Search This Blog

Dec 30, 2012

HAPPY NEW YEAR

Hai,friends "ADVANCE WISHES FOR NEW YEAR" We goes nearly to the 2013, that means "NEW YEAR" we decide some thing about our life, whatever change the character or to help others or about our studies or about our works. SOME ADVICES FOR ALL : 1.LOVE OTHERS LIKE US 2.DO THE WORK WELL OR STUDY WELL 3.HELP OTHERS 4.LIVE WELL Once again, "ADVANCE WISHES FOR NEW YEAR" AND Enjoy the new year & holidays safe gugs

Dec 28, 2012

A Girl Write A Poem About The Delhi GangRape




I am a girl
And I'm afraid
To stand alone
In the darkness
To walk through the street
At night
They are not what they seem to be in daylight
They turn to werewolves
The Men
They are omnipresent
Can't erase them
But should hide myself
To protect myself
To save me
I have a question
To all of you
What did you earn?
What did you gain?
By
Tearing her apart
Watching her scream
Killing her to death
You
Just tramped the dreams
Of not one
But many
She was the light for some
The world for some
She was a friend
A sister
A daughter
You have no reason
To excuse
No reason
To ask for Sorry
For all you've done
Cannot be washed away
The pain will follow her
Not now,Not then
But forever
She is stained
What did you try to do
Show your strength?
Your Power?
Your actions are enough

To describe You
They may sentence you to death
They may give you life imprisonment
But is that enough?
For what you've done?
When she begged you to leave her
Did you just take a minute
To think about the brutality of your action?
She begged you
She craved for nothing
But her life
You gave it,with all the shattered pieces
Why couldn't you just kill her?
That would've helped her
Now she has to Fight
Fight to Live
All eyes around her
She'll be followed
Every now and then

She is lost
She is abandoned
She is
Not anymore what she was until that night
And you
Spend your life with ease in the jail

But Beware
You're not saved
There's a Judge
Who takes up all the cases

He'll never fail to hear
Our cries
You will face the Extremes
Of Torturing,Harassment
Not now,Not then
But forever from Now on.

