#1 of 16: PAKISTAN: ORIGINS, IDENTITY, AND FUTURE

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  • Опубликовано: 19 окт 2024
  • Pervez Hoodbhoy in conversation with Shaheryar Azhar. #1 of 16 episodes.
    -- Why this book?
    -- About the author
    -- The book's architecture
    -- Ancient India
    -- The Muslim invasion
    The international edition (Routledge) is available from www.amazon.com... , and the local (Pakistani) version from foliobooks.pk/...
    TABLE OF CONTENTS:
    o Front cover endorsement by Noam Chomsky
    o Back cover endorsements
    o Acknowledgments
    o About the author
    o Foreword by Christophe Jaffrelot
    o Why this Book?
    o Charting the Labyrinth
    Myths of a nation’s origin
    Exclusivism as philosophy
    Was Partition accidental?
    The book’s expeditionary map (Parts I-V)
    o Part One: Long Before The Two Nation Idea
    1. Identity formation in medieval India
    The herd instinct
    India without nations
    The Sanskrit controversy
    Muslim invasions
    Mughal era purifiers of Islam
    Conclusion
    2. The British reinvent India
    Colonialism quietly sneaks in
    The Great Mutiny - a watershed
    Demoralized Muslim ashrafiyya
    Exception: the United Provinces
    The Muslim predicament
    Modernity impacts Muslims
    Modernity impacts Hindus
    Ways begin to part
    o Part Two: A Closer Look At Pakistan’s Three Founder-Heroes
    3. Founder I: the lonely modernizer
    Early years
    It’s okay to eat mangos
    Metamorphosis to modernity
    Siding with the British
    An unabashed elitist
    The non-communal Sir Syed
    Sir Syed communalizes
    Sir Syed’s mixed legacy
    4. Founder II: premier poet-preacher-politician
    Everyone loves Iqbal
    Biographical sketch
    Philosopher or just philosophical?
    Iqbal uses languages selectively
    Iqbal on faith versus reason
    Iqbal’s physics/math criticisms
    Iqbal’s “higher” communalism
    Iqbal on women
    Iqbal on theocracy
    Iqbal on blasphemy
    Iqbal and Sir Syed compared
    5. Founder III: liberal-secular-visionary?
    Did Jinnah have a plan?
    Anticipating dependence
    Did Jinnah not want Pakistan?
    Jinnah - the man
    Did Jinnah want secularism?
    Jinnah fuses politics with religion
    Jinnah and the Islamic state
    Jinnah’s Shia problem
    A master tactician not strategist
    6. Jinnah trounces his Muslim opponents
    Maududi - Jinnah’s nemesis
    Azad - the prescient cleric
    Bacha Khan - the peaceful Pathan
    Who won, who lost?
    o Part Three: Postnatal Blues
    7. Stubborn angularities I: Bengal
    A snapshot of history
    Mocking Bangla
    The road to separation
    Punjab still doesn’t want to know why
    Bangladesh overtakes Pakistan
    Final reflections
    8. Stubborn angularities II: Balochistan
    A shotgun wedding
    Baloch identity emerges
    Changes since 1947
    Too rich to be left alone
    CPEC and Balochistan
    The secession question
    The way forward
    o Part Four: Five Big Questions
    9. Was Partition worth the price?
    The no-Pakistan option
    Socialist utopia rejected
    Mobilizing the Muslim masses
    The winners
    The losers
    The cobra effect
    10. What is the ideology of Pakistan - and why does it matter?
    Ideology defined
    Hindutva ideology
    Pakistan ka matlab kya?
    The weaponization of ideology
    Resolving the ideology conundrum
    11. Why couldn’t Pakistan become an Islamic state?
    Warmup: a Christian state
    Who speaks for Islam?
    Qur’an and Islamic state
    Islamic scholars on the Islamic state
    Model I: The Medina state
    Model II: Maudoodi’s Islamic state
    Model III: The Taliban state
    The caliphate’s undying appeal
    The ummah and pan-Islamism
    What created political Islam?
    What if Pakistan becomes an Islamic sharia state?
    Is a liberal sharia state possible?
    12. Why is Pakistan a praetorian state?
    The Establishment defined
    Bankrupt political class
    A once apolitical army
    America’s junior partner
    Strong men make weak countries
    Wars of choice
    Cross-border jihad - a failed experiment
    Courting the blasphemy-busters
    India under martial law?
    13. Identity crisis: I’m Pakistani but what am I?
    Inventing an ancient Pakistan
    Telling Hindu from Muslim
    State imposed identity
    Cultural orphans
    The first Pakistani
    Arab Wannabe Syndrome
    My name is Ertugrul
    Citizens and subjects
    Price of prejudice
    The overseas Pakistani
    Folks: here’s what I really am!
    o Part Five: Looking Ahead
    14. Three imminent physical perils
    Climate change
    Population bomb
    Nuclear war
    Prognosis up to 2047
    15. The paths travelled post-1971
    Experiment One - Vengeance
    Experiment Two - Nizam-e-Mustafa
    Experiment Three - Enlightened moderation
    Experiment Four - Hybrid regime
    Why the experiments failed
    16. Replacing the Two Nation Theory
    End legalized discrimination
    Spread the wealth
    Pakistan not Punjabistan
    Uncage the women
    Give skills don’t brainwash
    Cool down Kashmir
    Send army to the barracks
    Epilogue
    o Index

