{"id":71449,"date":"2026-02-10T21:25:17","date_gmt":"2026-02-11T02:25:17","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/apnaorg.com\/wp\/articles\/delhi-odelhi-memories-of-fifties\/"},"modified":"2026-02-28T17:21:47","modified_gmt":"2026-02-28T22:21:47","slug":"delhi-odelhi-memories-of-fifties","status":"publish","type":"articles","link":"https:\/\/apnaorg.com\/wp\/articles\/delhi-odelhi-memories-of-fifties\/","title":{"rendered":"DELHI-\u2018O\u2019DELHI &#8211; MEMORIES OF FIFTIES"},"content":{"rendered":"<p align=\"left\"><strong><em><SPAN lang=\"RU\">What       Took Me Back To My College Days<\/SPAN><\/em><SPAN lang=\"RU\">?<\/SPAN><\/strong><\/p>\n<p align=\"left\"><SPAN lang=\"RU\">It was an invitation for       dinner at the Delhi &ldquo;o&rdquo; Delhi_, restaurant in the Habitat Centre, by       some very old friends from college days, whom I bumped into after 50 years       while roaming in the inner circle of Connaught Place where, once upon a       time, we used to stroll around after spending hours in the India Coffee       House discussing everything under the sun. And what flashed forwarded the       memories of Delhi and India Coffee House in the fifties, was the crowd and       the house-crooner in this restaurant. Since I had left Delhi in1958 , and       had recently relocated myself here(actually in Gurgaon) after 50 years,       this was my first glimpse of people, many familiar faces from those days       ,and the sugary crooner, crooning away old melodies requested by the       seemingly regular dinners ..<\/SPAN><\/p>\n<p align=\"left\"><SPAN lang=\"RU\">It was the next request, a       gazal, asked by some lady that transported me back to Delhi of fifties and       the people, known and unknown, most of them, perhaps still around. When       the crooner started singing the requested gazal, I think quite a few of       the dinners were taken back to old times, like me, because it used to be       the Fifties most popular gazal:-<\/SPAN><\/p>\n<p align=\"left\"><SPAN lang=\"RU\">&#8211; &ldquo;ISQUE KI NAI MANZAL KO       CHALLA DAAL KAY BAHAIN BAHAINON MEIN&ndash;AY DIL TORNE WALLE DEKH ZARA HUM       BHI TO PADEY HAIN RAHON MEIN&rdquo; It was by the Pakistani poet, Kateel       Shafai, and sung by the famous Pakistani singer Iqbal Bano.<\/SPAN><\/p>\n<p align=\"left\"><SPAN lang=\"RU\"><em><strong>United Milk Bar &amp; the Juke       -Box<\/strong><\/em><\/SPAN><\/p>\n<p align=\"left\"><SPAN lang=\"RU\">        In those days the only place that had a Juke-Box in Delhi was a milk bar       called United Milk Bar, located right under the then Hindustan Times       Office\/Press opposite the Scindia House , which is now a liquor bar &amp;       a restaurant. Actually, it was in this milk bar that I expressed my love       and proposed to a contemporary of mine who was doing her Masters in       Philosophy, while I was studying for Masters in English. Our affair was       known to most of our friends at the coffee house.<\/SPAN><\/p>\n<p align=\"left\"><SPAN lang=\"RU\">To play the juke-box, you       had to insert a four Anna coin (price of coke and cup of coffee at that       time).Iqbal Banos gazal was the most popular out of the 75 song options.       We spent lot of four annas there every day, out of our limited student       budget .This milk bar, a nice decent place, was used either to meet ones       girl friends or listen to the music. The main haunt, however, was       of-course India Coffee House. And for us students, coffee house at the       University was also the meeting place after classes. Every one had a great       sense of belonging to the India Coffee House in fifties. (Check with the       people mentioned in here!)<\/SPAN><\/p>\n<p align=\"left\"><SPAN lang=\"RU\">Curtain Raiser to Jan Path       Coffee House<\/SPAN><\/p>\n<p align=\"left\"><SPAN lang=\"RU\">Let me raise the curtain on       the India Coffee House at the Jan Path and introduce some of the people       who were the regulars and occupied their customary chairs on the appointed       hour with the punctuality of clocks at 10 30 in the morning&mdash;in summer       and winter. There were others, working in government offices, who came       earlier and left by 9.30, after having their Pan and cigarette.