Delhi rape case: Why women will continue to be raped in India

Late last night while flipping television channels I saw TV Mohandas Pai, a former CFO and HR Head of Infosys, advocating ‘chemical castration’ for rapists. A leading television anchor also ran his show yesterday around the theme and instigated his celebrity panellists in trying to get them to advocate chemical castration for rapists in India.
My heart is also thinking along similar lines. It even goes to the extent of telling me that the rapists should be stoned to death. But my head tells me even that won’t make a difference.
Any solution is as good as the system that executes it. In a country like India if anything like chemical castration for committing rapes becomes the order of the day and the police are pushed to solve rape cases faster, what are they likely to do? More often than not they will get hold of some random guy (the homeless, the slum dweller or probably just about the first person they can get their eyes on) beat the shit out of him and get him to confess to it. How do we ensure something like that does not happen? There is absolutely no way to do that.
The other point here is that the police and the judiciary the way they have evolved in India cater more to the rich and powerful rather than to those who ‘need’ the system to work for them. How do we ensure that solutions like ‘chemical castration’ will not be abused by the rich and the powerful?
Reuters
Someone very close to me for the last two years has been caught up fighting a false case registered against him in New Delhi. All it takes is a bribe of Rs 15,000-20,000 to the local thanedar to get a false first information report (FIR) registered. And it takes Rs 500-1000 to the babu at the court to ensure that the case does not come up for hearing, every time it is scheduled it. And this in a place like Delhi, which is the capital of the country. Imagine what must be happening in small towns and villages across India? The police in this country have sold out lock, stock and barrel and they shouldn’t be given any further ways of creating more problems for the citizens of this country.
What is interesting is the speed with which Delhi Police has acted in this case and managed to round up most of the rapists. The Delhi High Court has taken suo motu cognizance of the gang-rape and asked the Delhi Police to explain how the offence remained undetected.
Yes the citizens of this country are up in arms against what has happened but that I don’t believe is the real reason why the police and the judiciary have acted with such speed. The only reason for showing the speed that the system has is that the rapists come from the lower strata of the society. They are the ordinary citizens of this country.
As The Times of India reports “The accused have been identified as Ram Singh (33), resident of Ravidas Camp at Sector 3, R K Puram (driver of the bus, DL1PB-0149), his brother Mukesh, 24, (who was driving during the gang rape), Vinay Sharma, 20, (an assistant gym instructor in the area), Pawan Gupta, 18, (fruit seller), Akshay Thakur, 26, (bus cleaner) and another cleaner, Raju, 25.”
If the accused had been the sons of the rich and powerful the entire administration would have by now been working towards getting their names cleared.
The molestation charges against SPS Rathore, an inspector general of police were never proved. He got away with more than a little help from his friends in the government. Manu Sharma, son of Congress politician Venod Sharma, was first acquitted for the murder of model Jessica Lal. With the hue and cry that followed the judgement was overturned and Sharma was sentenced to life imprisonment.
In 2009, Sharma was allowed a parole of 30 days to attend to his sick mother and other matters. His mother was later found attending public functions and Sharma was found partying at a nightclub in Delhi. Matinee idol Salman Khan had rammed his Toyota Land Cruiser into a bakery in Bandra on September 28,2002, killing one person and injuring four others. The case has dragged on for ten years now.
Recently, cop turned lawyer-activist YP Singh revealed that the “Police had deliberately not taken the job of issuing summons seriously. Also, Salman was absent 82 times when summoned by the court.” This is what the rich and powerful in this country can do. The police is at their beck and call. Loads of rape cases go nowhere because the rich and the powerful who are the accused simply bribe their way through the system. When the accused go unpunished or justice takes a long time to be delivered, it makes rape a way of life for Indian men.
That brings me to my final point, the male:female sex ratio in India. As Vivek Dehejia and Rupa Subramanya write in Indianomix – Making Sense of Modern India “In 2011, the Census estimates that there were 914 girls for every 1,000 boys for the ages 0-6. This is even worse than in 2001, when there were 927 girls for every 1,000 boys. More pointedly, this ratio is the worst ever since the country’s independence in 1947…In nature, with no sex selection the observed sex ratio is approximately 1,020 males for every 1,000 females.”
What this tells us is that as a country we have a ‘son’ preference. And that leads us to sex-selective abortion and even female infanticide. In simple English we kill our girls before and just after they are born. Delhi and the neigbouring state Haryana have among the lowest sex ratios in the country. And it just doesn’t end there. Debraj Ray and Siwan Anderson have carried out research to suggest that most women who go missing in India do so as adults than at birth or as children. That explains India’s highly skewed sex ratio in favour of men.
Dehejia and Subramanya talk about the research of Ray and Anderson in their book. As they write “They show that about 12 per cent of women in India are missing at birth: they are probably missing due to sex selective abortion or infanticide. Another 25 per cent perish in childbirth. But that’s only a little more than a third of the total. Another 18 per cent go missing during their reproductive period, which picks up among other things deaths during childbirth. But a massive 45 per cent of the total number of missing women go missing in adulthood, something which by definition cannot have anything to do with sex selection.”
Anderson and Ray come up with some more information. “They find that it’s only in Punjab where the majority of missing women are at birth: in fact it’s as high as 60 per cent of the excess female mortality in the state…Two other states show up as having a majority of of their women missing at birth or in childhood (before the age of 15) and it shouldn’t surprise you to learn that they’re Haryana and Rajasthan.”
Hence, we kill our women before birth, after birth and keep killing them as they grow up. In a society like this it is not surprising that men grow up with terribly demented minds and commit heinous rapes like the one in Delhi.
People are appalled. And they want instant justice. Chemical castration. Public hanging. Stoned to death. Anything will do. But what has happened is sheer reflection of the way India has evolved. Women being raped day in and day out is a story of Indian evolution.
And evolution cannot be undone. So we might take to the streets to protest. Have candle night vigils. Protest on Twitter and Facebook. Call for chemical castration. Face water cannons from the police. Sing ballads against the government. Breakdown and cry while speaking in the Rajya Sabha.
But things won’t change.
As Arvind Kerjriwal  keeps reminding us “poore system ko badalna padega”. And that of course is easier said than done.
And in a day or two when our conscience is more at peace with itself, we will go back to living our lives like we always have. Because we are like this only. Meanwhile, women will continue to be raped.
Vivek Kaul is a writer. He can be reached at vivek.kaul@gmail.com

