Inquilab Zindabaad इन्कलाब जिन्दावाद Sweatshirt
₨ 1,400.00
This sweatshirt is designed for all the activist, revolutionary, and leaders who are fighting their own battle to win the revolution. The vintage design reads “Long Live the Revolution – इन्कलाब जिन्दावाद” in Ranjana Lipi.
Material : Cotton
Sizes Available : S, M, L, XL
Tshirt Color : Black
Print Color : Blood Red
- Categories: Alternative Fashion, Sweatshirts
- Tags: alternative fashion, Leftshop, leftshopnepal, red wears, revolutionary wears, sweatshirt
Related products
The Motorcycle Diaries is a story which revolves around 2 men who embark on a road journey on a 1939 Norton 500cc cylinder motorcycle from Buenos Aires. They are out to discover and explore South America. This book had been written 8 years prior to the Cuban Revolution. The person who wrote the memoirs of this journey was one of those 2 bikers, Ernesto Guevara. He focused on the injustices that were prevalent at that time in South America.
Power to the People is inspired from the Black Panther Party’s movement and people’s movement in the Philippines.
We dedicate this tshirt to everyone fighting to bring back power to the people.
Tshirt Material : Combed Cotton
Sizes Available : M, L, XL
Tshirt Color : Royal Blue, Egyptian Blue and Dark Green
Print Color : Sky Blue and Grey (See pics.)
Arrow of God is a 1964 novel by Chinua Achebe, his third. It followed his book Things Fall Apart. These two works, along with the third book, No Longer at Ease, are sometimes called The African Trilogy, as they share similar settings and themes. The novel centers on Ezeulu, the chief priest of several Igbo villages in Colonial Nigeria, who confronts colonial powers and Christian missionaries in the 1920s. The novel was published as part of the influential Heinemann African Writers Series.
The phrase “Arrow of God” is drawn from an Igbo proverb in which a person, or sometimes an event, is said to represent the will of God. Arrow of God won the first ever Jock Campbell/New Statesman Prize for African writing.
‘Angela Davis swings a wrecking ball into the racist and sexist underpinnings of the American prison system’—Cynthia McKinney, former Congresswoman, US.
Davis’ central point is worth studying and bringing to the foreground in the prison reform movement. She argues that prisons do not solve crime. Within the last two decades the prison boom simply has intensified the criminalization of certain types of behavior, rather than having brought official crime rates down.—http://www.politicalaffairs.net
Reviews
There are no reviews yet.