Комментарии • 79

  • @satyamxyz1093
    @satyamxyz1093 Год назад +40

    Good discussion. However, I don't agree with your comment that Mughals were the first rulers to bring India under one kingdom. Before Mughals there were several kingdoms (e.g., Ashoka, Kanishk, Vikramaditya) who not only brought the entire country under one kingdom but also they extended it to far beyond India's boundaries right up to Afghanistan.

  • @dineshchandel350
    @dineshchandel350 Год назад +12

    All the Muslims in Southwest Asia are of Hindu origin. The Muslims of Pakistan should not forget this fact and hence their identity is that of a Hindu.

  • @vs9324
    @vs9324 Год назад +32

    Mother India may or may not have been a virgin but Pakistanis are unable to agree even today on who their fathers were. The Turks or the Arabs or the Mongolians?

  • @rajnikantraval5941
    @rajnikantraval5941 Год назад +12

    Dr hoodbhoy , all Muslims were hindus converted to muslim faith afterwards. Sanskrit is the oldest language of india which were followed by our Rishis and called our God's language.

  • @VedPrakash-vf7or
    @VedPrakash-vf7or Год назад +8

    A very interesting and informative discussion ❤. I have listened to Dr. Hoodbhoy many times but it’s for the first time that I heard Sheheyar Azhar . Couldn’t believe someone speaking such a good English across the border. Very well coordinated interview. Looking forward for the next episode.

  • @ala7515
    @ala7515 Год назад +19

    Dr. Hoodbhoy, I'm looking forward to reading this book. Just a few thought experiments:
    1) What if Din-i Ilahi sustained post Akbar era and flourished in the subcontinent; how the subcontinent would have been different?
    2) By the start of 18th century before British arrived in India, the Mughal empire was almost replaced by the Maratha empire and to some extent by the Sikhs in Punjab. The Mughals were just the titular heads of Delhi. If the British hadn't arrived in India, the Marathas and Sikhs would have ruled the subcontinent. Most likely the subcontinent could have been divided based on the princely states and would ended up forming European union-like polity.

  • @nasirmustafa2492
    @nasirmustafa2492 Год назад +22

    Our identity is defined by our language. I speak Punjabi so I am a Punjabi, those who speak Bengali are Bengalis. Religion doesn't define our identity. Religion guides us about the life in the hereafter and the relationship between the two lives.

    • @averagebodybuilder
      @averagebodybuilder Год назад +4

      Religion doesn't define your identity. It defines mine. I am first a Muslim and then a punjabi. Not the other way around.

    • @virendraSingh-je3sx
      @virendraSingh-je3sx Год назад +6

      So, you all speak Indian languages, hence you are Indian. Even Urdu was borne in India