Delhi gang-rape victim succumbs to injuries


The rape victim who was brought for medical treatment ”passed away peacefully” with her family and officials of the Indian embassy by her side,” said Dr. Kevin Loh, the chief executive of Mount Elizabeth hospital where she had been treated since Thursday. “The Mount Elizabeth Hospital team of doctors, nurses and staff join her family in mourning her loss,” he said in a statement.
“Despite all efforts by a team of eight specialists in Mount Elizabeth Hospital to keep her stable, her condition continued to deteriorate over these two days. She had suffered from severe organ failure following serious injuries to her body and brain. She was courageous in fighting for her life for so long against the odds but the trauma to her body was too severe for her to overcome.” Dr. Loh said.
Indian High Commissioner to Singapore, T.C.A. Raghanvan told reporters that the scale of the injuries she suffered was “very grave” and in the end it “proved too much". He said arrangements are being made to take her body back to India
But by late Friday, the young woman's condition had “taken a turn for the worse” and her vital signs had deteriorated. It was clear then that she would not survive long.
PTI adds:
The girl who was admitted on Thursday morning at the multi-organ speciality facility, Mount Elizabeth Hospital, in an extremely critical condition here, died at 4:45 AM local time (2:15 AM Indian time), the hospital said in a statement. She was earlier treated at the Safdarjung Hospital in Delhi.
The body has been moved to the mortuary in the Singapore General Hospital for completion of some formalities since she is a foreigner, sources said.
The family of the girl wants the body to be taken to India, Indian High Commissioner to Singapore T.C.A. Raghavan told reporters.
He said the girl, who was conscious, fought a brave battle till the end. She was brought to Singapore for being provided good medical treatment.
“The family is shattered by this development. At the same time, they realised that best possible medical attention was given. And in the end it was the scale of injuries that proved too much for the medical attention provided to her,” the envoy said.
He said the final few hours was a trying time for the girl’s family and they bore the entire process with a great deal of fortitude and courage.
Mr. Raghavan said the family has requested that their privacy be respected in their hour of grief.
The girl, accompanied by her parents, was flown in an air ambulance in a critical condition on Wednesday night, after her health had suffered a setback that morning in the Delhi hospital following a government decision over which experts were divided.
The six-hour journey itself was said to have been eventful with her blood pressure having dipped alarmingly.
The patient had remained in an extremely critical condition since admission to Hospital in the morning of 27 Dec. (Singapore time), the Mount Elizabeth hospital statement said.
“Despite all efforts by a team of eight specialists in Mount Elizabeth Hospital to keep her stable, her condition continued to deteriorate over these two days.” the hospital statement said, adding, “She had suffered from severe organ failure following serious injuries to her body and brain. She was courageous in fighting for her life for so long against the odds but the trauma to her body was too severe for her to overcome.”
“We are humbled by the privilege of being tasked to care for her in her final struggle. We acknowledge the faith the Indian Government and the patient’s family have placed with us to ensure the best care possible was indeed provided to her at Mount Elizabeth Hospital,” it said.
“We share their huge sadness at her passing and will work with the High Commission of India to provide the family support in this time of grief,” said Dr. Loh.
Late on Friday night, the hospital said the condition of the rape victim had taken a “turn for the worse”.
“As of 9 p.m. (6:30 p.m. IST), the patient’s condition has taken a turn for the worse. Her vital signs are deteriorating with signs of severe organ failure,” Dr. Loh had said in a statement.
“This is despite doctors fighting for her life including putting her on maximum artificial ventilation support, optimal antibiotic doses as well as stimulants which maximize her body’s capability to fight infections,” the CEO had said.
During her treatment in Safdarjung Hospital, the girl’s condition had recorded several ups and downs. Three days after the attack, her gangrenous intestine was removed.
The bestial attack on the girl and her male friend in the bus had sparked off protests by students and women activists which took a violent turn in the capital last Saturday and Sunday.
Death for rapists was one of the demands of the protesters and the victim’s demise could trigger fresh display of emotions on the streets.
One of the Delhi police constables, Subhash Chand Tomar, died in a government hospital on Tuesday and the post-mortem report had said that he had suffered a cardiac arrest from complications arising out of injuries on his chest and neck.
Shaken by the public outrage, the government constituted a Commission of Inquiry into the incident and also set up a three-member Committee under former Supreme Court Chief Justice A.S. Anand to look into the possibility of rewriting the laws relating to aggravated sexual assault and enhancing penalty for it.
Congress President Sonia Gandhi had on Friday demanded speedy action against the perpetrators of the “barbarous” attack, while Prime Minister Manmohan Singh said the government was committed to bringing the guilty to justice as soon as possible. 


