Facials Threading Waxing Mehndi...These are some of the things our Desi ladies feel most comfortable doing at the Desi ""Beauty Parlors"". Our Desi Salon section has a listing of such Beauty Parlors.
Indian Cinema is the largest producers of films every year and movies from Bollywood Tollywood and rest of India are popular around the world. In many countries Indian movies are shown in local theatres and our Yellow Pages section lists theatres in over 20 countries where Indian movies are shown.
Diamonds are a woman's best friend and gold comes a close second. Indians are among the biggest buyers of gold and you can find Desi jewelery stores in many parts of the world. We have an extensive collection of Indian Jewellery Stores in over 10 countries and looking to add more.
As Indians have migrated to other countries Indian fashion has also followed them. You can now buy designer clothes at desi boutiques all over the world. Our Indian Boutiques Yellow Pages section has a good collection of Desi Boutiques from around the world.
Need a ticket to India or a trip for Hajj with all arrangements such as meals etc taken care of for you? You can find many Indian travel agents around the world in our Travel Agents section of the Desi Yellow Pages
Do you miss the Desi soaps reality shows entertainment shows and movies? Many of the hit Desi channels like Zee TV, Star, Sony, Colors and other regional TV channels are available in many countries. Learn more.
The Ali Akbar College of Music in San Francisco is pleased to announce the launch of a global campaign to save the life’s work of Maestro Ali Akbar Khan. The official logo of this campaign “the Maestro and Me” is included here and will link you directly to the campaign website.
You can Learn about the legacy you will be helping to preserve, watch videos prepared by other musicians who were touched by his life and music, and much more. For a donation of $5, people will receive a download of one of the Maestro’s greatest recordings, Raga Chandranandan.
Please forward this message onward, post it on Facebook, and/or put it on a website. We need your help to get the message out so the whole world will have the opportunity to be touched by this music.
Veteran Theatre and Film Actor Paresh Rawal is all set to tour the USA with his new Hindi play Krishnan v/s Kanhaiya. Paresh Rawal is ready to recreate the magic of “Shaadi @ Barwadi” he performed in the USA and is preparing to rock the North American audience with his new hilariously entertaining and sensationally shocking Indian/Hindi play, “Krishan Vs Kanhaiya” directed by Umesh Shukla.
The play, which is about an aethist's battle with the Almighty is an adaptation of the popular, contemporary Gujarati comedy KANJEE VIRRUDH KANJEE.
Paresh Rawal will be accompanied by other younger but accomplished Gujarati theatre actors such as Dharmendra Gohil and Chirag Vora. The play will be performed in New York before it travels to Georgia, California and Pennsylvania. The month long tour will start on 21st August 2010 at the Colden Auditorium, Queens College at Flushing in New York city. The play will be performed at various major US locations with Indian population. Click Read More event locations and details.
The New Zealand driver's licence system is a graduated system, which has been in place (with modifications, such as the L-plate requirement) since 1987. It consists of three phases for a car licence, each with varying levels of conditions. A New Zealand driver's licence allows the holder to drive a moped, tractor, or all-terrain vehicle as well as a car, however, motorbikes and heavy vehicles require separate licences.
Upon passing the respective test for each stage of the system, the successful applicant is given a plastic card which contains a unique identifying number, date of birth and photograph of the holder. Apart from passports and a special-purpose 18+ card, a driver's licence is the only legal form of ID for buying alcohol, tobacco and fireworks in New Zealand.
Visitors from India
Visitors to New Zealand who hold overseas drivers licences may be required to take a driving test before they qualify for a full New Zealand licence. However, those from countries with similar road rules are only required to take a theory test (similar to the learner licence test) within a year of arrival; until this time they may continue to drive on their foreign drivers licence provided it is either written in English, or they have an authorised English translation available.
Gerrard Street is a street in Toronto, Ontario, Canada. It consists of two separate parts, one running east from University Avenue for 6 km to Coxwell Avenue, and the other starting 300 m north along Coxwell and continuing east for another 4 km to Clonmore Avenue (between Victoria Park Avenue and Warden Avenue). In the vicinity of Coxwell Avenue the southern piece of Gerrard Street is frequently referred to as Lower Gerrard, and the northern piece is referred to as Upper Gerrard.
On Gerrard Street between Greenwood Avenue and Coxwell Avenue, there are many Indian, Pakistani, Bangladeshi and Afghanistani restaurants, cafés, videos/DVD stores, clothing shops, electronic goods & home decor stores catering to the South Asian-Canadian communities. Along with Jackson Heights in New York and Devon Avenue in Chicago, it forms one of the largest South Asian marketplaces in North America. The area has never been home to a large South Asian population, rather it has served for several decades as commercial centre for South Asians living in the Toronto area. Today, it attracts visitors from the Toronto area, and from elsewhere in Canada and the United States. It celebrates the annual Festival of South Asia in late August.
