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May 12, 2026
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Latest Posts

It’s the Community, Stupid! Remembering the Lost Art of Celebrating Together
April 27, 2026April 27, 2026TRADITIONBy Charu Uppal2 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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Category Errors in the Study of Bharatīya Jñāna Paramparā
April 16, 2026April 16, 2026PERSPECTIVE, PHILOSOPHYBy Pavan Kumar Garikapati3 0

Category Errors in the Study of Bharatīya Jñāna Paramparā

Modern scholarship often misreads Bharatīya Jñāna Paramparā by forcing it into text-centric, innovation-driven frameworks that do not match its transmission-based nature. This article argues that the confusion arises from deep category errors about what knowledge is and where it resides. Rather than a collection of texts, the tradition functions as an integrated epistemic architecture sustained through guru–śiṣya paramparā. Recognising this distinction reframes continuity not as stagnation, but as disciplined preservation of valid knowing.

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Accident : A Philosophical Essay
April 04, 2026April 4, 2026PHILOSOPHYBy Anshul Kalia3 0

Accident : A Philosophical Essay

A reflective essay that begins with everyday “accidents” to probe a deeper philosophical question: what is an accident? Moving from legal definitions to Aristotle and Hume, it argues accidents arise from human ignorance of causes. Drawing on Hindu acharyas like Shankaracharya and Ramanujacharya and scriptures like the Isha Upanishad, Bhagavad Gita, and Srimad Bhagavatam, it advances a final insight: what appears accidental is ultimately governed by divine grace.

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The Story of the Musunuri Nayakas – The Rise and Fall of a Telugu Resistance
March 31, 2026March 31, 2026HISTORYBy Ratnakar Sadasyula1 0

The Story of the Musunuri Nayakas – The Rise and Fall of a Telugu Resistance

After the fall of the Kakatiyas, Telugu land was plunged into devastation under the Delhi Sultanate, with temples desecrated and society disrupted. From this chaos emerged the Musunuri Nayakas, who united scattered warriors and waged a fierce resistance to reclaim their homeland. Led by Prolayanayaka and later Kapayanayaka, they drove out invaders and restored cultural life, inspiring wider southern revolts and the rise of Vijayanagara. Yet internal rivalries and betrayal weakened this hard-won unity, leading to a tragic fall. Their legacy endures as a powerful chapter of resilience, resistance, and civilizational revival.

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The two streams of the Bengali language: Claims, Counterclaims and Facts
March 27, 2026March 27, 2026COMMENTARYBy Dileep Karanth4 0

The two streams of the Bengali language: Claims, Counterclaims and Facts

Published in the ISPAD Partition Center Journal (Oct 2025), this paper challenges claims that vernacular languages in India emerged only under Islamic rule due to a supposed Sanskritic monopoly. It shows that regional literary traditions flourished under Hindu patronage well before this period. The paper also disputes the idea that modern Bengali was artificially Sanskritized by colonial institutions, demonstrating that both Hindu and Muslim writers historically used a shared Sanskrit-based linguistic framework. It further highlights that later attempts to Islamize Bengali had limited success.

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Daily Feed

In COMMENTARY, ESSAY, PHILOSOPHY

Philosophical Systems Of India – A Primer – Part 4

In the fourth part of the 5-part series on Indian philosophical systems, Dr. Pingali Gopal discusses the prominent Advaitic view on the notions of the Self and the non-Self. We shall also see the notion of cause and effect in the material world and how the Self interacts with the material world. It is a promise of Indian Darshanas that proper knowledge confers liberation to the striving individual.

In ESSAY

Kashmir: An Overview of the Seven Exoduses of Hindus (Part 2)

An extremely brutal period for Kashmiri Hindus as various Muslim ethnic groups tried to completely Islamise the land of Kashmir.

In EXCERPT

The Place of Mahatma Gandhi

Mahatma Gandhi's failure in recognising the threat posed by imperialist ideologies has left his legacy very much tainted.

In ESSAY

Kashi Corridor – From Spirituality to Materialism

Treating temples as just another structure that can be replaced is to give in to the adharma of disregarding and offending the divinity that resides within them.

In COMMENTARY

Sri Aurobindo’s Savitri

A poem which went through several revisions over 50 years, each time renewed with the growth in Sri Aurobindo's consciousness.

