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Go Spiritual launches global campaign to promote Maha Kumbh Mela 2025 – Adgully

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Go Spiritual, a leading spiritual organization dedicated to spreading awareness of India’s rich spiritual heritage, has launched a worldwide campaign to promote the Maha Kumbh Mela 2025. Known as the largest spiritual gathering in the world, the Maha Kumbh Mela is set to take place in Prayagraj, Uttar Pradesh, drawing millions of devotees, spiritual seekers, and international visitors to the sacred confluence of the Ganga, Yamuna, and Saraswati rivers.
With the aim of amplifying global awareness and participation, Go Spiritual’s campaign will transcend national boundaries, bringing the message of unity, spirituality, and cultural richness to the global stage. Recognized by UNESCO as an Intangible Cultural Heritage of Humanity, the Kumbh Mela embodies the essence of India’s spiritual and cultural identity, uniting people across the globe in a celebration of shared humanity and faith.

Sonu Tyagi, Founder of Go Spiritual & Approach Entertainment, highlighted the global vision of the campaign:
“The Maha Kumbh Mela is more than a festival; it is a spiritual phenomenon that reflects the timeless wisdom of India. At Go Spiritual, we are dedicated to showcasing its universal relevance to the world, inspiring people from all walks of life to experience this transformative event. Our campaign will connect ancient Indian traditions with a global audience, fostering spiritual exploration and unity on an unprecedented scale.”

To achieve this ambitious goal, Go Spiritual is leveraging the power of digital media and spiritual content to reach audiences worldwide. The campaign will feature a series of carefully curated Kumbh-centric content, including informative videos, cultural documentaries, and live-streamed events that showcase the essence of the Maha Kumbh Mela and the richness of Indian spirituality. Through its robust media outreach and strategic PR efforts, Go Spiritual aims to engage global audiences and draw attention to the spiritual, cultural, and environmental significance of the Kumbh Mela.

The campaign will also include comprehensive coverage through Go Spiritual’s flagship platforms, including Go Spiritual News Magazine and its upcoming Web TV and OTT platform. These platforms will provide in-depth insights into the Maha Kumbh Mela, exploring its historical roots, spiritual rituals, and its transformative impact on the millions who attend. The Go Spiritual app will further enhance accessibility by offering real-time updates, travel guides, and resources for international visitors planning to participate in the event.
A key element of Go Spiritual’s campaign is its commitment to promoting sustainable and eco-friendly practices at the Maha Kumbh Mela. The organization will collaborate with environmental groups and local authorities to implement initiatives aimed at preserving the sacred rivers and surrounding environment. Efforts such as clean river projects, effective waste management systems, and the use of biodegradable materials will be prioritized to ensure the event’s ecological footprint is minimized. By intertwining spirituality with environmental responsibility, Go Spiritual seeks to inspire participants to embrace a sustainable and mindful approach to their spiritual journeys.
The campaign also seeks to foster meaningful cultural exchange, creating opportunities for dialogue and collaboration between spiritual leaders, cultural ambassadors, and international participants. By encouraging these interactions, Go Spiritual aims to strengthen mutual understanding and respect, positioning the Maha Kumbh Mela as a platform for shared spiritual exploration and unity. This cultural exchange underscores the universality of India’s spiritual teachings and its relevance in a rapidly globalizing world.
As the Maha Kumbh Mela 2025 approaches, Go Spiritual’s worldwide campaign is set to create an unprecedented impact, drawing attention to the grandeur and spiritual significance of this historic event. The campaign not only invites millions to participate but also aims to position India’s spiritual heritage as a beacon of hope, unity, and inspiration for the world.
Also Read: Approach Communications launches public awareness campaign
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Brewster Kahle, the internet’s librarian – California Sun

02 January 2025
Brewster Kahle, founder of the Internet Archive, housed in a former San Francisco church with Greek columns that echo the ancient Library of Alexandria, discusses his three-decade mission to preserve humanity’s digital knowledge and culture. Now facing unprecedented challenges, including a major cyberattack and legal battles with publishers over the site’s distribution of copyrighted materials, Kahle reflects on the growing threats to digital preservation while reaffirming his commitment to universal access to all knowledge. We begin the year by looking back. 

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Vivian Dsena’s wife Nouran Aly accepts she faced ‘love jihad’ accusations after he changed religion to marry her: ‘We didn’t speak for 6 months’ – The Indian Express

Actor Vivian Dsena has been a celebrated name in the Indian TV fraternity. Considered among the most popular stars on the medium, Vivian has now appeared on Bigg Boss 18. The actor converted to Islam in 2019 and married Egyptian journalist Nouran Aly in 2022. Recently, Nouran appeared on Bigg Boss 18, after which she opened up about the challenges she and Vivian’s relationship went through initially. In a conversation with Galatta India, Nouran said that she received hate and faced accusations of love jihad when Vivian converted to Islam to marry her. She said she was so concerned about the fallout that she even parted ways with him for six months.
 
