🐮 Animal Farm — Indianized Story
In a village in rural India, there was a farm called Shantivan Farm, owned by Kishanlal, a careless farmer who often ignored his animals and spent evenings drinking at the tea stall.
One night, the oldest and wisest bull, Baba Nandi, gathered all the animals under the banyan tree.
He spoke about a dream:
“One day, animals of India will run the farm themselves — no exploitation, no hunger, no masters.”
The animals felt inspired. A few days later, Baba Nandi passed away, but his ideas awakened a fire.
🇮🇳 The Rebellion
Led by two clever pigs, Sundar (Snowball) and Naresh (Napoleon), the animals chased Kishanlal out of the farm during a stormy night.
They renamed the place:
“Jeevan Kranti Farm.”
They wrote Seven Rules of Equality on the farm wall, the most important being:
“Sab prani barabar hain.” (All animals are equal)
🐷 Sundar vs Naresh
Sundar wanted progress — he proposed building a windmill to generate electricity, so animals wouldn’t have to pull water from the well manually.
But Naresh wanted power.
One day, he secretly brought in four desi dogs he trained to obey only him.
He used them to chase Sundar out of the farm and took complete control.
From then on:
Naresh became “Netaji Naresh.”
💼 Life Under Naresh
Slowly, the pigs behaved like Indian politicians:
They moved into Kishanlal’s kachha farmhouse
Ate the freshest vegetables
Began drinking country liquor
Took all decisions without asking the others
They started twisting the farm rules.
Whenever other animals complained, Naresh’s spokesperson, a pig named Tota Ram, used fancy Hindi-English to confuse everyone.
The rules kept changing.
Finally, the main rule on the wall said:
“Sab prani barabar hain, par kuch prani zyada barabar hain.”
(All animals are equal, but some are more equal than others.)
⚒️ The Hardworker
Among all animals, a hardworking ox named Bheem (Boxer) believed everything Netaji Naresh said. His mottos were:
“Aur mehnat karo!”
“Netaji hamesha sahi hain!”
When Bheem became old and injured after building the windmill, Naresh secretly sold him to a tannery in the nearby town in exchange for cash.
But the pigs told everyone he was taken to a “special animal hospital.”
🌪️ The Windmill Trouble
The animals worked hard to make the windmill, which was important for pumping water and grinding grain. It collapsed twice:
Once in a storm
Once during an attack by nearby villagers
Both times, Naresh blamed Sundar to maintain fear and control.
🐖 The Final Twist
Years passed, and the pigs began walking on two legs, wearing kurta-pajama, and carrying lathis like village leaders.
They invited human farmers for a card game and feast.
When the other animals peeked through the window, they were shocked:
They couldn’t tell who was the pig and who was the human politician.
The animals realized they had replaced one corrupt master with another.
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