<\/SPAN><\/p>\n<p align=\"left\"><SPAN lang=\"RU\">PLACE: &#8211; THE INDIA COFFEE       HOUSE, JANPATH, DELHI<\/SPAN><\/p>\n<p align=\"left\"><SPAN lang=\"RU\">YEAR: &#8211; COULD BE 1953 or       1955 or 1957&mdash;or even early fifties.<\/SPAN><\/p>\n<p align=\"left\"><SPAN lang=\"RU\">SEASON &ldquo;-WINTER or       SUMMER-IN FACT ALL YEAR ROUND<\/SPAN><\/p>\n<p align=\"left\"><SPAN lang=\"RU\">TIME: &#8211; ALWAYS MORNING at       10.30<\/SPAN><\/p>\n<p align=\"left\"><SPAN lang=\"RU\">Now imagine you are with me       back in fifties and we are going to the coffee house. We go past the two       old Panwalla Punditjis, sitting on their chowkis either side of the       entrance, with shining copper thaals full of pans and all the colourful       ingredients, already serving their regular customers. There is another       cluster of people outside, buying cigarettes at the shop under the       staircase, on the right side of the door, and discussing politics while       going to pick up their cycles and away to work. (Popular mode of travel       for office workers and students) As you push open the double door and       enter, you see the place is already full, and sounds quite noisy,       cacophony of chatter, as everyone is talking at the same time. The inside       hall is large and long and goes right up to the kitchen enterance,from       where a spiral staircase takes you to the balcony, which is rarely used by       the regulars..<\/SPAN><\/p>\n<p align=\"left\"><SPAN lang=\"RU\">The centre of the hall has       a long row of tables with chairs around it, depending upon the number of       people in each group occupying the table. Left side of the hall is lined       up with small cabins, for the families, with curtains drawn. And, along       the right side of the wall, there is row of sofas with low long tables for       large groups. The sofa seat in the centre of this row is of horse &ndash;shoe       shape and meant for a larger group.<\/SPAN><\/p>\n<p align=\"left\"><em><SPAN lang=\"RU\"><strong>GIRILAL       JAIN GROUP<\/strong><\/SPAN><\/em><\/p>\n<p align=\"left\"><SPAN lang=\"RU\">In fact, this horse -shoe       shape sofa seat, unofficially was always left for a regular group, already       sitting there. The head of the group, sitting in the centre, is nobody       else but GIRILAL JAIN, then the chief reporter of Times of India; and he       has about ten youngsters listening to his discourse in rapt silent, over       cups of hot coffee. Later on, one saw a new member, a young lady who came       into this group &#8211; Kamala Mankekar, wife of the then editor of Times of       India Delhi, who had also joined the staff of Times of India. Girilal Jain,       later on, became the London Correspondent and then held the post of the       Editor, during Indra Gandhi&rsquo;s primeministership. I also happened to be       in London at the same times as Girilal was, in early sixties, and I used       to go to Times of India&rsquo;s office, as my place of work was quite close       by, at lunch break to read the Indian paper and sometime chat with him and       have tea together. I left London in December1964 (after 5 years) and       landed back in Bombay, and worked there for almost 35 years before       relocating to Gurgaon, and this visit to the Habitat Centre for dinner.<\/SPAN><\/p>\n<p align=\"left\"><SPAN lang=\"RU\">. Surprisingly, in 1971,       almost after 16 years, Kamala Mankekar joined as the PR head in the same       organisation in Bombay where I worked, and became a good friend ..<\/SPAN><\/p>\n<p align=\"left\"><em><SPAN lang=\"RU\"><strong>I.K.GUJRAL       GROUP:-<\/strong><\/SPAN><\/em><\/p>\n<p align=\"left\"><SPAN lang=\"RU\">The very first table in the       centre row, as you entered the coffee house, was always occupied by a       group, which included Inder Kumar Gujral (IKGujral), popularly called       Inder; Surinder Nihal Singh of Statesman, more an Englishman than an       Indian, with as tall a foreign wife; Inder Malhotra of Times of India,,       expert on Pakistan affairs; Rakshat Puri; Ajit Bhattacharjee-two most       sober people in this group, and Uma Vasudeva (known, among us DU students       as &ldquo;303&rdquo;!.) They were always in serious political discussions, Inder       Malhotra being the most animated and loudest. I never found out who paid       for the coffee, perhaps they were always going Dutch. Both Nihal Singh