(hi gugs it is not my own post it is from website you don't worry..,,,., give me your comments to this post)


   BY

  kathir

Shaming of Rapists database


 What’s a little naming-and-shaming compared to calls for public hangings and chemical castration?
The government has decided it’s going to prepare a database of all rape convicts across the country. So far, so good.
But then it says it’s going to put them on the National Crimes Records Bureau (NCRB) website complete with photographs, names and addresses. And the public can access the website.
It’s hard to have much sympathy for rapists. Even prisoners thrashed the men accused of gang-raping the 23-year-old in the Delhi bus. Yet the prospect of this website should give us pause. It’s always worrisome when policies are cooked up in an overheated chamber of  righteous popular outrage. This proposed database seems prompted less by a concern for public safety than a belated attempt by a flatfooted government to give the appearance of swift action. If we cannot hang them in the public square, let’s hang them in a public database at least.
The database sounds dangerously like a well-planned roadmap for a lynch mob.
As a country we have been rightly castigating ourselves for keeping quiet when we see women being harassed on a bus or a train. But if we err on the side of no action, we also can just as easily hurtle towards the other extreme. The power of a mob can go both ways. It can molest a woman the way it did in front of a Guwahati bar  earlier this year. Or it can turn on a suspected rapist and thrash him to death. Soon after the Delhi gangrape, five men in a Jharkhand village,  all “suspected eve teasers” were beaten to death by an angry mob. “We were fed up with their misbehaviour with women of the villages,” a villager told a local news channel.


