Indian Reunification Association

Indian Reunification Association The Indian Reunification Association exists to reunite with India, what is now Pakistan & Bangladesh.
(7)

We support the   of our   We believe 1. Dowry should be illegal.2. I support feminism & equal rights.3. Marital r**e is ...
11/05/2026

We support the of our

We believe
1. Dowry should be illegal.
2. I support feminism & equal rights.
3. Marital r**e is r**e.
4. Transgender people deserve equal rights.
5. Abortion is healthcare.
6. I support LGBTQ.
7. Forcing religion should be illegal.
8. Women deserve fair alimony and financial support after divorce.

Feel free to unfollow if you disagree.. but we will always stand with every female of

Pir Panjal range    From Gulraiz,    It wás breathtaking scene 😍
11/05/2026

Pir Panjal range
From Gulraiz,
It wás breathtaking scene 😍

If anybody thinks that   is independent country ...Joke on you all!! It's a country running by   since it's establishmen...
11/05/2026

If anybody thinks that is independent country ...Joke on you all!!

It's a country running by since it's establishment in #1947
No can go and try to throw a stone 🪨 towards embassy and you may all see the consequences.. it proves that life of one American citizen is equal to 100 Pakistanis....

It's time for every Pakistani to wakeup and demand your rights !

10/05/2026

Dear MOTHER INDIA🇮🇳
HAPPY MOTHER'S DAY!
WE PROMISE YOU
🙏Bharat Bhagya Vidhata🙏

A video showing 75-year-old Pakistani Bharatanatyam dancer and women’s rights activist  allegedly being manhandled by po...
10/05/2026

A video showing 75-year-old Pakistani Bharatanatyam dancer and women’s rights activist allegedly being manhandled by police outside the has sparked massive backlash on social media and among rights groups. The incident reportedly took place while she was on her way to a press conference demanding permission for the annual Aurat March protest. Following public outrage, three police officers were suspended, with many people raising concerns over freedom of expression and the treatment of activists in .

WE STAND WITH AURAT MARCH KARACHI
ARREST VIOLENCE, NOT VOICES

Full solidarity with the organizers, volunteers, allies, and participants of Aurat March Karachi who were harassed, detained, and threatened for peacefully raising their voices outside the Karachi Press Club .

We strongly condemn the shameful treatment faced by feminist activists, including the intimidation and disrespect directed toward renowned artist and activist Sheema Kermani and other members of Aurat March Karachi. The use of police force against women demanding rights, dignity, and justice is unacceptable.

We questions the State and Police:

1. Where is this police when a girl is r**ed and murdered?
2. Where is this police when women are killed in the name of Karo Kari and so-called “honour”?
3. Where is this police when young girls are kidnapped?
4. Where is this police when women are beaten or murdered over something as small as food not being warm enough?

The police should review its own record. There are countless pending complaints related to,

- r**e and murder of women
- kidnapping of girls
- child marriages
- harassment
- domestic violence

Instead of taking action against these crimes, the police is targeting and arresting women and feminist activists who raise their voices against violence and injustice.
Under what law are activists being arrested on the streets without warrants or legal authority?

Once again, the state has chosen to silence women instead of addressing the real violence women face every day across this country — honour killings, harassment, forced conversions, domestic violence, discrimination against trans persons, and attacks on marginalized communities. It is deeply disturbing that state institutions find the time and resources to arrest activists and surround press clubs, yet fail to protect women and vulnerable communities from actual violence and injustice. We reject the criminalization of feminist resistance. Peaceful protest is a democratic right, not a crime.

In solidarity with Aurat March Karachi

Happy Mother’s day Dear Mother India,We bow our head in sorrow and shame, for We are citizens who failed you when you ne...
09/05/2026

Happy Mother’s day Dear Mother India,

We bow our head in sorrow and shame, for We are citizens who failed you when you needed unity the most.

We stood by silently as your heart was torn apart, as brothers turned against each other and the sacred thread of your harmony was severed.

We could have raised our voice, built bridges, or calmed the fires—but We did not....
For that, We seek your forgiveness 🙏

Yet in this regret, I carry a hope: that one day, through love, understanding, and shared destiny, your children will reunite—not through force, but through the healing power of peace.

