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Radio Haanji 1674 AM โ€” Australia's premier Punjabi radio station and podcast network. Serving the Punjabi community across Australia and worldwide with news, entertainment, culture, and community content entirely in Punjabi.

Location:

Australia

Description:

Radio Haanji 1674 AM โ€” Australia's premier Punjabi radio station and podcast network. Serving the Punjabi community across Australia and worldwide with news, entertainment, culture, and community content entirely in Punjabi.

Language:

Punjabi


Episodes
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เจ•เจฌเฉ€เจฐ เจœเฉ€ - Spiritual Story - Ranjodh Singh

3/18/2026
เจฆเจพเจฃเฉ‡-เจฆเจพเจฃเฉ‡ เจฆเฉ‡ เจ‰เฉฑเจคเฉ‡ เจ–เจพเจฃ เจตเจพเจฒเฉ‡ เจฆเฉ€ เจฎเฉ‹เจนเจฐ เจฒเฉฑเจ—เฉ€ เจนเฉˆเฅค Every grain has the name of its eater already written on it. Today's Punjabi audio kahani is a story of Bhagat Kabir Ji โ€” the saint, the poet, the weaver whose verses live in the Guru Granth Sahib. When his son worries that the storeroom is running out of grain from feeding the daily satsang, Kabir Ji leads him through a remarkable lesson disguised as a plan to steal food. The twist โ€” "Did you tell the owners?" โ€” unlocks a teaching about divine provision that has echoed through five centuries of Punjabi spiritual life. Narrated in Punjabi by Ranjodh Singh. For every Punjabi family in Australia, Singapore or anywhere in the world that has ever lain awake wondering if there will be enough โ€” this story is for you. It was written six hundred years ago and it speaks directly to today. Kitaab Kahani is Radio Haanji 1674 AM's daily Punjabi audio story series โ€” new stories every weekday morning, free on all platforms. Listen free at haanji.com.au Radio Haanji App: iOS and Android #KitaabKahani #RadioHaanji #PunjabiAudioKahani #PunjabiKahani #เจชเฉฐเจœเจพเจฌเฉ€เจ•เจนเจพเจฃเฉ€ #PunjabiAudioStory #PunjabiSpiritualKahani #BhagatKabirJi #KabirVani #เจชเฉฐเจœเจพเจฌเฉ€เจ†เจกเฉ€เจ“เจ•เจนเจพเจฃเฉ€ #PunjabiPodcast #MelbournePunjabi #SingaporePunjabi #RanjodhSingh #RadioHaanji1674AM #PunjabiAustralia #BestPunjabiPodcast #DailyPunjabiKahani #GuruGranthSahib #PunjabiWisdom

Duration:00:11:38

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Indian Updates 18 Mar 2026 - Bengal Poll & Haryana RS

3/18/2026
Wednesday 18 March 2026 โ€” Amrinder Gidda and senior journalist Pritam Singh Rupal bring you deep analysis of four major stories shaping India and Punjab today on Radio Haanji Indian Updates. Punjab Chief Minister Bhagwant Singh Mann declared at a Dhuri rally yesterday that AAP's return to power in the 2027 Punjab elections is "writing on the wall," claiming the government has fulfilled all pre-poll guarantees in four years. The Punjab Rajya Sahkari Kheti Vikas Bank has identified 109 defaulter farmers for land auction โ€” a politically sensitive development in a state where agricultural debt has long been a crisis. In West Bengal, Mamata Banerjee personally released TMC's full candidate list of 291 seats, with the biggest headline being that she will directly face BJP's Suvendu Adhikari in Bhawanipur โ€” a rematch after Adhikari defeated her in Nandigram in 2021. And in Haryana, the Rajya Sabha election for two seats ended 1-1 in a dramatic all-night count that exposed five Congress MLAs who cross-voted, four invalidated ballots, bribery allegations, and INLD abstentions. Indian Updates is Radio Haanji 1674 AM's daily programme for deep analysis of India and Punjab news โ€” not just headlines, but the context that matters to the Punjabi community in Australia, Canada, Singapore and worldwide. #IndianUpdates #RadioHaanji #PunjabiNews #WestBengalElections2026 #MamataBanerjee #BhawanipurContest #SuvenduAdhikari #TMCCandidateList #HaryanaRajyaSabha #CrossVoting #BhagwantMann #DhuriRally #PunjabNews #AmrinderGidda #PritamSinghRupal #PunjabiPodcast #RadioHaanji1674AM #IndiaElections2026 #MelbournePunjabi #SingaporePunjabi

Duration:00:32:04

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Today Updates 18 Mar 2026 - Iran War & SA Election

3/17/2026
Wednesday 18 March 2026 โ€” Ranjodh Singh brings you 12 major stories on Radio Haanji Today Updates on day 19 of the Iran war. Overnight, Iranian drones and missiles hit the Gulf โ€” Dubai International Airport temporarily closed its airspace, Qatar intercepted 13 ballistic missiles and debris from a downed missile killed a Pakistani national in Abu Dhabi. Israel confirmed the killing of Iran's National Security Council Chief Ali Larijani in a targeted strike. Iran has vowed no ceasefire until it achieves revenge. Multiple US officials have resigned or been forced out over their opposition to the war, while NATO allies have refused Trump's request for military support. Pakistan's military struck the Omid Addiction Treatment Hospital in Kabul, killing 408 people and injuring 265 โ€” one of the deadliest single incidents of the Pakistan-Afghanistan conflict. Pakistan denies targeting a hospital. Here in Australia: the RBA's 25bp rate hike to 4.10% is now confirmed, with all four major banks also expecting a May hike to 4.35%. RMIT University reports VPN usage has surged since the children's social media ban. Age pension rates change on 20 May. Brisbane fire ants halted a football match. And South Australia goes to the polls this Saturday. Today Updates is Radio Haanji 1674 AM's daily weekday news podcast โ€” free on all platforms. Listen free at haanji.com.au Radio Haanji App: iOS and Android #TodayUpdates #RadioHaanji #PunjabiNews #IranWar #DubaiAirport #KabulHospital #PakistanAfghanistan #RBADecision #AustraliaNews #SouthAustraliaElection #SocialMediaBan #FireAnts #MelbournePunjabi #SingaporePunjabi #PunjabiPodcast #RadioHaanji1674AM #PunjabiNewsAustralia #AustraliaInflation #RanjodhSingh #DailyPunjabiPodcast

Duration:00:36:22

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Laughter Therapy - Daily Punjabi Laughs with Ranjodh Singh

3/17/2026
Wednesday morning just got better. Ranjodh Singh is on Radio Haanji 1674 AM today with live chutkule (jokes), bolian (Punjabi folk couplets) and bujaratan (riddles) that will have you laughing before the day has properly started. This is Radio Haanji's most-loved daily show โ€” a live call-in programme where Punjabi kids and adults share the humour that has been part of their culture for generations. No script, no rehearsal โ€” just real laughs from a real community. Ranjodh Singh brings his signature warmth to every caller, making Wednesday feel a little lighter for the Punjabi community across Melbourne, Singapore and beyond. Laughter Therapy is Radio Haanji 1674 AM's daily Punjabi comedy show โ€” new episodes every Monday to Friday morning, free on all platforms.

Duration:00:49:39

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เจฐเจฟเจธเจผเจคเฉ‡ เจคเฉ‡ เจคเจฟเจ†เจ— - Punjabi Story - Ranjodh Singh

3/17/2026
เจœเฉ‹ เจฌเจฟเจธเจผเจจ เจธเจฟเจ‰เจ‚ เจจเฉ‡ เจ•เฉ€เจคเจพ, เจฆเฉเจจเฉ€เจ† เจฆเฉ‡ เจ‰เฉฑเจคเฉ‡ เจ•เฉ‹เจˆ เจฎเจฐเจฆ เจจเจนเฉ€เจ‚ เจ•เจฐ เจธเจ•เจฆเจพเฅค He gave away his wife's entire inheritance โ€” land that was rightfully hers after all her siblings had passed โ€” and asked for nothing in return. Today's Punjabi audio kahani is the story of Bishan Singh: a man who understood that the deepest wealth is not what you hold onto, but what you freely give. Narrated in Punjabi by Ranjodh Singh on Radio Haanji Kitaab Kahani. Years later, when Naseeb Kaur's mother fell gravely ill, the man who had received that land blocked the car door and refused to let her be taken away โ€” "The relationships you tied yourself, don't untie them now. If you showed me what a sister is, let me show you what a brother is." This Punjabi emotional audio kahani is about how a single selfless act can plant seeds that grow for generations. Kitaab Kahani is Radio Haanji 1674 AM's daily Punjabi audio story series โ€” new stories every weekday morning, free on all platforms. Listen free at haanji.com.au Radio Haanji App: iOS and Android #KitaabKahani #RadioHaanji #PunjabiAudioKahani #PunjabiKahani #เจชเฉฐเจœเจพเจฌเฉ€เจ•เจนเจพเจฃเฉ€ #PunjabiAudioStory #PunjabiEmotionalKahani #เจชเฉฐเจœเจพเจฌเฉ€เจ†เจกเฉ€เจ“เจ•เจนเจพเจฃเฉ€ #PunjabiPodcast #MelbournePunjabi #SingaporePunjabi #RanjodhSingh #PunjabiMoralStory #RadioHaanji1674AM #PunjabiAustralia #PunjabiFamily #BestPunjabiPodcast #DailyPunjabiKahani #PunjabiShortStory #PunjabiWisdom

Duration:00:08:36

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Indian Updates 17 Mar 2026 - Bengal Purge & Nitish RS