In a society which has little faith in the process of law actually delivering justice speedily, it’s very tempting to dish out vengeance instead. A government should not be making it easier for frustrated citizens to do just that by making vigilante retribution only a mouse click away.  If a woman is molested somewhere, would any registered sex offender in the neighbourhood be safe? And what if a clerical error puts the wrong name into a database? One shudders to imagine what someone will have to go through to get the behemoth of government bureaucracy to fix that mistake.
Mind you, this is meant to be a database for convicted rapists. So this means that even if the rapist has served whatever sentence a court has laid down for his crime, he (and his family) will be tarred and feathered for the rest of their lives. And yes, it will affect the family as well because the sins of the son always come to rest on the parents. (Case in point — all those calls for Pranab Mukherjee  to apologise for his middle-aged son’s idiotic statements.)
The government says the idea is to prevent repeat offences. Yet is it even clear that rape is a “repeat offence” in the way pedophilia usually is? The US has something similar for sex offenders. It’s called Megan’s Law. It too was passed at the height of feverish national outrage.  In 1994 seven-year-old Megan Kanka was raped and murdered by Jesse Timmendequas, a sex offender who lived across the street from her with several other sex offenders. It was a quiet neighbhourhood where children played in each other’s homes and the parents had no idea that sex offenders were living in their midst. Now sex offenders have to register with police and the community had to be notified when one moves into a neighbourhood. When some raised privacy concerns the lawmaker who  proposed the law said simply if that law had been in place in 1994, Megan Kanka would have been alive. The consensus is the importance of protecting public safety outweighs the convicted sex offender’s right to privacy.
In the US, there have not been many instances of vigilantism on the basis of Megan’s law. But it’s hard to be as sanguine about India. Today’s Telegraph has the story of an angry mob in the Tiljala neighbourhood of Kolkata beating up a rag-picker who had picked up a baby outside a shanty. They suspected she was part of a child snatching racket. A local youth alleged he had heard her muttering “I have lifted many before and today it’s the turn of this kid.” That’s all it took to beat her to death. In a hot-headed culture where we are happy to act first and think later, this public database could be a ticking time bomb.
This gruesome Delhi case notwithstanding, the thing to remember about rape is that  women (and children) are often more at risk at home and among people they know than out on the street. A district judge in Delhi just let off a man accused of marital rape by his wife not because he didn’t do it but because the penal code does not recognise marital rape. Section 375 of the Indian Penal Code says “Sexual intercourse by a man with his own wife, the wife not being under 15 years of age, is not rape.” The attitudes towards women are regressive across the board. The president’s son might be the current target of national ridicule but he has plenty of compatriots in parliament (and indeed everywhere else) who are breathing a sigh of relief that no one is paying attention to the idiotic things they have said.  The louder the cry to name and shame others, the more it seems we want to deflect attention from our failings.
According to the NCRB’s statistics  two women are raped every hour in India. Between 2007 and 2011 rapes have gone up 20 percent all over the country. And the conviction rate is abysmal. The national average for conviction hovers at around 27.7 percent.  Perhaps we need to look closely at the reasons for that. What will a database of convicted rapists achieve other than naming and shaming?
A government should provide safety. A government should provide fast track justice when rapes occur. A government should hold its police accountable when a woman walks into a police station to report a rape and then wishes she had not even bothered.
That is the business of government.
When naming and shaming becomes government business, we should all be worried.

Victim 'fighting for her life',


 Victim 'fighting for her life', hospital says

SINGAPORE: The 23-year-old Delhi gang-rape victim has significant brain injury, infection in lungs and abdomen and she is currently struggling against all odds at Mount Elizabeth Hospital where her condition continues to be "extremely critical", the hospital said on Thursday.

"Our medical team's investigations upon her arrival at the hospital yesterday showed that in addition to her prior cardiac arrest, she also had infection of her lungs and abdomen, as well as significant brain injury," said Dr Kelvin Loh, chief executive officer, Mount Elizabeth Hospital.

In a statement, Dr Loh said, "The patient is currently struggling against the odds, and fighting for her life."

Briefing reporters here on girl's condition, Loh said, "As at 28 December, 11am (8:30 IST) the patient continues to remain in an extremely critical condition."

The girl, who was gang-raped and brutally assaulted in a moving bus on December 16, was brought here in an air ambulance yesterday and admitted to the intensive care unit.

She had undergone three surgeries at the Safdarjung Hospital in Delhi, where she remained on ventilator support during most part of the treatment. Doctors removed major part of her intestines which had become gangrenous.

"A multi-disciplinary team of specialists has been working tirelessly to treat her since her arrival, and is doing everything possible to stabilise her condition over the next few days," Dr Loh said.

"The High Commission of India has been fully supportive in helping the hospital and her family, and ensuring that the best care is made available," he added.

The security was tightened at the hospital, favoured by well-heeled patients, with each visitor screened before being allowed into the ICU.

In Delhi, Congress chief Sonia Gandhi stressed that no time should be lost in bringing the perpetrators of such barbarous act to justice.

Prime Minister Manmohan Singh assured that those found guilty of lapses in the aftermath of the incident will not be spared.

"We are committed to bringing the guilty to justice as soon as possible," Singh said, adding that best possible medical care was being provided to the victim.

The victim's father, who flew in with her, said he was reassured that the best is being done for his daughter.

The girl's family members do not speak English and rely on interpreters to communicate with hospital staff, the Strait Times newspaper reported.