Until then, We remain your humble, striving child who will keep trying...

Happy Mother's Day ❤❤

BJP’s Task in Bengal is Bigger than GovernanceWest Bengal’s new government has a five-year mandate, but its real task wi...
09/05/2026

BJP’s Task in Bengal is Bigger than Governance

West Bengal’s new government has a five-year mandate, but its real task will take a generation.

Three successive regimes — British, Nehruvian, Communist, and then Trinamool — spent a hundred and fifteen years suppressing one of the most productive civilisations the modern world has seen. The BJP now has the first real opportunity to reverse that.

In December 1911, the British announced from the Delhi Durbar that they were moving their imperial capital out of Calcutta because, as Lord Curzon put it candidly to the House of Lords, they wished merely "to escape the somewhat heated atmosphere of Bengal."

The voters of Bengal have just ended an arrangement that began on that day.

The BJP that now inherits the state must understand that its task is not merely to govern it for the next five years but to play its part in reviving the civilisation that the long arrangement was designed to suppress.

Most educated Indians have been taught for two generations not to look at what that civilisation was. Between roughly 1820 and 1941, a single Indian province produced a body of work whose like was not produced anywhere else in colonised Asia.

It produced the first non-European Nobel laureate in literature; the equation by which modern astrophysics still calculates the temperature of stars; the statistics that govern the behaviour of half the particles in the universe and after which those particles are now named; the first demonstration of millimetre-wave wireless transmission in 1894, two years before Marconi's celebrated public version; India's first indigenous pharmaceutical company, founded in a back room with seven hundred rupees of capital.

It produced the religious revival — Ramakrishna, Vivekananda, Aurobindo — that gave nineteenth-century Hinduism the confidence to argue with Western Christianity in Western languages and not lose. It produced the revolutionaries — from Bagha Jatin to Khudiram Bose to Surya Sen to Subhas Chandra Bose — whose deaths weighed more heavily on British imperial accounting than any number of Gandhian fasts.

It produced Vande Mataram, Jana Gana Mana. And it produced, alongside all this, money: the Bengal Presidency by the 1910s contributed more than half of British India's overseas trade, and Calcutta operated as the second city of the Empire after London. Calcutta, in Curzon's honest phrase, had become heated; in plainer language, it had begun to win the argument with the West, and the argument had become inconvenient.

What was done to Bengal between 1911 and 2026 was not natural decline. It was the cumulative work of three regimes, each of which had a structural interest in keeping the place weak. The British recognised in 1911 that they could no longer manage Calcutta and moved their capital out.

The Lutyens-Nehruvian establishment that inherited the British arrangement in 1947 deepened it. The Boundary Commission severed Calcutta from its East Bengal hinterland. Four million Hindu refugees walked westward into a state given no plan for them. Shyama Prasad Mukherjee — who almost single-handedly saved West Bengal from absorption into Pakistan, and whose political party has now returned to govern it — asked Nehru for a Punjab-style population exchange; Nehru declined; Mukherjee resigned in 1950 and died in detention in Srinagar three years later under circumstances the Government of India has never investigated.

Then came freight equalisation, the policy by which the Government of India subsidised the transport of coal and steel and iron ore at uniform national prices and thereby destroyed, by administrative fiat, the locational advantage that had made the Hooghly valley industrial. Bengal's share of national industrial output collapsed from twenty-seven per cent in 1947 to seventeen per cent by 1961.

The same establishment that had appropriated Vande Mataram and Jana Gana Mana for the Republic proceeded to hollow out the place that had produced them, characterising this asphyxiation, with a straight face, as the natural drift of markets.

The Communists who took office in 1977 ran the longest continuous Communist government in any democracy in human history. Polite commentary remembers Operation Barga and forgets the rest. The rest includes the Naxalite period, in which an entire generation of Bengal's most academically gifted young people was destroyed under Charu Majumdar's doctrine of class annihilation, and the murder of the vice-chancellor of Jadavpur University in his own home by his own students in December 1970.

It includes the Marichjhapi atrocity of January 1979, when several thousand Bengali Hindu Dalit refugees were blockaded on a Sundarbans island, deprived of food and water, and on the thirty-first of January fired upon.

