Gursharan Singh wrote over two hundred drama scripts. Many of these were original plays, others were based on short stories, novels and even poems from contemporary writings. In 2010-11, writer and artistic director, Kewal Dhaliwal, published seven volumes of Gursharan Singh’s collected plays and released them in Chandigarh in the presence of Gursharan Singh. We discovered a few more scripts after the publication of these seven volumes. These will be brought out in another volume in the coming year. The seven volumes are being added with much gratitude to Kewal Dhaliwal, who is also a member of the Trust.
Years later, as a junior counsel at the Supreme Court, Rohan found himself arguing a real extradition case. He cited the Arrest Warrant of 11 April 2000 (DRC v. Belgium) by heart. After winning, an old professor asked him, “Where did you learn to argue immunity so well?”
Rohan smiled. “From a ghost PDF and a roommate who believed in sovereign equality.” If you need a legitimate copy of the book, I recommend checking a law library, a legal bookstore, or an authorized e-book platform. I’d be glad to help you summarize its key chapters or explain concepts from public international law instead.
But the library’s only copy had been “missing” since 2019. The photocopy shop near Patel Chest knew the legend—a PDF so elusive it was called the Holy Grail of Law Faculty . Public International Law Book By Sk Kapoor Pdf
The hint: “The principle that no state can be tried without its consent. All caps. No spaces.”
It was password protected.
Rohan’s roommate, a cynical third-year student named Meera, laughed. “You don’t find the Kapoor PDF. It finds you.”
He typed it. The folder opened.
There it was: a scanned, slightly crooked, but perfectly readable PDF of S.K. Kapoor’s Public International Law , complete with handwritten margin notes from some unknown student who had annotated the North Sea Continental Shelf cases with sarcastic jokes.
Years later, as a junior counsel at the Supreme Court, Rohan found himself arguing a real extradition case. He cited the Arrest Warrant of 11 April 2000 (DRC v. Belgium) by heart. After winning, an old professor asked him, “Where did you learn to argue immunity so well?”
Rohan smiled. “From a ghost PDF and a roommate who believed in sovereign equality.” If you need a legitimate copy of the book, I recommend checking a law library, a legal bookstore, or an authorized e-book platform. I’d be glad to help you summarize its key chapters or explain concepts from public international law instead.
But the library’s only copy had been “missing” since 2019. The photocopy shop near Patel Chest knew the legend—a PDF so elusive it was called the Holy Grail of Law Faculty .
The hint: “The principle that no state can be tried without its consent. All caps. No spaces.”
It was password protected.
Rohan’s roommate, a cynical third-year student named Meera, laughed. “You don’t find the Kapoor PDF. It finds you.”
He typed it. The folder opened.
There it was: a scanned, slightly crooked, but perfectly readable PDF of S.K. Kapoor’s Public International Law , complete with handwritten margin notes from some unknown student who had annotated the North Sea Continental Shelf cases with sarcastic jokes.