Thursday, October 10, 2013

Independence wishes

Wish you happy indpendence day

Saturday, August 10, 2013

Independence Day Speechs

India celebrates Independence Day on August 15 each year. India became an independent nation on August 15, 1947, so a gazetted holiday is held annually to remember this date. Students are asked to deliver a speech on a Independence day at your school, college, institution or University. Here we have some models of speech so that it can help students for delivering the speech on Independence Day function.


Happy Independence Day 2013 Speech


Model: 1 Independence day speech

Honourable Chief Guest of the day, distinguished guests for the occasion teachers, parents and all my dear friends, this day 15th August of every year is a golden day engraved in the history of the world. We got freedom on this date and it is a day worth a celebration. When we celebrate it hoisting the flag, playing our National Anthem with favour, distributing sweets, we need to sail back into the past to remember and pay homage to the builders of our nation. My dear friends, we were the privileged lot to have been born in free India. We were able to breathe the fresh free air since our birth. If at all we want to know the pangs of agony of being slaves under a foreign rule, we must ask our elders born before 1947. It was indeed a Himalayan task for every Indian those days to fight against those powerful giants – the British rulers. We must not allow those hard times and struggles fade away from our memories. Hence it is befitting for us to celebrate such National festivals and recall those heroic deeds of our National heroes. We remember them today. Right from Mahatma Gandhi to the local patriotic leaders we owe our gratitude. When we regard those martyrs who laid their precious lives for our sake, we must not ignore the common people who sacrificed their lot for the good cause. There were farmers, land lords, businessmen, teachers, writers, poets and students who helped the land achieve the long cherished freedom. Today we have come a long way in the path of free India. We have proved ourselves worthy of freedom. We are considered as the largest democracy in the world. How proud we were when Abhinav Bindra made our National Flag flutter and ‘Jana Gana Mana’ played at the background in Beijing? We are proud of it and feel very happy about all these positive aspects. But are we blind to the black clouds surrounding us? Are we very successful in using our freedom in the right manner? If so, why should there be so many bomb blasts, killings, attacks on government offices, cases against so many politicians and so many unstable governments? Well my dear friends, what can a student do at this juncture? Should we go and catch the terrorists? Should we fight against the corrupted politicians? Or should we take over the country into our hands by waging another war for freedom? No, we are not expected to do all these things. We must keep observing things around us. We will have our own day. Before that, let us do our duty of preparing ourselves to be well-educated citizens of tomorrow. Let us do our duty sincerely and study hard to achieve a goal. Today we require youngsters with lot of knowledge and energy. Illiteracy is the first enemy for a democratic nation. Let us get rid of illiteracy and take India to a bright future.

Jai Hind


Model 2:Independence day for kids:


Respected Head Mam, teachers and my friends,I wish you a happy independence day.


INDEPENDENCE DAY means a day when we had got freedom from not only our brute rulers but freedom from want from fulfillment of right needs...


India was under the British rule for 3-4 centuries. It was in 1857 India started it's independence struggle forcefully through a revolt named "The Great Revolt" against the British. 


Mahatma Gandhi was the spine and brain behind the Indian independence struggle and finally her Independence. "Non-violence" or "Ahimsa" against the cannons and rifles of the so called "MIGHTY" British. His words of wisdom were followed by almost every Indian of that age to follow non-violence and struggle with perseverance and the British finally manumitted India from it's bondage. India's independence struggle is a huge epic on it's own. "NON_VIOLENCE" was the weapon used to free India. That's why India even today doesn't want resort to force or war unless there is some menace to the security/integrity of Indian unity.

India gained independence after nearly 200 years of British rule on 15 August 1947 and Indian tricolor flag was unfurled by Jawaharlal Nehru, the first Prime Minister of India, on the ramparts the Red Fort of Delhi Proud to be an Indian. Thank You One and all. Jai Hindh............. 


Model 3:

Respected Head Mam, teachers and my friends,I wish you a happy independence day.


On 15 August 1947, India attained freedom from the British Rule. Every year, August 15 is celebrated as the Independence Day in India. This national festival is celebrated with great enthusiasm all over the country.


The Independence Day of any country is a moment of pride and glory. On this special occasion, rich tributes are paid to the freedom fighters who sacrificed their lives and fought to free their motherland from the clutches of the oppressors - British who ruled the country.

"At the stroke of the midnight hour, when the world sleeps, India will awake to life and freedom. A moment comes, which comes but rarely in history, when we step out from the old to the new…India discovers herself again."

We are proud of our democracy. We are proud of our values and ideals

Today, we remember all those martyrs who laid down their lives for the freedom and security of our country. The best way of paying homage to those brave sons of our country will be to resolve today that we will always stay committed to strengthening the unity and integrity of our nation. Let us all together take a vow that we will spare no effort to take India to greater heights. 


In the early hours of the 15th of August, 1947, when our nation had just become Independent, our first Prime Minister, Jawaharlal Nehru spoke to the nation and asked us all one important question on the very first day we became a free country: "Are we brave enough and wise enough to grasp this opportunity and accept the challenge of the future?"