3/17/2026
Tuesday 17 March 2026 โ€” Ranjodh Singh and senior journalist Pritam Singh Rupal bring you deep analysis of six major stories shaping India and Punjab today on Radio Haanji Indian Updates. The Election Commission has removed five of West Bengal's most senior officials โ€” including the Chief Secretary, Home Secretary and DGP โ€” within hours of announcing the state's 2026 assembly election schedule. Chief Minister Mamata Banerjee has responded furiously, writing to the Chief Election Commissioner and accusing the ECI of acting at the BJP's direction. Bihar's longest-serving Chief Minister Nitish Kumar has been elected to the Rajya Sabha alongside BJP president Nitin Nabin, signalling his departure from the Chief Minister's post. The Punjab Vidhan Sabha has passed a formal resolution demanding the Bharat Ratna for Manyavar Kanshi Ram. Chief Minister Bhagwant Mann has warned that a BJP win in Punjab 2027 could trigger religious conflict. And following the release of climate activist Sonam Wangchuk after six months of NSA detention, tens of thousands of Ladakhis took to the streets in Leh and Kargil demanding statehood and Sixth Schedule constitutional protections. Indian Updates is Radio Haanji 1674 AM's daily programme for deep analysis of India and Punjab news โ€” not just headlines, but the context and significance that matters to the Punjabi community in Australia, Singapore and worldwide. New episodes every Monday to Friday. All episodes free on demand. Listen free at haanji.com.au Radio Haanji App: iOS and Android Tuesday 17 March 2026 โ€” Ranjodh Singh and senior journalist Pritam Singh Rupal bring you deep analysis of six major stories shaping India and Punjab today on Radio Haanji Indian Updates. The Election Commission has removed five of West Bengal's most senior officials โ€” including the Chief Secretary, Home Secretary and DGP โ€” within hours of announcing the state's 2026 assembly election schedule. Chief Minister Mamata Banerjee has responded furiously, writing to the Chief Election Commissioner and accusing the ECI of acting at the BJP's direction. Bihar's longest-serving Chief Minister Nitish Kumar has been elected to the Rajya Sabha alongside BJP president Nitin Nabin, signalling his departure from the Chief Minister's post. The Punjab Vidhan Sabha has passed a formal resolution demanding the Bharat Ratna for Manyavar Kanshi Ram. Chief Minister Bhagwant Mann has warned that a BJP win in Punjab 2027 could trigger religious conflict. And following the release of climate activist Sonam Wangchuk after six months of NSA detention, tens of thousands of Ladakhis took to the streets in Leh and Kargil demanding statehood and Sixth Schedule constitutional protections. Indian Updates is Radio Haanji 1674 AM's daily programme for deep analysis of India and Punjab news โ€” not just headlines, but the context and significance that matters to the Punjabi community in Australia, Singapore and worldwide. New episodes every Monday to Friday. All episodes free on demand. Listen free at haanji.com.au Radio Haanji App: iOS and Android #IndianUpdates #RadioHaanji #PunjabiNews #WestBengalElections2026 #MamataBanerjee #NitishKumar #RajyaSabha2026 #SonamWangchuk #LadakhRally #KanshiRamBharatRatna #PunjabVidhanSabha #BhagwantMann #PunjabNews #PritamSinghRupal #RanjodhSingh #PunjabiPodcast #RadioHaanji1674AM #IndiaElections2026 #MelbournePunjabi #SingaporePunjabi

Duration:00:24:20

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Today Updates 17 Mar 2026 - Iran War & RBA Rate Hike

3/16/2026
Tuesday 17 March 2026 โ€” Ranjodh Singh covers 17 major stories on Radio Haanji Today Updates on what may be one of the most consequential news days of the year for Australia. The Iran war is escalating on every front: Trump's appeal to allies to protect the Strait of Hormuz has gone unanswered. A drone attack from Iraq has hit Dubai oil tankers. Israeli operations in Lebanon have killed more than 800 people. Ukraine has struck Russia with approximately 250 drones in one of the war's largest single-night attacks. Pakistan and Afghanistan are trading accusations and military strikes. China has called for peace. Cyber attack fears are rising globally. And a Reuters analysis warns that if the Hormuz blockage continues, $500 billion in global trade could be at risk. Here in Australia, the Reserve Bank is expected to announce a 25 basis point interest rate hike at 2:30pm today โ€” the second rise of 2026 โ€” pushing the cash rate to 4.10 per cent and adding pressure to millions of Australian mortgage holders. Scientists are warning about "climate whiplash" as Australians face floods, fires and extreme heat simultaneously. And the Victorian Government has acknowledged liability in the COVID lockdown class action, opening the door to compensation for thousands of businesses. On a brighter note โ€” the 2026 Oscars. Best Picture went to One Battle After Another. Best Actor to Michael B. Jordan. Best Actress to Jessie Buckley. And KPop Demon Hunters won Best Animated Film. Today Updates is Radio Haanji 1674 AM's daily weekday news podcast โ€” free on all platforms. #TodayUpdates #RadioHaanji #PunjabiNews #IranWar #RBADecision #AustraliaNews #Oscars2026 #MichaelBJordan #JessieBuckley #KpopDemonHunters #OneBattleAfterAnother #UkraineDrones #IsraelLebanon #PakistanAfghanistan #CrudeOil #StraitOfHormuz #MelbournePunjabi #SingaporePunjabi #PunjabiPodcast #RadioHaanji1674AM

Duration:00:40:02

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Laughter Therapy - Punjabi Chutkule, Bolian, Bujartan and Laughs

3/16/2026
Tuesday morning just got better. Balkirat Singh and Ranjodh Singh are on Radio Haanji 1674 AM today, bringing live chutkule (jokes), bolian (Punjabi folk couplets) and bujaratan (riddles) straight from the Punjabi community to your morning. This is Radio Haanji's most-loved daily show โ€” a live call-in programme where Punjabi kids and adults share the humour that has been part of their culture for generations. From children delivering chutkule with full confidence to adults stumping the hosts with impossible bujaratan, every episode is completely unscripted and entirely genuine. Today, Balkirat Singh and Ranjodh Singh bring their own trusted combination of calm warmth and quick wit to keep the whole community laughing from the first call to the last. If you are part of the Punjabi diaspora in Australia, Singapore, Canada or anywhere in the world, Laughter Therapy is your daily reminder that no matter how far from Punjab you are, the warmth and laughter of your community travels with you. New episodes every Monday to Friday morning. All episodes free on demand. Listen free at haanji.com.au Radio Haanji App: iOS and Android #LaughterTherapy #RadioHaanji #PunjabiPodcast #PunjabiChutkule #Chutkule #Bolian #Bujaratan #PunjabiComedy #PunjabiFamily #MelbournePunjabi #SingaporePunjabi #PunjabiMorning #IndianCommunityAustralia #PunjabiKids #BestPunjabiPodcast #PunjabiRadio #RadioHaanji1674AM #PunjabiAustralia #DailyPunjabiPodcast #FunnyPunjabiPodcast

Duration:00:45:04

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Aristotle - เจ…เจฐเจธเจคเฉ‚ - Spiritual Punjabi Audio Story - Ranjodh Singh

3/16/2026
เจ‡เจจเจธเจพเจจเฉ€ เจ—เจฟเจ†เจจ เจฆเฉ€ เจ‡เฉฑเจ• เจธเฉ€เจฎเจพ เจนเฉˆ, เจœเจฆเจ•เจฟ เจฌเฉเจฐเจนเจฟเจฎเฉฐเจก เจ…เจธเฉ€เจฎ เจนเฉˆเฅค Aristotle was one of the greatest minds in human history โ€” student of Plato, teacher of Alexander the Great. And yet, a stranger on a beach with nothing but a spoon stopped him in his tracks and left him speechless. Today's Kitaab Kahani is a philosophical parable about the limits of human intellect and the infinity of the universe and the divine. Narrated in Punjabi by Ranjodh Singh. For the Punjabi diaspora far from home โ€” educated, accomplished, navigating a world full of noise โ€” this story is a quiet reminder that wisdom begins where the ego ends. No single author is known for this story. It belongs to everyone. Kitaab Kahani is Radio Haanji 1674 AM's daily Punjabi audio story series โ€” new stories every weekday morning, free on all platforms. #KitaabKahani #RadioHaanji #PunjabiKahani #AristotlePunjabi #เจชเฉฐเจœเจพเจฌเฉ€เจ•เจนเจพเจฃเฉ€ #PunjabiAudioStory #PunjabiSpiritualStory #PunjabiPhilosophicalStory #PunjabiPodcast #MelbournePunjabi #SingaporePunjabi #RanjodhSingh #PunjabiMotivationalStory #RadioHaanji1674AM #PunjabiAustralia #PunjabiWisdom #BestPunjabiPodcast #DailyPunjabiStory #เจ…เจฐเจธเจคเฉ‚ #PunjabiShortStory

Duration:00:16:00

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Indian Updates 16 Mar 2026 - Punjab investment summit

