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HomeTop StoriesAndaze Bayan: Heartfelt Tales of Revolution Shahi Vs. Dictatorship

Andaze Bayan: Heartfelt Tales of Revolution Shahi Vs. Dictatorship

Titles: Time, Keeps Account of All. (Foreword) The great Spanish writer, Gabriel García Márquez, entangled himself in writing a bold novel about a married woman's sex life in the final stages of life. In the novel, a woman named 'Anna' visits her mother's grave on a Caribbean island every year, freeing herself from her husband and family for a while and finding a new lover each time! The elderly Marquez was suffering from dementia or psychosis and his memory was beginning to deteriorate. Marquez wrote 4-5 editions of the novel, cutting the text for years but finally gave up and told his son Gonzalo: 'Never publish this novel.' But after Marquez's death, his sons published the novel 'Until August' 10 years later. Although it is not a great story like Marquez's 'Love in the Time of Cholera', it is special because it contains the final voice of the great Marquez. Very lucky are the writers, whose children or friends, after their departure, keep the flame of the extinguished pen alive by publishing unpublished writings. …but the revolution did not happen to the Danish Diderot (1713–1784), a French fighter for free thought. For Diderot in the poor village of France, the motto of writing or life is 'doing the least harm and the most welfare of mankind'. Such 'liberal thinking' or 'free thoughts' was the resolution, rather the principle, of the swashbuckling writer Diderot, and he became a despotic royalist against these acid thoughts. was an enemy. Interval: Can't dig the sound! Silence cannot be lifted. (Labhshankar Thakar) One evening in Didero's courtyard, the police showed a warrant and started searching the house for 'seditious literature'. Didero, seeing this, was neither shocked nor surprised. 'Don't wait for me at dinner', he said to the family and sat quietly in the police carriage. 'My guilt?' 'You made fun of the emperor's mistress, that's your crime. You are a traitor revolutionary with new and dangerous ideas against government and religion!' said the policeman. Diderot knew that expressing independent ideas was a crime in the confined France of the time. Many acid writers ended up in jail for similar crimes. Then two well-known French publishers appealed to the emperor, 'We have made an agreement with Diderot to write an 'Encyclopedia' (encyclopedia) and if that work is stopped, we will suffer losses.' A minister of the tyrannical emperor Andarkhan was a fan of the new revolutionary idea. He explained to the emperor, 'Diderot is a mere miserable writer. Heads of empty talk. There is no strength in its writing to cause any harm to the state. Forgive Magatra and leave.' After coming out of prison, Diderot began to write an encyclopedia, but in it he put hidden messages against the regime and the religious establishment. Publishers understood that if Diderot's text was revealed to them, this would happen. The cunning publishers printed the book after cutting out the revolutionary writings, which Diderot found out after the last part had been printed….and then he shook his head, wept at night! Other books by Diderot, which were edited by the publishers, were also published by police. Diderot then lived in depression for twenty years, but exactly twenty years after his death, the French revolutionized, broke the Bastille prison, and ended the oppressive despotic dynasty. Historians say that the real force behind the bloody revolution and change in France was the fiery power of Diderot's fiery ideas. 'After only 40 years, the words of that miserable writer will undermine the foundations of the entire French government and religion' – if the dictator of that time had the slightest idea, he would have killed Diderot in prison instead of letting him go…then the question arises that such a great revolutionary Why didn't Diderot become so famous in world history? On the other hand the French thinker Johnson became world famous because he got his biographer Boswell who was very good as a biographer. The quality that Boswell had was not in Diderot's ongoing biography. About the great but anonymous revolutionary Diderot, our great writer Meghani writes: 'To immortalize great men, their character-writers should also be found great.' Even today in 2024, we have court writers writing books about great men with less truth and more government propaganda by distorting history. History has been strange not only to Diderot but also to figures like Che Guevara, Fidel Castro or Lenin. Gandhiji was lucky that in his time there were no dwarf writers or flattering historians of the government, who could make Gandhi a superman by showing him great or heroic from his childhood! If Diderot was not banned from writing in France, he would have created his own immortal character by writing a wonderful autobiography! Many anonymous revolutionaries have made today's civil society and modern free world by giving silent sacrifices… However, rulers who suppress the voice of such people are still around us, always were and always will be.. But remember – people can be suppressed but the voice of the people is always in the grip of power. cannot be imprisoned for. End-Titles: Adam: My lips are free, to speak… Eve: Speak again!

Image Credit: (Divya-Bhaskar): Images/graphics belong to (Divya-Bhaskar).

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