The Information Minister who declared the island "refugee-free" three months later was Buddhadeb Bhattacharjee, who would later become Chief Minister and is to this day fondly remembered in Lutyens drawing-rooms as a cultivated, poetry-loving Marxist. The official death toll is two. There has never been a formal investigation.

The historian Ross Mallick was the first to ask, in print, whether the response would have been the same had the dead been Banerjees and Mukherjees instead of Mondals and Sarkars. The question has not been answered because the answer is known.

The Trinamool Congress that took over in 2011 did not reverse the decline but monetised it. Six thousand six hundred and eighty-eight registered companies relocated their head offices out of West Bengal between 2011 and 2025, on the Government of India's own count tabled in the Rajya Sabha last July, with the destinations of choice being Maharashtra, Delhi, Uttar Pradesh, Chhattisgarh and Gujarat.

There is now a country to the east called Bangladesh, partitioned out of Bengal in 1947, that records a higher per-capita income than West Bengal. The province that produced J.C. Bose has fallen behind the country containing the village he was born in.

These facts are not seriously in dispute. What has been in dispute, until now, is whether they were reversible. I want to argue that they are indeed reversible.

The seventy-five-year stretch between 1947 and 2026 is best understood as an interregnum — a gap between two Renaissances, the first concluded in 1941 with Tagore's death, the second deferred by three hostile regimes, and now, for the first time in a hundred and fifteen years, structurally unblocked.

You see renaissances across the world do not run on continuous timelines. The Italian Renaissance survived the Sack of Rome in 1527, after which Caravaggio came, and Galileo came, and Venetian painting flowered. Renaissances are often interrupted, but rarely killed. What kills them is sustained regime hostility. What revives them is the lifting of that hostility, applied to a civilisational reservoir that has remained intact.

I want to argue that Bengal's reservoir is intact.

Even under three boots Bengal produced Satyajit Ray, Amartya Sen, Abhijit Banerjee. The diaspora is global and remains, despite five decades of cultural deracination, recognisably Bengali.

The institutions are still standing — Presidency, Jadavpur, Visva-Bharati, IIT Kharagpur, the Indian Statistical Institute, Belur Math, Bose Institute. Visva-Bharati was inscribed as a UNESCO World Heritage Site in 2023. Durga Puja was inscribed on the UNESCO Intangible Heritage list in 2021, the first festival in Asia to receive that recognition. The cultural inventory is world-class. What it has lacked, for three generations, is a state government interested in deploying it.

The BJP's mandate therefore has two components.

The first is the governance reset, which is necessary and which had better be executed without delay: law and order in the border districts, the syndicate raj broken, the autonomy of the universities restored against political-cadre appointments, the Tajpur deep-sea port actually built after fifteen years of theatre, the Siliguri Corridor secured, the seminar room at R.G. Kar Medical College made safe for the women who study there.

None of this is glamorous. All of it is the precondition for the second component, which is the cultural reset — the work no Indian state government has hitherto seriously attempted.

This cultural revival involves treating Bengal's universities as universities rather than as patronage networks with hostels attached; deploying Visva-Bharati and Belur Math and Bose Institute as the civilisational generators their founders intended; recovering Subhas Chandra Bose, Vivekananda and Aurobindo from the dismissive custody of the secular consensus; and above all, making it possible for an ambitious young Bengali to imagine a future in Calcutta that does not require leaving Calcutta.

The polite commentariat that said the BJP could not win West Bengal will now say that the BJP cannot do this either. It will be wrong about that for the same reason it was wrong about the first thing: it has stopped looking at Bengal and started looking at its own assumptions about Bengal.

The arc of decline that began at the Delhi Durbar in 1911 was a single arc, executed by three different sets of hands but unified in its structural intention to keep Bengal weak; and several generations of Bengalis have looked at it long enough to be done with it.

What comes next is up to them, and to the government they have just elected — a government whose responsibility is not merely to govern a difficult state for the next five years but to play its part in restoring the civilisation that the long arrangement was designed to suppress.

Bengal has the reservoir. It has, for the first time in a century and more, the political conditions. The rest is a question of nerve.