  • @abhishekinfra
    @abhishekinfra Год назад +26

    Sanskrit is like Urdu, whose grammar and syntax largely originated in India, but some words are Arabic, Persian or Turkish. Similarly, it's true that Sanskrit, Russian and some slavic languages have some common words. Example : fire is "Agni" in Sanskrit and "Agon" in Russian. It means that both descended from some common Indo-European language. But Sanskrit's grammar was formalized in the Indian subcontinent. Panini, who formalized Sanskrit, lived in what today is Pakistan.
    The concept of a unified land called Bharat Khand (or Bharat) is mentioned in the Vedas, Mahabharat and Ramayana. We're certain that Gandhaar mentioned in Mahabharat is present-day Kandahar. The idea of a unified kingdom of whole of Bharat was always sought after and even achieved by Chandragupta Maurya, Ashoka, Prithviraj Chauhan (only north and Central India) and more lately, the Marathas. However, the sheer size of the subcontinent made it very difficult for any one ruler to hold on for long. So, there have been smaller dynasties like Hoysalas, Chalukyas, Cholas and many others.
    Like China, India is a civilizational country. Over centuries, many dynasties tried to consolidate our respective vast lands with some success. Only in the 20th century, did both countries unify under their respective banners. India though, was unfortunately partitioned.
    Bharat varsh and Hinduism are like the Greek and Roman civilizations. Ancient and polytheistic. But unlike the latter two, Bharat and Hinduism survived the assault by Islam/Christianity due to the sheer size of Bharat.

  • @abhay_cs
    @abhay_cs Год назад +2

    Prof Hoodbhoy in his usual mood. Thing is, Hindus did have a sense of identity across India. Al Beruni distincly says that there are two places that no Indian will allow him to visit (no foreigner can enter). Can you guess? It is Kashmir and Kashi. What is common to these is the shared religion and that very Hindu sentiment that a foreigner will "corrupt" that holy soil.

  • @sanjithkmemon8525
    @sanjithkmemon8525 Год назад +13

    Dr Hoodboy. When muslims under jinnah sliced away a part of India do you think it did not hurt us? Or are we supposed to be free from hurt? Werent you hurt when bangladesh parted? If you did, then why cant you feel our hurt?
    Hindu nationalism is only a reaction to pan islamism.

  • @merebaap8370
    @merebaap8370 Год назад +4

    Excellent as usual. Mr. Hoodhhoy. A much needed perspective of history.
    Love from India.

  • @kanchhediachamaar9289
    @kanchhediachamaar9289 Год назад +6

    The Greek historians around the time of Alexander the great called India Indoi.

  • @divyanshsh
    @divyanshsh Год назад +3

    13:00 "he was a theosophist" array sirr... aaj to ❤ DIL JEET LIYE AAP 🙏 maa blavatsky (urf radha bai) aur shri Jiddu Krishnamurti ji to mera SALAM aur NAMASKAR 🙏

  • @azanraza6234
    @azanraza6234 Год назад +2

    chapters are telling that this could be the finest exploration of question what we are today.

  • @SaurabhSingh-pp6ys
    @SaurabhSingh-pp6ys Год назад +31

    Sir Sanskrit never came from outside. It was originated in India by Aryan Migrants who probably came from Southern Russia or Region above Caspian Sea somewhere around 1800 BC

  • @pramodvyas4862
    @pramodvyas4862 Год назад +2

    Excellent work... Congratulations.
    A scientist is after all a scientist and can see things with a dispassionate mind endowed with scientific temper. I look forward to next episode.

  • @alimohtashimkhan2711
    @alimohtashimkhan2711 Год назад +1

    Beautiful discussion in a different style.

  • @nazlone
    @nazlone Год назад

    Amongst the few persons who are international celebrities from pakistan, are Prof Ishtiaq and prof. Hoodbhoy. Even if you differ with them, they cannot be ignored.

  • @mohanvirick2600
    @mohanvirick2600 Год назад +1

    Enjoyed this historical account of our shared past

  • @sanjithkmemon8525
    @sanjithkmemon8525 Год назад +3

    Dr Hoodhbouy if its the hittite horse training literature that you have to call sanskrit to have originated in syria...then its a thin thread to say that sanskrit originated there. Let me ask you, what was the language called in syria? Sanskrit or something else?

  • @honorhonor3352
    @honorhonor3352 Год назад +1

    Thank you for doing this.

