Jump to content

shastarSingh

Members
  • Posts

    1,391
  • Joined

  • Last visited

  • Days Won

    55

Everything posted by shastarSingh

  1. https://www.sikhsangat.com/index.php?/topic/89502-baba-thaan-singh-and-his-dasam-granth-birr/
  2. Nope. But there are 10 crore Muslims in UP and they are strongly anti India.
  3. No One knows the exact time. Only Waheguru knows. China can attack India from ladakh side, Pakistan Kashmir side, north east side and even from Nepal side. It can even attack from sea and destroy Mumbai, the financial capital of India. There are about 10 crore Muslims in Uttar Pradesh and these Muslims and naxalites will join China during the war.
  4. https://www.sikhsangat.com/index.php?/topic/89497-sau-sakhi-mentioning-sant-bhindranwale-and-indira-gandhi/
  5. https://www.sigc.edu/ The above is a college named after the maha paapi narakdhari Indira Gandhi. Srimati is used before her name and not sri
  6. Plz read the heading of this you tube video. Sri is used for rahul Gandhi and srimati is used for Sonia Gandhi.
  7. https://www.sikhsangat.com/index.php?/topic/89481-importance-of-cows-in-guru-ghar/
  8. Plz tell if these files are being easily downloaded
  9. https://www.sikhsangat.com/index.php?/topic/89477-puratan-dasam-granth-manuscripts/
  10. https://www.sikhsangat.com/index.php?/topic/89466-explanation-of-starting-portion-of-sarbloh-granth/
  11. https://www.dawn.com/2012/10/21/origin-of-urdu-in-dravidian-and-fareedkotis-theory/ However, a new shade was added to this linguistic sketch when in the latter half of the 20th century some linguists opined that Urdu was not an Aryan but a Dravidian language. Among them was Ain-ul-Haq Fareedkoti, who pursued this theory with detailed research. He began writing on issues concerning linguistics, languages of the Indo-Pak subcontinent and Urdu’s origin. He contributed his papers on linguistic issues to Urdu Nama, a magazine launched by the Urdu Dictionary Board and edited by the board’s then secretary Shan-ul-Haq Haqqi. Ain-ul-Haq Fareedkoti’s real name was Fazl Elahi. According to official records, he was born on September 17, 1919, in Fareedkot, East Punjab. In his early literary career, he tried his hand at poetry and wrote under the penname of Sho’la Fareedkoti. Having joined the Royal Indian Army in 1942, he opted for Pakistan after independence and in 1974 retired from Pakistan Army Education Corps. Fareedkoti Sahib wrote in Urdu, English and Punjabi on a variety of subjects but later devoted himself for the study of history and linguistics. His papers on linguistics and the origin of Urdu were collected in book form and published under the title Urdu Zaban ki Qadeem Taareekh (Lahore, 1972). In English, he wrote Pre-Aryan Origin of Pakistani Languages (Lahore, 1992). The theory that Urdu was an Aryan language was challenged by Fareedkoti Sahib. He, in his Urdu and English writings, surmised that contrary to the popular theory, Urdu did not have its roots in Sanskrit. In fact, his thesis is that not only Urdu but many sub-continental languages including Punjabi and Sindhi are Dravidian languages with influences from Manda and Indo-Chinese family of languages. To support his claim, Fareedkoti Sahib amassed a huge collection of data concerning the ancient languages, history, linguistics and their vocabularies. With a deep study of history and an interest in the ancient seals of Harappa and their scripts, he kept on looking for the roots of modern languages as he researched on ancient ones. He finally arrived at the conclusion that languages spoken in the Indus valley some 5,000 years ago could not have vanished in thin air without leaving any trace behind and the vestiges those ancient languages could be traced in the present-day languages of Pakistan. He believed, as he wrote in his book Pre-Aryan origin of Pakistani languages, that the language “spoken in the streets of Harappa in the pre-Aryan times could not in any way be an Aryan language. It can also be safely concluded that ‘Harappan’ language might have been related to any primitive non-Aryan linguistic group. Naturally, the Dravidian and the Manda languages remained as the main contenders in this respect”. Fareedkoti Sahib further writes that though Urdu, Hindi, Punjabi and Sindhi do not have enough Dravidian and Manda elements in their vocabularies, their grammatical structures totally differ from Sanskrit, or for that matter, any other Aryan language. In his opinion, grammatically these languages have close affinities with Dravidian languages and hence, clearly defy the “long-standing claims of western scholars” that emphasise Aryan origins.
  12. https://en.gyaanipedia.com/wiki/Ain-ul-Haq_Faridkoti
  13. Punjabi must have been a language with strong similarities to Dravidian languages like brahui before the rig veda era. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Brahui_language
  14. https://www.sikhsangat.com/index.php?/topic/89382-a-great-lesser-known-soorma-singh/
  15. https://www.sikhsangat.com/index.php?/topic/89377-a-new-researched-book-on-sarbloh-granth/
  16. https://www.sikhsangat.com/index.php?/topic/89365-is-punjabi-5500-years-old/
  17. https://www.sikhsangat.com/index.php?/topic/89306-proof-that-gobind-gita-is-an-adaption/
  18. Veerji Did krishan speak something from his mouth which was not true?
  19. But krishan lied that there is some one behind krtasatr Singh?
  20. Thanks Can you translate in English? So did krishan lie and used deceit?
  21. https://www.worldgurudwaras.com/gurudwaras/gurudwara-sri-qilla-mubarak-sahib-bathinda/
  22. Plz read https://www.sikhsangat.com/index.php?/topic/88026-proof-that-dasmesh-pita-loved-cows/
  23. I think Khalsa can do jhatka of bulls. It's only the cow that can't be killed according to nihangs.
×
×
  • Create New...