3/15/2026
Monday 16 March 2026 โ€” Ranjodh Singh and senior journalist Pritam Singh Rupal bring you deep analysis of five major stories shaping India and Punjab today on Radio Haanji Indian Updates. The Election Commission of India has announced assembly elections in five states โ€” West Bengal, Kerala, Tamil Nadu, Assam and Puducherry โ€” with polling from April 9 to April 29 and counting on May 4. Punjab's Progressive Investors Summit concluded with Rs 12,250 crore committed, with major investments from Verbio India, Plaksha University, Nahar Industries and Tynor Orthotics. Home Minister Amit Shah officially declared at the BJP's Moga rally that the party will contest all 117 Punjab seats alone in 2027 โ€” ending any speculation of an Akali Dal alliance. Sukhbir Badal has responded, calling the elections a fight against Delhi-based parties. And on Kanshi Ram's 92nd birth anniversary, both Congress and BSP have demanded India's highest civilian award for the Bahujan movement's founder โ€” though each party is accusing the other of political opportunism. #IndianUpdates #RadioHaanji #PunjabiNews #IndiaElections2026 #PunjabNews #WestBengalElection #KeralElection #TamilNaduElection #InvestPunjab #AmitShahMoga #BJPPunjab #AkaliDal #KanshiRam #BharatRatna #RahulGandhi #Mayawati #PritamSinghRupal #RanjodhSingh #PunjabiPodcast #RadioHaanji1674AM

Duration:00:22:38

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Today Updates 16 Mar 2026 - Iran War & Melbourne Myki

3/15/2026
Monday 16 March 2026 โ€” Ranjodh Singh covers 16 major stories on Radio Haanji Today Updates, including the latest on the Iran-US war, a historic day for Melbourne commuters, and a serious inflation warning for Australian households. Top stories today: The United States has now spent $16.5 billion in the first twelve days of the Iran war, with a daily cost of $1.43 billion. Iran's Red Cross reports 1,300 people killed. The US Embassy in Baghdad was hit by a missile attack. Iran has rejected Trump's ceasefire statement. Pope Leo XIV has called for peace. Israel killed 16 members of one family in Gaza. Crude oil is heading toward $150 per barrel. Twenty-two Indian ships are stranded in the Strait of Hormuz. Australian Treasurer Jim Chalmers has warned inflation could peak at 4 to 5 percent. And Melbourne has today launched its long-awaited Myki-free tap-and-go travel trial. Today Updates is Radio Haanji 1674 AM's daily weekday news podcast โ€” delivering the most important Australian and global stories to the Punjabi community in Australia, Canada, Singapore and worldwide. #TodayUpdates #RadioHaanji #PunjabiNews #IranWar #AustraliaNews #MelbourneNews #JimChalmers #AustraliaInflation #MelbourneMyki #PunjabiPodcast #RadioHaanji1674AM #MelbournePunjabi #SingaporePunjabi #DailyPunjabiPodcast #PunjabiNewsAustralia #WorldNews #RanjodhSingh #CrudeOil150 #IranUSWar #GazaWar

Duration:00:40:27

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Laughter Therapy - Bolian, Bujaratan & Laughs - Yash & Ranjodh Singh

3/15/2026
Monday mornings belong to Laughter Therapy. Today, Yash and Ranjodh Singh are on Radio Haanji 1674 AM bringing live chutkule (jokes), bolian (Punjabi folk couplets) and bujaratan (riddles) straight from the Punjabi community to your morning. This is Radio Haanji's most-loved daily show โ€” a live call-in programme where Punjabi kids and adults share the humour that has been part of their culture for generations. From four-year-olds delivering chutkule with full confidence to adults stumping the hosts with impossible bujaratan, every episode is completely unscripted and entirely genuine. If you are part of the Punjabi diaspora in Australia, Singapore, Canada or anywhere in the world, Laughter Therapy is your daily reminder that no matter how far from Punjab you are, the warmth and laughter of your community travels with you. New episodes every Monday to Friday morning. All episodes free on demand. #LaughterTherapy #RadioHaanji #PunjabiPodcast #PunjabiChutkule #Chutkule #Bolian #Bujaratan #PunjabiComedy #PunjabiFamily #MelbournePunjabi #SingaporePunjabi #PunjabiMorning #IndianCommunityAustralia #PunjabiKids #BestPunjabiPodcast #PunjabiRadio #RadioHaanji1674AM #PunjabiAustralia #DailyPunjabiPodcast #FunnyPunjabiPodcast

Duration:00:49:42

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Udham Singh - 13 March 1940 - The Day a Punjabi Revolutionary Changed History in London - Punjabi Podcast - Radio Haanji

3/13/2026
Udham Singh - 13 March 1940 - The Day a Punjabi Revolutionary Walked Into Caxton Hall and Made History Eighty-six years ago today, a man walked into a meeting room in London, waited for the speeches to finish, and then did what he had spent 21 years preparing to do. His name was Udham Singh. The year was 1940. And what happened that afternoon in Caxton Hall โ€” a revolver hidden inside a book, a single act of defiance carried across two decades and two continents โ€” is one of the most extraordinary stories in the history of India's freedom movement. Today, on Radio Haanji 1674 AM, Ranjodh Singh marked the anniversary of that day. Because some dates deserve to be spoken aloud. Thirteen March 1940 is one of them. Jallianwala Bagh โ€” where the story begins, not ends To understand what happened in London in 1940, you have to go back to Amritsar in 1919. On 13 April 1919, British troops under Brigadier-General Reginald Dyer opened fire on a peaceful gathering at Jallianwala Bagh. The crowd had assembled for Baisakhi. They were unarmed. The exits were sealed. The firing continued until the ammunition ran low. Estimates of the dead range from several hundred to over a thousand. The wounded numbered far higher. The massacre was not a miscalculation or a moment of panic. It was ordered, sustained, and defended. And among those who defended it most loudly was Michael O'Dwyer โ€” the Lieutenant Governor of Punjab at the time โ€” who endorsed General Dyer's action and called it correct. When the British government eventually forced Dyer into retirement under mounting pressure, O'Dwyer continued to publicly justify what had been done. Udham Singh was in Amritsar that day. He saw what happened. He was a young man, barely past his teens, when the bullets tore through the garden. Whatever he carried away from Jallianwala Bagh, he carried for the rest of his life. Twenty-one years of waiting There is something almost impossible to hold about that span of time. Not weeks. Not months. Twenty-one years. Udham Singh spent those years moving โ€” India, Europe, the United States, East Africa. He was watched by British intelligence. He was arrested more than once. He lived under different names, took different work, kept moving. Through all of it, the purpose did not change. By 1934 he was in England. By the late 1930s he was in London. He knew O'Dwyer was there. He knew the circles the man moved in โ€” the colonial establishment's lecture halls and society meetings where former administrators gathered to remember an empire they still thought had been noble. He waited for his moment. He prepared for it. 13 March 1940 โ€” Caxton Hall, London The meeting that evening was unremarkable by the standards of that world. The East India Association and the Royal Central Asian Society had arranged a joint gathering. O'Dwyer was among those scheduled to speak. These were the kinds of events that filled the diaries of British men who had administered India and returned home to write their memoirs. Udham Singh was in the audience. He had a revolver hollowed into the pages of a book. When the meeting ended and the crowd began to move, he stepped forward and fired. Michael O'Dwyer was struck twice and died at the scene. Others in the room were wounded, including the Secretary of State for India and the former Governor of Bengal. Udham Singh did not run. He stood where he was and let himself be taken. There was no panic in his face, no scramble for an exit. He had spent 21 years planning this and he had known from the start that it ended here. Ram Mohammad Singh Azad When British police and then the court asked for his name, Udham Singh gave them one they had not expected. Ram Mohammad Singh Azad. Three names. A Hindu name, a Muslim name, a Sikh name, and the word for freedom โ€” azad. It was a statement as deliberate as everything else he had done. He was not acting for one religion or one community. He was acting for India. The massacre at Jallianwala Bagh had...

Duration:00:07:09

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Interview with Gurnam Bhullar - Ishqan De Lekhe - Balkirat Aulakh - Radio Haanji

3/13/2026
Gurnam Bhullar on Ishqan De Lekhe - What He Told Balkirat Aulakh on Radio Haanji About the Film He Put His Heart Into Gurnam Bhullar did not just act in Ishqan De Lekhe. He produced it. That is the detail that most audiences miss when they watch the film โ€” and it is the detail that makes this Radio Haanji conversation between Gurnam and host Balkirat Aulakh worth your time. When a producer sits in the chair across from an interviewer and talks about his own film, the conversation goes to places a standard press tour rarely reaches. He is not there to sell tickets. He already has the box office numbers. He is there because the film meant something to him, and he wants to talk about what. This episode, streaming now at haanji.com.au/podcast, is one of those interviews that starts somewhere and ends up somewhere else entirely. The man behind the film, not just in front of the camera Gurnam Bhullar has been in Punjabi cinema long enough that his name on a poster carries weight. Qismat. Lekh. Rose Rosy Te Gulab. Every few years he chooses a project that pushes him somewhere new. Ishqan De Lekhe is different from those earlier films in one specific way: this time he built it from the ground up. Producing a film while playing its male lead is a different kind of pressure. You are responsible for everything โ€” the casting, the budget, the music direction โ€” and then you walk on set and have to let all of that go and just be present in a scene. Gurnam spoke to Balkirat Aulakh about that double weight, and what comes through is not stress or self-congratulation. It is clarity. He knew what kind of film he wanted to make, and making it himself was the only way to make sure it came out that way. That directness of intention shows in the finished product. Ishqan De Lekhe does not feel like a film made by committee. It has a point of view โ€” about love, about trust, about what illness does to a relationship when neither person is ready for it. That coherence starts with the person who decided what the film was going to be before a single frame was shot. Why Isha Malviya, and what he saw that others might have missed Casting the female lead in a romantic drama is a decision that shapes everything. The wrong choice and no amount of strong writing or beautiful cinematography saves the film. Gurnam's conversation with Balkirat turned to this โ€” the decision to cast Isha Malviya in her debut Punjabi feature, someone the audience knew from television and Bigg Boss but had never seen carry a full film. What he describes is not a gamble. It is a reading of a person. Isha has something that you can see in very few actors, new or established โ€” the ability to hold stillness on screen without going flat. Jasneet, the character she plays, is guarded, emotionally complex, and for much of the film operating under a painful misunderstanding. That is a hard thing to play. Overact it and you lose the audience's sympathy. Underplay it and the story stops moving. She does neither. From a producer's perspective, Gurnam took on real risk with that decision. The film's emotional architecture depends on Jasneet being someone you believe in completely. That risk paid off โ€” Isha's performance is the conversation people keep coming back to when they discuss the film. The social message โ€” and why he insisted it stay One of the more striking things about Ishqan De Lekhe is that it carries a health awareness message woven into the love story, and it never once feels like an insert. You do not sit in the theatre and sense the gears shifting from romance to social responsibility. The two things move together, because they come from the same place in the story. Gurnam spoke about this choice directly with Balkirat. The decision was deliberate. He wanted to make a film that did something beyond entertain โ€” that left the audience with a thought that mattered. But the condition was that the message had to earn its place. If it disrupted the emotional journey of the...