The High Commission of India has assigned a liaison officer with the family.







      BY

  kathir

 gugs give me your comments



Nov 10, 2012

KATHIRRAJAAVI: diwali celebrations

KATHIRRAJAAVI: diwali celebrations: submitted by kathir Deepawali or Diwali is certainly the biggest and the brightest of all Hindu festivals. It's the festival of lig...

diwali celebrations


submitted by
kathir

Deepawali or Diwali is certainly the biggest and the brightest of all Hindu festivals. It's the festival of lights (deep = light and avali = a row i.e., a row of lights) that's marked by four days of celebration, which literally illumines the country with its brilliance, and dazzles all with its joy. Each of the four days in the festival of Diwali is separated by a different tradition, but what remains true and constant is the celebration of life, its enjoyment and goodness.

The Origin of Diwali

Historically, the origin ofDiwali can be traced back to ancient India, when it was probably an important harvest festival. However, there are various legends pointing to the origin of Diwali or 'Deepawali.' Some believe it to be the celebration of the marriage of Lakshmi with Lord Vishnu. Whereas in Bengal the festival is dedicated to the worship of Mother Kali, the dark goddess of strength. Lord Ganesha, the elephant-headed God, the symbol of auspiciousness and wisdom, is also worshiped in most Hindu homes on this day. In Jainism, Deepawali has an added significance to the great event of Lord Mahavira attaining the eternal bliss of nirvana. Diwali also commemorates the return of Lord Rama along with Sita and Lakshman from his fourteen year long exile and vanquishing the demon-king Ravana. In joyous celebration of the return of their king, the people of Ayodhya, the Capital of Rama, illuminated the kingdom with earthen diyas (oil lamps) and burst crackers.

These Four Days

Each day of Diwali has its own tale, legend and myth to tell. The first day of the festival Naraka Chaturdasi marks the vanquishing of the demon Naraka by Lord Krishna and his wife Satyabhama. Amavasya, the second day of Deepawali, marks the worship of Lakshmi, the goddess of wealth in her most benevolent mood, fulfilling the wishes of her devotees.Amavasya also tells the story of Lord Vishnu, who in his dwarf incarnation vanquished the tyrant Bali, and banished him to hell. Bali was allowed to return to earth once a year, to light millions of lamps to dispel the darkness and ignorance, and spread the radiance of love and wisdom. It is on the third day of Deepawali — Kartika Shudda Padyami that Bali steps out of hell and rules the earth according to the boon given by Lord Vishnu. The fourth day is referred to as Yama Dvitiya (also called Bhai Dooj) and on this day sisters invite their brothers to their homes.

The Significance of Lights & Firecrackers

All the simple rituals of Diwali have a significance and a story to tell. The illumination of homes with lights and the skies with firecrackers is an expression of obeisance to the heavens for the attainment of health, wealth, knowledge, peace and prosperity. According to one belief, the sound of fire-crackers are an indication of the joy of the people living on earth, making the gods aware of their plentiful state. Still another possible reason has a more scientific basis: the fumes produced by the crackers kill a lot of insects and mosquitoes, found in plenty after the rains.

The Tradition of Gambling

The tradition of gambling on Diwali also has a legend behind it. It is believed that on this day, Goddess Parvati played dice with her husband Lord Shiva, and she decreed that whosoever gambled on Diwali night would prosper throughout the ensuing year. Diwali is associated with wealth and prosperity in many ways, and the festival of 'Dhanteras' ('dhan' = wealth; 'teras' = 13th) is celebrated two days before the festival of lights.

From Darkness Unto Light...

In each legend, myth and story of Deepawali lies the significance of the victory of good over evil; and it is with each Deepawali and the lights that illuminate our homes and hearts, that this simple truth finds new reason and hope. From darkness unto light — the light that empowers us to commit ourselves to good deeds, that which brings us closer to divinity. During Diwali, lights illuminate every corner of India and the scent of incense sticks hangs in the air, mingled with the sounds of fire-crackers, joy, togetherness and hope. Diwali is celebrated around the globe. Outside India, it is more than a Hindu festival, it's a celebration of South-Asian identities. If you are away from the sights and sounds of Diwali, light a diya, sit quietly, shut your eyes, withdraw the senses, concentrate on this supreme light and illuminate the soul.


