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“Why Did You Put X Mark?” Supreme Court Pulls Up Chandigarh Poll Officer

The Supreme Court was hearing a petition on the Chandigarh mayoral election.

Taking a tough stand on the alleged defacement of ballot papers during the Chandigarh Mayor elections, the Supreme Court has said that Returning Officer Anil Masih should be prosecuted for “interference in the election process”.

 

The court said this after seeking Mr Masih’s reply, saying this is the first time in the history of independent India that a returning officer has been cross-examined by the Chief Justice of the country.

Hearing a petition on Monday on alleged irregularities in the elections, a day after three AAP councilors joined the BJP, the Supreme Court also said the “horsetrading” going on is a serious matter.

 

The court has asked the ballot papers to be brought to it for examination on Tuesday. After initially proposing that the votes should be counted by a new returning officer rather than holding fresh elections, the court said it would decide on the issue after examining the ballot papers.

During the counting of the mayoral election on January 30, returning officer Anil Masih had declared eight votes invalid and AAP’s mayoral candidate was defeated by BJP’s Manoj Sonkar by a margin of four votes. AAP had claimed that Mr Masih, a member of the BJP’s minority cell, had deliberately invalidated the votes.

A video of Mr Masih writing on the ballot papers of some AAP councilors while looking at the camera had surfaced, and the Supreme Court had called his action a “mockery of democracy” during a hearing on February 5.

‘Answer truthfully’
During the hearing on Monday, a bench of Chief Justice DY Chandrachud, JB Pardiwala and Manoj Mishra took note of the fact that BJP’s Manoj Sonkar had resigned from the post of mayor the previous evening and then asked Mr Masih to come forward and answer some questions. Asked for.

Chief Justice Chandrachud said, “Mr Masih, I am asking you a question. If you do not answer truthfully you will be prosecuted. This is a serious matter. We have seen the video. What were you doing looking at the cameras and crossing off the ballot papers? Why were you marking?”

Admitting that he had marked eight ballot papers with a cross (X), Mr Masih replied that he did so because the ballot papers which had been defaced had to be separated.

The Chief Justice asked, “Why did you (Mr Masih) mutilate the ballot papers? You were only supposed to sign the papers. Where is it provided in the rules that you can put other marks on the ballot papers?”

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Chief Justice Chandrachud then turned to Solicitor General of India Tushar Mehta, who was representing the Chandigarh administration, and said, “Mr Solicitor, he (Mr Masih) will have to be prosecuted. He is interfering in the election process.”

Why do jewish women wear wigs

Question:

I heard an anthropologist talking about chattels (wigs). She said how ironic it is that observant Jewish women wear wigs. In Biblical Judaism, the rule was that married women should cover their hair to appear modest and unattractive. In recent times, women wear wigs, which are sometimes more attractive than natural hair. So wearing a wig actually defeats the entire purpose of covering the hair! He was giving this as an example of how cultures forget the reasons behind their ancient traditions, and customs can develop in ways that contradict their original intentions. Do you have any comments?

Answer:

That anthropologist has not only mistaken the wig for real hair, but has also mistaken it for its version of true modesty. He equates modesty with unattractiveness, but that is his definition, not Judaism’s. From a Jewish perspective, modesty has nothing to do with being unattractive. Rather, modesty is a means of creating privacy. And that’s what wigs achieve.

Modesty has nothing to do with being unattractive. Covering hair was never intended to make a married woman look unattractive. Beauty is a divine gift, and Jewish tradition encourages both men and women to take care of their appearance and always look attractive. Jewish tradition also encourages humility; Not to diminish our beauty, but to channel our beauty and charm so that it is protected where it belongs – within marriage.

By covering her hair, the married woman makes the statement: “I am not available. You can see me but I am not open to the public. Even my hair, the most obvious and visible part of me, is not for your eyes. ” ,

Effect of cold oil Wear:

Covering hair has a profound effect on the wearer. This creates a psychological barrier, a cognitive distance, between him and strangers. Her beauty becomes visible but invisible; She is attractive but unavailable.

The wig achieves exactly the desired effect, because a wig allows a woman to cover all her hair while maintaining her attractive appearance. She can be proud of the way she looks without compromising her privacy. And even though her wig looks real enough to be mistaken for natural hair, she knows no one is seeing the real thing. She has created a personal space, and only she decides who is allowed into that space.

Perhaps in other religions there is no mixture of modesty and beauty. This is not the Jewish viewpoint. True beauty, inner beauty requires humility to protect it and allow it to flourish.

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