patriotic hindi poems
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Baisakhi celebration
A special assembly was conducted on the occasion of Baisakhi. The students presented a colorful dance and Punjabi songs.
Students presented a talk show whereby they talked and discussed about the reason for celebrating Baisakhi and the ways in which this festival is celebrated.
Labour Day celebration
A special assembly was conducted to celebrate Labour’s day on 1st May’08.Students presented a hindi skit whereby explaining the value of hard work. Everybody enjoyed the skit and learnt a meaningful lesson from it that “Aalas buri baat hai”
Teej celebration
Teej is a festival for women folk. The festival announces the coming of the monsoon season. A fete was organized within the school premises on 4.08.08 for classes Nur to Ist.
The fete included three stalls for games, each organized by the teachers of classes I A, I B and I C and a special stall of mehndi and bangles was also organized by teachers of Nursery A,B,C and Prep A,B,C
Rakshabandhan
The festivals of ‘Raksha Bandhan’ as celebrated on 14th August’08.
A special mass assembly was called and the students of classes I, II and III depicted the bond of love between brother and sister in the form of a poem, song and a beautiful dance.
Independence Day celebration
Our school celebrated the auspicious occasion of completion of 61 years of Independence with great excitement, enthusiasm and joy on 14th August’08(Thursday) in the school premises.
A special mass assembly was called from Nursery to VIII .The function started with the beautiful short speech given by Amandeep Singh of class I-A.
Students of Nursery and prep presented a lovely song ‘Hum Bharat Ke Vasi’ which was appreciated by all. The tiny toddlers were looking really sweet in their tri-colour dresses.
After that a colorful dance was performed by students of nursery and prep on the patriotic song ‘I Love my India’ Students enjoyed it a lot.
The function ceremony came to an end with, hoisting of National Flag, followed by our National Anthem.
Everybody enjoyed and appreciated the celebration. Students were also explained the importance & meaning of this day.
Teacher’s day celebration
Students celebrated teacher’s day on 5th September’08. The best gift teachers got from the students were titles, which really made them happy. Senior students recited poems and performed a skit.
Dussehra and Diwali celebration
On occasion of Diwali and Dussehra celebration, students of ‘BRAIN INTERNATIONAL SCHOOL’ depicted the life story of Lord Rama by enacting Ramayana.
Tiny tots along with our growing mind beautifully presented the skit by showing how the righteous devotion of Rama and the faithfulness and womanly love of Sita, run like two threads of god through the whole fabric of the Epic and ennoble and sanctify the work in the eyes of Hindus.
Their hard efforts and grand performance received a lot of appreciation.
About the Author:
Mrs. Seema Behl, Principal of Brain International School located in H-Block, Vikas Puri, New Delhi affiliated to CBSE.
Article Source: ArticlesBase.com – Brain International School has celebrated events and festivals in 2008
Books and publishing are doing well, despite the hard economic times. Poetry is doing well online. And free poetry, widely available through online literary journals and e-book publishers, offers a way to help those who want to, or perhaps have to, shave their book budgets.
Eric Pfanner, writing for the International Herald Tribune, examines how bookstores and the publishing industry have continued doing well, despite the world-wide recession. Apparently, this is especially true for Continental Europe’s bookstores, but also true for bookstores in the US. People still want to read—whether for pleasure and escape or for better understanding of what’s happening with the economy. So, they turn to books.
What about poetry? While the death knell for poetry has been rung many times, especially recently, poetry in particular also thrives today, despite the economy. The blossoming of online publishing, documented by the online site Poetry Archive, amongst others (see Stephen Adams, writing for the Daily Telegraph. Literally hundreds of thousands of unique viewers look at poetry. According to Adams, they look at more than a million pages of poetry per month just at the Poetry Archive site. And that’s just the Brits and Europeans.
In the U.S., The Poetry Foundation has a similar site that allows viewers access to well-known and well-respected poets and poems, among others.
But web-based literary magazines know no geo-political boundaries. New ones spring up regularly (for example, see West Goes South). Some are offered as Adobe PDF downloads, such as Poetry Midwest. Some online journals periodically print the best from their sites, as does Abramelin: The Journal of Poetry and Magick. Zeek offers another model growing in popularity, an online accompaniment to a print journal. Many long-established journals now also offer free online supplements to their print issues, including poetry.
While many companies, such as Barnes & Noble and Amazon, try to capitalize on e-books through sales of e-book readers and licensed books, other publishers are choosing a route more reminiscent of the indie music labels: they provide free publication to promote the poetry and poets. why vandalism? (no capitals) is a literary and arts journal that also publishes e-books. The journal and the books are both free for the viewing. Currently, why vandalism?, which has been publishing for only two years, offers five e-books.
Its sixth book, The World Behind It, Chaos, by Michael Dickel (whose work has been published on many of the sites listed here), is due by the end of March, which just happens to be at the end of Small Press Month and the beginning of National Poetry Month. Despite T. S. Eliot’s line, “April is the cruelest month,” April promises to be good for Dickel and why vandalism?
Dickel’s book demonstrates another principle of online publishing related to economics. His book contains photographs and digital art, most of it in full-color, the cost of publishing which would have driven the book’s price out of reach for consumers. This way, his artwork will be seen, his poetry will be read, and an audience will grow to know his work. Dickel says that he’d “like to make money, I don’t expect to do so as a poet. If people become familiar with my work, perhaps then they will also buy books from publishers—and be willing to pay the higher price to include art with the poetry.”
All you have to do is search on the word “poetry” in Google or Yahoo to see that, indeed, poetry is alive and well on the internet. And, largely, available for free. Poetry not only thrives in the online community, it thrives in ways that are affordable to any who have access to a computer and the internet.
About the Author:
Jacob Abrahamson is a writer, poet, and publicist.
Article Source: ArticlesBase.com – Poetry thrives online: Check out free poetry sites for April, National Poetry Month