Weekend reads
- Vishnu Varma in the Indian Express introduces readers to a yoga centre in Kerala where women are “brought back” from their non-Hindu partners.
- North India’s air is going to take a lot of work to even begin cleaning up, writes Chaitanya Mallapur in India Spend.
- “As surprising as it may sound, colloquial expressions such as ‘giving a cold shoulder’ or an ‘icy stare’ imply physical coldness. In other words, social rejection or exclusion literally feels cold,” writes Shilpa Madan in Mint.
- Ananya Revanna gives readers a glimpse of what caste identities mean in a village near Una in Gujarat, in Blink.
- “Madness is something I suffer, but sanity is something I crave. It is only the intervention of my support system that makes me nostalgic for days when I was functional and taken more seriously. ‘Is he mad?’ is a bit of an obvious question. I am saved by the fact that my parents, friends and doctors now ask, ‘What was he like when he was sane?’” writes Shreevatsa Nevatia in the Hindu.
- Natasha Badhwar in Mint tells us that sisters are the perfect best friends, survive and flourishing despite competition and comparisons.
- Is India becoming a Hindu Pakistan? Sadanand Dhume attempts to answer the question in the Times of India.
- In the New York Times, Brian M Rosenthal, Emma G Fitzsimmons, and Michael LaForgia explain how politics and bad decisions starved New York’s subways.