 
A post shared by JioCinema (@officialjiocinema) 
Also Read: Bigg Boss 18: Kamya Panjabi calls Vivian Dsena ‘dull’, Salman Khan says, ‘Your game is over’
Nouran shared, “I was accused of love jihad for converting Vivian to Islam. He also faced trolling on social media, and maybe it affected his work pattern too. We have a lot of differences in terms of belief or language barrier, I had very clearly told him that in my religion, I could not do an interfaith marriage with him, it is not acceptable on my side and I respect that. Vivian was a Christian, and its core is very similar to Islam. But since women don’t convert to our religion, I stayed away for six months because I was very worried and scared wondering if he would do this for me.”
 
 
A post shared by Vivian Dsena (@viviandsena) 
She also added, “I thought the society won’t spare us, if he changed his religion for a woman, secondly, he would regret later if I didn’t meet his expectations. It was a big step. We didn’t speak for six months, and I would not respond to his messages, but then I got to know from a mutual friend that he kept studying my religion. I had zero interference in this, he met people, and then after six months, he told my friends that he wanted to speak with me. He said he was ready to convert, not for me but for himself, so even if I was not with him he would have adopted Islam. It took me 1-2 weeks to believe him that he was doing it for himself, I didn’t want him to be cut off from his roots for me.”
Nouran and Vivian’s love on the show has been adored by the audience. Nouran’s strong personality on Bigg Boss 18 made quite an impression.
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Mukesh Chandrakar, a brave journalist in Bastar, sacrificed his life while exposing the conflict between police and Maoists. He was a dedicated chronicler of the region and worked to highlight the plight of the Adivasi community. Despite obstacles, he fought for justice and even helped free a captive.
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Rocklin teen joins KCRA 3 to talk about his pet food drive to help animals – KCRA Sacramento

A 17-year-old Boy Scout has been trying to make a difference for animals in need.
Blake Sparks is on a mission to become an Eagle Scout by helping furry friends at the Placer County SPCA.
He started a pet food drive in November in front of the Tractor Supply store in Rocklin to collect food and raise awareness about the need for animal adoptions.
See KCRA’s previous coverage on Blake’s pet food drive here.
Sunday marked his last pet food drive. Blake said from his November food drive and Sunday’s drive, he collected over 3,100 pounds of pet food and over $1,300 in donations.
Blake is very thankful for all of the community support he has received for his Eagle Scout project.
He spoke to KCRA 3 about it before it began Sunday morning.
Watch in the video player above.
Hearst Television participates in various affiliate marketing programs, which means we may get paid commissions on editorially chosen products purchased through our links to retailer sites.

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Life Lessons From a Zonie Girl Archives – Flagstaff Business News

Flagstaff Business News
Northern Arizona’s premier source for business, education and health news.
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After decades of studying greatness, career journalist Bonnie Stevens shares strategies for navigating life’s challenging landscapes Can you go three more feet? Are you over the moon with soft skills? Can you leave what was once good for a chance at something better? “Life Lessons From a Zonie … [Read more…] about Life Lessons From a Zonie Girl Offers Tips for Staying Sunny, Grounded, Resilient
Filed Under: Business, Education, Local News, Sedona, Williams, Winslow

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COVID’s lessons have all been forgotten – Matangi Tonga

