Kalić is a village in Croatia. It is connected by the D8 highway.
Coordinates: 45°30′35″N 14°44′03″E / 45.5097536800°N 14.7340883100°E / 45.5097536800; 14.7340883100
"Kali" is a popular award winning poem by the eminent Indian writer, linguist and literary critic Rukmini Bhaya Nair. The poem won First Prize in the Second All India Poetry Competition conducted by The Poetry Society (India) in 1990. The poem has been widely cited and anthologised in reputed journals and scholalry volumes on contemporary Indian poetry.
The poem has received rave reviews since its first publication in 1990 in the anthology on Indian Poetry Emerging Voices. The poem has been frequently quoted in scholarly analysis of contemporary Indian English Poetry. The poem is regarded by critics as a jewel in contemporary Indian poetry.
Although outwardly the poem describes the Hindu Goddess Kali, her tantrums and her equation with her son Ganesha and consort Shiva, the poem has a clear existentialist message for the Indian woman and her many socio-psychological trappings. In her writings, Rukmini brings about this interplay between the esoteric and the mundane in systematic subjugation of Indian woman over the centuries. The poem has been widely discussed at various literary festivals.
Kali (Hanna Weynerowska, born Hanna Gordziałkowska; 18 December 1918 – 20 June 1998) was a Polish-born American painter known for her stylized portraits. She has been described as one of the most important Polish female painters. She was a World War II veteran of the Polish Resistance Movement after Nazi Germany occupied Poland, when she used the nom de guerre Kali. After emigrating and marrying, she used many variants of name, including "Hanna Kali Weynerowski", "Hanna Weynerowski-Kali", "Hanna Gordziałkowski-Weynerowski", "Hanka Weynerowska", and "Hanna Gordziałkowski", but she signed her paintings Kali.
The figures in her art resemble Old Masters in subject and positioning, but are painted in a simplified, flattened and more graphic manner. The paintings are brightly colored, often portraying the subject shown sitting at bust-length, with an elongated face, flattened body, a patterned element such as part of the clothing, and with the subject's hands positioned in a classical pose. Her work has been likened to a combination of Neo-mannerist and Surrealist.
Nila may refer to:
In the Hindu epic Ramayana, Nila, also spelled as Neela, is a vanara (monkey) chieftain in the army of Rama, the prince of Ayodhya and avatar of the god Vishnu. He is the commander-in-chief of the monkey army under the monkey king Sugriva and is described as leading the army in Rama's battle against the rakshasa (demon) king Ravana of Lanka (identified with modern-day Sri Lanka) and as killing many demons.
Though the Ramayana credits Nala as the sole builder of the Rama Setu, a bridge across the ocean between Rameswaram (India) and Lanka, enabling forces of Rama to pass over to Lanka, other adaptations of the epic attribute the bridge's construction to both Nala and Nila.
In the Ramayana, Nila is described as the son of Agni, the fire-god, and as the "foremost among the monkeys in effulgence, reputation and prowess". An important part of the epic describes the role played by the monkey army in the rescue of Sita, the wife of Rama who is kidnapped by Ravana, the rakshasa (demon) king of Lanka. The many stories forming the epic are retold in various adaptations.
Meera Chopra, also known as Nila, is an Indian actress and model who appears in Tamil, Telugu and Hindi films.
Bollywood actresses Priyanka Chopra, Parineeti Chopra and Mannara are her cousins.
Anbe Aaruyire in which she starred with S. J. Surya. She did her second movie with Pawan Kalyan in Telugu, followed by her performance in M. S. Raju's Vaana. Going to stare in Vikram Bhatt's 1920London with Sharman Joshi actor marking her Bollywood debut as well. She's also worked in Satish Kaushik's upcoming Gang of Ghosts which is produced by Venus.
Yuga in Hinduism is an epoch or era within a four age cycle. A complete Yuga starts with the Satya Yuga, via Treta Yuga and Dvapara Yuga into a Kali Yuga. Our present time is a Kali Yuga, which started at 3102 BCE with the end of the Mahabharata war.
There are four Yugas in one cycle:
Ancient reminders of worlds gone by, concrete tombstones reach for the sky, like hieroglyphic writings on the wall, modern man just doesn't seem to hear his call, force of times behind the changes bound to come, primitive man was once forced to succumb, both caught in a web of eternal quest,
wiped out by their search for conquest, taken back to a land of wonder and of fear, prehistoric creatures stalked the wild frontier, all can be told in unlocking of the past, cyclical repetition ah we see the contrast, skeletons in a closet as dark as the mind, hidden truths there shine light for the blind, somewhere back in time when cave dwellers walked, was a spoken language that needed not be talked, extinction found the way to man of yesterday, only to occurr in tragedies today, lost innocence in the maze of confusion, sets the final stage for this drama of illusion, simplicity's dig to unfold great mysteries, as we plunge forward engulfed by our destinies, what will future man uncover in our ruin, Kali-Yuga progresses wheels of time are spun, technological society buried by ignorance, fossils for decay victims of circumstances