Weekend Reads
- Ellen Barry of the New York Times spent four months reporting on a government programme that brings rural women into the big city and, in doing so, reveals much about the Indian dream.
- Chennai's floods last year didn't just damage property – it also left people struggling to handle post-traumatic stress disorder, reports Mahima A Jain in Blink.
- Aakash Joshi argues, in the Indian Express, that calling the soldiers who died in Uri "martyrs" does them a disservice. "Martyrs, whatever else they may be, take a conscious decision to die."
- Karnataka's Alipur has an unusually large number of deaf people, reports Bhavya Dore in Mint, and this community is now trying to reach out to the rest of the world.
- "Despite their growing brawn, India’s armed forces still lack a brain," says the Economist.
- A town called Uri – and how the attack on September 18 may now change it, reports Naveed Iqbal in the Indian Express.
- NDTV's Truth vs Hype team looked into the pattern of donors on global terror watch lists helping fund Saudi-style Islamic schools in India.
- Cow vigilantism is just another trump card handed out to violent men to go out and rape, writes Nisha Susan in The Ladies Finger.
- Andrew Sullivan, once an ever-online blogger, writes an (occasionally melodramatic) essay in Select/All about information addiction and always being connected.
- "I’m writing because I have a request," says Paul Farhi in the Washington Post. "Please stop calling us the media.”