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Aamir Khan Quotes a Wonderful Poem of Tagore

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Aamir Khan's Clarification on 'Intolerance' Issue

Aamir Khan Quotes Tagore's Poem in His Press Note
Aamir Khan Quotes Tagore's Poem in His Press Note

Ever since 'Intolerance' statement made by Aamir Khan, many people across India happened to react on his remarks of disquiet and despondency prevailing in India for the past six months. Naturally, his statements were lashed out by the BJP, RSS groups, a few Bollywood's film fraternity. Equally, he was supported by a good number of people. Apparently, Aamir Khan decided to make a screeching halt to this controversy. He released a press note giving clarification to his statements. However, he made it clear that he stands by everything he had said in the interview. At the end of the text he quoted a wonderful poem 'Where the Mind Is Without Fear' written by Rabindranadh Tagore. Incidentally, the poem appears to be symbolic to the issue burning throughout the nation at the moment. Following is the full text of Aamir Khan's clarification.

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First let me state categorically that neither I, nor my wife Kiran, have any intention of leaving the country.We never did, and nor would we like to in the future. Anyone implying the opposite has either not seen my interview or is deliberately trying to distort what I have said.India is my country, I love it, I feel fortunate for being born here, and this is where I am staying.

Second, I stand by everything that I have said in my interview.To all those people who are calling me anti-national,I would like to say that I am proud to be Indian, and I do not need anyone's permission nor endorsement for that.To all the people shouting obscenities at me for speaking my heart out, it saddens me to say you are only proving my point.To all the people who have stood by me, thank you. We have to protect what this beautiful and unique country of ours really stands for. We have to protect its integrity, diversity, inclusiveness, its many languages, its culture, its history, its tolerance, it's concept of ‘ekantavada’, its love, sensitivity and its emotional strength.I would like to end my statement with a poem by Rabindranath Tagore; it's a prayer really:

Where the mind is without fear and the head is held high,

Where knowledge is free,

Where the world has not been broken up into fragments, by narrow domestic walls,

Where words come out from the depth of truth,

Where tireless striving stretches its arms towards perfection,

Where the clear stream of reason has not lost its way, into the dreary desert sand of dead habit,

Where the mind is led forward by thee,

Into ever-widening thought and action, Into that heaven of freedom, my father, let my country awake.

Jai Hind.

Aamir Khan