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Lal Salam (Bengali: লাল সেলাম, Hindi: लाल सलाम, Urdu: لال سلام; transl. "Red salute" [1]) is a salute, greeting, or code word used by communists in South Asia. The phrase is a compound of lāl , meaning "red" in Hindi and Urdu, and salām , meaning "peace", a contraction of the Arabic phrase as-salāmu ...
His reply is 'the plain human courage shown by the people of Vietnam', instead of the expected: man landing on the Moon. The interviewer asks if he is a communist. Needless to say, he does not get the job. He reaches a coffee shop where he is offered work for the communist party. When he does not show any interest, the party leader tells him ...
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Of course, many others in India, including Bombay Group, were thinking along similar lines. He announced intention to set up ‘Indian Communist Party’ in the Hindi daily Aj of 12 July 1924. He referred to Russia and to the Communist rule there, asserting that Communism was the only path uplifting unhappy and exploited people.
Part of a series on Communism Concepts Anti-capitalism Class conflict Class consciousness Classless society Collective leadership Communist party Communist revolution Communist state Commune Communist society Critique of political economy Free association "From each according to his ability, to each according to his needs" Market abolitionism Proletarian internationalism Labour movement Social ...
The British colonial authorities had banned all communist activity, which made the task of building a united party very difficult. A Communist Group was founded in Tashkent on 17 October 1920, soon after the Second Congress of the Communist International by M.N. Roy. Roy made contacts with Anushilan and Jugantar groups in Bengal.
Free association; Freed market; Industrial democracy; Input–output model; Internationalism; Labour-time calculation; Labour voucher; Material balance planning; Peer‑to‑peer economics; Production for use; Sharing economy; Spontaneism; Social dividend; Social ownership; Socialism in one country; Socialist mode of production; Soviet ...
Compound verbs, a highly visible feature of Hindi–Urdu grammar, consist of a verbal stem plus a light verb. The light verb (also called "subsidiary", "explicator verb", and "vector" [ 55 ] ) loses its own independent meaning and instead "lends a certain shade of meaning" [ 56 ] to the main or stem verb, which "comprises the lexical core of ...