and       Inder Gujral (I don&rsquo;t remember if he had a goatee at that time, after       the visit of Bulganan), would move into the individual family cabins once       their wives arrived.Inder Gujral, later on joined the kitchen cabinet of       Indra Gandhi, and not only managed to retain his chair in the reshuffle,       but went on to become the Prime Minister of India! He stopped coming to       the coffee house once he joined Indras cabinet.Nihal Singh, Ajit       Bhattacharjee and Inder Malhotra,I believe, are still there and       contributing to various newspapers . I am not sure about Rakshat Puri,       whose younger brother, Rajinder Puri, writes a &ldquo;Bulls Eye&rdquo; column in       the Outlook. Rajinder Puri was occasionally part of our table of students       and was trying to become a cartoonist at that time.<\/SPAN><\/p>\n<p align=\"left\"><em><SPAN lang=\"RU\"><strong>SATINDER       SINGH GROUP<\/strong><\/SPAN><\/em><\/p>\n<p align=\"left\"><SPAN lang=\"RU\">Satinder Singh, (God rest       his soul-he died pretty young) was an expert on Akali and Communist       politics, a very well read man and a ferocious reader. He had a small       blond beard, more like stubble, quite tall with the loudest laugh in the       coffee house, high pitch voice and a great argumentative Indian. Beside       few other young journalist from the Indian Express and HT, there were few       others from the vernacular press, including a short gentleman-slightly       hunch-back, and Krishan Malik, who was the Airport correspondent of Times       of India and later became the London correspondent and never came back .As       students, we never got invited to the lavish parties thrown by the       American and Russian embassies in those days, but we always tagged along       with Krishan Malik, bachelor at that time and not attached with anybody       then.. He knew quite a few diplomats as he covered the Airport as a Times       reporter, and we gate crashed with him for free vodkas and whiskies.Malik       was a happy-go-lucky jovial friendly chap. He is often on BBC television       programmes where is invited as an expert on Indian affairs. He had a nice       pad on the top floor of the coffee house building those days which he       shared with a diplomat from a South American embassy.<\/SPAN><\/p>\n<p align=\"left\"><SPAN lang=\"RU\">Satinder, later on got       hooked to a young charming girl, who used to visit coffee house with her       family and eventually, after long romance, got married.<\/SPAN><\/p>\n<p align=\"left\"><SPAN lang=\"RU\">.Satinder Singh, bachelor       at that time, used to live in West Nizzamudin, while I was living in .the       East part staying with my family, and I often went to his place for a       drink&mdash;the deal was that I would bring the sodas, and. he would provide       the whisky. Our evening meetings stopped after he got married, and I moved       onto Bombay. I believe Khushwant Singh knew Satinder quite well, even       though he never visited the coffee house. There were three other fans of       SatinderSingh, in the coffee house, which need mention here. One was        &ldquo;Professor&rdquo; Joginder Singh, who used to teach in private colleges       (which were quite popular at that time with the refugee students).He       always used to carry orange peels in his pockets and use them as face       fresheners during summer. His younger brother, Hardev Singh, who was an       economist, used to work for a political weekly published in Delhi.? And       the third gentleman was known as &ldquo;Judge Singh&rdquo;, a popular character,       tall and handsome who would also show up sometime in the University coffee       house also.(nobody knew what exactly he did) All three of them great       characters, known to almost everybody in the coffee house.<\/SPAN><\/p>\n<p align=\"left\"><SPAN lang=\"RU\">I must point out here that       these groups were not known as &ldquo;Girilal,&rdquo; &ldquo;Inder Gujral&rdquo; or        &ldquo;Satinder Singh&rdquo; group, but these names are given for easy recognition       as they were well-known people at that time.