Tag: sold

  • She Broke the News That the U.S. Catholic Church Sold Enslaved People. She’s Still Going to Mass.

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    In recent years, Georgetown and the Maryland Jesuits became an early example of an institution attempting to atone for its past in the slave trade. In 2019, the school announced it would provide preferential admissions to descendants of enslaved people, and its Jesuit operators announced millions in funding for racial reconciliation and education programs.

    It’s uncertain whether last week’s Supreme Court decision overturning race-conscious affirmative action in college admissions will affect Georgetown’s program for descendants of enslaved people. Georgetown president John J. DeGioia wrote in a statement that the university was “deeply disappointed” in the decision, and that the university will “remain committed to our efforts to recruit, enroll, and support students from all backgrounds.”

    As the college system braces for the fallout of that Supreme Court decision — and amid a simmering cultural debate about how, or even whether, to teach the kind of history Swarns has unearthed in schools — we had a wide-ranging discussion about book bans, the history of the Catholic Church (and her own connection to it) and the future of campus diversity.

    This interview has been edited for length and clarity.

    Naranjo: Obviously the Catholic Church is not the only institution involved in slavery in the U.S. Do you think all institutions with a history of enslaving people have a duty to provide a full accounting of their involvement in doing so?

    Swarns: You’re absolutely right. My book is about the Catholic Church and Georgetown University and their roots in slavery, but they are far from alone. Slavery drove the growth of many of our contemporary institutions — universities, religious institutions, banks, insurance companies. Many of those institutions are grappling with this history and I think it’s really important and urgent for them to do that work. I think it helps us understand more clearly how slavery shaped Americans, many American families and many of the institutions that are around us today. So to me, this is critical work.

    Naranjo: I understand you are Catholic yourself. Has your personal relationship with the church been affected during your research?

    Swarns: I had been writing about slavery and the legacy of slavery, and so I stumbled across the story in this book about the Catholic Church and Georgetown. But it just so happened that I also happen to be a Black, practicing Catholic, and when I first heard about this slave sale that prominent Catholic priests organized to help save Georgetown University, I was flabbergasted. I had never known that Catholic priests had participated in the American slave trade. I had never heard of Catholic priests enslaving people. I was really astounded, and I’ve been doing this research, going through archival records of the buying and selling of people by Catholic priests to sustain and help the church expand, even as I am going to Mass and doing all of that. And so it has been an interesting time for me because of that.

    One of the things, though, that has been fascinating is that, as I tracked some of the people who had been enslaved and sold by the church, I learned that many of them — even after the Civil War, even after they were free people — they remained in the church that had betrayed them and sold them. And they remained in the church because they felt that the priests, the white sinful men who had sold them who had done these things, did not own this church. The church — God, the Holy Spirit, the Son — they did not control that. And their faith that had sustained them through all of this difficult period of enslavement continued to sustain them. And not only that, many of these individuals became lay leaders and some even became religious leaders in the church and worked to make the church more reflective of and responsive to Black Catholics and more true to its universal ideals. And so, in a strange way, learning that history, learning about these people and their endurance and their resilience and their commitment to their faith has been really inspiring to me. So, I’m still practicing, I’m still going to Mass.

    Naranjo: As you note in the book, Catholicism in the U.S. has often been perceived as a Northern religion. And you show us how that’s not necessarily the case. But what do you think its role in enslaving people means for conversations about culpability and reparations, given that many people view slavery as a Southern thing?

    Swarns: I think that explains a bit of the disconnect for people. Many of us as Americans view the Catholic Church as a Northern church, as an immigrant church. Growing up in New York City, that’s certainly the church that I knew. The truth is that the Catholic Church established its foothold in the British colonies and in the early United States and in Maryland, which was a slaveholding state and relied on slavery to help build the very underpinnings of the church. So the nation’s first Catholic institution of higher learning, Georgetown, first archdiocese, the first cathedral, priests who operated a plantation and enslaved and sold people established the first seminary. So this was foundational to the emergence of the Catholic Church in the United States, but it’s history that I certainly didn’t know and most Catholics don’t know. And most Americans don’t know.