Monday, January 6, 2025 – 10:09

 By Antara Haldar
In December 2019, as the world was looking ahead to a new year, a novel virus was quietly spreading in China, having most likely made the leap from animals to humans in a Wuhan “wet market.” Soon, the COVID-19 pandemic would bring the world to a grinding halt, forcing billions of people into unprecedented lockdowns and shuttering economies worldwide. Five years on, we are still grappling with the effects of this “gray rhino”: a high-probability risk that was nonetheless neglected or ignored.
What did we learn? For starters, the pandemic exposed fundamental flaws in the design of the global economy. In such a tightly interconnected world, the virus was able to spread globally in the space of just a few weeks, and governments, focused on short-term economic goals, were reluctant to do what was necessary to prevent or stop it. While the World Health Organization issued warnings, it lacked the resources or authority to take decisive action. As hospitalizations mounted, not a single health-care system in the world proved to be a match for the virus.
Moreover, inequality – both between and within countries – fueled heightened social tensions during lockdowns, exacerbating class and gender struggles, but also conflict between the Global North and South. In the wake of the vaccine rollout, wealthier countries hoarded doses while billions of people in poorer countries had to wait months or even years for access.
This “vaccine nationalism” was a strategic as well as a moral failure. New variants of the virus soon emerged, prolonging the pandemic and undermining the global recovery. The pandemic also exposed, and fueled, a loss of trust in institutions, as mis- and disinformation campaigns led to disaffection with government pandemic responses. Commonsense measures like social distancing and masks soon became deeply divisive political issues.
The pandemic also lent urgency to questions that can seem remote to the quotidian functioning of the economy. Should we think of the economy as independent of its host society, and can there even be a global economy without global institutions?
For a fleeting moment, it looked like COVID could be the wake-up call that would finally bring about greater economic solidarity. When the severity of the crisis became apparent, many governments did move relatively quickly to enforce lockdowns, protect vulnerable populations, and roll out fiscal and monetary interventions on an unprecedented scale to prevent an economic freefall. It was the first time in living memory that policymakers started listening more closely to epidemiologists than economists, prioritizing people over profits.
The virus illuminated the character of the “commons,” blurring the line between individual and shared interest. It posed a collective-action problem that only a coordinated effort could address. Briefly, the widespread confrontation with death seemed to bring out a kinder, gentler side of society.
But a scientific breakthrough abruptly ended this moral state of exception. As the economic historian Adam Tooze argued, the mRNA vaccine allowed global capitalism to escape a reckoning once again. The pandemic clearly demonstrated that our current economic systems, with their myopic focus on short-term interests, are fundamentally ill equipped to deal with what the ecologist and microbiologist Garrett Hardin called a “tragedy of the commons.” But this inherent fragility was soon papered over.
While the impetus for reform was lost, it is still obvious that we need international institutions that can align longer-term global interests with shorter-term incentives. The vaccines allowed COVID to be treated as an aberration, but we must not forget what it really was: A preview of the kind of planetary challenges that await us. In the face of climate change, uncontrolled artificial intelligence, and other
developments, cooperative cross-border solutions are not a starry-eyed indulgence, but an existential necessity.
Since the pandemic lockdowns were lifted, we have largely gone back to business as usual, averting our gaze from the frailty of global supply chains that resulted in shortages of basic goods – the consequence of “just-in-time” manufacturing and overreliance on concentrated production hubs in the name of efficiency. Rather than reinventing our production networks to make them more resilient and decentralized, we are once again on a quest for the cheapest possible “world factory.”
The “essential workers” whom we briefly honored, clanging our pots and pans, remain a largely non-unionized precariat lacking the assurances of a strong social safety net. The inequalities that we decried have grown only worse, with Oxfam observing that the pandemic left five billion people poorer, while doubling the fortunes of the world’s five richest men.
Similarly, the outcry over racial injustice following the murder of George Floyd is now being dismissed as part of the “woke” agenda that US voters rejected at the ballot box in November. After two years of negotiations, the draft of a global pandemic treaty remains unsigned, and the seven million people killed directly by the virus have become mere statistics.
The sobering truth to remember for the new year is that threats like the climate crisis, unfettered AI, and rising geopolitical tensions, not to mention public-health risks like bird flu and mpox, are quietly gathering force – just as the virus was doing five years ago. There are only so many times that science will come to the rescue. When it doesn’t, will our institutions be able to protect us?
It is worth remembering that COVID-19 was a single “gray rhino,” and it was enough to paralyze us. A herd of rhinos – the risk we face in 2025 – is called, fittingly, a “crash.”
Antara Haldar, Associate Professor of Empirical Legal Studies at the University of Cambridge, is a visiting faculty member at Harvard University and the principal investigator on a European Research Council grant on law and cognition

© Project Syndicate – 2025
Copyright © Vava’u Press 2025. Permissions apply. Contact the publishers.

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Delaware Lottery Play 3 Day, Play 3 Night winning numbers for Jan. 5, 2025 – The News Journal

The Delaware Lottery offers several draw games for those aiming to win big. Here’s a look at Sunday, Jan. 5, 2025 results for each game:
Day: 1-8-0
Night: 9-8-2
Check Play 3 payouts and previous drawings here.
Day: 4-4-4-4
Night: 2-0-4-2
Check Play 4 payouts and previous drawings here.
07-18-21-26-28-32
Check Multi-Win Lotto payouts and previous drawings here.
06-27-31-33-47, Lucky Ball: 13
Check Lucky For Life payouts and previous drawings here.
Day: 5-3-8-5-3
Night: 3-6-5-8-5
Check Play 5 payouts and previous drawings here.
Feeling lucky? Explore the latest lottery news & results
Check previous winning numbers and payouts at Delaware Lottery.
Fortunately for First State residents, the Delaware Lottery allows winners remain anonymous. Unlike many other states that require a prize be over a certain jackpot, Delawareans can remain anonymous no matter how much, or how little, they win.
Tickets are valid for up to one year past the drawing date for drawing game prizes or within one year of the announced end of sales for Instant Games, according to delottery.com.
Missed a draw? Peek at the past week’s winning numbers.
This results page was generated automatically using information from TinBu and a template written and reviewed by a Delaware Online digital operations manager. You can send feedback using this form.

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