Today, my fellow citizens, I stand here once again and ask you that same question. Are we ready to face the challenge of the future? Are we brave enough, to do so, and wise enough, in doing so? Can we rediscover the ideas and ideals that shaped our freedom struggle, and use them to take our country forward into the future? Are we willing to show the courage and the wisdom that Panditji wanted us to show in building a new India in a new world?

Are we really independent? 


Well that depends. A country cannot be independent till it can freely express its opinion and act based on its national and strategic interests. Yes, we are independent constitutionally. But let us give it a second thought and ask After 63 years, are we really independent? I do not think so. We still do not have complete freedom. Laws are made by our elected representatives and thrown upon on us. And we call ourselves the largest democracy in the world.

 

Model 4:


Good Morning! We have assembled here to celebrate our 67th Independence Day. As a citizen of India, I am so proud to talk to you about my mother India. On the night of August 14, 1947, Pandit Jawaharlal Nehru rose to make a maiden speech in New Delhi, “When the world sleeps, India will wake to life and freedom.” Yes, India became free from the bondage of British rule. Now, India is the largest democratic country in the world. The country’s strength is to find, “Unity in diversity”. But, there are stray incidents that test her secularism but the people of India are ready to sacrifice anything for the cause of unity. Today we remember the great leaders who gave their lives for the nation’s freedom and prosperity. Dr. B.R.Ambedkar gave the longest written constitution to us. Pandit Jawaharlal Nehru worked for an industrialized India. Gandhi ji taught us Ahimsa and Non-violence. Subash Chandra Bose inducted courage in us. Swami Vivekanada gave us spiritual power. Yes, with these contributions, India will be the super power in the coming years. Our former President Dr.APJ Abdul Kalam called the children of India to dream to build a strong Nation with aim and perseverance. Indeed! This is not a word of a single man. It is word of one billion souls. Hail India! Jai Hind!



Independence day Greetings























Friday, August 9, 2013

Independence Day 2013

India celebrates Independence Day on August 15 each year. India became an independent nation August 15, 1947, if one day the Gazette is held annually to remember this date.
Independence Day is celebrated every year on 15 August is a national holiday in India commemorating the independence of the nation from British rule on August 15, 1947. India attained freedom after an independence movement noted for the non-violent resistance and largely civil disobedience led by the Indian National Congress. Independence coincided with the partition of India, where the British Indian Empire was divided along religious lines in the Dominions of India and Pakistan, the partition was accompanied by violent riots and massive losses .
                                                The flagship event of the celebrations of Independence Day held in New Delhi, where the Prime Minister hoists the national flag of the Red Fort and delivers a speech ramparts. The festival is observed throughout India with flag hoisting ceremonies, parades and cultural events. Indians celebrate the day by displaying the national flag on their clothing, accessories, houses and cars, listening to patriotic songs, watch patriotic movies, and liaison with family and friends. Books and movies have the independence and partition in their story. Separatist and militant organizations have often led terrorist attacks on and around August 15, and others have said the strikes and used black flags to boycott the celebration.European traders had established outposts on the Indian subcontinent in the 17th century. Thanks to the overwhelming military strength, British East India Company controlled local kingdoms and established themselves as the dominant force in the 18th century. After the rebellion of 1857, the India Government Act 1858 led to the British Crown to assume direct control of India. In the following decades, civil society has emerged gradually across India, especially the Indian National Congress, formed in 1885.The period after the First World War was marked by British reforms, such as the Montagu-Chelmsford reforms but he also attended the promulgation of the Act and calls for autonomy by Indian activists repressive Rowlatt. Discontent crystallized in this period of non-violent movements in the country of non-cooperation and civil disobedience led by Mohandas Karamchand Gandhi.
                                           During the 1930s, the reform was gradually covered by British, Congress won victories in the resulting elections.195-197 The next decade was beset by political turmoil: Indian participation in World War II, driven Final Congress for non-cooperation, and a rise of Muslim nationalism led by the Muslim League All-India. The growing political tension was crowned by independence in 1947. The jubilation was tempered by the bloody partition of the subcontinent into India and Pakistan.
                                                The Red Fort (usually transcribed into English as Lal Qila or Lal Qil'ah) is a 17th century fort complex constructed by the Rajput king, Prithviraj Chauhan in the walled city of Old Delhi (in present Delhi, India) after the defeat of Rajput, it was the residence of the Mughal emperors. The fort was the palace for the new capital of the Mughal Emperor Shah Jahan, Shahjahanabad, the seventh city in the Delhi site. He moved his capital here from Agra in a move designed to bring prestige to his reign, and to provide ample opportunity to implement its programs and the interests of ambitious construction. He served as the capital of the Mughals until 1857, when Mughal emperor Bahadur Shah Zafar was exiled by the British Indian government.
The fort lies along the Yamuna River, which fed the moats that surround most of the wall walls.The its northeastern corner is adjacent to an old fort, the Salimgarh Fort, a defense built by Islam Shah Suri in 1546 . The construction of the Red Fort began in 1638 and was completed by 1648. The Red Fort has had many additional developments after its construction by Emperor Shah Jahan. Significant phases of development were under Aurangzeb and later Mughal rulers in later. It was designated a World Heritage Site by UNESCO in 2007. The previous Red Fort was built by King Tomara Anangpala, now known as the Mosque of Qulb.
                                                   Jana Gana Mana is the national anthem of India. Written in very Sanskritised (tatsama) Bengali, it is the first of five stanzas of the Brahmo hymn composed and scored by Nobel laureate Rabindranath Tagore. It was first sung in Calcutta session of the Indian National Congress, December 27, 1911. "Jana Gana Mana" was officially adopted by the Constituent Assembly as the Indian national anthem January 24, 1950. December 27, 2011 marked the end of 100 years of Jana Gana Mana since it was sung for the first time.
The original poem written by Rabindranath Tagore was translated into Hindi by Abid Ali. The original Hindi version of the song Jana Gana Mana, translated by Ali and based on the poem by Tagore, was a little different. It was "Sukh chain Ki Barkha Barase, Bharat Bhagya Hai Jaga ....". Jana Gana Mana was officially adopted by the Constituent Assembly as the Indian national anthem January 24, 1950.
                                                  An official interpretation of the national anthem takes 52 seconds. A shortened version consisting of the first and last lines (and taking about 20 seconds to play) is also organized on the occasion. Tagore wrote the English translation of the song and with Margaret Cousins ​​(an expert in European music and wife of Irish poet James Cousins), put notation Madanapalle in Andhra Pradesh, which is followed only when the song is sung in the original slow rendering style of singing. However, when the version of the national anthem of the song is sung, it is made in the traditional Martial grandiose style of music.
words.
                                                     The text, though Bengali, is highly sanskritised (written in a literary register called Sadhu Bhasa). The song was written almost entirely by using names that can also function as verbs. Most of the song names are in use in all major Indian languages. Therefore, the original song is clearly understandable, and in fact, remains almost unchanged in several very different Indian languages. Also in the form of quasi-Sanskrit text, it is acceptable in many modern Indic languages, but the pronunciation varies considerably across India. This is primarily because most Indic languages ​​are abugidas in that certain unmarked consonants are assumed to have an inherent vowel, but conventions for this differ among the languages ​​of India. The transcription below reflects the Bengali pronunciation, in both the Bengali script and romanization. The following are officially recognized versions of the national anthem by the Indian government in some of the officially recognized languages.

