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Life is a journey ooh ooh ooh enjoy the ride feel like life is a journey ooh ooh ooh the hardest of ur time yeah ur flying to freedom uuh uuh uuh uuh uuh life is a journey ooh ooh ooh there is know time just keep believing uuh uuh uuh uuh uuh the hardest u got then ur back to freedom hey oh there is no time just keep believing .


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Around 27 years ago, if you had asked Ritu Nanda, daughter of the doyen of Hindi cinema Raj Kapoor, what her fondest memory of her father was, she would have said, "I didn't know him at all". That he was busy churning movie after movie when she was growing up, and her mother, Krishna, kept her away from the industry, meant that the two got little, if any time together. "If and when we communicated, it was through notes that I would place under his pillow before I went to sleep," Nanda tells us over the phone from Delhi. That's how Kapoor first learnt that his daughter was keen on playing the piano. "I kept sending him notes asking when my piano would come. Then, one day, it arrived," the 69-year-old remembers. This relationship suffered more neglect, as Nanda, who married early at the age of 20, got busy with her own life and children Nikhil and Nitasha.

But, somewhere in 1990, two years after Kapoor's demise, something unexpected fell into her lap, which changed her relationship with her father for good. "The then Soviet Union was honouring film personalities from around the world, to celebrate 100 years of cinema. Among the many names, including Ingrid Bergman, Charlie Chaplin and Jean Gabin, was Raj Kapoor. And, they wanted someone to write the book," says Nanda. While she didn't feel qualified for the task, the many people whom Nanda had approached, and who she believed, would have done a better job, either didn't find the book commercially viable or had prior commitments of their own. Despite suffering many an anxious moment, Nanda eventually wrote the book.

The second includes interesting vignettes of the actor from members of the family, including wife Krishna, his late brothers Shammi and Shashi, children, daughters-in-law and grandchildren, among others. For instance, Shashi Kapoor, the last of the legendary trio of brothers, who passed away earlier this month, recounts the time he was slapped by "Raj-ji", when he used foul language while talking to his mum, Ramsarni. "My brother had always lavished affection on me. Moreover, I had never been hit by either of my parents. I shut myself up in a room and howled. Raj-ji tried to console me, but when I wouldn't stop crying, he also burst into tears," Shashi recalled.

The book also celebrates Kapoor's life outside of the movies. His passion for cinema was matched only by his enthusiasm for cricket, and he was known to hold several fund-raising matches. Apart from that, Kapoor also loved farming. Raj Bagh, his farm in Pune, was where he intended to retire one day. What the book, however, did most was to bring Nanda closer to her father. "When I started out on the first book, I didn't know him. And, I had no business writing it. But, papa would always say that there is no such difficulty that cannot be conquered," she says, adding, "It's been an emotional journey for me, because even as I was researching this book, I realised how much he loved me." Here, Nanda remembers an incident during a family get-together, when Kapoor told his folks, 'One day you will all have a lot of respect for me'. "I understand that now more than ever," she ends.

During the height of the anticipation of the sophomore album, the Kwacha Music Awards winner, Dizmo, teased an intimate glimpse into his life journey with the revealing documentary titled Umuntu Mutwe which provides a raw and unfiltered accounting to the hustle, resilience, and breakthrough in the Zambian music industry. 152ee80cbc

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