Angrezi Dikhawa delves into the complex layers of modern Indian society, exploring how the legacy of British colonialism continues to shape our cultural perceptions. Follow the journey of Ramesh Yadav, a young man from Bihar working in a Delhi call center, as he faces silent shame and loud judgments-simply for the language he speaks. Why do we praise a broken English sentence but mock a pure Bhojpuri one? This powerful debut by Anubhav captures a quiet rebellion-a plea for dignity in one's mother tongue. "I've seen it," Anubhav says, "friends in Kushinagar raising kids to say 'Mom' not 'Ma, ' ashamed of Bhojpuri or UP Hindi. At work, colleagues avoid their Marathi, Kannada, Odia-thinking English is superior. That pain made me write." Angrezi Dikhawa is not just a story-it's a mirror. It reflects our daily choices between accent and authenticity, between global shine and rooted identity. Through Ramesh's journey-from glass towers of Delhi to muddy banks of Pipra's Ganga-the book reminds us: language is not status. It's soul. A deeply human tale of belonging, shame, pride-and the quiet war between who we are and who we're told to be.
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