A Letter Handwritten by Steve Jobs When He Was 19 Could Sell for Up to $300,000 USD at Auction: Detailing his interest in Zen Buddhism and his desire to travel to India.
Women mourn the death of a family member, who died from the coronavirus disease (COVID-19), outside a crematorium in New Delhi, India. REUTERS/Adnan Abidi
South African families spending sleepless nights worried about their loved ones in India as Covid-19 tsunami continues to rage
By Tanya Waterworth, Sameer Naik
2h ago
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As death surges across India, overwhelming mortuaries and filling makeshift pyres, South African families are spending sleepless nights worried about their loved ones as they fight to survive the Covid-19 tsunami.
In Kempton Park, on the East Rand, Eaizaan Mohammed, an Indian national, is worried about his family in Delhi who he has learnt may have Covid-19.
Cassandra lived up to her name by peeking into the future and crying out loud, not “I see blood” but “Beware the third Covid-19 wave, it’s a-coming.” She saw what was imminent in India with masses in the Holy River at the Kumba Mela, and connected it to Free Sri Lanka. Cass does not claim kudos for her warning such as this para culled from her Cry of Friday April 4 with the Avuruddha approaching and enticing people to shop, travel, make merry and gather together. Many were fearful but their warnings unheard, unheeded. She wrote: “Coming back to Free Sri Lanka, we seem to stress on that first word Cass inserted to the country name, even in these dire times of no crowds, no gathering together, no being close and crowding. And the worst is, milling crowds are apparently encouraged to boost popularity of certain VVIPs, by sycophants and by the preference/orders of the VVIPs themselves.”
Haridwar Kumbh 2021: NMCG develops infrastructure to stop sewage water flowing into Ganga ANI | Updated: Apr 01, 2021 14:20 IST
Haridwar (Uttarakhand) [India], April 1 (ANI): An ancient city located on the banks of River Ganga, Haridwar is expanding rapidly. Being a popular pilgrimage site, the city also witnesses a massive floating population as each day pilgrims come to bathe at the holy river to get rid of their sins.
The number of visitors grows manifold during the festivals, especially the month-long Kumbh fair.
The National Mission for Clean Ganga (NMCG) has been tirelessly endeavouring to ensure that pilgrims get a cleaner Ganga at this holy site with no flow of sewage water.