The book can be bought in Mumbai :
Address: Room no 108 ,Building no -13,MMRDA COLONY Poonam nagar ,opp PMGP colony Andheri (E), Mumbai.
Contact person: Gaurav Verma: 08450940279
The book can be bought in Indore :
Address:
RAMANAND KUMAR DEEPAK. TECH-SYNERGY PVT LTD. M 1 -5 RUKMANI PLAZA. 14 NEW PALASIA. A.B. ROAD INDORE
452001Contact person: Deepak : 07879963783
The book can be bought in Nasik (Maharastra) :
Contact person:Ashutosh Shrivastava: 09822189995
The book can be bought in Bangalore:
Contact person:
Abhas Verma : 8747029805
Price: Rs.190 + COD(or one can pick it up from the location)
The book can also be bought online from:
Flipkart : http://www.flipkart.com/third-battle-panipat/p/itmdn4qt3hmtdqgb?affid=abhasabvgm
Buy from Hariomji Sellers
Good book one must buy one copy
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ReplyDeleteExcellent attempt by the author to write over this topic....he has certainly done a great job compiling/sourcing all details....much appreciated. Highly recommended to read once for every Indian at least to whom who wants to know about Indian brave!
ReplyDeletea very well-researched book.details in this book are just awesome.really liked the book for exploring the true Indian history.thanks and kudos to author for this brilliant effort
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ReplyDeleteThe book can be bought in Bangalore:
DeleteContact person:Ujjawal Deo: 09448252392
for detail discussion reach out to me at abhasabv@gmail.com
can i buy in Panipat? As i m from Panipat or should i buy online? Dr. Imran
ReplyDeletesend you address to abhasabv@gmail.com, I can do something for you.
DeleteMany urban Afghan Pashtuns marry Farsiwan/Tajik women. The same dynamic occurs in urban Pakistan with Punjabis and Urdu speakers. Pashtun identity is traced patrilineally, so your mother can be non-Pashtun, and your paternal grandmother can be non-Pashtun, but you will still be considered a Pashtun, as long as your paternal grandfather was a Pashtun (which means he should have had a Pashtun paternal grandfather), and as long as you follow Pashtunwali (which is irrelevant when dealing with contemporary situations, since few if any urban Pashtuns still observe Pashtunwali, with exception to things like hospitality, as the revenge stuff is too much, a remnant of a darker time. Rural Pashtuns, and people in FATA are a different story). And even here, there are huge genealogical exceptions. The Ghilzai have no mythic paternal link to the greater family of Pashtun peoples. Their mythical ancestor is a Turkic nobleman/prince. Their Pashtun link is the mythical daughter of Batan, Bibi Matao. Nevertheless, nobody can seriously doubt the Pashtun credentials of these people (they are the largest group of Pashtuns in Afghanistan). Many Pashtuns throughout the region have become "Pashtunized" in recent memory (the people of the Korengal valley in Afghanistan, the Baloch living alongside the Khattak, many Hindkowans in Peshawar, Mardan, and Charsadda)
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ReplyDeleteOne should buy and read this book to do an in-depth analysis
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