Duration:00:21:23

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เจšเจพเจ… โ€” เจชเฉฐเจœเจพเจฌเฉ€ เจญเจพเจตเจจเจพเจคเจฎเจ• เจ•เจนเจพเจฃเฉ€ - Punjabi Audio Story - Punjabi Kahani - Radio Haanji

3/13/2026
เจšเจพเจ… - เจ•เจฟเจคเจพเจฌ เจ•เจนเจพเจฃเฉ€ - Radio Haanji เจ†เจตเจพเจœเจผ: เจฐเจฃเจœเฉ‹เจง เจธเจฟเฉฐเจ˜ | เจตเจฟเจงเจพ: เจญเจพเจตเจจเจพเจคเจฎเจ• ยท เจ…เจธเจฒ เจœเจผเจฟเฉฐเจฆเจ—เฉ€ | เจซเจผเจพเจฐเจฎเฉˆเจŸ: เจชเฉฐเจœเจพเจฌเฉ€ เจ†เจกเฉ€เจ“ เจ•เจนเจพเจฃเฉ€ | เจฒเฉœเฉ€: เจ•เจฟเจคเจพเจฌ เจ•เจนเจพเจฃเฉ€ เจ•เฉเจ เจ–เฉเจธเจผเฉ€เจ†เจ‚ เจ‡เฉฐเจจเฉ€เจ†เจ‚ เจตเฉฑเจกเฉ€เจ†เจ‚ เจนเฉเฉฐเจฆเฉ€เจ†เจ‚ เจจเฉ‡ เจชเฉฐเจœเจพเจฌเฉ€ เจตเจฟเฉฑเจš เจ‡เฉฑเจ• เจธเจผเจฌเจฆ เจนเฉˆ โ€” เจšเจพเจ…เฅค เจ–เฉเจธเจผเฉ€ เจจเจพเจฒเฉ‹เจ‚ เจตเฉฑเจกเจพเฅค เจ‰เจน เจ–เฉเจธเจผเฉ€ เจœเฉ‹ เจธเจฐเฉ€เจฐ เจตเจฟเฉฑเจš เจธเจฎเจพเจ‰เจ‚เจฆเฉ€ เจจเจนเฉ€เจ‚เฅค เจ…เฉฑเจœ เจฆเฉ€ เจชเฉฐเจœเจพเจฌเฉ€ เจ•เจนเจพเจฃเฉ€ เจ‰เจธเฉ‡ เจšเจพเจ… เจฌเจพเจฐเฉ‡ เจนเฉˆ โ€” เจ…เจคเฉ‡ เจ‰เจธ เจคเฉ‹เจ‚ เจฌเจพเจ…เจฆ เจ•เฉ€ เจนเฉ‹เจ‡เจ†เฅค เจฐเจฃเจœเฉ‹เจง เจธเจฟเฉฐเจ˜ เจฆเฉ€ เจ†เจตเจพเจœเจผ เจตเจฟเฉฑเจš เจธเฉเจฃเฉ‹ Radio Haanji เจฆเฉ€ เจ•เจฟเจคเจพเจฌ เจ•เจนเจพเจฃเฉ€ เจตเจฟเฉฑเจš เจ‡เจน เจชเฉฐเจœเจพเจฌเฉ€ เจ†เจกเฉ€เจ“ เจ•เจนเจพเจฃเฉ€เฅค เจ•เจนเจพเจฃเฉ€ เจฌเจพเจฐเฉ‡ 'เจšเจพเจ…' เจจเจธเฉ€เจฌ เจ•เฉŒเจฐ เจฆเฉ€ เจ•เจนเจพเจฃเฉ€ เจนเฉˆเฅค เจšเจพเจฐ เจงเฉ€เจ†เจ‚, เจšเจพเจฐ เจชเฉ‹เจคเฉ€เจ†เจ‚, เจ…เฉฑเจ  เจธเจพเจฒเจพเจ‚ เจฆเฉ€ เจ‰เจกเฉ€เจ• โ€” เจ…เจคเฉ‡ เจซเจฟเจฐ เจ‰เจน เจซเฉ‹เจจ เจ•เจพเจฒ เจœเจฟเจธเจฆเจพ เจธเจพเจฒเจพเจ‚ เจคเฉ‹เจ‚ เจ‡เฉฐเจคเจœเจผเจพเจฐ เจธเฉ€เฅค เจ‡เจน เจ…เจธเจฒ เจœเจผเจฟเฉฐเจฆเจ—เฉ€ เจตเจฟเฉฑเจšเฉ‹เจ‚ เจจเจฟเจ•เจฒเฉ€ เจชเฉฐเจœเจพเจฌเฉ€ เจ•เจนเจพเจฃเฉ€ เจนเฉˆ เจœเฉ‹ เจ…เฉฐเจฆเจฐ เจคเฉฑเจ• เจœเจพเจ‚เจฆเฉ€ เจนเฉˆ โ€” เจ‡เฉฑเจ• เจตเจพเจฐ เจธเฉเจฃเจจ เจคเฉ‹เจ‚ เจฌเจพเจ…เจฆ เจญเฉเฉฑเจฒเจฆเฉ€ เจจเจนเฉ€เจ‚เฅค เจ•เจนเจพเจฃเฉ€ เจฆเจพ เจธเจพเจฐ เจจเจธเฉ€เจฌ เจ•เฉŒเจฐ เจฆเฉ‡ เจฌเฉ‡เจŸเฉ‡ เจฆเจฐเจธเจผเจจ เจจเฉ‡ เจซเฉ‹เจจ เจ•เฉ€เจคเจพ: "เจฎเจพเจ‚, เจฎเฉเฉฐเจกเจพ เจนเฉ‹เจ‡เจ† เจนเฉˆเฅค" เจ…เฉฑเจ  เจธเจพเจฒเฅค เจšเจพเจฐ เจงเฉ€เจ†เจ‚เฅค เจšเจพเจฐ เจชเฉ‹เจคเฉ€เจ†เจ‚เฅค เจ…เจคเฉ‡ เจนเฉเจฃ เจ‡เจน เจ–เจฌเจฐเฅค เจ‰เจน เจธเจฎเจ เจจเจนเฉ€เจ‚ เจธเฉ€ เจชเจพ เจฐเจนเฉ€ เจ•เจฟ เจ•เฉ€ เจ•เจฐเฉ‡เฅค เจฐเฉ‹เจตเฉ‡, เจจเฉฑเจšเฉ‡, เจ•เฉ‹เจ เฉ‡ เจšเฉœเฉเจน เจ•เฉ‡ เจฐเฉŒเจฒเจพ เจชเจพเจตเฉ‡เฅค เจ‰เจธเจจเฉ‡ เจฌเจพเจฌเฉ‡ เจฆเฉ€ เจซเฉ‹เจŸเฉ‹ เจ…เฉฑเจ—เฉ‡ เจฎเฉฑเจฅเจพ เจŸเฉ‡เจ•เจฟเจ†เฅค เจจเจตเฉ‡เจ‚ เจ•เฉฑเจชเฉœเฉ‡ เจชเจพเจเฅค เจ—เฉเจ†เจ‚เจขเฉ€เจ†เจ‚ เจจเฉ‚เฉฐ เจฎเจฟเจ เจพเจˆเจ†เจ‚ เจตเฉฐเจกเฉ€เจ†เจ‚เฅค เจธเจพเจฐเฉ‡ เจชเจฟเฉฐเจก เจตเจฟเฉฑเจš เจ–เจฌเจฐ เจซเฉˆเจฒ เจ—เจˆเฅค เจซเจฟเจฐ เจ‰เจน เจ—เจฟเฉฑเจงเฉ‡ เจตเจฟเฉฑเจš เจธเจผเจพเจฎเจฟเจฒ เจนเฉ‹เจฃ เจ—เจˆเฅค เจคเจพเฉœเฉ€เจ†เจ‚ เจตเฉฑเจœ เจฐเจนเฉ€เจ†เจ‚ เจธเจจเฅค เจ…เจคเฉ‡ เจ…เจšเจพเจจเจ• เจ‰เจน เจกเจฟเฉฑเจ— เจชเจˆเฅค เจฆเจฐเจธเจผเจจ เจ‰เจธเฉ‡ เจตเฉ‡เจฒเฉ‡ เจชเฉ‹เจคเฉ‡ เจจเฉ‚เฉฐ เจฒเฉˆ เจ•เฉ‡ เจ˜เจฐ เจชเจนเฉเฉฐเจšเจฟเจ†เฅค เจฐเจพเจน เจตเจฟเฉฑเจš เจ‰เจน เจธเฉ‹เจšเจฆเจพ เจ† เจฐเจฟเจนเจพ เจธเฉ€ โ€” เจฎเจพเจ‚ เจฌเฉ‚เจนเฉ‡ 'เจคเฉ‡ เจ–เฉœเฉเจนเฉ€ เจนเฉ‹เจตเฉ‡เจ—เฉ€, เจคเฉ‡เจฒ เจšเฉ‹เจตเฉ‡เจ—เฉ€, เจตเจงเจพเจˆเจ†เจ‚ เจฆเฉ‡เจตเฉ‡เจ—เฉ€เฅค เจชเจฐ เจฎเจพเจ‚ เจฌเฉ‚เจนเฉ‡ 'เจคเฉ‡ เจจเจนเฉ€เจ‚ เจธเฉ€เฅค เจชเฉ‹เจคเจพ เจ˜เจฐ เจ† เจ—เจฟเจ† เจธเฉ€เฅค เจชเจฐ เจชเฉ‹เจคเฉ‡ เจคเฉ‹เจ‚ เจชเจนเจฟเจฒเจพเจ‚ เจฆเจพเจฆเฉ€ เจœเจพ เจšเฉเฉฑเจ•เฉ€ เจธเฉ€เฅค เจ‡เจน เจ•เจนเจพเจฃเฉ€ เจ‡เฉฑเจ• เจตเจพเจฐ เจธเฉเจฃเฉ‹ เจ•เฉเจ เจ•เจนเจพเจฃเฉ€เจ†เจ‚ เจนเฉเฉฐเจฆเฉ€เจ†เจ‚ เจจเฉ‡ เจœเฉ‹ เจคเฉเจนเจพเจกเฉ‡ เจจเจพเจฒ เจฌเจฃเฉ€เจ†เจ‚ เจฐเจนเจฟเฉฐเจฆเฉ€เจ†เจ‚ เจนเจจเฅค เจ‡เจน เจชเฉฐเจœเจพเจฌเฉ€ เจ•เจนเจพเจฃเฉ€ เจ‰เจจเฉเจนเจพเจ‚ เจตเจฟเฉฑเจšเฉ‹เจ‚ เจนเฉˆเฅค เจธเจฟเจ†เจฃเฉ‡ เจ•เจนเจฟเฉฐเจฆเฉ‡ เจจเฉ‡ โ€” เจ•เฉเจ เจ–เฉเจธเจผเฉ€เจ†เจ‚ เจ‡เฉฐเจจเฉ€เจ†เจ‚ เจตเฉฑเจกเฉ€เจ†เจ‚ เจนเฉเฉฐเจฆเฉ€เจ†เจ‚ เจจเฉ‡ เจ•เจฟ เจฆเจฟเจฒ เจ‰เจนเจจเจพเจ‚ เจฆเจพ เจญเจพเจฐ เจเฉฑเจฒ เจจเจนเฉ€เจ‚ เจธเจ•เจฆเจพเฅค เจ‡เฉฑเจ• เจ†เจ‰เจ‚เจฆเจพ เจนเฉˆ, เจ‡เฉฑเจ• เจœเจพเจ‚เจฆเจพ เจนเฉˆเฅค เจธเจผเจพเจ‡เจฆ เจ‡เจธเฉ‡ เจธเจซเจผเจฐ เจจเฉ‚เฉฐ เจœเจผเจฟเฉฐเจฆเจ—เฉ€ เจ•เจนเจฟเฉฐเจฆเฉ‡ เจจเฉ‡เฅค เจฐเจฃเจœเฉ‹เจง เจธเจฟเฉฐเจ˜ เจฆเฉ€ เจ†เจตเจพเจœเจผ เจตเจฟเฉฑเจš เจ‡เจธ เจ•เจนเจพเจฃเฉ€ เจตเจฟเฉฑเจš เจฌเจนเฉเจค เจ•เฉเจ เจ…เจœเจฟเจนเจพ เจนเฉˆ เจœเฉ‹ เจฒเจซเจผเจœเจผเจพเจ‚ เจคเฉ‹เจ‚ เจชเจฐเฉ‡ เจนเฉˆเฅค เจฐเจฃเจœเฉ‹เจง เจธเจฟเฉฐเจ˜ เจฆเฉ€ เจ†เจตเจพเจœเจผ เจ‰เจน เจฅเจพเจ‚ เจชเจนเฉเฉฐเจšเจฆเฉ€ เจนเฉˆ เจœเจฟเฉฑเจฅเฉ‡ เจธเจผเจฌเจฆ เจจเจนเฉ€เจ‚ เจชเจนเฉเฉฐเจšเจฆเฉ‡เฅค เจ‡เจน เจชเฉฐเจœเจพเจฌเฉ€ เจ†เจกเฉ€เจ“ เจ•เจนเจพเจฃเฉ€ เจธเฉเจฃเจฆเฉ‡ เจนเฉ‹เจ เจ•เจˆ เจฅเจพเจตเจพเจ‚ 'เจคเฉ‡ เจฐเฉเจ•เจฃเจพ เจชเจตเฉ‡เจ—เจพเฅค เจ•เจฟเจคเจพเจฌ เจ•เจนเจพเจฃเฉ€ เจฌเจพเจฐเฉ‡ เจ•เจฟเจคเจพเจฌ เจ•เจนเจพเจฃเฉ€ Radio Haanji เจฆเจพ เจฐเฉ‹เจœเจผเจพเจจเจพ เจชเฉฐเจœเจพเจฌเฉ€ เจ†เจกเฉ€เจ“ เจ•เจนเจพเจฃเฉ€ เจธเฉˆเจ—เจฎเฉˆเจ‚เจŸ เจนเฉˆ โ€” เจธเฉ‹เจฎเจตเจพเจฐ เจคเฉ‹เจ‚ เจธเจผเฉเฉฑเจ•เจฐเจตเจพเจฐเฅค เจ…เจงเจฟเจ†เจคเจฎเจฟเจ•, เจ‡เจคเจฟเจนเจพเจธเจ•, เจญเจพเจตเจจเจพเจคเจฎเจ• เจ…เจคเฉ‡ เจ…เจธเจฒ เจœเจผเจฟเฉฐเจฆเจ—เฉ€ เจฆเฉ€เจ†เจ‚ เจชเฉฐเจœเจพเจฌเฉ€ เจ•เจนเจพเจฃเฉ€เจ†เจ‚ โ€” เจฆเฉเจจเฉ€เจ† เจฆเฉ‡ เจ•เจฟเจธเฉ‡ เจตเฉ€ เจ•เฉ‹เจจเฉ‡ เจคเฉ‹เจ‚ เจฎเฉเจซเจผเจค เจธเฉเจฃเฉ‹เฅค Chaa โ€” A Punjabi Audio Story Narrator: Ranjodh Singh | Genre: Emotional ยท Real Life | Format: Punjabi Audio Story About this story There's a word in Punjabi โ€” chaa. It doesn't translate cleanly. It's somewhere between joy and longing, the kind of happiness that fills the body completely. Today's Punjabi kahani on Radio Haanji's Kitaab Kahani is called Chaa. It's about a woman named Nasib Kaur, and the day she got the news she had been waiting eight years to hear. Narrated by Ranjodh Singh. What happens Nasib Kaur's son Darshan calls. A grandson. After four daughters, four granddaughters, eight years of waiting โ€” a grandson. She doesn't know what to do with herself. She touches her face and finds her eyes are wet. She bows at the photograph of her father. She puts on new clothes. She sends the neighbour's boy running for sweets. She spreads the news across the whole village. Then she joins the women dancing the giddha. And then she falls. Darshan drives home with the baby, imagining his mother at the door. Oil in her hand. Ready to welcome. He walks in. She's not there. The baby came home. But the grandmother had already left. The last line The storyteller ends with a saying: some joys are so big the heart cannot carry their weight. One arrives, one leaves. Perhaps this is what they call life. It's a beautiful line. It's also devastating. That tension โ€” between the arrival and the departure happening on the same day โ€” is what makes this Punjabi story stay with you. Ranjodh Singh This is the kind of story where narration matters enormously. The pacing, the silences, the moment the cheering stops. Ranjodh Singh narrates the Kitaab Kahani Punjabi audio kahani series on Radio Haanji, and his voice handles grief and joy in the same breath in a way that feels genuinely earned. About Kitaab Kahani Kitaab Kahani is Radio Haanji's daily Punjabi story segment โ€” new episodes Monday to Friday. Motivational, spiritual, historical, real-life. Free to listen from anywhere. Radio Haanji 1674 AM | Punjabi Podcast | Broadcasting from Melbourne, Australia Listen free at...

