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Exclusive: âœHe was a complete manâ exclaims Saira Banu as she looks upon Dilip Kumar with affection
onmynews.com

Exclusive: âœHe was a complete manâ exclaims Saira Banu as she looks upon Dilip Kumar with affection


Bollywood romances are one thing but the one Saira Banu had with the late Dilip Kumar was right out of a fairytale. You can just take his name, and she sounds like the 22 year old who had fallen head over heels in love with him and to date, still feels the same. That he’s made her a better version of herself is evident, but that love when true can truly conquer all is something she proves with everything she has to say about the 56 years she has spent with him, happily married. On the occasion of Valentine’s Day, she bares her heart out as she gives a deeper glimpse into her epic love story. Excerpts..

The most loving thing that Dilip Saab ever did for you?

He was a complete man. I have never seen a man so wonderfully endowed with the most beautiful traits. One small thing that I can generate that accentuates and illustrates what kind of person he was. Once, when I was shooting in Kashmir, I think I was shooting for Shagird. And the weather in Kashmir suddenly changed for the worse. We could not shoot for eight or nine days over there. We just kept sitting, and eventually Samir Ganguli and Subodh Mukherjee decided suddenly overnight that this wouldn’t happen. And they shifted the entire unit from the North to the Jog Falls in the South. We had to imagine a song there. With this sudden turn of events, nothing was organised. There was nothing to eat for the unit. I usually had my own stuff and everything, but they were, of course, late in coming. They had to come in from Kashmir. And I did what I never do, which is eat what is being served. And unfortunately, the food that I ate made me sick. I was so sick that night that by morning I had food poisoning. And they had to cancel the shoot that day. Somehow I finished the shoot, but when I was back at home in Mumbai, I landed in trouble with a terrible illness.

And eventually, after getting to the hospital, I did not recover, and they had to shift me to London. The place where we stayed in London was a beautiful home in the suburbs. And this private hospital was in the heart of town. So when Saab wanted to organise food arrangements for me at the clinic with special permission, It would take hours in the car. So he opted for the London tube and would get a beautiful tiffin packed for me with very light food, which was ordained by the doctor. He would travel personally, deliver the food to me and my mother, and see that we had a good deal. It was the most touching, loving gesture—one of the most loving gestures that I can remember and recall, which is stuck in my mind. Every day of my life, I have been grateful to him for so many things that he’s done. He’s been a perfect gentleman. And I’ve seen the world; you know, I have travelled the world as a child. I’ve travelled the world as a grownup w working woman all over the world. Never have I seen a man so full of kindness as Dilip Saab.

If you had to pick a romantic classic in which you could star with Dilip Saab which one would it be.

The classic that I always wanted to do with Dilip Saab and I wanted it to be my first movie with him. It was an adaptation of Pygmalion written by George Bernard Shaw. Wherein this professor, who was to be played by Dilip Saab, turns the flower girl into a lady.  I had studied it at my school and I had studied it so well that I had given an exam on it. So I know it by heart. I would have loved to have played Eliza Doolittle to his professor Professor Henry Higgins. 

That is the romantic classic I would have wanted to do with him. Another one which I would have loved to have done with him, would have been Roman Holiday. The famous Gregory Peck and Audrey Hepburn movie. Wherein a princess, she takes off from her palace. Just to make a few days of an ordinary life for herself, wherein she meets this journalist and falls in love with. That was a beautiful film. I would have loved to have done it as a Hindi version.

One lesson you learnt about love from him.

As for a lesson to learn from him, we started our life together. I would say that we have grown up together. We were married for 56 years. And he was in the bloom of his life in the early 40s. And I was 22. I really feel that I have just grown up with him. But the one best lesson that I have learned from him and that has taken me so long to own is that he never spoke ill of anyone. That is one thing I have learned from him. 

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Rakul Preet Singh and Jackky Bhagnani to postpone their honeymoon and focus on work post-wedding
onmynews.com

Rakul Preet Singh and Jackky Bhagnani to postpone their honeymoon and focus on work post-wedding

The impending marriage of Rakul Preet Singh and Jackky Bhagnani has sparked great curiosity, with people speculating about the location, attendees, and outfits. It is anticipated to be a lavish celebration, marking the start of a new phase in their lives.

A reliable source close to the pair has informed ETimes that Rakul and Jackky have chosen to postpone their plans for a honeymoon, and have decided to focus on their work commitments instead.

Although Rakul will continue working until just three days before her wedding, she plans to begin filming her new Bollywood project within a week of getting married. Meanwhile, Jackky will be busy organising one of the biggest releases of his career as a producer for the film Bade Miyan Chote Miyan featuring Akshay Kumar, Tiger Shroff, and Prithviraj. The movie, directed by Ali Abbas Zafar, is set to be released on Eid this year.

The couple will tie the knot on the 21st of February in Goa. Their wedding outfits have been created by Tarun Tahiliani. Recently, the couple, accompanied by their families, was seen at Tahiliani’s studio in South Mumbai.

See Also: Rakul Preet Singh visits Jackky Bhagnani’s home ahead of their wedding. Watch: 

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Explained: How Abu Dhabi’s Hindu Temple Represents India-UAE Ties
onmynews.com

Explained: How Abu Dhabi’s Hindu Temple Represents India-UAE Ties

Bochasanwasi Shri Akshar Purushottam Swaminarayan Hindu Mandir or BAPS Hindu Mandir is spread over a 27-acre piece of land.
In 2015, then crown prince and current UAE President, Sheikh Mohamed bin Zayed Al Nahyan, donated 13.5 acres of land for the construction of the first temple in the UAE. In 2019, he gifted an additional 13.5 acres.
The temple represents the idea of coexistence – A Muslim king donated land for a Hindu Mandir, where the lead architect is a Catholic Christian, the Project Manager is a Sikh, and the Foundational designer is a Buddhist. Construction Company is a Parsi group, and the director comes from a Jain tradition.
Prime Minister Narendra Modi during the ‘Ahlan Modi’ event shared an anecdote and said “In 2015, when I presented to him (Sheikh Mohamed bin Zayed) the proposal to build a temple in Abu Dhabi on behalf of all of you, he immediately said yes to it…now the time has come to inaugurate this grand (BAPS) temple.”
Buildings surrounding the mandir are modern, minimalistic and monolithic. Symbolically 7 spires pay respect to the seven emirates of the UAE.
The iconic stone temple is located in Abu Mureikhah, near Al Rahba off the Dubai-Abu Dhabi Sheikh Zayed Highway.
The cost of the construction of the temple is estimated to be around 400 million United Arab Emirates dirhams, as per reports.
Just like all other BAPS mandirs around the world, this mandir is open to everyone and anyone.
The front side panel has lifesize panels of universal values, stories of harmony from different cultures, and representation of Avatars and Hindu Spiritual leaders.
The external facade of the mandir uses pink sandstone from Rajasthan. The mandir interior uses Italian marble with two central domes – ‘The Dome of Harmony’ and ‘The Dome of Peace’.
No iron material is used in the temple. Different types of pillars can be seen in the temple like circular, and hexagonal.
There are idols of historic figures, sages, and acharyas, who have sustained these values, that plinth is known as the plinth of values. Apart from Indian civilization, stories are taken from the Maya, Aztec, Egyptian, Arabic, European, Chinese and African civilizations etc.

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