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June 20, 2026
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From Silence to Rain-Washed Grace: A Sacred Pilgrimage
June 11, 2026June 11, 2026TRAVELOGUEBy Pradeep Krishnan4 0

From Silence to Rain-Washed Grace: A Sacred Pilgrimage

This travelogue by Pradeep Krishnan traces a deeply spiritual pilgrimage through the sacred landscapes of northern Karnataka and Maharashtra, where temples, ashrams, and saintly traditions transform travel into an inward journey. From the serene ashrams of Vijayapura and the powerful presence of Akkalkot Maharaj to the rain-soaked grace of Siddharoodha Swami Math, the author reflects on moments of devotion, silence, and unexpected blessings. Rich with encounters that reveal Bharat’s living spiritual heritage, the journey becomes a meditation on faith, continuity, and the enduring power of dharma.

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Dhurandhar IS Propaganda: Counterpropaganda
June 06, 2026June 6, 2026PERSPECTIVEBy Sriram Chellapilla4 0

Dhurandhar IS Propaganda: Counterpropaganda

Is Dhurandhar propaganda - or a challenge to Bollywood's dominant ideological narrative? Sriram Chellapilla argues that the film breaks from decades of cinematic conventions that framed Pakistan, nationalism, and secularism through a particular political lens. In doing so, it exposes Bollywood's own embedded propaganda structures and gives expression to viewpoints long excluded from mainstream storytelling. The essay presents Dhurandhar not as propaganda, but as powerful counterpropaganda against an entrenched ideological and political narrative.

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Secularism Was Never Ours: The Wrong Word for the Wrong Country
June 01, 2026June 1, 2026PERSPECTIVEBy Kshiteesh Sharma3 0

Secularism Was Never Ours: The Wrong Word for the Wrong Country

What does “secularism” really mean, and does the concept fit India’s civilizational experience? In this essay, Kshiteesh Sharma traces the origins of secularism to specific Christian conflicts in Europe and argues that the term was later transplanted into India without regard for its distinct dharmic traditions. Examining the history of the 42nd Amendment, temple administration, and differing state approaches to religious communities, the article questions whether India’s current model is truly neutral or a legacy of colonial categories. Ultimately, it calls for a re-examination of governance through indigenous concepts such as Dharma and Rajadharma rather than imported frameworks.

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Desire, Hierarchy, and Dehumanization: A Critique of Anti-Caste Imagination
May 27, 2026May 27, 2026PERSPECTIVEBy Aryan Anand3 0

Desire, Hierarchy, and Dehumanization: A Critique of Anti-Caste Imagination

This essay examines the deeper assumptions behind a provocative anti-caste claim that caste will end only when oppressed communities can marry Brahmin women. Drawing on Frantz Fanon’s analysis of colonial psychology, it argues that such rhetoric often preserves the very hierarchy it seeks to destroy. The article also critiques the reduction of caste to endogamy, exposing conceptual contradictions in modern anti-caste discourse. Finally, it warns against the dehumanization hidden within symbolic “conquest” narratives, where individuals are reduced to tokens in ideological struggles. Ultimately, the essay calls for a more rigorous understanding of caste, equality, and human dignity beyond the language of resentment and inversion.

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It’s the Community, Stupid! Remembering the Lost Art of Celebrating Together
April 27, 2026April 27, 2026TRADITIONBy Charu Uppal5 0

It’s the Community, Stupid! Remembering the Lost Art of Celebrating Together

Once, Navratri Kanjak was more than a ritual—it was a living expression of trust, where every home in the neighborhood welcomed children like family. Today, rising walls and shrinking connections have turned a shared celebration into a hollow formality. This article reflects on how rituals once built community and belonging, and how their spirit fades when relationships disappear. It is both a memory of what was and a call to rebuild neighborhood bonds with intention.

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Daily Feed

In ESSAY

Advancements from the Ancient Vedic Culture – Part 2

In this second part of a series on Ancient India, we delve further into the achievements from that golden period

In COMMENTARY

Beef against beef

The discourse on the issue of beef ban in various states of India and the ensuing political war is strangely negligent of the ethos behind the enactment of these laws.

In COMMENTARY

The Good thief/Bad thief dissonance of Shashi Tharoor

The strange rationalisation by Shashi Tharoor of defending Islamic colonialism while criticising British colonialism is an exercise in fallacy.

In COMMENTARY, Rebuttal

Muhammad Ghori – No More Than Yet Another Barbaric Invader

Ila Krishna counters the arguments presented by Anirudh Kanisetti in his latest article and explores the truth about his claims of Ghori's leniency towards Hindus in general and Prithiviraja Chauhan's kin in particular, and his propagation of Sanskrit and coins with inscriptions of Goddess Lakshmi in Bharata.

In ESSAY

Accession Of Jodhpur To Union Of India – Facts Vs Myths

This is a very popular belief that Jodhpur wanted to accede to Pakistan, but with the efforts of V.P. Menon, Sardar Patel, and Mountbatten, it didn’t happen. In this essay, the author examines and disproves the various misconceptions about Jodhpur’s accession to the Union of India.

In EXCERPT

The Vedic metaphor of Indra’s Net

The metaphor of Indra's net, with its poetic description of the indivisibility of the universe, captures the essence of Hinduism's vibrant and open spirit.