  • @djsunshine1
    @djsunshine1 Год назад +2

    One way to understand the evolution of a society is by studying the evolution of the language. Just like DNA it evolves like a life!
    As a matter of fact all conscious thoughts happen in a language!
    Having said that one can argue that the most purest version of the language and grammar will be... where it is likely originated! For example Arabic spoken in Pakistan or India would be less pure than what it's practiced in Saudi Arabia!
    As a fact the purest form of Sanskrit in its also as an evolved way happened in India! For example Vedas...that originated at least 5000 years ago. Saraswati River vanished almost before 8000 years or more! There's geographic proof on the ground! In Mahabharata it's described that this Saraswati River vanishes in some places and comes back out in the other parts of western India...and now we know it has vanished.
    The point I am trying to make is...that there's no question that Vedas & the language of the Veda is the oldest...and purest! Sanskrit in Mahabharata is an evolved Sanskrit...from...Vedas. Both happened in India.... You are a progeny of that people & language! Nation was called 'Bharat Varsha'...in those days!
    Occupiers who wrote the history described it as a 'Nation'...for their own convenience! By labeling it differently one cannot change the underlying truth!
    You are failing to express that having a separate Pakistan was an induced idea of the British Empire...Jinnah became the tool of a British Exit strategy....especially as a hedge against the risk of a 'Blow Back' from Hindustan... if they have to leave in a hurry!..Especially if there was no infighting between Hindus and Muslims!
    That's why the British government & the US government have practiced ... The division we have is kept alive time after time! Keeping alive deep routed quarrel issues!
    Even now Pakistani politics is run by Pakistanies in the UK! There's no unified Muslim opinion... enabling Nationhood...we witnessed it in the names of 'Bengali fights & the exudes of Ahmedias' from Pakistan!
    Pakistani hatred for Hindus is so deep that they are attempting to outcast their forefathers!!!
    (Think Gazwae Hind! ...willing to sell out as Gazwae Pakistan to China!!)Indonesians and Malaysians are honest and courageous enough to recognize & accept their own forefathers!
    Yes Mother Hindustan was not a virgin... otherwise all of us would not have been born! We are not like children of the 'Virgin Merry'!!!

  • @lon9540
    @lon9540 Год назад +5

    Here is something people don't know, and, Modi won't like this BUT the truth is: The earliest form of Sanskrit is that used in the Rig Veda (called Old Indic or Rigvedic Sanskrit). Amazingly, Rigvedic Sanskrit was first recorded in inscriptions found not on the plains of India but in in what is now northern Syria.
    Between 1500 and 1350 BC, a dynasty called the Mitanni ruled over the upper Euphrates-Tigris basin, land that corresponds to what are now the countries of Syria, Iraq, and Turkey.

  • @kkamraanahsan173
    @kkamraanahsan173 Год назад

    Very nice, informative and meaningful. Keep up the good work sir 👌 👍 👏

  • @mohanvirick2600
    @mohanvirick2600 Год назад

    Is the book available at Amazon
    Sure would buy it

  • @vivekmundhe8693
    @vivekmundhe8693 Год назад +2

    All the historical monuments built during Moghal era are found in India...why can't we find them in any Islamic countries...? Many are saying that, Moghals built these monuments with Hindu architecture (Vastushastra) and Hindu construction workers and artisans with deep knowledge of vastushastra.

  • @subramayamrvr8774
    @subramayamrvr8774 Год назад +1

    Please write about the history of Anatolia Constantinople Istanbul and the origin of AL Aqsa mosque from the claims of Jewish history and Christian history.

  • @sheikhfarid4038
    @sheikhfarid4038 Год назад +1

    excellent ❤🇧🇩

  • @addytov
    @addytov Год назад +1

    one of the best book, just reading

  • @parmeshreddykadire9001
    @parmeshreddykadire9001 Год назад +1

    Good and informative discussion

  • @indrajitgupta3280
    @indrajitgupta3280 Год назад

    As Professor Hoodbhoy points out, it was a rapid demographic change from 1700 onwards. This is slightly misleading. The Portuguese were far more active, far longer. Urbanisation and rapid demographic change happened in Goa before the British brought in changes in parts that they ruled. That also included the impact of European laws; Goa has had a uniform civil code right through, even as India grapples with the concept and tries to separate it from Islamophobic action.

  • @rishabhkachroo
    @rishabhkachroo Год назад +5

    As always, astutely put by Prof. Hoodbhoy. Always a delight to hear him.