    In terms of grappling with this history, the institutions have taken a number of steps. Georgetown and the Jesuit order priests, who were the priests who established the early Catholic Church in the United States, they’ve apologized for their participation in slavery and the slave trade. Georgetown has offered preference in admissions to descendants of people who were enslaved by the church, and it’s created a fund — a $400,000 fund — which they’ve committed to raising annually to fund projects that will benefit descendants. They’ve also renamed buildings and created an institute to study slavery.

    The Jesuits, for their part, partnered with descendants to create a foundation and committed to raising $100 million toward racial reconciliation projects and projects that would benefit descendants. So those are the steps that have been taken so far by the institutions that I write about in my book.

    Descendants, I think, have different feelings about whether or not this is adequate, whether or not more should be done. Most of the people that I speak to believe that these are good first steps, but that more needs to be done.

    Naranjo: In your reporting process, did you experience any pushback into looking into a history that maybe some would like to have forgotten?

    Swarns: In this instance, I was dealing with institutions that were trying to be transparent and trying to address this history. For both institutions, I would say there are more records that I wish I had that I don’t have. And that’s often what we journalists encounter. And part of the challenge, frankly, beyond institutional willingness or unwillingness, is just the marginalization of enslaved people during our history. Enslaved people were barred by law and practice from learning to read and write. So the records that would give great insight into their lives, letters and journals that historians and writers used to document the lives of other people, say, in the 1800s, are really, really, really, really scarce. And so that’s an enormous challenge for anyone trying to unearth the lives of enslaved people.

    Naranjo: I was reading the book last week, after the Supreme Court struck down race-based affirmative action in college admissions. Years before that, Georgetown had embarked on this process and, as noted in the book, implemented a program for preferential admission for descendants of people enslaved by its Jesuit founders. What responsibilities do you think institutions with similar histories of enslaving people have to descendants?

    Swarns: Universities all across the country are obviously grappling with the implications of the Supreme Court’s affirmative action decision. More than 90 universities have already identified historic ties to slavery and have committed to addressing that history. There’s actually a consortium of universities studying slavery. And what the Supreme Court decision means for them and for their efforts, I think, remains uncertain.

    Georgetown issued a statement last week like many universities did, saying that they remain committed to ensuring diversity on campus and valuing diversity. How this will all play out — I mean, I think we’re all going to have to wait and see. In terms of the responsibilities for universities that have identified their roots in slavery? I’m a journalist, so to me, I think it’s so important to document this history. To search in the archives, to make materials available and easily available to families to identify descendants. And to reach out and to work with descendants. I’m a journalist, I’m not a policymaker, and so there will be others who can hammer out what policies institutions feel are best and what policies that the descendants, if there are any identified, feel would be best. But for me as a journalist and as a professor, I feel the urgency of documenting this history and making sure that it is known. And collaborating with descendant communities, when those communities are identified, in terms of deciding on policies and programs.

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    ( With inputs from : www.politico.com )

  • Minor girl sold for Rs 50,000 in Madhya Pradesh; 4 arrested

    Minor girl sold for Rs 50,000 in Madhya Pradesh; 4 arrested

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    Raisen: Police have arrested three men and a woman for allegedly selling a 17-year-old girl for Rs 50,000 to a person in Madhya Pradesh’s Raisen district, an official said on Sunday.

    The girl, resident of Ghughri police station limits in Mandla district, met two of the accused – Pahalwati Bai and Sunil Kushwaha – while working at a dairy in Jabalpur, Additional Superintendent of Police Amrit Meena said.

    The two accused lured her under the pretext of getting her a better job in Mumbai, he said.

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    Later, the accused reached Patai village in Raisen where they allegedly sold the girl for Rs 50,000 to a person named Vishnu Kushwaha to marry him, the official said.

    In the meantime, the girl’s parents filed a missing complaint with police in Mandla, he said.

    The police arrested the four accused involved in this case of human trafficking on Saturday, the official said.