<\/SPAN><\/p>\n<p align=\"left\"><em><SPAN lang=\"RU\"><strong>CABIN       USERS- Bartholomews, Vatsyayan, Satish Gujral &amp; others<\/strong><\/SPAN><\/em><\/p>\n<p align=\"left\"><SPAN lang=\"RU\">Before I take you to other       table mates, let me give you a peep to these well known regulars, who       preferred to sit inside the family cabins. There was Kapila Vatsyayan, now       of Centre for Science and Environment, with her husband. Other cabin users       were Richard Bartholomew, critic of modern Indian art, and his wife Rati,       both working in Modern School at that time, and often joined by Balwant       Gargi, the Punjabi playwright. Pablo Bartholomew, a well &ndash;known       photographer, comes from the same clan.. Satish Gujral, with other family       members, always sat in a cabin, even though his brother Inder Gujral would       be outside with his friends<\/SPAN><\/p>\n<p align=\"left\"><SPAN lang=\"RU\"><strong>OUR MIXED GROUP<\/strong><\/SPAN><\/p>\n<p align=\"left\"><SPAN lang=\"RU\">Our table, almost at the       end the row, near the kitchen door, always had about eight to ten friends,       mostly students of M.A. from different colleges&mdash;Delhi, Kirorimal and       Hindu.( Few friends on our table were not student but used to work in       different offices&mdash;these generous earning members were normally made to       pay for coffee, as they always had money.) Roshan Taneja, from Commerce       College, Darya Ganj who later on went off to New York to learn Acting. He       worked on Broadway in the West-Side story with Marlon Brando.After coming       back to India he joined the Film Institute at Pune as the head of Acting       Department and had the distinction of training Amitabh Bachchan, Jaya       Bahduri, Shatrugun Sinha, Asrani and many more. Eventually he started his       own&rdquo;Roshan Taneja School of Acting&rdquo; in Mumbai.O.P.Kohli, short &amp;       plump and jovial chap. was involved with theatre production in Delhi while       working in some government office.<\/SPAN><\/p>\n<p align=\"left\"><SPAN lang=\"RU\">He would always force you       to have coffee with him before he left for office .People considered him a       buffoon but was a very friendly soul. Ved Prakash was a Hindi teacher in       the Modern School at the same time as Richard Bartholomew, and a lover of       Hindi poetry. Then we had Shoon Sexena and Shyam Sexena .Shyam was known       as the copy of Deva Nand with the similar hair style and shirt-collars       always up.( fashion in those days-a- la Devanand) The topics of discussion       on this table used to be poets and poetry-both Urdu &amp;       English.Madhubala &amp; Madhushala of Bachchan,for us, used to be like a       commercial break in between Jigar and Josh.<\/SPAN><\/p>\n<p align=\"left\"><SPAN lang=\"RU\">I must mention two of my       seniors who were in Kirorimal College. They both were in MA.Eng. Final       year while I was in the (previous)&mdash;one year junior. All of us were very       close friends, and liked by our Principal-Dr.Swarup Singh.Harish Malik was       a brilliant student while Bhutani (I think the first name was Satish-but       can&rsquo;t recall) was an o.k. student and he passed his Master degree by       just one mark! While Harish got through with distinction and he joined the       college as a lecturer, though he was bent upon joining IAS, like everyone       else. Even after three tries Harish couldn&rsquo;t make it, whereas Bhutani       got through the exam in the very first try and went for Foreign Services.       Harish Malik eventually joined Air India and became a Director on the       Board, but had to quit I believe, because he couldn&rsquo;t get-along with       Rajiv Gandhi.<\/SPAN><\/p>\n<p align=\"left\"><SPAN lang=\"RU\"><strong>OTHER TABLES<\/strong><\/SPAN><\/p>\n<p align=\"left\"><SPAN lang=\"RU\">There were number of other       tables occupied quite a few notable people from various walks of life like       travel agencies,hotels,All India Radio artists, Urdu writers and Hindi       poets. But we had no interaction with them.<\/SPAN><\/p>\n<p align=\"left\"><SPAN lang=\"RU\">Lets now move on to       University coffee house.