@Ramya
Ramya V
@Ramya · 1:47

Thinking about traditions..

article image placeholderA village in Andaman where people go barefoot
There's also a very interesting legend behind this tradition, for which you will have to read this very well written article. But I was also very surprised to read that this practice of not wearing shoes is not a very stringent religious code or anything. It's just a tradition that is steeped in respect. And many locals agree that this is something that they voluntarily want to do, and it was something that tied them together as a community and gave them a unique identity

https://s.swell.life/SSXfbsGle2mHOHk

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@Shaz
Shaz
@Shaz · 0:11

Something so wonderful about this!

I just read the article and I love the fact that this isn't a customer or something that is enforced and people just do it out of respect
2
@roomi
Roomi Tarik
@roomi · 3:58
Palata Bhadbod Shakirya, thank you so much for actually sharing this article. That was such a great read. I have to admit, this is why I keep telling people, please, please go through our history, get yourself self informed, educated, because we have this preset notion in the previous audio submission that it's not enforced upon it's, what they choose to do, just like what I'm trying to do right now
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@Avian7
Kumar Avinash
@Avian7 · 2:41

Hyderabadi v ta bolani hai tuaku.

Hello. Hello, Rumi. Thank you. I listened to you in reply to that magnificent women and I'm very happy to listen to you switching very frequently from Urdu to him to English. Your knowledge is very lost and I think I appreciate that. But there is a little complaint from my side if you are supporting this multilinguistic identity of Indian continent, but at the same time, you have quoted that you are from Hyderabad, but you haven't even quoted a single word from Hyderabadi language
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