  • @Flowerbloom-g5l
    @Flowerbloom-g5l Год назад +11

    Well, the ancient Sanskrit, which may have come with Aryans may not have originated in India. However the sophistication and evolution of Sanskrit very much originated on Indian soil by Indian genius scholars like Maharshi Panini who laid down the complex, sophisticated grammar of classical Sanskrit. Ancient Sanskrit in which Vedas were created is very different from classical Sanskrit, in which Vedantic literature like Upanishads, Sankhyas, Bhashyas, Shruti, Smriti, The Gita, several poems, plays were later written. Sir, you may want to believe that your sources of research was perfect, but that is far from reality. Before even the Indians, it was Germans who did extensive research on Sanskrit and its literature. Kindly try to source German research also if you don't trust Indian scholars on the subject. Sir, you are a brainly scientist, rational thinker, but your hatred towards Dharmic civilization, which evolved on Indian subcontinent is obvious. You try to negate or belittle every thing of beauty, which came from people of Dharmic civilization on Indian subcontinent. In contrast, you glorify achievements of "Muslims" from 9-11th centrury, lumping all the followers of Islam, from Philippines to Albania and Spain and for some intellectual advancements that the Syrian, Iraqi or Labenese followers of Islam made. In reality, those practicing Islam made some scientific progress - not because of Islam but inspite of Islam. Islam and science are opposites, actually. Your credibility of neutral, objective observations is highly compromised in this latest book, maybe because you hate BJP/RSS. You are free to hate the latter, but at least don't twist reality to customize your hatred.

  • @balanatraj7712
    @balanatraj7712 Год назад

    Dr. Hoodbhoy - I have watched several of your videos. They have always been very enlightening. It appears that this books pretty much starts with the entry of Moghuls in India. What about the period starting from Mauryan empire (325 BCE to 180 BCE approx)? I hope the book covers that.

  • @nadiaalibaig
    @nadiaalibaig Год назад

    Great

  • @somnathde8680
    @somnathde8680 Год назад +1

    Great subject.👌

  • @RaviRJoshi
    @RaviRJoshi Год назад

    Excellent discussion, Sirs

  • @aniurs
    @aniurs Год назад +2

    Dr.Hoodhoy, respect from a fellow physicist for your effort. But with all honesty I have to tell you , however good your intentions are, you are making the same mistake as the Nehruvian historians. They are tasked to write the history to reconcile the differences of the partitioned India. Its a ideological project. It is not a history based on facts, so they have cherry picked the incidents. Fast forward 75 yrs, see the result, still there is no reconciliation. The best way forward is bring to the forefront the good, bad and ugly and leave it to the masses to decide for themselves how they want to deal with it. Never underestimate the intellect of the common people. Best wishes!

  • @jamshedfbc
    @jamshedfbc Год назад +1

  • @subramayamrvr8774
    @subramayamrvr8774 Год назад

    Foreign religions have divided the world into believers and non believers while belief is subject to scrutiny and belief has been exploited for political power and commercial exploitation.

  • @mkpandyapandya5188
    @mkpandyapandya5188 Год назад

    Mr Parvez I request u to give one copy your book to laltopi n Oriya makbool because their view about Iqbal totally different

  • @hussanzia6986
    @hussanzia6986 Год назад

    The partition of British India and the birth of Pakistan is a fact of history. It is what actually happened and not what some of us like to think or believe happened. To know it, one has to turn to credible and reliable sources that can be readily verified. This was not possible until after the British Government made available the official record concerning Partition for publication. The last of its dozen or so volumes was not published until the late 1980s under the title, 'Transfer of Power Documents 1042 - 1947'.
    Anything published before this was primarily based on hearsay or personal recollection with limited value. Since then many reputable historians have recorded the history of Partition, giving appropriate references, with far greater accuracy and objectivity. Included among them are 'Alex Von Tunzelmann ('Indian Summer'), Patrick French ('Liberty or Death'), Lawrence James ('The Raj'), Andrew Roberts ('Eminent Churchillians'), and Stanley Wolpert ('Shameful Flight'). Any serious student of history would be well-advised to refer to these for guidance.