    Deori police station’s sub-inspector Shraddha Uikey said based on information provided by the Mandla police, the accused were arrested from Patai village. The girl has been handed over to the Mandla police, she said.

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    #Minor #girl #sold #Madhya #Pradesh #arrested

    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • Qatar World Cup final ball could be sold for Rs 2 cr in auction

    Qatar World Cup final ball could be sold for Rs 2 cr in auction

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    Doha: The ball with which the Qatar 2022 World Cup final was played, between Argentina and France, is scheduled to be auctioned off in June.

    It could be expected to be sold at 160,000-200,000 pounds (Rs 1,64,44,736-2,05,56,903).

    The auction will be run by Graham Budd Auctions on June 6 and 7 online at Northampton in England.

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    The match Ball contains written history of the World Cup Finals and more.

    The match ball, named ‘Al Hilm’ (The Dream),  was won by a soccer fan after participating in a ‘Win The Match Ball’ competition conducted by the official soccer provider Soccer and Adidas.

    The winner has now decided to auction off the memorabilia.

    The auction house said, the mysterious owner of the ball did not believe that he had won the competition, and he thought it was a hoax, but later discovered that he owned the ball with which Kylian Mbappe scored three goals in the World Cup final, and the Argentine national team was crowned world champion with it at Lusail Stadium in Qatar.

    In a press release, the head of sporting memorabilia at Graham Budd Auctions, David Convery said,

    “This Adidas football is a fascinating and important piece of recent football history alongside what it did for the reputation of players like Messi and Mbappe.”

    “The ball is fully authenticated, and we can trace every part of its journey to date. That’s one of the reasons why we feel confident it’ll reach, or even go beyond, its estimated price.”

    It is noteworthy that the Argentine national team was crowned the 2022 World Cup champion in the State of Qatar, in December 2022, by defeating the French national team on penalty kicks.

    Qatar hosted the FIFA World Cup between November 20 and December 18, 2022, in the first edition of the tournament to be held in the Middle East.

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    #Qatar #World #Cup #final #ball #sold #auction

    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • Dubai car number plate ‘P7’ sold for record Dh 55 million

    Dubai car number plate ‘P7’ sold for record Dh 55 million

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    Dubai: The vehicle number plate P7 was sold for a record Dh55M at the ‘Most Noble Numbers’ auction in Dubai.

    Starting at a bid of Dh15 million in the action on Saturday night, the bids rose within seconds to over Dh30 million. The bid stagnated for several minutes at Dh35 million which was bid by Pavel Valeryevich Durov, the French-Emirati businessman, the founder and owner of the app Telegram.

    The price rose quickly until it reached the amount of Dh55 million (INR1,226,144,700) by bid panel seven who wished to remain anonymous. The crowd cheered and applauded as each bid was placed.

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    Many other VIP number plates and phone numbers were auctioned at the same time and the auction process raised nearly Dh100 million ($27 million) for a Ramzan food appeal. In total, Dh97,920,000 ($26662313) was raised from the sale of car plates and exclusive mobile phone numbers at the Four Seasons Hotel in Jumeirah.

    The event was organised by Emirates Auction, Dubai’s Roads and Transport Authority, Etisalat and Du.

    ‘P 7’ topped the list after a bidding war between several people who wanted to break the existing record set in 2008, when a businessman paid Dh52.2 million for Abu Dhabi’s number 1 plate.

    All proceeds from the noblest numbers auction will go to the One Billion Meals campaign, which was launched to boost efforts to combat global hunger. The One Billion Meals Endowment was launched by Sheikh Mohammed bin Rashid, Vice President and Ruler of Dubai, in line with the generous spirit of Ramzan.

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    #Dubai #car #number #plate #sold #record #million

    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • Fruits and dates being sold in certain areas during Ramadan

    Fruits and dates being sold in certain areas during Ramadan

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    Fruits and dates being sold in certain areas during Ramadan

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    #Fruits #dates #sold #areas #duringRamadan

    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • 1st-gen iPhone sold for Rs 45 lakh at auction

    1st-gen iPhone sold for Rs 45 lakh at auction

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    San Francisco: A first-generation seal-packed iPhone was sold for $54,904 (around Rs 45 lakh) at auction.