In THIS WEEK THAT YEAR

5th to 11th June

Time is what we want most, but what we use worst.

In BOOK REVIEW

The Story of Islamic Imperialism in India – Part 1

The story of Islamic imperialism has been conveniently shielded from scrutiny by most historians in modern India.

In EXCERPT

Seeds that were to sprout

Marx's philosophy of a supposed harmonised social system garnered many followers, though in time people still connected with the Hindu ethos realised its severe limitations.

In STORY

The Autumn Wind

The haunting experience of returning to ones homeland from where you were once cast away.

In TRAVELOGUE

Varadaraja Perumal Temple – Kanchipuram (Part 2)

A temple where Lord Vishnu’s manifestation as Athi Varadar rises from his Anant Saras after every 40 years to bless his devotees

In INTERVIEW

Temples of Tamil Nadu: Ancient Glories and current state of affairs – Part 2

Conservation of temples in Tamil Nadu is severely lacking and hence needs to be addressed before the damage is permanent.

In ESSAY

Not so strange a coincidence

The Hindu Bengali genocide which coincides with World Refugee Day is a blot on humanity that still isn't acknowledged for its barbarity.

Daily Feed

In ESSAY

Ramayana in the Light of Sri Aurobindo

Sri Aurobindo's grasp of the essence of the Ramayana is truly unique.

In TRAVELOGUE

Keezhadi – Unearthing a civilisation

The Keezhada excavations have unearthed a plethora of information about the ancient Tamil civilisation.

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 POLITICS, COMMENTARY, PHILOSOPHY

Understanding Political Systems Of India – Part 1 – Political Ideologies – A Dummy’s Understanding of Background Western Theories

"The political spectrum teaches absurdly that opposites are the same. The two ‘positions’ - Left and Right - are the mixing of incoherent, unrelated, and constantly shifting ideas lumped together by the accident of history. Aggressive military positioning hardly connects to a free-market philosophy. Defenders acknowledge this variation but claim an underlying essence: the Right (conservatives), ‘backward looking’, want to conserve; the Left (progressives), ‘forward looking,' want change. Both wings' policies, in fact, are ‘backward-looking’ and marked by nostalgia, depending on the issue."
In the first installment of the series titled "Understanding Political Systems Of India", Dr. Pingali Gopal analyses the multiple prevalent political systems and ideologies of the West, that define world politics as we know it today. These systems have been allowed to influence Indian politics and policy making after independence, with complete disregard to the ancient political systems of India.
The broad classification of political ideology as Right or Left is nebulous at best - one can falsify every proposed essence of right or left, which shows us that ideologies are nothing but social constructs. these Right-Left political ideas do not make sense either in the Western context or in the Indian context, and yet, for decades, we have held on to them. We need to understand our past political systems better, and we need to transcend the paradigm.

In COMMENTARY

The Harihara war: A war between the Lords

Warring lords show us what it takes to uphold Dharma.

In ESSAY

An Indic Reading of Nietzsche’s Thus Spoke Zarathustra – Part II

Knowledge is not merely to be read or heard as words; on the contrary, it is to be lived, experienced and thus renewed.

In ESSAY

Yantras – What is their purpose

Used in sadhana practices for worshipping deities, yantras are symbols of divine power which need to be installed with the use of specific mantras.

In PERSPECTIVE

Hindu – The Archetypal Liberal

The natural liberal outlook of the Hindus has long been obscured by the left-right conflict of the western world.

In ESSAY

Bhārata as Dharma rāṣṭra

We should all aspire for a Dharma rāṣṭra, a rāṣṭra that is in sync with Dharma.

In ESSAY

Ban on Paśubali – A Judicial Blunder (Part 2)

An ignorance of sacred texts along with a loose argument has made the ban on Paśubali, an attack on Tantric worship.

In ESSAY

Hindu Temple Management – Framework for the future

The need to free Hindu temples from government control has been met with opposition from those who think Hindu samaj has no framework to manage them.

In ESSAY

‘Saamkhya Hypothesis’ – Creation Link Deciphered

This article examines the 'Saamkhya' hypothesis through the lens of sciences and shows that the hypothesis is worthy of adoption as a plausible mechanism for ‘creation’ and for ‘life’.

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