Skip to main content

Posts

'Employment guarantee now': Rural workers take to streets on May Day

By A Representative   Rural workers across India observed International Workers' Day on May 1 with demonstrations in multiple states, demanding that the government restore employment guarantees even as the flagship MGNREGA scheme is being wound down and its announced replacement remains non-operational.
Recent posts

When labour laws fail: The rising anger of India’s workers

By Fr. Cedric Prakash SJ*  The latest issue (dated 25 April 2026) of the popular magazine Frontline carries an incisive article titled, “What Noida’s Worker Strikes Tell Us About the Labour Codes ’ Broken Promise.” Written by T.K. Rajalakshmi, the summary states: “The protests by industrial workers across the National Capital Region and adjoining areas, and the violence and police repression that followed, are telling evidence that despite the hollow promises accompanying the new Labour Codes, little has changed on the ground.”

Gaza, justice, politics of solidarity, and the 'ethics' of international silence

By Sandeep Pandey*  When Israel was being created, Mahatma Gandhi had clearly said that Palestine belongs to the Arabs just as England belongs to the English and France to the French. In other words, he had rejected the proposal to create Israel in the Jerusalem region. The United Nations passed a resolution in 1947 to create two states; Israel came into existence, but Palestine has still not been granted full recognition by the United Nations. In 2012, it was only given the status of a non-member observer state.

JFK, Malcolm X, MLK, RFK: What the government didn’t want you to know

By Bharat Dogra   An author may write many books, but some can only be written once in a lifetime. Such is the recent work by James W. Douglass : Martyrs to the Unspeakable – The Assassinations of JFK, Malcolm, Martin, and RFK ,  published by Orbis Books (USA).

Oil wealth vs human need: Oxfam flags energy profits amid global poverty

By Vikas Meshram*  A new report by Oxfam presents an extremely disturbing picture of the global energy system. On one hand, billions of families across the world are being crushed under the burden of rising electricity bills, while on the other, fuel companies’ profits climb to new heights every passing second. This is not merely an economic contradiction—it is the greatest moral irony of our times, where crisis and prosperity walk hand in hand, yet both experiences fall to entirely different sets of people.

Fragments of the soul, debris of history: Savita Singh’s feminist poetic dialogue

By Ravi Ranjan*  In the landscape of contemporary Hindi poetry, Savita Singh stands out as a creator whose work probes deeply into women’s experience, self-awareness, the body, and the philosophical dimensions of time. Her poetry does not treat woman merely as subject matter; rather, woman emerges as a powerful centre of knowledge and creation. 

Racing’s chosen creature: Dubai Millennium’s brief, brilliant reign

By Harsh Thakor*  Dubai Millennium scaled heights rarely transcended in the sport of horse racing before tragically perishing too soon. Many racehorses become legends, but only a few are remembered as destiny’s chosen creatures—beings so exceptional that they seem to transcend beyond the boundaries of sport itself, scaling realms metaphysical. Dubai Millennium symbolised one such horse, who on April 29 marks the 25th anniversary of his death. His life epitomised a dream that was realised and then heartbreakingly lost. Dubai Millennium was not merely bred—he was a creature of destiny.