    The device originally cost $599 when it was first introduced in 2007, so this is a surcharge of more than $54,000, reports MacRumors.

    A former Apple employee, who bought the original iPhone when it was released, placed it for sale on RR Auction.

    An “undiscovered” Apple-1 computer was also sold by RR Auction for an undisclosed sum, along with other Apple products and memorabilia that fetched high prices.

    About $4,000 was paid for Apple CEO Tim Cook-signed iPhone 11, $12,500 was spent on Steve Jobs-annotated technical manuals, and a Steve Jobs business card sold for $6,188, the report said.

    Last month, it was reported that a first-generation iPhone had sold for a record-breaking price of $63,356 (approx Rs 52,00,000) at an auction, the highest sale ever recorded for an original 2007 iPhone.

    Meanwhile, in August last year, an unopened first-generation 2007 iPhone in a sealed box had been sold for $35,000 (nearly Rs 28 lakh) in an auction in the US.

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    #1stgen #iPhone #sold #lakh #auction

    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • ‘I sold the concept of ‘Instant Architecture’ to Saudi Arabia and it worked’

    ‘I sold the concept of ‘Instant Architecture’ to Saudi Arabia and it worked’

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    image 39
    By Zahyr Siddiqi

    I allowed myself to be encouraged by my father that the talent I have has no market in India. He was convinced that it is the USA where my talents would bloom. My younger brother was already settled. That is the only open society where you will find good bearing, he had advised. I took off from India with a blind stroke of a straight bat, hoping to continue after one stop in Jeddah, Kingdom of Saudi Arabia, putting my USA dream on hold.

    Being a master’s scholarship student of Urban Planning in the New Delhi’s prestigious ‘School of Planning and Architecture’ SPA with Housing as specialization I was confident of doing something worthwhile. The SPA Director’s vision was to make everyone in the class of 35 the best after two years of the master’s programme completion. Prior to my departure I had my own office with a colleague of SPA and a teaching job in Jawaharlal Technological University in Hyderabad. But I found myself on a blind date.

    Before I proceed, a brief SPA experience would add value to my sojourn.

    In SPA I got embroiled with a senior student from my own state, Andhra Pradesh. After my admission in SPA in an all-India competition, I arrived on time and was ushered into a good room in the SPA hostel on the top floor on a first come first serve basis.

    However, it was not liked by our state’s favored senior student who had come late. He kept harassing me to vacate the room for him. Since I was young and new, I felt restive and wanted to see the Director for my problem. Before I could meet the Director, the registrar briefed him about my case and gave me only 5 to 10 minutes to explain him and move out of his room.

    The Director was very kind and explained to me that since I come from a ‘Hyderabadi type’ of soft background, I need to get adjusted in whatever way I could to continue my studies. He was aware that I was among the top five candidates from all over India. He narrated his experience of London School of RIBA regarding his own roommate who incidentally also was a Hyderabadi but shy and self-composed.

    The major lesson he gave me was to be the best. He made me stand for more than an hour to listen to his doctrine of making the SPA students the best. I returned to my room and moved over to the ground floor.

    After that episode my approach to life became thoroughly professional which helped me to be assertive up-front and result oriented. I was someone that did not look back. I always succeeded.

    My foreign journey predicament

    I landed in the coastal city of Jeddah for Hajj with only 2.5-pound sterling which the travel agent gave me before boarding. He had taken all documents signed in return of my travel documents that included my foreign exchange. I took a taxi to a handwritten address of a relative after cajoling the taxi man for one pound and eating a sandwich for another one. I was left with 50 shillings (5X10) coins, which is still with me among my heritage travel bags.

    The initial first week I fulfilled all the sacred rituals and got dropped in the night near a Hajjis travel lodging. In the scramble of all that I misplaced the location paper of my relative. There was no place to stay. At the same time I had fallen sick. I took refuge in the travel lodge’s basement parking area. I visited the nearby government clinic where I was given a handful of multi-coloured tablets to take with meals. For food, I would walk by any group eating together to be invited. They were nice religious people. They would often ask me to join them for food. After a couple of days, I became weaker but as luck would have it, I manage to locate the residence of my relatives who lived around the corner.