Duration:00:11:57

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Fun Friday - 13 March 2026 - Yash and Ranjodh Singh Own Friday the 13th

3/12/2026
Fun Friday - 13 March 2026 - Yash and Ranjodh Singh Turn Friday the 13th Into the Best Morning of the Week on Radio Haanji Friday the 13th has a reputation. Yash and Ranjodh Singh spent this morning dismantling it, one caller at a time. Fun Friday on Radio Haanji 1674 AM does not really care what the calendar says. It shows up every Friday regardless โ€” funny stories, live calls, the kind of banter between two hosts who genuinely enjoy each other's company โ€” and today was no different. If anything, the date gave the morning an extra edge. Bad luck is hard to believe in when you are laughing. Friday the 13th? Yash and Ranjodh Singh had other plans There is a version of this show that could have leaned into the superstition, milked it for easy material, made the whole hour about the date. That is not how Yash and Ranjodh Singh work. They brought what they always bring โ€” themselves, a phone line and a community that knows what to do with both. What makes Fun Friday actually work is not the format. Plenty of shows have caller segments and funny stories. What this show has is two hosts whose chemistry is not performed. Yash and Ranjodh Singh riff off each other the way people do when they are not thinking about how it sounds, and that looseness is exactly what gives the show its texture. Listeners pick up on it immediately. You can tell when people on air are genuinely enjoying themselves, and when they are going through motions. This is the former. Friday the 13th or not, the morning felt like it always does on this show โ€” slightly chaotic, warm, and very hard to switch off. Callers, stories and the laughter you didn't know you needed The caller segment is where Fun Friday gets interesting every week. People ring in from across Melbourne's Punjabi and Indian community with stories from their actual lives โ€” things that happened at work, at home, at the shops, that somehow became funnier in the retelling than they were in the moment. Nobody scripts these. The laughs are real because the situations are real. There is something specific about community radio caller segments that you do not get anywhere else. The people who call in are not trying to be performers. They are just sharing something they thought was funny, or something that embarrassed them, or something that happened to their neighbour. Yash and Ranjodh Singh know how to hold that space โ€” they react honestly, they push the story further when it wants to go there, and they let it breathe when it doesn't. For listeners who follow Radio Haanji's full range of programming โ€” the political analysis of Indian Updates, the geopolitical depth of The Insight Report โ€” Fun Friday is the counterweight. The week asks a lot of people. This show asks only one thing: sit back and laugh. Visit haanji.com.au/podcast to explore the full lineup. Why Fun Friday has stuck around The show's premise is not complicated. Make people laugh on a Friday morning. Help them go into the weekend feeling lighter than they felt going into the hour. That is it. It sounds simple. Executing it consistently, week after week, with different callers and unpredictable conversations, is harder than it looks. Yash and Ranjodh Singh have managed it because they treat the show like what it actually is โ€” a conversation with their community, not a performance for it. The distinction matters more than it sounds. For Melbourne's Indian and Punjabi community, Fun Friday on Radio Haanji 1674 AM has become a Friday fixture the way certain things just do โ€” not because anyone decided they should, but because people kept coming back. As a free Punjabi podcast online, it removes every barrier. No subscription, no algorithm deciding whether to serve it to you. It is there every Friday, ready to go, and has been for long enough that missing it now would feel like something is missing from the week. Friday the 13th is allegedly unlucky. An hour with Yash and Ranjodh Singh suggests otherwise. Listen to Fun Friday - free...

Duration:01:30:53

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Indian Updates 13 March 2026 - Punjab LPG Crisis Analysis Radio Haanji

3/12/2026
Indian Updates - 13 March 2026 - LPG Crisis, Punjab Politics and Investment - Radio Haanji Preetam Singh Rupal, a respected India-based journalist, joined host Ranjodh Singh on Radio Haanji 1674 AM this Friday for Indian Updates - a programme that does not stop at headlines. Today's episode took on three stories that are moving through Punjab and India's political economy simultaneously: a domestic LPG shortage that is hitting ordinary households hard, a sharp statement from Congress leader Partap Singh Bajwa, and the launch of the Partisheel Punjab Niveshak Samelan. Each one has layers worth unpacking. Punjab's LPG Crisis - When the Gas Runs Out, the Silence Gets Loud The news that gas agencies across Punjab have shut down online LPG booking and replaced it with long physical queues should not be treated as a logistics story. It is a governance story. When a basic household commodity becomes inaccessible enough to drive people into lines in front of distribution offices, something has gone wrong further up the chain - and the question is whether that failure is administrative, political or structural. The shortage points to a gap between supply commitments and actual distribution capacity. LPG availability in India has long been tied to government subsidy policy, import volumes, and the efficiency of the last-mile delivery network. When any part of that chain tightens - whether due to global energy prices, import disruption, or distribution mismanagement - it is the domestic kitchen that notices first. In Punjab, where LPG dependency is high across both urban and rural households, the impact is immediate and visible. For the Indian community in Australia watching this, the practical question is a familiar one. Families back home navigate these shortages with workarounds - relatives standing in queues, informal network bookings, switching fuels temporarily. The systems that were supposed to modernise and simplify access to cooking gas have, in this instance, reverted to something far more inconvenient. Preetam Singh Rupal's analysis today placed this in the context of ongoing questions about state-level energy management and the accountability gaps that allow such shortages to develop without early warning. Partap Singh Bajwa's Statement - Reading Between the Lines in Punjab's Opposition Politics Congress leader Partap Singh Bajwa made a statement that Radio Haanji covered today as part of the ongoing conversation around Punjab's political landscape. Bajwa has been one of the more vocal opposition voices in the state, and his public positions tend to signal where the Congress party in Punjab is trying to place itself relative to the AAP government. Without the full text of the statement, the analytical frame matters more than the specific words. Punjab's opposition politics in 2026 operates in a compressed space. The AAP government remains the dominant force at the state level, and the Congress, despite its history in Punjab, has struggled to rebuild a coherent identity since 2022. Statements from senior figures like Bajwa function partly as positioning - for internal party audiences, for media cycles, and for the community that Indian Updates reaches in Australia. For NRIs following Punjab politics from Melbourne or Sydney, the significance is real. Many in the Punjabi diaspora have direct stakes in the state's political direction - family land, business interests, electoral connections through relatives. Indian Updates provides the interpretive layer that raw news does not. What is Bajwa's statement about? What is the political calculation behind it? What does it mean for the broader opposition's chances of making ground before the next cycle? These are the questions Preetam Singh Rupal brought to today's episode. Partisheel Punjab Niveshak Samelan - What the Investment Summit Is Actually Trying to Do The Partisheel Punjab Niveshak Samelan gets underway today, and it is worth being precise about what these investment...

Duration:00:20:55

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Today Updates 13 March 2026 - Iran and US tariffs and Ethiopia - Punjabi Podcast Radio Haanji

3/12/2026
Today Updates - 13 March 2026 - World and Australia News - Radio Haanji Ranjodh Singh was on air this Friday morning for Today Updates on Radio Haanji 1674 AM, running through a heavy news day that stretched from the Middle East to Melbourne's share market. It is the kind of Friday where the news does not slow down just because the weekend is close, and the show covered it all across the World and Australia segments. World Updates Iran's newly appointed military commander came out publicly on Friday with a clear message: the attacks will continue. He said Iran intends to maintain constructive relationships with its neighbours but will not yield to pressure from the United States. In the same statement, he pointed to the casualties from strikes on a school and civilian sites as part of his justification for Iran's ongoing military posture. It is a significant opening statement from someone taking command during one of the most volatile periods in the region. The Iranian president followed that with a separate development. He set out conditions under which Iran would consider de-escalation with the United States and Israel. The conditions were not vague diplomatic language - they were specific, and whether Washington and Tel Aviv treat them as a genuine opening or dismiss them entirely will shape the next phase of this conflict. No agreement has been reached and the situation remains active. On the trade front, the Trump administration moved to launch a new round of investigations tied to tariff policy. The details are still emerging, but the broader direction of the administration's economic approach - using tariffs as both leverage and revenue tools - continues to be a live issue for international markets and trading partners. Russia is recording significant profits from crude oil sales, driven in part by the volatility in the Middle East. When regional instability pushes oil supply concerns higher, Russian oil finds more buyers and commands stronger prices. It is an indirect benefit from a conflict that Moscow has no direct hand in, and the timing is not lost on energy analysts watching the numbers. A shooting in Michigan in the United States left the attacker dead. Authorities confirmed the incident was neutralised. The broader details around motive and circumstances are still being established. In southern Ethiopia, a landslide has killed more than fifty people, with over a hundred still unaccounted for. Search and rescue operations are ongoing in difficult terrain. It is one of the deadlier natural disasters the region has seen this year and the numbers may rise as teams continue to work through the affected areas. China's annual Two Sessions political meetings wrapped up with a notable emphasis on technology development. The government signalled major investment directions in areas like artificial intelligence and advanced manufacturing. These are not small announcements - they reflect where China's leadership wants the country positioned economically over the next five to ten years. Finally, Iran has been excluded from the FIFA 2026 World Cup. The decision comes amid the country's ongoing international pressures and will be felt by Iranian football fans who had been following their national team's qualification prospects closely. Australia This Week - What It Means for Our Community The Australian government announced it is moving to facilitate the return of Australian citizens currently in Israel and the UAE. The move comes as conditions in parts of the region remain unpredictable and the government has opted to act rather than wait. For families in Melbourne and Sydney with relatives caught up in those areas, this is directly relevant news. The GST distribution formula is back under debate, with a projected $60 billion burden being discussed in the context of how funds are divided between states. These conversations tend to get technical quickly, but for the Indian community in Australia - particularly those...

