At a mere four hours’ notice, at 8.00 p.m., on March 24th 2020, the Indian Prime Minister Modi announced a lockdown to contain the spread of virus in order to jumpstart an already-crumbling healthcare system for one of the most devastating pandemics soon to envelop India. People stormed out to panic-buy ration stocks; India’s migrant working classes started walking back to the villages, left hungry and desolate without homes, work and wages - a scene not very short of an apocalypse. Over two summers, India woke up to similar headlines: a shortage of hospital beds, oxygen, medicines; a languishing economy; cases rising and falling; governments greenlighting Hindu religious, superspreader that compounded the second wave; misled unlocking schools, business and the social sphere, and reversed lockdowns when cases went up; underreporting of cases and deaths; lakhs dead to the virus and crores of people infected, and still counting. While the pandemic continues to rage on, notwithstanding its ebbs and flows, its real impact on society may start to be visible only much later. Over a year of tracking how the pandemic ravaged India’s society, economy, politics and culture, nine of finest India’s writers try and make sense of this difficult reality. The Dark Hour is a publisher’s anthology of specially commissioned long-form essays that unpack two dreadful summers of the pandemic that wreaked havoc on the many Indias within India.
Suave, Educated, Secular And With A Reputation For Unwavering Honesty, Madhavrao Scindia Did Not Conform To The Conventional Image Of The Indian Politician. Despite His Liberal Outlook And His Whole-Hearted Espousal Of Democratic Values, Madhavrao, Son Of The Last Ruling King Of Gwalior, Did Not Forget His Heritage: He Was Inextricably Linked With The People Of Gwalior And Guna, Who Unfailingly Voted For Him In All The Nine Elections He Contested. To The World At Large He Was A Successful Minister And A Leading Light Of The Congress Party, But At Heart He Remained A Simple Family Man, Who Did Not Allow Either His Ancestry Or His Political Status To Define Him. What Made Madhavrao Scindia One Of The Most Fascinating Figures In Contemporary Indian Politics? The Answer Lies, Perhaps, In The Way Madhavrao Chose To Live. Born With Life&Rsquo;S Plan Neatly Laid Out For Him&Mdash;The Title To A 21-Gun Salute State; A Political Career Chosen For Him By His Mother; And Vast Estates In Several Cities&Mdash;He Sought Instead To Tread A Path That Was Neither Predictable Nor Easy. Madhavrao Scindia&Rsquo;S Life Reads Very Much Like The Plot Of A Grand Novel. There Is The Bitter Falling Out With His Mother, The Rajmata Vijayaraje Scindia, A Powerful Force Of The Jana Sangh; A Host Of Minor And Major Characters Ranging From Intriguing Courtiers To Wily Politicians; A Battle With At Least Two Congress Governments (The First During The Emergency And The Second During Narasimha Rao&Rsquo;S Regime) And, Finally, Madhavrao&Rsquo;S Tragic And Untimely Death. This Is The Story Of A Man Who Was Born A Maharaja But Chose To Live As A Democratic Citizen Of India. Vir Sanghvi And Namita Bhandare Bring Alive His Tale In This Riveting Biography That Is As Much A Chronicle Of Modern Indian Politics As It Is A Portrait Of A Fascinating Life. &Nbsp;
At a mere four hours’ notice, at 8.00 p.m., on March 24th 2020, the Indian Prime Minister Modi announced a lockdown to contain the spread of virus in order to jumpstart an already-crumbling healthcare system for one of the most devastating pandemics soon to envelop India. People stormed out to panic-buy ration stocks; India’s migrant working classes started walking back to the villages, left hungry and desolate without homes, work and wages - a scene not very short of an apocalypse. Over two summers, India woke up to similar headlines: a shortage of hospital beds, oxygen, medicines; a languishing economy; cases rising and falling; governments greenlighting Hindu religious, superspreader that compounded the second wave; misled unlocking schools, business and the social sphere, and reversed lockdowns when cases went up; underreporting of cases and deaths; lakhs dead to the virus and crores of people infected, and still counting. While the pandemic continues to rage on, notwithstanding its ebbs and flows, its real impact on society may start to be visible only much later. Over a year of tracking how the pandemic ravaged India’s society, economy, politics and culture, nine of finest India’s writers try and make sense of this difficult reality. The Dark Hour is a publisher’s anthology of specially commissioned long-form essays that unpack two dreadful summers of the pandemic that wreaked havoc on the many Indias within India.
Thank you for visiting our website. Would you like to provide feedback on how we could improve your experience?
This site does not use any third party cookies with one exception — it uses cookies from Google to deliver its services and to analyze traffic.Learn More.