In Telugu:

జన గణ మన అధినాయక జయహే
భారత భాగ్య విధాత
పంజాబ, సింధు, గుజరాత, మరాఠ
ద్రావిడ, ఉత్కళ, వంగ,
వింధ్య, హిమాచల, యమునా, గంగ,
ఉచ్ఛల జలధి తరంగ
తవ శుభ నామే జాగే,
తవశుభ ఆశిష మాగే;
గాహే తవజయ గాథ..
జన గణ మంగళ దాయక జయహే,
భారత భాగ్య విధాత,
జయహే, జయహే, జయహే,
జయ జయ జయ జయహే.

जन गण मन (Devanagari)
जन-गण-मन अधिनायक जय हे
भारत-भाग्य-विधाता ।
पंजाब सिंध गुजरात मराठा
द्राविड़ उत्कल बंग ।
विंध्य हिमाचल यमुना गंगा,
उच्छल जलधि तरंग ।
तव शुभ नामे जागे,
तव शुभ आशिष माँगे;
गाहे तव जय गाथा ।
जन-गण मंगलदायक जय हे,
भारत-भाग्य-विधाता ।
जय हे, जय हे, जय हे,
जय जय जय, जय हे ।।

                                          Rabindranath Tagore translated "Jana Gana Mana" from Bengali to English and also set to music in Madanapalle, a town in the Chittoor district of Andhra Pradesh state, India. Though the Bengali song had been written in 1911, he was largely unknown except for readers of Brahmo Samaj, Tatva Bodha Prakasika which Tagore was the editor.
During 1919, Tagore accepted an invitation from a friend and controversial Irish poet James H. Cousins ​​to spend a few days at the Besant Theosophical College in Madanapalle located which Cousins ​​was the principal. On the evening of February 28, 1919, he joined a gathering of students and demand Cousins, sang the Jana Gana Mana in Bengali. The college authorities, greatly impressed by the lofty ideals of the song and praise to God, chose as their prayer song. In the days that followed, enchanted by the idyllic hills of Madanapalle, Tagore wrote the English translation of the song and the woman Cousins, Margaret (an expert in Western music), put the notation which is followed up to date. The song was carried beyond the borders of India by the college students and became The Morning Song of India and subsequently the national anthem.
Today, in the library of Besant Theosophical College in Madanapalle, the framed original English translation of Jana Gana Mana, titled as The Morning Song of India in Tagore's handwriting is displayed