  • @tejindersharma8603
    @tejindersharma8603 Год назад +1

    A enriching debate good food for brain

  • @chaina357
    @chaina357 Год назад +1

    Wonder how many Paxitanis can understand this

  • @doctorvinay
    @doctorvinay Год назад +1

    Suave.
    Good job !
    👍🏼

  • @akshaynabar4837
    @akshaynabar4837 Год назад +1

    Professor Hoodbhoy, congratulations on your brave effort!! Thanks for a few surprising revelations such as regional identities etc. But few corrections:
    1. The Mauryan empire was the first time large swathes of India were under a central authority
    2. The Mughals didn't 'take care of' Hindus, there was also an element of the reverse
    3. Regarding why the 'only' 19% were Muslims because the Muslim rulers 'spared' the Hindus the fury of the sword of Islam: There was fierce opposition to Muslim hegemony (not to Islam) by local Hindu forces e.g. Shivaji, Maharana Pratap, Rana Sangha etc. Therefore , they had to enter into opportunistic military and matrimonial alliances with Hindu military lords.....Viewers can draw their own inferences on why this Islamic period coincides with what would be called a 'dark age' of India, when comparing with the contemporary West..

  • @anantparashar9242
    @anantparashar9242 Год назад +2

    Sir if you were searching for word hindu as a religion it was never there the religion is called sanatan dharm not hinduism but i agree there was not concept of common nation all were feudal lords

  • @ArunGupta-wj1xl
    @ArunGupta-wj1xl Год назад +4

    Akbar had 35 wives.

  • @basicphysics1520
    @basicphysics1520 Год назад

    sir g plasma physics bi start kren plz

  • @dev7155g
    @dev7155g Год назад

    Jinha and Alma Iqbal both ancestors were Hindus hence whole Pakistani have Hindu ancestors

  • @balkrishnaparab3353
    @balkrishnaparab3353 Год назад

    Dr. Hoodbhoy is looking at the Sanatan Dharma, which he calls Hinduism from the prism of Abrahamic religions. That is a mistake.

  • @btmoradia
    @btmoradia Год назад +2

    He is one of few sensible Pakistanis.

  • @golangolan
    @golangolan Год назад

    Excellent discussion. When people from both sides disagree with you, you must be saying something right.

  • @Vishal_Kanade
    @Vishal_Kanade Год назад

    intro music name please 🙏🏻

  • @balkrishnaparab3353
    @balkrishnaparab3353 Год назад +1

    Has he heard about Kashi, Ujjain, Moolsthan?

  • @subramayamrvr8774
    @subramayamrvr8774 Год назад +1

    The Mauryan empire and Chola empire and their culture traditions civilization is ignored of South India.

  • @Krunalbhuyar
    @Krunalbhuyar Год назад

    You must interview indian intellectual on same topic 👍👍👍🇮🇳

  • @somnathde8680
    @somnathde8680 Год назад +4

    I am sharing this in Indians WhatsApp groups.

  • @karan706
    @karan706 Год назад

    Sir what about chanakya, Gupta Empire, Maurya Empire

  • @nikhildeshmukh6221
    @nikhildeshmukh6221 Год назад +5

    Life is beautiful ❤️ if you ignore trollers 😎
    Especially from PTI 🇵🇰and BJP 🇮🇳

  • @WhiteRock262
    @WhiteRock262 Год назад +1

    Sounds like a great book❤❤

  • @SarojEkka-zc3nq
    @SarojEkka-zc3nq Год назад

    Why india was called Bharat from ancient times?

  • @Unknown-sh8kw
    @Unknown-sh8kw Год назад +2

    Which other countries have ancient documents or books in Sanskrit 🤔🤔🤔 Aryan theory is already debunked.

  • @prasad7553
    @prasad7553 Год назад

    Half truth is not truth.

  • @AmjadAli-qk3vc
    @AmjadAli-qk3vc Год назад

    Is Sanskrit is a dead language?

  • @shahidkinnare
    @shahidkinnare Год назад

    Indus valley civilization new name Pakistan.

  • @jay-vs6xb
    @jay-vs6xb Год назад

    If you want to see Indian architecture..
    Visit temple's,
    It is incredible..
    Most if were distroyed by attackers..

  • @kasiviswanathankrishnan2412
    @kasiviswanathankrishnan2412 Год назад

    shivaji is maratha

  • @iftikhar8642
    @iftikhar8642 Год назад +1

    India pe aur region pe b baat kren

  • @masoodanwar6856
    @masoodanwar6856 Год назад +2

    سر اردو میں بات کریں

  • @manieshshah6778
    @manieshshah6778 Год назад +1

    Sir come to india for your book promotion. You have a huge fan base in india. I am sure you won't face any difficulty for visa.

  • @indigenous_clips
    @indigenous_clips Год назад

    Sir sanskrit came from south east asia..

  • @ammarali1914
    @ammarali1914 Год назад

    Great