Essays
Essays
Essays
My country India is a land of Shiva, Parvati, Krishna, Hanuman, Buddha, Mahatma Gandhi, Swami
Vivekananda, Kabir, etc. It is a country where great people took birth and did great works. I love my country
very much and salute it. It is famous for its biggest democracy and oldest civilization of the world. It is the
second most populous country of the world after the chain. It is a country where courteous people of many
religions and cultures lives together. It is a country of great warriors such as Rana Pratap, Shivaji, Lal Bahadur
Shashtri, Jawaharlal Nehru, Mahatma Gandhi, Sardar Patel, Subhash Chandra Bose, Bagat Singh, Lala Lajpet
Rai and so many.
It is a rich country where great people took birth in the field of literature, art and science such as Rabindranath
Tagore, Sara Chandra, Premchand, C.V. Raman, Jagadish Chandra Bose, APJ Abdul Kalama, Kabir Das, etc.
Such great people of India were the proud of my country. All the great leaders of the country came from
villages and led the country to go ahead. They fought for many years and sacrificed their lives to make India an
independent country from the British rule. It is a country where famous rivers and oceans are run regularly
such as Ganges, Yamuna, Godavari, Narmada, Brahmaputra, Krishna, Kavery, Bay of Bengal, Arabic sea, etc.
India is a beautiful country surrounded by the oceans from three sides. It is a country where people are very
intellectual and spiritual and believe in God and Goddess.
It is hoisted in the government offices, schools and other educational institutions on the occasions of Republic
Day, Independence Day and other national events. Indian national flag was first time adopted on July 22nd in
1947. Our national flag is a beautifully designed tricolour flag, also known as Tiranga. It is made up of hand-
made Khadi clothes. It is completely restricted to make the Indian flag using clothes other than the Khadi. The
topmost colour of national flag is saffron, middle white and lower deep green. Saffron colour symbolizes
sacrifice and selflessness, white colour truth and purity and green youth and energy.
NATIONAL FLAG OF INDIA ESSAY 3 (200 WORDS)
The national flag of India was adopted on 22nd of July in 1947 some days after the independence of India on
15th of August, 1947 from the British rule. The Indian national flag contains three colours and thus also called
as the Tiranga. The uppermost saffron colour indicates sacrifice and selflessness, middle white colour indicates
truth, peace and purity and lowermost green colour indicates youth and energy. The middle white colour
contains a navy blue colour Ashoka Chakra which has 24 equal spokes. Our national flag is a symbol of
freedom, pride, unity and honour. Ashok Chakra indicates real victory of honesty and justice.
At this day, all the national, states and local government’s offices, banks, post offices, markets, stores,
businesses, organizations, etc become closed. However, public transport is totally unaffected. It is celebrated in
the capital of India with big enthusiasm however it is also celebrated in all the schools, colleges and other
educational institutions by the students and teachers including public community and society.
Democracy in India gives its citizens the right to vote irrespective of their caste, colour, creed, religion and
gender. It has five democratic principles – sovereign, socialist, secular, democratic and republic.
Various political parties stand for elections at the state as well as national level periodically. They propagate
about the tasks accomplished in their previous tenure and also share their future plans with the people. Every
citizen of India, above the age of 18 years, has the right to vote. The government is making continuous efforts
to encourage more and more people to cast their vote. People must know everything about the candidates
standing for the elections and vote for the most deserving one for good governance.
India is known to have a successful democratic system. However, there are certain loopholes that need to be
worked on. Among other things, the government must work on eliminating poverty, illiteracy, communalism,
gender discrimination and casteism in order to ensure democracy in true sense.