pantheon of bir heroes made "service to the Nepali language" an act of devotion to one's nation on par with serving in battle. In doing so, it also established a view of poetry, verbal art, and such facility with language as masculine pursuits and talents.
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