Duration:00:37:30

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Laughter Therapy 13 March 2026 - Punjabi Chutkule Podcast - Radio Haanji

3/12/2026
Friday Morning Chutkule - Laughter Therapy Punjabi Podcast - 13 March 2026 Friday mornings hit different when Yash and Ranjodh Singh are on air. Laughter Therapy on Radio Haanji 1674 AM wrapped up the week the way it always does - with the Punjabi community across Melbourne calling in, sharing chutkule, bolian and bujaratan, and generally refusing to let a single listener start their day in a bad mood. If you missed this morning's show, here is what went down. Friday's Laughter Therapy - How the Morning Came to Life Laughter Therapy airs Monday to Friday on 1674 AM, and by Friday the energy from the whole week builds into something a bit looser, a bit warmer. Yash and Ranjodh Singh have been running this show long enough that the format feels easy - not scripted, not forced. Callers know what to expect, hosts know the community, and the chutkule flow without anyone needing a prompt. The show runs in two parts. First the kids call in. Then the adults. The theme stays the same throughout: laughter, Punjabi language, and the kind of community connection that is genuinely hard to find at 8am on a weekday. You can catch previous episodes of Laughter Therapy on the Radio Haanji podcast page if you want to hear how different each morning sounds from the last. Kids Take the Mic - Chutkule, Bolian and Bujaratan The first half of the show belongs to the kids. Children aged four to fourteen call in from across Melbourne and do what kids do best - they are honest, quick, and completely unpredictable. Some share chutkule they have heard at home. Others try bujaratan - the Punjabi riddle tradition that has grandparents and grandchildren speaking the same language even when everything else feels different. Then there are the bolian, the rhythmic Punjabi verses that feel like a direct line back to Punjab no matter which suburb in Melbourne you are calling from. There is something genuinely useful about this segment beyond the entertainment. Kids who are growing up speaking English at school and Punjabi at home get a space on actual radio where their language sounds celebrated rather than out of place. That matters. Ranjodh Singh and Yash both understand this, which is why they give the kids room to go off-script. You can listen to how this segment sounds across different episodes on the Laughter Therapy podcast archive - each episode is its own thing. Adults Keep the Laughter Going The second half of the show switches to adult callers. The chutkule get a little sharper, the bolian a little more layered, and the back-and-forth between Yash, Ranjodh Singh and the listeners settles into something that sounds less like a radio show and more like a group chat that got on air. Adult callers bring their own flavour. Some share jokes that have clearly been tested at the dinner table. Some go off on tangents that the hosts reel in - or let run, depending on how good the tangent is. The bolian in this segment often carry a bit more history, a bit more reference to the Punjab that many callers left behind years or decades ago. The show does not try to be serious. It does not wrap up with life lessons. It just keeps the laughter going until the clock runs out, which is exactly what the name promises. If you want to explore other shows on Radio Haanji, the full podcast library at haanji.com.au covers everything from news to music to community conversations. Why This Punjabi Podcast Has Melbourne Listening Every Morning Laughter Therapy is not the only Punjabi podcast in Australia. But it is the one that has been showing up every weekday morning consistently, on an actual radio frequency - 1674 AM - while also being available on every major podcast platform. The combination of live radio and podcast distribution means the community can engage in real time during the morning commute and then catch up on Spotify or Apple Podcasts whenever it suits them. No paywall, no subscription required. It has always been free, and that is not going to...

Duration:00:37:43

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เจœเฉœเฉเจนเจพเจ‚ โ€” เจชเฉฐเจœเจพเจฌเฉ€ เจชเฉเจฐเฉ‡เจฐเจฃเจพเจฆเจพเจ‡เจ• เจ•เจนเจพเจฃเฉ€ - Punjabi Audio Story - Ranjodh Singh - Radio Haanji