My simple definition of Bengal is - *Bengal is the most misunderstood state in the country with maximum talent, capabilities and potential which has been most ruthlessly exploited in the country by the ruling class*

Post Credit: Gaurav Banerjee

Timeline of South Asia (Indian Subcontinent) – From Ancient Civilizations to Modern IndiaThe timeline begins with the In...
09/05/2026

Timeline of South Asia (Indian Subcontinent) – From Ancient Civilizations to Modern India

The timeline begins with the Indus Valley Civilization (c. 2600–1900 BCE), one of the world’s earliest urban societies known for advanced city planning and trade. It transitions into the Vedic Period, where early Hindu traditions, texts like the Vedas, and social structures developed.

Next comes the era of Mahajanapadas (c. 600 BCE), marking the rise of early states and republics. This led to the powerful Maurya Empire (c. 322–185 BCE), famous for rulers like Ashoka and the spread of Buddhism.

The Gupta Empire (c. 320–550 CE) followed, often called a “Golden Age” for science, mathematics, and arts. After this, the Delhi Sultanate (1206–1526) introduced Islamic governance and cultural blending.

The timeline then shows the grand Mughal Empire (1526–1857), known for architecture like the Taj Mahal and administrative strength. It overlaps with the rise of the Maratha Empire, which challenged Mughal dominance.

Colonial rule begins with the British Raj (1858–1947), reshaping politics, economy, and society under British control. Finally, the timeline ends with the modern Republic of India (1947–present), marking independence and democratic governance.

All provincial governments of   are corrupt, but the government of   takes the crown for being the worst.
08/05/2026

All provincial governments of are corrupt, but the government of takes the crown for being the worst.

It's not a coincidence — it's a scar left by colonialism.In 1916, Britain and France promised Arabs a single unified sta...
08/05/2026

It's not a coincidence — it's a scar left by colonialism.
In 1916, Britain and France promised Arabs a single unified state stretching from Aleppo to Aden, if they helped defeat the Ottoman Empire. British diplomat Mark Sykes even designed a flag for the Arab revolt.
The Arabs won. But the promise was never kept.
Through the secret Sykes-Picot Agreement, Britain and France simply divided the Arab lands between themselves — and assigned the new countries flags based on that very same revolt flag.
One flag. Many broken nations.

💬 What are your thoughts on this betrayal?
Comment below.

~~~Rabindranath Tagore~~~7 May 1861 – 7 August 1941Born in   to religious reformer Debendranath Tagore (1817–1905) and S...
08/05/2026

~~~Rabindranath Tagore~~~
7 May 1861 – 7 August 1941

Born in to religious reformer Debendranath Tagore (1817–1905) and Sarada Devi (1830–1875), he was their youngest son.
Tagore came to despise formal education. At age seven, he dropped out of school after attending for one month as students at the school were punished by being beaten with sticks in the hands of British teachers.

grew up to be a poet, short-story writer, song composer, playwright, essayist, and painter who introduced new prose and verse forms and the use of colloquial language into Bengali literature, thereby freeing it from traditional models based on classical .
He was highly influential in introducing Indian culture to the West and vice versa, and he is generally regarded as the outstanding creative artist of early 20th-century India.

Ironically, Tagore’s later interest in education led him to founding his own school in 1901 at Santiniketan ("Peaceful Abode"), in the bucolic countryside in West . His school was established as an experimental educational institution, which would blend the best features of Eastern and Western traditions in education.

Rabindranath, has not only enriched literature but he also contributed to the freedom struggle in pre-Independence . He was vocal & active in spreading awareness among the masses for various political issues then like the Bengal , issues with conventional Western education, & also renounced the title of “Knighthood” as a protest against the brutal rule.

In 1913 Rabindranath Tagore was awarded the Prize for literature, primarily for his work “Geetanjali”, becoming the first non-European to receive the Nobel Prize for .

The National Anthem : “Jana Gana Mana” & The National Anthem “Amar Sonar ”, both are composed by Rabindranath Tagore.



Post Credit: Suproteek Mukherjee

Address

247/2, Block B
Gujranwala Town Model
110009

Website

http://facebook.com/groups/IndianReunificationAssociation/

Alerts

Be the first to know and let us send you an email when Indian Reunification Association posts news and promotions. Your email address will not be used for any other purpose, and you can unsubscribe at any time.

Contact The Organization

Send a message to Indian Reunification Association:

Share