<\/SPAN><\/p>\n<p align=\"left\"><em><SPAN lang=\"RU\"><strong>INDIA       COFFEE HOUSE AT THE UNIVERSITY<\/strong><\/SPAN><\/em><\/p>\n<p align=\"left\"><SPAN lang=\"RU\">Jan Path coffee house had<\/SPAN> <SPAN lang=\"RU\">a sibling establishment,       under the same name &amp; management, and as much popular, at the campus       at Delhi University, where we students, discussed Keats. Byron, Milton       along with Waris Shah and Ghalib, after our classes. Most of us ,from       different colleges, were studying literature, philosophy, law economics       and personnel management under renown professors like VKRVRAO(popularly       known as ABC RAO) Dr Swarup Singh, who went on to become V-C of Delhi       University and later a State Governor ,Prof.Bhalla of St.Stephephns and       Saniyal.Another popular professor, among his students used to be Frank       Thakur Das. In our literature class there were three girls and one of them       was Madhur Mathur, who became Madhur Jaffrey&mdash;the famous Indian cookery       queen of New York.<\/SPAN><\/p>\n<p align=\"left\"><SPAN lang=\"RU\">The three students who       never entered the University coffee house, were- the Singh brothers- sons       of Sardar Baldev Singh, India&rsquo;s first Defense Minister; they ,students       of law, always stood outside the Law Faculty&mdash;mid-between the Miranda       House &amp; the Coffee House- leaning against their open limousines       ,chatting with friends. For most of us students, the best mode of travel       used to be the University special&mdash;a low-long trailer bus-which used to       move thro whole of Delhi<\/SPAN><\/p>\n<p align=\"left\"><SPAN lang=\"RU\">Picking up &amp; dropping       regular students, some of them never paid the fare!<\/SPAN><\/p>\n<p align=\"left\"><SPAN lang=\"RU\">This coffee house was       quaint, little place, with lot of open spaces to sit outside. Both the       coffee houses, besides serving excellent Indian coffee, were known for       their very friendly and courteous nature&mdash;they knew the regulars by their       names, and the regulars also called the waiters by their first names-        never as &ldquo;waiter&rdquo;. University coffee house produced quite a few IAS       &amp; IFS officers, like the Jan Path coffee house produced well-known       journalist &amp; politicians. Of-course there was third-raters (like us)       also&mdash;but all doing well in life (hopefully).<\/SPAN><\/p>\n<p align=\"left\"><em><SPAN lang=\"RU\"><strong>FAMOUS       CULTURAL ACTIVITIES OF DELHI IN FIFTIES<\/strong><\/SPAN><\/em><\/p>\n<p align=\"left\"><SPAN lang=\"RU\">I don&rsquo;t know about       today&rsquo;s Delhiwallas, but all of us, the whole crowd of people of coffee       houses&mdash;Jan Path and the University-used to be pretty -high on Indian       culture (Nehru&rsquo;s influence?).There was something in the wind that made       each member of these coffee-houses to look-forward to three of the most       famous cultural programmes in Delhi.<\/SPAN><\/p>\n<p align=\"left\"><SPAN lang=\"RU\"><strong>1. MUSHAIRA at       CHELMSFORD CLUB.<\/strong><\/SPAN><\/p>\n<p align=\"left\"><SPAN lang=\"RU\">This annual function,       Mushaira, used to be held in the memory of Sir.Shanker Lal at the       Chelmsford Club. And it always was a Three-night function, and the        &ldquo;mehfil&rdquo; used to start at about 9pm and go on till the early hours of       the morning. The function, every year, was presided over by one Kunwar       Mohinder Singh Bedi, who I believe was a government functionary, and a       poet of repute. Some of the great poets who used to participate were:-        Josh Malliahabadi,Jigger Muradabadi,Firaque Gorakhpuri,Sagar Nizami,Jagan       Nath Azad, Ali Sardar Jaffery,and others. Sometime Pakistani poets like       Ahmed Nedeem Kasami and Kateel Shafai also used to participate. Josh Sahib       was Nehru&rsquo;s personal friend, but that didn&rsquo;t stop Josh going away to       Pakistan (I believe he regretted the decision later on, but he didn&rsquo;t       return to India although Pt.Nehru offered him his job as an Editor of &ldquo;AAJKAL&rdquo;.<\/SPAN><\/p>\n<p align=\"left\"><SPAN lang=\"RU\">Not only the whole of       coffee house people but other Delhiwallahas were always there-all the       three nights; and nobody would leave the mehfil till the early morning.       The open &ndash;air place used to packed, with quite a few drunks around,       beside the poets&mdash;especially Jigger and Firaque, both in sherwanis.<\/SPAN><\/p>\n<p align=\"left\"><SPAN lang=\"RU\"><strong>2.       