3/12/2026
เจœเฉœเฉเจนเจพเจ‚ | เจ•เจฟเจคเจพเจฌ เจ•เจนเจพเจฃเฉ€ | Radio Haanji เจ†เจตเจพเจœเจผ: เจฐเจฃเจœเฉ‹เจง เจธเจฟเฉฐเจ˜ | เจตเจฟเจงเจพ: เจชเฉเจฐเฉ‡เจฐเจฃเจพเจฆเจพเจ‡เจ• ยท เจฌเฉ‹เจง เจ•เจฅเจพ | เจซเจผเจพเจฐเจฎเฉˆเจŸ: เจชเฉฐเจœเจพเจฌเฉ€ เจ†เจกเฉ€เจ“ เจ•เจนเจพเจฃเฉ€ | เจฒเฉœเฉ€: เจ•เจฟเจคเจพเจฌ เจ•เจนเจพเจฃเฉ€ เจœเจฆเฉ‹เจ‚ เจฐเจธเจคเจพ เจฌเฉฐเจฆ เจนเฉ‹ เจœเจพเจตเฉ‡ เจ•เจˆ เจตเจพเจฐ เจ‰เฉฑเจชเจฐ เจœเจพเจฃ เจฆเจพ เจฐเจธเจคเจพ เจฌเฉฐเจฆ เจนเฉเฉฐเจฆเจพ เจนเฉˆเฅค เจ•เฉ‹เจธเจผเจฟเจธเจผ เจ•เจฐเฉ‹ เจคเจพเจ‚ เจฆเฉ€เจตเจพเจฐ, เจธเฉเจชเจจเฉ‡ เจตเฉ‡เจ–เฉ‹ เจคเจพเจ‚ เจชเฉฑเจฅเจฐเฅค เจ‰เจธ เจชเจฒ เจฆเจพ เจฆเจฐเจฆ เจฌเจฟเจฒเจ•เฉเจฒ เจตเฉฑเจ–เจฐเจพ เจนเฉเฉฐเจฆเจพ เจนเฉˆเฅค Radio Haanji เจฆเฉ€ เจ•เจฟเจคเจพเจฌ เจ•เจนเจพเจฃเฉ€ เจตเจฟเฉฑเจš เจ…เฉฑเจœ เจฆเฉ€ เจชเฉฐเจœเจพเจฌเฉ€ เจ•เจนเจพเจฃเฉ€ 'เจœเฉœเฉเจนเจพเจ‚' เจ‰เจธเฉ‡ เจชเจฒ เจคเฉ‹เจ‚ เจธเจผเฉเจฐเฉ‚ เจนเฉเฉฐเจฆเฉ€ เจนเฉˆเฅค เจฐเจฃเจœเฉ‹เจง เจธเจฟเฉฐเจ˜ เจฆเฉ€ เจ†เจตเจพเจœเจผ เจตเจฟเฉฑเจš เจธเฉเจฃเฉ‹ เจ‡เจน เจชเฉฐเจœเจพเจฌเฉ€ เจ†เจกเฉ€เจ“ เจ•เจนเจพเจฃเฉ€เฅค เจ•เจนเจพเจฃเฉ€ เจฌเจพเจฐเฉ‡ 'เจœเฉœเฉเจนเจพเจ‚' เจ‡เฉฑเจ• เจฌเฉ€เจœ เจฆเฉ€ เจชเฉฐเจœเจพเจฌเฉ€ เจ•เจนเจพเจฃเฉ€ เจนเฉˆ เจœเฉ‹ เจตเฉฑเจกเจพ เจฐเฉเฉฑเจ– เจฌเจฃเจจเจพ เจšเจพเจนเฉเฉฐเจฆเจพ เจธเฉ€, เจชเจฐ เจญเจพเจฐเฉ‡ เจชเฉฑเจฅเจฐ เจจเฉ‡ เจฐเจพเจน เจฐเฉ‹เจ• เจฆเจฟเฉฑเจคเจพเฅค เจ‡เจน เจ•เจนเจพเจฃเฉ€ เจ‡เฉฑเจ• เจธเจตเจพเจฒ เจชเฉเฉฑเจ›เจฆเฉ€ เจนเฉˆ เจœเฉ‹ เจ†เจฎ เจคเฉŒเจฐ 'เจคเฉ‡ เจ•เฉ‹เจˆ เจจเจนเฉ€เจ‚ เจชเฉเฉฑเจ›เจฆเจพ: เจœเจฆเฉ‹เจ‚ เจ‰เฉฑเจชเจฐ เจฆเจพ เจฐเจธเจคเจพ เจฌเฉฐเจฆ เจนเฉ‹เจตเฉ‡, เจคเจพเจ‚ เจ•เฉ€ เจนเฉ‡เจ เจพเจ‚ เจœเจพเจฃเจพ เจนเจพเจฐ เจนเฉˆ? เจœเจตเจพเจฌ เจธเฉเจฃเฉ‹ เจฐเจฃเจœเฉ‹เจง เจธเจฟเฉฐเจ˜ เจฆเฉ€ เจ†เจตเจพเจœเจผ เจตเจฟเฉฑเจšเฅค เจ•เจนเจพเจฃเฉ€ เจฆเจพ เจธเจพเจฐ เจ‡เฉฑเจ• เจฐเจพเจนเฉ€ เจจเฉ‡ เจซเจฒ เจ–เจพ เจ•เฉ‡ เจฌเฉ€เจœ เจฎเจฟเฉฑเจŸเฉ€ เจตเจฟเฉฑเจš เจธเฉเฉฑเจŸ เจฆเจฟเฉฑเจคเจพเฅค เจฌเฉ€เจœ เจจเฉ‡ เจธเฉเจชเจจเจพ เจตเฉ‡เจ–เจฟเจ† โ€” เจ‰เฉฑเจšเจพ เจฐเฉเฉฑเจ–, เจซเจฒเจพเจ‚ เจจเจพเจฒ เจฒเฉฑเจฆเจฟเจ†, เจฒเฉ‹เจ•เจพเจ‚ เจฆเฉ‡ เจšเจฟเจนเจฐเจฟเจ†เจ‚ 'เจคเฉ‡ เจ–เฉเจธเจผเฉ€เฅค เจซเจฟเจฐ เจ‰เฉฑเจชเจฐเฉ‹เจ‚ เจญเจพเจฐเจพ เจชเฉฑเจฅเจฐ เจ† เจกเจฟเฉฑเจ—เจพเฅค เจฌเฉ€เจœ เจจเฉ‡ เจฐเฉฑเจฌ เจ…เฉฑเจ—เฉ‡ เจ—เจฟเจฒเจพ เจ•เฉ€เจคเจพ: "เจœเฉ‡ เจธเฉเจชเจจเฉ‡ เจชเฉ‚เจฐเฉ‡ เจจเจนเฉ€เจ‚ เจ•เจฐเจจเฉ‡ เจธเฉ€ เจคเจพเจ‚ เจตเจฟเจ–เจพเจ เจ•เจฟเจ‰เจ‚?" เจงเจฐเจคเฉ€ เจจเฉ‡ เจ•เจฟเจนเจพ: "เจœเฉ‡ เจ‰เฉฑเจชเจฐ เจจเจนเฉ€เจ‚ เจœเจพ เจธเจ•เจฆเจพ, เจคเจพเจ‚ เจœเฉœเฉเจนเจพเจ‚ เจนเฉ‡เจ เจพเจ‚ เจตเจงเจพเฅค เจ‡เฉฐเจจเฉ€เจ†เจ‚ เจกเฉ‚เฉฐเจ˜เฉ€เจ†เจ‚ เจ•เจฟ เจ•เฉ‹เจˆ เจคเฉ‚เจซเจพเจจ เจคเฉˆเจจเฉ‚เฉฐ เจนเจฟเจฒเจพ เจจเจพ เจธเจ•เฉ‡เฅค" เจฌเฉ€เจœ เจจเฉ‡ เจฎเฉฐเจจเจฟเจ†เฅค เจœเฉœเฉเจนเจพเจ‚ เจกเฉ‚เฉฐเจ˜เฉ€เจ†เจ‚ เจ•เจฐเจฆเจพ เจฐเจฟเจนเจพเฅค เจ‡เฉฑเจ• เจฆเจฟเจจ เจชเฉฑเจฅเจฐ เจฆเฉ€ เจชเจฐเจตเจพเจน เจ•เฉ€เจคเฉ‡ เจฌเจฟเจจเจพเจ‚ เจธเฉฑเจœเจฟเจ“เจ‚-เจ–เฉฑเจฌเจฟเจ“เจ‚ เจฐเจพเจน เจฌเจฃเจพ เจ•เฉ‡ เจ‰เฉฑเจชเจฐ เจตเฉฑเจฒ เจตเจง เจ—เจฟเจ†เฅค เจซเจฟเจฐ เจคเฉ‚เจซเจพเจจ เจ†เจ‡เจ†เฅค เจนเจฐเฉ‡-เจญเจฐเฉ‡ เจชเจฐ เจ•เจฎเจœเจผเฉ‹เจฐ เจœเฉœเฉเจนเจพเจ‚ เจตเจพเจฒเฉ‡ เจฐเฉเฉฑเจ– เจชเฉเฉฑเจŸเฉ‡ เจ—เจเฅค เจ‡เจน เจฐเฉเฉฑเจ– เจ…เจกเฉ‹เจฒ เจฐเจฟเจนเจพเฅค เจ‡เจน เจ•เจนเจพเจฃเฉ€ เจ•เจฟเจธ เจฒเจˆ เจนเฉˆ เจœเฉ‹ เจ‡เจธ เจตเฉ‡เจฒเฉ‡ เจ•เจฟเจธเฉ‡ เจชเฉฑเจฅเจฐ เจนเฉ‡เจ  เจนเจจเฅค เจœเจฟเจจเฉเจนเจพเจ‚ เจฆเฉ‡ เจธเฉเจชเจจเฉ‡ เจฆเฉฑเจฌเฉ‡ เจ—เจ เจฒเฉฑเจ—เจฆเฉ‡ เจนเจจเฅค เจœเจฟเจจเฉเจนเจพเจ‚ เจจเฉ‚เฉฐ เจฒเฉฑเจ—เจฆเจพ เจนเฉˆ เจ•เจฟ เจฐเฉฑเจฌ เจจเฉ‡ เจ‰เจนเจจเจพเจ‚ เจจเจพเจฒ เจฌเฉ‡เจ‡เจจเจธเจพเจซเจผเฉ€ เจ•เฉ€เจคเฉ€ เจนเฉˆเฅค เจชเฉฑเจฅเจฐ เจฐเฉ‹เจ•เจฃ เจจเจนเฉ€เจ‚ เจ†เจ‡เจ†เฅค เจกเฉ‚เฉฐเจ˜เจพ เจ•เจฐเจจ เจ†เจ‡เจ† เจนเฉˆเฅค เจฐเจฃเจœเฉ‹เจง เจธเจฟเฉฐเจ˜ เจฆเฉ€ เจ†เจตเจพเจœเจผ เจตเจฟเฉฑเจš เจฐเจฃเจœเฉ‹เจง เจธเจฟเฉฐเจ˜ เจฆเฉ€ เจ†เจตเจพเจœเจผ เจตเจฟเฉฑเจš เจ‡เจน เจชเฉฐเจœเจพเจฌเฉ€ เจ†เจกเฉ€เจ“ เจ•เจนเจพเจฃเฉ€ เจธเฉเจฃเจจ เจตเจพเจฒเฉ€ เจนเฉˆเฅค เจ‰เจน เจ•เจนเจพเจฃเฉ€ เจธเฉเจฃเจพเจ‰เจ‚เจฆเฉ‡ เจจเจนเฉ€เจ‚ โ€” เจœเจฟเจ‰เจ‚เจฆเฉ€ เจ•เจฐ เจฆเจฟเฉฐเจฆเฉ‡ เจนเจจเฅค เจฌเฉ€เจœ เจฆเจพ เจ—เจฟเจฒเจพ เจ…เจคเฉ‡ เจงเจฐเจคเฉ€ เจฆเจพ เจœเจตเจพเจฌ โ€” เจฆเฉ‹เจตเฉ‡เจ‚ เจ‰เจนเจจเจพเจ‚ เจฆเฉ€ เจ†เจตเจพเจœเจผ เจตเจฟเฉฑเจš เจ‡เฉฑเจ•เจฆเจฎ เจธเฉฑเจšเฉ‡ เจฒเฉฑเจ—เจฆเฉ‡ เจนเจจเฅค เจ•เจฟเจคเจพเจฌ เจ•เจนเจพเจฃเฉ€ เจฌเจพเจฐเฉ‡ เจ•เจฟเจคเจพเจฌ เจ•เจนเจพเจฃเฉ€ Radio Haanji เจฆเจพ เจฐเฉ‹เจœเจผเจพเจจเจพ เจชเฉฐเจœเจพเจฌเฉ€ เจ†เจกเฉ€เจ“ เจ•เจนเจพเจฃเฉ€ เจธเฉˆเจ—เจฎเฉˆเจ‚เจŸ เจนเฉˆ โ€” เจธเฉ‹เจฎเจตเจพเจฐ เจคเฉ‹เจ‚ เจธเจผเฉเฉฑเจ•เจฐเจตเจพเจฐเฅค เจ…เจงเจฟเจ†เจคเจฎเจฟเจ•, เจ‡เจคเจฟเจนเจพเจธเจ•, เจญเจพเจตเจจเจพเจคเจฎเจ• เจ…เจคเฉ‡ เจ…เจธเจฒ เจœเจผเจฟเฉฐเจฆเจ—เฉ€ เจฆเฉ€เจ†เจ‚ เจชเฉฐเจœเจพเจฌเฉ€ เจ•เจนเจพเจฃเฉ€เจ†เจ‚ โ€” เจฆเฉเจจเฉ€เจ† เจฆเฉ‡ เจ•เจฟเจธเฉ‡ เจตเฉ€ เจ•เฉ‹เจจเฉ‡ เจคเฉ‹เจ‚ เจฎเฉเจซเจผเจค เจธเฉเจฃเฉ‹เฅค Jarhan โ€” Roots - Punjabi Kahani - Radio Haanji Narrator: Ranjodh Singh | Genre: Motivational ยท Moral Story | Format: Punjabi Audio Story When the way up is blocked Sometimes every path forward is blocked. You push, and there's a wall. You dream, and something falls on top of it. Most people have felt this โ€” the specific frustration of being stopped before you even start. Today's Punjabi kahani on Radio Haanji's Kitaab Kahani is called Jarhan โ€” Roots. It starts exactly there. Narrated by Ranjodh Singh. About this story Jarhan is a Punjabi motivational story told through a seed that wants to become a tree, gets pinned under a stone, and has to figure out what to do next. Simple setup. The question it asks is one most people don't think to ask: when the way up is blocked, is going deeper a defeat? What happens A traveller drops a seed into the soil after eating a fruit. The seed has a clear picture of what it wants โ€” a tall tree, branches full of fruit, people resting in its shade. Then a heavy stone falls and pins it down. The seed asks: "If you weren't going to let me grow, why give me the dream?" The earth says: "If you can't go up, grow down. Make your roots deep enough that no storm can pull you out." The seed does it. Day after day, deeper and wider, until it's strong enough to push sideways around the stone and finally rise. When the storm comes, the trees with shallow roots come down. This one doesn't move. What this Punjabi story is actually about The stone wasn't there to stop the seed. It was there to make the seed go deeper than it ever would have without it. That's the whole thing. Hardship that looks like an obstacle is sometimes what builds the foundation. The trees that fall in the storm are the ones that never had to fight for their roots. If you're under a stone right now, this Punjabi audio story is worth your time. Ranjodh Singh Ranjodh Singh narrates the Kitaab Kahani Punjabi audio kahani series on Radio Haanji. He's particularly good at stories like this one โ€” where a lot of the weight is in what's not said. The seed's complaint and the earth's answer land very differently in his voice than they would on a...

Duration:00:16:35