I is no large fan of Gandhiji but I is liking he it is. I is respect gives to he it is. Becose he is the parson who is teach doesed to the hole cuntry about non-voilens it is. I is surestly going and watch doesing this movie it is. I LOVE NON-VOILENS and peoples who is saport it. Thank you.
RE:GANDHIJI KI JAY.
by Chaman Chambu on Aug 03, 2007 09:52 PM
Sameer, did you mean VIOLENS or violins? I am sure Gandhi never played violins..may be that was his practice of non-violins?
Judging from your English, you would be the person who hates Brits the most.
RE:GANDHIJI KI JAY.
by rasesh dave on Aug 03, 2007 07:45 PM
Hey Sameer, I appreciate your efforts to communicate in a foreign language. As a token of Gratitude I am starting this link as a suggested correction of what you are trying to say. This may not necessarily be correct; but then everybody can learn. Here goes the first one for now.
" I am not a huge fan of Gandhiji, but I do like him, and respect him, because he is the person who practiced what he preached. He taught the entire nation about non-violence. I am surely going to watch this movie. I love non-violence and appreciate people who support it. Thank you"
Hey guys out there, correct me if I am wrong somewhere.
RE:GANDHIJI KI JAY.
by abhijeet prabhanshu on Aug 03, 2007 09:57 PM
Rasesh that was very sweet of you for making understand what Sameer wanted to say to some English-knowing-proud-people. I believe they all had got what Sameer had conveyed through his message. And I dare admit Sameer's version was sweeter one.
And as far as your claim to write correct english goes.....English or for that matter any language does does not only demand writing correct words in predescribed format. Placing of punctuation are also of great importance. You have placed "," (comma) before "but", "and" and "because" in your comment. That is not correct.
RE:GANDHIJI KI JAY.
by Pramod on Aug 03, 2007 07:14 PM
This is the greatest comment I have ever read. I had to read it several times to make sure I got it right. Good job.
RE:GANDHIJI KI JAY.
by Savio J on Aug 04, 2007 01:09 AM
Guys - I think the joke is on you. Sameer in his immense wisdom decided to write this as though he were an illiterate in the language and throw some "gujju-giri" while he was at it. If you read thru Rediff message boards you will notice the guy practically lives here... Good one Sameer and not sure who you are going to "doing" while you are watching this film but have fun anyway :)
People need more good versatile actors in Bollywood n flourishing of theatre will play a major role. The script department in Bollywood needs a major boost. All the best to Darshan..we are awaitng the film.
Its an irony for India and Indians that movies on Gandhi gets so much spot light, even films of little consequence and total waste share so much print and media space but the real heroes and their stories languish in obscurity. The film 'BOSE' made on the life of Subhash Chandra Bose rarely got highliting let alone being talked about. Its nothing but bad luck of India that we tend to follow others like herds of sheep and never do a reality check as to who was the real hero of our freedom struggle. I am sure this messsage of mine will not be posted here as it tries to knock on the conscience of the people and being out the truth!
RE:What an irony
by Vladimir Stalin on Aug 03, 2007 10:18 PM
When you take the names of Netaji Subhash Chandra Bose or Veer Savarkar or Nathuram Vinayakram Godse or for that matter that of Narayan Apte you do that with an sense of awe and admiration. These are people who lived and died for an ideology. The frist two Bose and Savarkaar had to suffer rigorous imprisonment and had to suffer untold misery in the Siberian concentration camp (where the communists safely housed Bose in order to save the Dynasty) and the Andamaan Cellular jail respectively. With History writing becoming an industry no wonder men of straw were lionised, the people were made to believe one is father and the other is chacha when in reality they were far removed from these two noble terms. Comrade Lenin said Debase the morals of a people and they will have no courage to resist. We stand debased at the hands of anti-national history manufacturers, we have lost all our courage to resist gangsters masquerading as noble souls.
RE:What an irony
by etg on Aug 03, 2007 06:55 PM
It is so true. Same was the case with Vir Savarkar. If you haven't seen the movie you need to see it. You need to see the meeting Vir Savarkar had with Mr. Gandhi. Gandhi couldn't even look into Vir Savarkar's eyes. Gandhi compliments Vir Savarkar about him standing for Harijans. But Vir Savarkar objects the word Harijans or backward class. He says they are also humans. Why don't we remove this caste system? Gandhi mentions to Vir Savarkar that NO THE CASTE SYSTEM SHOULD BE THERE AND IT SHOULD BE LIKE THIS. After that Vir Savarkar stares at Mr. Gandhi and Mr. Gandhi cannot even look at Vir Savarkar. He just takes his leave and goes away. Vir Savarkar was a visionary who knew that the Caste system will create a major problem in the future and he wanted to abolish it completely. But thanks to Congress it is still there and it is mainly used for Vote Bank. You need to go and rent the movie VIR SAVARKAR to watch the real hero. Even watch Bhagat Singh movie. In which the Congress wanted to make a deal with the Britishers to free Bhagat Singh. But as soon as the Britisher raises his voice, Mr. Gandhi just shuts up and accepts what they had to offer. That showed pure politics by Mr. Gandhi.