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It Happens Only In India

Reader's Digest India

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April 2017

In this day and age, there are very few things all Indians can agree on, but one of them is this: India is a strange land.

It Happens Only In India

Maybe, some claim, our ancient sages invented the zero only so we could measure how much sense the world around us would make thousands of years later. From a diverse range of oddness that perhaps only our melting pot of a country can provide, from lawbreakers and lawmakers, seminars and simians, we’ve found subjects for a series of stories that happen only in India: some funny, some horrifying, and several that manage to be both.

CRIME PATROL

BEWARE, THESE PINK ₹2,000 notes would have passed off as real, but closer inspection revealed they were issued by the ‘Bhartiya Manoranjan Bank’ and ‘Children Bank of India’. This stopped being funny after a few ATMs in Delhi-NCR, Haryana, Andhra Pradesh and Uttar Pradesh dispensed the play notes. Turns out, they are easily available at toy stores. So much for demonetization putting a stop to counterfeit currency. Source: thehindu.com

IMAGINE THIS: a chain-snatcher’s wedding, his brethren, India’s top muggers and thieves, as guests, with 20 policemen merely keeping watch on the festivities. The news of Toufiq Shah’s wedding in Ambivali, Thane, spread like wildfire. The police were left to defend their dubious decision of not arresting Shah right then (but the next day). Of course, they seemed to ignore the fact that his bride was underage—she’s 15.

Source: indiatvnews.com

Reader's Digest India'den DAHA FAZLA HİKAYE

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STUDIO

Untitled (Native Man from Chotanagpur drawing Bow and Arrow)

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Learning to FLY

A small act of rebellion on a cold Oxford night creates a moment of spontaneous joy

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MY (RELUCTANT) TRIP TO THE TITANIC

In 2023, the submersible Titan imploded on its way to view the famous sunken ocean liner. A year earlier, our author—a sitcom writer— took the same trip. Here's what he saw

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She Carried HOME the Blues

Tipriti Kharbangar has spent two decades carrying a music that refuses spectacle and chases truth. Now the blues singer is asking a deeper question: what does it mean to know your roots—and protect them?

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A Year in France

My time in Aix-en-Provence as a student changed my outlook on life

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3 mins

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A SISTERHOOD IN THE WILD

COMMUNITY In a city better known for traffic snarls than bird calls, a small but growing initiative is helping women slow down and look closer at the wild spaces around them.

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3 mins

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Reader's Digest India

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How Famine and History Rewired Our Genes

What if India's current diabetes crisis began generations ago? Science reveals that food scarcity, colonial history, and epigenetics quietly shaped South Asia's metabolic fate

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4 mins

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Tracing the Birth of Nations

In his latest book, Sam Dalrymple interlaces high political history with intimate human stories to examine the complex, often violent, foundations of modern west and south Asian countries

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The Case for Curiosity

Two trivia enthusiasts explore how wonder fades with age— and why asking questions might be the key to finding it again

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