CLASSICAL MUSIC NIGHTS at CONSTITUTION CLUB<\/strong><\/SPAN><\/p>\n<p align=\"left\"><SPAN lang=\"RU\">The second great annual       event used to be classical music function at the old Constitution Club.       This was also a three-night event, and always had packed house every       night. Here again, the mehfil never finished before the dawn of the next       day. One had the life-time opportunity to listen to India&rsquo;s great       masters, Omkarnath Thakur, Bade Ghulam Ali Khan , Gangubai Hangal, Girja       Devi, Ustad Vilayat Khan Ustad Ali Akbar Khan, Ravi Shanker.Ahmed Jan       Trikhwa Ustad Bundu Khan the Sarangi player and others. The Pakistani       singer like Mallika Pukraj singing Haffeez Jullandaris famous &ldquo;Abhi to       main Jawan Hun&rdquo; gazal,<\/SPAN><\/p>\n<p align=\"left\"><SPAN lang=\"RU\">. The programme always       started with the Shahnai of Ustad Bismilla Khan. The topic of discussion       the next day at coffee house was of-course the previous nights show.<\/SPAN><\/p>\n<p align=\"left\"><SPAN lang=\"RU\"><strong>3. PHOOL WALLON KI SAIR<\/strong><\/SPAN><\/p>\n<p align=\"left\"><SPAN lang=\"RU\">The third annual event was       the famous &ldquo;phool wallon ki sair&rdquo; at the Mehrauli village.Mehrauli, at       that time was really a village&mdash;and far far away from Delhi. The event       used to have Nehru&rsquo;s blessings in those days, and attracted Qwals from       all over India. Although, now-a-days one passes Mehrauli everyday, living       in Gurgaon, I haven&rsquo;t attended this event in recent years. Incidentally       Qutab and Hauz Khas, in those days were the places for picnics and young       friends to meet. One had to go there either by Tongas or cycles, passing       thro all the villages. The tomb and the huge green at Hauz Khas, in those       days, were like peaceful heavens for young couples. These places seemed       miles &amp; miles away from Delhi.(What a change in 50 years.)<\/SPAN><\/p>\n<p align=\"left\"><SPAN lang=\"RU\"><strong>THE END OF THE ICONIC       PLACE.<\/strong><\/SPAN><\/p>\n<p align=\"left\"><SPAN lang=\"RU\">I left Delhi, my home town       after partition, in1958 for Bombay to find a job before getting married to       my college friend after marriage; we left Bombay shortly after to go off       to London, which has other experiences , memories., and another part of       life travel. Now retired and settled here, one misses the institution like       the old India Coffee House, where one could get lost in the cacophony of       chatter of cultured intellectual people and friends.<\/SPAN><\/p>\n<p align=\"left\"><SPAN lang=\"RU\">I pity the people of       Banglore, where the same institution, India Coffee House has pulled down       shutters recently.<\/SPAN><\/p>\n<p align=\"left\"><SPAN lang=\"RU\">. I can understand their       loss, which we went through long time ago.<\/SPAN><\/p>\n<p align=\"left\"><SPAN lang=\"RU\">&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;-<\/SPAN><\/p>\n<p align=\"left\"><SPAN lang=\"RU\">THE WRITER:-JATINDER       SETHI.68, Sector 15-Part-1, Gurgaon, 122001.<\/SPAN><\/p>\n<div align=\"left\"><U><SPAN lang=\"RU\">Emai..jnsethi@hotmail<\/SPAN><\/U><SPAN lang=\"RU\">.<\/SPAN><\/p>\n","protected":false},"featured_media":71450,"template":"","language":[],"class_list":["post-71449","articles","type-articles","status-publish","has-post-thumbnail","hentry"],"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/apnaorg.com\/wp\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/articles\/71449","targetHints":{"allow":["GET"]}}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/apnaorg.com\/wp\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/articles"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/apnaorg.com\/wp\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/types\/articles"}],"wp:featuredmedia":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/apnaorg.com\/wp\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media\/71450"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/apnaorg.com\/wp\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media?parent=71449"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"language","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/apnaorg.com\/wp\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/language?post=71449"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}