A group of Hindu and Sikh merchants have formed the "Gerrard India Bazaar Business Improvement Area" (BIA). The BIA sponsors events that appeal to the different South Asian groups that shop in the area: in 2004, Diwali, the Hindu festival of lights, and Eid, the Islamic feast day that marks the end of Ramadan, occurred around the same time in November. The BIA held a joint Diwali-Eid festival. The area is also commonly referred to as "Little India", or Little Pakistan.
The neighbourhood originated in 1972 when businessman Gian Naaz purchased the Eastwood Theatre and began to show Bollywood films. This attracted large numbers of Indo-Canadians from across the GTA. This large traffic led to a number of other stores in the area to be created to cater to the South Asian community. The area expanded rapidly and features houses some 100 stores and restaurants and has spread over almost the entire length from Greenwood to Coxwell. While originally shop owners mostly spoke Hindi, Punjabi, and Bengali, in recent years a wide array of Pakistani stores have opened in the western part of the neighbourhood (near Greenwood), which is closely linked to the large Muslim community in the East Danforth area just to the north.
Phahurat or Pahurat, often known as Thailand's Little India, is an ethnic neighborhood surrounding Phahurat Road in Phra Nakhon District, Bangkok. The area that would become Phahurat was an enclave of Vietnamese immigrants who came to Siam during the reign of King Taksin (1768-1782). In 1898, a fire broke out and paved way for a road which was named "Phahurat" by King Chulalongkorn in remembrance of his daughter Princess Phahurat Manimai who had died at the age of 10.
Many of today's Phahurat residents are of South Asian descent. A Sikh community settled down in the area a century ago and established a textile trading center that is still thriving today. Their temple, the golden-domed Siri Guru Singh Sabha, is a landmark of Phahurat. In addition to the Sikh community, the neighborhood is also home to a number of South Asian Hindus and Muslims.
Although the sprawling of Chinese shops from the nearby Chinatown are
slowly spilling over into Phahurat, South Asian restaurants and
businesses are still prevalent in the area. The area is also the site
of some of the more unusual markets and shopping malls in Bangkok,
including the sprawling Sampeng Market, the colonial-styled The Old
Siam Plaza, and the new four-storey India.
Chakraphet Road is well known for its Indian restaurants and shops selling Indian sweets. One of the best eateries in the area is the Royal India Restaurant, which serves north Indian cuisine and is justly famous for its tasty selection of Indian breads (Naan and Tandoori Roti). On the opposite side of Chakraphet Road from the Royal India is a Chinese temple. North of this temple, in a back alley on the west side of the road, is a large Sikh temple-turn left before the ATM Department Store to find the entrance. Visitors to the temple-reportedly the second largest Sikh temple outside of India-are welcome but they must remove their shoes and cover their head. If you arrive on a Sikh festival day you can partake in the langar or communal Sikh meal served in the temple.
Several inexpensive Indian food stalls are found in an alley alongside the ATM department store. Behind the store, stretching westward from Chakraphet Road to Triphet Road, is the Pahurat Market.
Pahurat is easily accessible by walk, after alighting from a Chao Phraya River Express boat at Tha (pier) Saphaan Phut, which is just to the north-west of Phra Phut Yot Fa (Memorial) Bridge.
The San Marga Iraivan Temple is a white granite stone Hindu temple sculpted in India and currently under construction on the Hawaiian island of Kauai. The temple is dedicated to the Hindu deity Shiva. "Iraivan" means "He who is worshipped," and is one of the oldest words for God in the Tamil language.[citation needed] The Iraivan Temple is located next to the Wailua River and five miles (8 km) from Mount Waialeale. It is the first all-stone temple to be built in the United States. It is maintained by the Saiva Siddhanta Church, also known as Kauai Aadheenam and Kauai's Hindu Monastery.
Sri Trichy Mahaswamigal of Kailash Ashram, Bangalore, describes the temple's importance: "The Iraivan Temple is going to be to America what the temples of Chidambaram, Madurai, Rameshwaram, and other great Siva temples are to India."
History
The Dhakeshwari temple was built in the 12th century by Ballal Sen, a king of the Sena dynasty, and many say the name of the city was coined after this temple. The current style of architecture of the temple cannot be dated to that period because of numerous repairs, renovations and rebuilding in its long years of existence and its present condition does not clearly show any of its original architectural characteristics. It is considered an essential part of Dhaka's cultural heritage. Many researchers say that the temple is also one of the Shakti Peethas, where the jewel from the crown of the Goddess had fallen. Although there is not enough historical context in order to establish this as a fact, researchers were directed to this site while trying to locate the particular Shakti Peetha. Since ages, the temple has been held in great importance. The original 800-year old statue was destroyed during the War of 1971. The temple was further damaged during the riots of 1989/90.