Nov 9, 2012

Friendship


''FRIENDSHIP''



Hai friends, Every person has lot of friends but in student life friend are
not like that they are only expect friendship only with us. and they rare our first friend & they are the best ever.but we not member them.                    




''A friend is someone who knows the song in your heart and sings it back to you when you have forgotten how it goes''.



friendship

''FAIRWELL DAY ''

I love my friends neither with
my heart nor with my mind.
Just in case heart might stop, Mind can forget.
I love them with my soul.
Soul never stops or forget..




If you trust someone, trust till the very end ….. whatever the results maybe … In the end you will have a very good friend or a very good lesson !!!!






To be Kind is more important than to be right. Many times what people need is not a brilliant mind that speaks but a special heart that listens. And it is compassion that makes a special heart move to the pain of others. Be compassionate and loving human being.

Be the wind to drive others; A leaf which falls from the tree is at the mercy of wind,
it goes wherever wind takes it. Be the wind to drive others, not the leaf to be driven by others.!




                       








A Friendship rose for you; This rose is a symbol of our friendship and signifies how important you are to me . May your days always be blessed with happiness and love. Friendship – Inspirational Quotes, Pictures and Motivational Thoughts. …


 I offer you peace. I offer you love. I offer you friendship.
I see your beauty. I hear your need. I feel your feelings.My wisdom flows from the Highest Source. I salute that Source in you.Let us work together for unity and love. ~ Mahatma Gandhi



 THE ROAD T O A FRIEND’S HOUSE IS NEVER  LONG ……..Danish proverb Friendship – Inspirational Quotes, Pictures and Motivational Thoughts. <<< Friends are precious ~ Friendship is priceless ~ Welcome Home >>>





























 There are people we meet in life that everything seem magical… cherish them






















Three things of life that once gone , never come back : Time ,words & opportunity .
Three things of life that must not be lost : Peace , Hope & Honesty .
Three things of life that are most valuable : Love , Self-confidence & Friend.
Be aware and have a beautiful life.


 I offer you peace. I offer you love. I offer you friendship.
I see your beauty. I hear your need. I feel your feelings.My wisdom flows from the Highest Source. I salute that Source in you.Let us work together for unity and love. ~ Mahatma Gandhi
Mahatma Gandhi ~ The Idol of Humanity ~ Salutations on his BirthDay ~



Here are 10 wonderful collection of quotes on Friends & Friendship from our blog which have been consistently liked the most by our blog readers.
1. Words of true friend: I can’t promise to solve all your problems; but i can promise that i’ll never  let you face them alone…….
2. A friend is one who …. Sees your first drop of tear …… Catches the second ….. Stops the third …… and turns the fourth into a Smile!!!
3If you trust someone, trust till the very end ….. whatever the results maybe … In the end you will have a very good friend or a very good lesson !!!!
4. A friend is someone who knows the song in your heart and sings it back to you when you have forgotten how it goes.
5. Never choose a friend without complete understanding and , Never Lose a friend because of a small misunderstanding ….
6. Friendship… its a package of feelings. Nobody can make it, nobody can break it, nobody can explain it, only we can feel it….
7. Do you know which is the best part of life? When your family understands you as a friend and Your friends support you as your family…
8. The world’s happiest friends never have the same nature. They just have the best understanding of their differences…..
9. To love without condition, To talk without intention, To give without reason, And to care without expectation… this is the heart of a true friend….
10. True friends are like mornings, you cant have them the whole day, but you can be sure, they will be there when you wakeup tomorrow, next year and forever…..
7 colors make a rainbow, 7 chord make a music, 7 days make a week, 7 continents make a world and 7 beautiful letters make us FRIENDS. Friends are priceless .Wishing you true, genuine, wonderful, loving friendships …







BYE BYE FRIENDS