    I was sick for a couple of more days. Still I enquired about the address of the downtown where I had been told that numerous offices are located. Suffering with fever and weakness, I decided to look for the downtown. I took to the street with my meager projects’ portfolios. I had to find a job to survive. I entered a newly built office mall called the “Queen’s Building” and went through the ‘Building Office Inventory’. There were many engineering and construction offices in the list. That gave me hopes of finding some job. My desperation was such that I was ready to take up even the job of a typist if it was available. I entered one office that reflected its cosmopolitan image. There some men and women working together.

    At the reception I enquired about an architect’s job opening. The young woman receptionist looked at me from top (shaven head) to bottom (very lean thin person). Surprisingly, she dared to say that I did not look like an architect. I was flustered. I rebutted in English that ‘I am not here for a beauty contest.’ She was not expecting such an answer from a walk-in job seeker.

    She said sheepishly that the architect-owner of ‘IDEA Center’ would come in a few minutes and that I can be seated. Soon after a young, tall and handsome Saudi gentleman walked in his traditional attire and asked the receptionist in an American accent to clear the entrance as he was expecting an important client soon. He looked at me and asked, ‘Who is this’?

    She told him that I was a job seeker. He advised her to clear the place and make me sit somewhere inside with the staff. I went inside and took an empty seat near the drafting board with a person working on it.

    A picture containing text, outdoor, linedrawing

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    SV Reservation Center, RDQ Sketch Perspective Concept sketch designed on the flight to Saudi Arabia.

    It took a good amount of time. The Saudi gentleman barged in again to ask the person working on the drafting board to hurry up. He made three more visits every time making more noise. I stood up gently to see what exactly that person was doing and read the nicely drawn presentation. While sitting next to the drafting board, I took my pad and started sketching as it was my habit.

    The owner came again and this time he snatched the drawing off the drafting board. For the next few seconds he saw the sketch I had worked on and asked directly, “What is this?’

    I said, “It is my version of the assignment he had given to that gentleman.” He suddenly said it was fantastic and went on to ask me whether I could give him that sketch. I handed him over the sketch.”

    He vanished again inside his office.

    A few minutes later the same receptionist who had doubts about my looks came hurriedly towards me. She had a pad and pencil in hand. She asked for my needs to design the sketch as a project. She also asked in what time I can finish the design.

    With my responses, I found something which I had not expected at all. I was immediately appointed to the job. I was told to start working from the next day. With the speed of turn of events, I was in a shock.

    Was this real or a dream? I asked myself.

    The answer was no it was not. It was the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia running with lightening speed to become one of the most happening countries in the world.

    I also ended up asking myself. Was it the way Saudi Arabia worked? Or was it my sheer luck?

    Perhaps I was at that place at the right time.

    I took it as a great opportunity and called my beginning there as ‘Instant Architecture’. My professional climb thereafter was based on the brand I subconsciously created as ‘Instant Architecture’, like instant tea which was getting marketed at that time. Ready to share and give architectural designs at any given situation. On hearing the requirements in any form my hand will start sketching the design as required.

    SV HQ Bldg Jeddah KSA My Concept hand sketch design – Winning entry SV HQ Model

    I owe appreciation of my work to my father who was the real super-visionary. He understood my potential and advised me to pursue my talents outside of India.

    With a quirk of fate my architectural designs now grace great metropolises of India, the Middle East, Europe, and USA.

    The self-belief helped me to design great architectures by traveling around the world in search of my identity.

    In recent days I have given up active architectural design passion on persuasion of my children who proclaimed, “Enough is enough. You are not getting any younger.” They demanded that I spend more time with them. And that is what I am doing now.

    The article is a biographical narrative of Zahyr Siddiqi, a Hyderabad- born architect and urban planner who made his fortune in the Kingdom Saudi Arabia. He now lives in Chicago, IL, USA.

