Description
Information about each and every employee a book or booklet can get printed, with the name of the institute with increase in pages, in adequate price (more pages less price)
Information about each and every employee a book or booklet can get printed, with the name of the institute with increase in pages, in adequate price (more pages less price)
| Weight | 150 kg |
|---|---|
| Dimensions | 21.5 × 14 cm |
A Journey from Frontier to Frontier: Across the Soul of India From the Eastern Dawn to the Western Horizon and from Kashmir’s icy heights to Kanyakumari’s oceanic edge, this book is a breathtaking chronicle of one man’s self-driven odyssey across India’s vast and varied frontiers. Through vivid reflections and sharp-eyed observations, the author captures the […]
This book has fulfilled the demand of banks/credit societies as it has draft with the important articles of Banking Regulation Act, giving explanation about all aspects dealing with it for the working of banks and credit-societies, along with its application in different circumstances. First each one is given in summary/abstract and later on in B R act (applied to the co-operative urban banks) in translation in Marathi. By reading the English part, everyone would be benefited.
Gadge Baba was not an organizer of propagator of the religion or a saint. He was social worker who moved in the society and taught people about social uplift and the methods to be observed for it. He taught the people the fundamental and basic links of life and worked as an angel. He was moving educational institute, who worked alone, and made people to follow him for the cause of society. The book tells about the experiments made him and the odds faced by him. The information in the book would benefit social workers in particular.
Since our Bahujan icons inspire us in each and every struggle of our life, we must celebrate and propagate their work. This book is a step towards that direction. The work of Barrister Saheb is very inspiring. In the socio-political arena of independent India, we rarely come across a leader who is so dedicated to his cause as Barrister Saheb was. He carried forward Babasaheb’s legacy of simultaneous engagement with parliamentary politics and ground politics. Limiting him only to the identity of a Republican leader would be an injustice to his versatile personality. He was a parliamentarian, a barrister, a journalist, a diplomat of India’s foreign policy, a champion of the rights of the marginalized and women, a mass leader, and a staunch ideologue of Ambedkarite thought. One can feel thrilled and overwhelmed to find these many aspects within only one personality. Without an unwavering resolution to devote one’s life to the cause of the downtrodden, one cannot do such a mountain of work. This book is tribute to Barrister Saheb and his humongous work on his birth centenary year and 40th death anniversary year.