In BOOK REVIEW

‘The Imperishable Seed’ By Bhaskar Kamble – A Summary Review

Dr. Pingali Gopal reviews 'The Imperishable Seed' By Bhaskar Kamble, a theoretical physicist from IIT Kanpur and presently a data scientist in Germany.
The linear progression of history from a primitive past to an advanced future, deeply entrenched in western philosophy, embeds itself in Indians even today as a classic case of ‘colonial consciousness’. Bhaskar has done a brilliant job of describing the history of mathematics, a much ignored subject in our educational systems,  and tracing the roots of many subjects to the genius mathematicians of ancient and mediaeval India.

In EXCERPT

Lord Risley and 'Race Science'

Lord Risley's application of the principles of 'Race Science' to his study and classification of Indian society was as absurd as it was consequential.

In COMMENTARY

The Gita and Integral Yoga

The timeless philosophy of the Gita and the oneness with the divine through Yoga, will lead us into the next phase of human evolution.

In COMMENTARY

Perversion of India’s political parlance – Part 1

Since its introduction in India, Leftist language has clearly dominated the discourse and performed the task of othering remarkably.

In ESSAY

Ajanta and Ellora – Temples as Theme Parks of Learning

Architectural wonders' significance should not be lost when compared with structures whose benefit is seemingly much more palpable.

In Temple, HISTORY

Unseen Temples of India – Legacy and Narrative – Part 2

Building a separate structure to house murtis, carriers of divinity, for personal and public worship of deities is an old tradition prevalent in India.
Manisha Chitale takes us through the history and evolution of temple architecture in the country and how temples have shaped the Sanatana dharmik civilisation.

Daily Feed

In BOOK REVIEW

Hindu Love Stories by Aditi Banerjee – A Review

In this review of "Hindu Love Stories" by Aditi Banerjee, we learn about the author's motivation behind writing the book; and her treatment of her characters. She brings forth the popular tales, as well as some lesser known ones; and shows us that some of the lore known to us as tales of duty and surrender can also be viewed from the Hindu view of love, which is very different from the single-hued romantic love marketed by the West.

In COMMENTARY

Buddhism versus Hinduism: Encounters of the imagined kind(Part II)

The attempt by Western scholarship to disassociate Buddhism from the Indic fold as a separate religion is a true reflection of the 'othering' that they practice in their own religions.

In TEMPLE TRAIL

Somnathpura Symphony

Exploring the unique beauty of an architectural wonder built by the Hoysalas, which was destroyed by Malik Kafoor's army in medieval times.

In BOOK REVIEW

The European view of the Indo-European Homeland

Two decades after initially releasing his book, the author still holds the same biases regarding AIT without having come to terms with recent developments.

In COMMENTARY, ESSAY

Śaṅkara Charitam – A Re-telling – Chapter – 01

Shri Ramesh Venkatraman delves into detail about the life and the times of Jagadguru Shri Adi Śaṅkaracharya, and his impact on Sanātana Dharma, on the basis of his study of two authoritative texts on Śaṅkara: The Mādhaviya-Śaṅkara-Digvijayam of Jagadaguru Śri Vidyaranya Mahaswami, 12th ācārya of Dakshinamnaya Sringeri Sharada Peetam; and Śaṅkara Charitam, a collection of talks given by the Paramācārya of Kānchi, Jagadaguru Śri Chandrashekarendra Saraswati, the 68th Jagadguru of the Kānchi Kāmakoti Peetha.
In the first chapter of the series of essays that will be published every Thursday (Guruvāsaram), we learn about the circumstances that necessitated the emergence of an avatāra-puruṣa in Kaliyugā.

In ESSAY

Morality in Language and Dharma

Notions of morality communicated through stories is a much more effective way of embedding values in a society as opposed to codifying them as commandments or laws.

In ESSAY

On the existence of the Self: Part 2

The prior existence of consciousness is necessary for the universe to make its presence known to us.

In COMMENTARY

Communal Echoes in ‘Secular’ Discourse : Tropes and Themes in Naseeruddin Shah’s ‘Secular’ Rants

In the next essay of the series of articles on minority-progressive celebrities, Sriram Chellapilla dissects Naseeruddin Shah’s polemics to expose a familiar pattern in India’s “secular” discourse: the distortion of arguments, selective outrage, and the reflexive defense of Mughal icons like Aurangzeb. Through close textual analysis and historical context, the essay shows how misrepresentation, straw-manning, and moral asymmetry function as tools of what the author terms the Minority-Progressive Celebrity (MPC) narrative. At its core, the piece interrogates how Hinduphobia is normalized under the guise of liberalism while minority fundamentalism is minimized or denied.

In PERSPECTIVE

Clarity on Role Play (Hindi)

यदि सब मिथ्या और माया है तो परिश्रम करने से क्या लाभ?

In ESSAY

Why didn’t Hindus give up in their fight for Ram Mandir?

The scars from centuries of violence refused to heal which is why the fight for Ram Janmabhoomi never died down.

In EXCERPT

Immigration from Bangladesh

Simmering communal tension in some of the border areas is one of the manifestations of the effects of large-scale illegal migration of Bangladeshi nationals who have slowly displaced or dispossessed the local population.

In COMMENTARY, HISTORY

Religious Nationalism of the Two Nation Theory

In this article, Adarsh Jha digs for facts behind the much talked about "Two Nation Theory"; and how the two parties debating it are faring, 75 years after the partition.

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