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    #sold #concept #Instant #Architecture #Saudi #Arabia #worked

    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • Meet IPS Qazi Bisma, Her mother sold jewellery for her studies

    Meet IPS Qazi Bisma, Her mother sold jewellery for her studies

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    Srinagar, Mar,02: IPS Qazi Bisma has written a social media post for her husband Shahzad Alam. She has expressed her love for him.

    She wrote in a birthday post that it was her husband who taught her what true love meant.She also tagged her husband in the tweet.The IAS-IPS couple is very popular on the internet.

    IPS Qazi Bisha is an Indian Police Officer of the 2017 AGMUT cadre. She is currently posted in Delhi’s licensing unit.

    IAS Shahzad Alam is the SDM of Rohini. He became an IAS officer in 2019. He is also from the AGMUT cadre.Qazi Bisma is a native of Jammu and Kashmir’s Rambagh.

    She is an engineer by training. She completed her engineering from Kashmir University in 2014. Qazi Bisma has 28000 followers on Instagram. Shahzad Alam has 12000 followers.

    Bisma comes from a very humble family. Her father runs a shop in Jammu and Kashmir. She was always a great student. She was a gold medallist in her graduation in Kashmir University.

    She believes art is one of the strongest ways to convey thoughts. She loves to paint in her free time.She said her mother sold her jewellery to arrange her children’s fees.

    Sources: DNA

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    #Meet #IPS #Qazi #Bisma #mother #sold #jewellery #studies

    ( With inputs from : roshankashmir.net )

  • Abencia Meza: her ex-partner betrayed her, sold her property and left her bankrupt

    Abencia Meza: her ex-partner betrayed her, sold her property and left her bankrupt

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    Singer Abencia Meza, Incarcerated in the San Monica prison, she witnessed the bankruptcy of her businesses. In addition, her ex-partner Zundy Culquimboz sold one of her properties.

    Abencia Meza he lost almost everything. The folk music singer, who is serving a sentence for the crime against Alicia Delgado, pleads for her release. “D-Day” contacted the interpreter for her to give details of her days in jail and her request for her release. In the communication, it was revealed that she lost her belongings and her business went bankrupt. Zundy Culquimboz, with whom she had a romantic relationship before entering prison, sold her home in La Molina, valued at $420,000.

    However, she downplays these assets and is waiting for Dina Boluarte to give her a pardon. “Sooner or later everything comes to light. The bad is never, ever hidden,” she said. “Painful was her departure, but she always lives with me,” she added.

    #Abencia #Meza #expartner #betrayed #sold #property #left #bankrupt

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    #Abencia #Meza #expartner #betrayed #sold #property #left #bankrupt
    ( With inputs from : pledgetimes.com )

  • Raj Kapoor’s historic bungalow sold, check whopping price

    Raj Kapoor’s historic bungalow sold, check whopping price

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    Mumbai: Veteran Bollywood director and actor Raj Kapoor’s historic bungalow in Chembur which is also known as RK Studios has been acquired by Godrej Properties Ltd from Rs 100 crore. The real estate firm is all set to develop a premium residential project on the site.

    Raj Kapoor died in June 1988, aged 64, in New Delhi. Since then the house was under the observation of the Kapoor family.

    According to the report in IndiaTV news, Randhir Kapoor said, “This residential property in Chembur has been of great emotional and historical significance to our family. We are happy to once again associate with Godrej Properties to take forward this rich legacy for the next phase of development of this location.”

    The Godrej Properties Limited Managing Director and CEO Gaurav Panday said that the company is grateful to the Kapoor family for entrusting them with the task of creating new residential project on the site. He said, ”This project will allow us to further strengthen our presence in Chembur.”

    He said that due to the demand for premium developments for the past few years, the company aims to build an outstanding residential community to celebrate the legacy of the site.

    Raj Kapoor founded the RK Studios on 2.2 acres in Chembur in 1948.

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    #Raj #Kapoors #historic #bungalow #sold #check #whopping #price

    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )