During the British Raj, there was an invisible barrier in the jute mills of Calcutta—between the Scottish managers and the Indian clerks. Amrit Baruah relates how he broke through that barrier.
Amrit Baruah is one of a diminishing number of Indians who remember the time of the British Raj. In this memoir, he recalls and celebrates the daily life of a westernized family in Assam--a life wi...
In a brilliant recent study of India-Nepal relations, a Nepali journalist with wide international exposure has made a path-breaking examination of the complexities, misunderstandings, prejudices an...
Global Absolute, Global Absolute Securities, Global Absolute Research Limited, set up by Mr. Rajinder Singh and Mr. Deldar Tony Singh, ACA. The promoters have previously claimed to have worked with...
This article will highlight some of the misinterpretations of Hinduism in Encyclopædia Britannica, many of which are very offending to any Hindu reader and those who know and respect Hinduism. The ...
This is the story of Assam Valley, the easternmost region of India, as it was during the 1930s.
Amrit Baruah tells of growing up in an idyllic place—a remote land of tea plantations, ancient tem...