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March 12, 2026
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Latest Posts

Nuwari of a Story!
March 08, 2026March 8, 2026STORYBy Charu Uppal0 0

Nuwari of a Story!

A single mustard-and-maroon saree becomes the thread weaving together generations of memory. As a mother recounts its journey - from saree to half-saree, curtain, cushion cover, and album cover—her daughter discovers how fabric can carry family history. Each transformation holds laughter, sisterly love, and the ingenuity of making do with what one has. In the end, the saree becomes more than clothing - it becomes a living archive of relationships, creativity, and continuity.

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Inventing the Oppressor: Social Theory and the Logic of the UGC Regulations
March 05, 2026March 5, 2026PERSPECTIVEBy Aryan Anand1 0

Inventing the Oppressor: Social Theory and the Logic of the UGC Regulations

Aryan Anand argues that the debate around the recent UGC guidelines has remained confined to immediate political reactions, ignoring the deeper intellectual frameworks shaping such policies. Drawing on strands of critical social theory, he contends that contemporary policy increasingly operates through rigid oppressor–oppressed binaries. Applied mechanically to the Indian context, this framework risks misreading the complex realities of caste and society. Anand suggests that policies built on such assumptions may ultimately deepen social divisions rather than address them.

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Gaffe or Gambit – Did A R Rahman Cross a Line While Keeping Within Others?
March 02, 2026March 2, 2026PERSPECTIVEBy Sriram Chellapilla0 0

Gaffe or Gambit – Did A R Rahman Cross a Line While Keeping Within Others?

Was A.R. Rahman’s reference to a “communal thing” in Bollywood a careless gaffe—or a calibrated signal within a larger minority-progressive discourse? Situating his remarks within a broader pattern of celebrity secularism, this essay argues that selective invocations of intolerance often coexist with studied evasions on questions of history, identity, and civilizational memory. Rahman’s diplomatic silences—on Aurangzeb, on cultural politics, on ideological alignments—appear less accidental than strategic. The result is a familiar cycle: grievance, outrage, clarification, and international amplification. At stake is not merely celebrity speech, but the narrative framing of Hindu-majority India itself.

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Inside the Temple Crisis: Governance and Preservation Challenges
February 17, 2026February 17, 2026PERSPECTIVEBy Rema Raghavan4 0

Inside the Temple Crisis: Governance and Preservation Challenges

Across India’s temple towns, rising tourist footfall, evolving governance structures, and new revenue models are reshaping how sacred sites are administered and preserved. Temples, once self-sustaining civilizational institutions, are increasingly treated as revenue-generating assets, with properties sold, offerings monetized, and darshan commodified. Rema Raghavan writes that this commercialization displaces local communities, erodes ritual continuity, and weakens the organic moral oversight once provided by resident devotees. As temples transform from living centers of worship into tourist spectacles, the intimate bond between deity, devotee, and community frays. Restoring temples as civilizational epicenters, she argues, requires accountable governance, empowered local participation, and an uncompromising commitment to ritual and heritage preservation.

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An Air of Social Doom: Political Propaganda Passed off as Moral Messaging
February 07, 2026February 13, 2026COMMENTARYBy Sriram Chellapilla1 0

An Air of Social Doom: Political Propaganda Passed off as Moral Messaging

This article by Sriram Chellapilla, the fifth in a series of essays on the subject, argues that celebrity anguish over press freedom, NGOs, and society functions less as moral concern and more as selective political signaling. Using Naseeruddin Shah’s statements as a framing device, the author exposes how unelected NGOs, opaque media ownership, and celebrity activism often mask ideological agendas behind the language of freedom. Chellapilla contends that scrutiny of NGOs and media is neither new nor authoritarian, having been pursued by successive governments. What is troubling, he argues, is the hypocrisy of invoking free speech only when aligned with preferred politics, while remaining silent on censorship and intimidation by “secular” regimes.

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Daily Feed

In TEMPLE TRAIL

Brassy silence of Pitalkhora

The almost forgotten cave complex of Pitalkhora resonates the silence deep within us.

In ESSAY

Pre-Sultanate History Of The Qutub Complex

A sneak-peak into the pre-Sulatanate history of the Qutub Complex.

In ESSAY

The Colonial Genesis of Anti-Brahminism

A country is never fully defeated as long as its martial and intellectual leaders exist. A self-conscious imperialism undertakes to reduce them as its first important task.

In STORY, TRADITION

Eternal Love Story of Prabhu Shri Rama and Mata Sita

The Ramayana is an epic of unparalleled significance in Hindu mythology. It is rightly and widely regarded as a story that epitomizes righteousness, duty, sacrifice, and devotion. At its heart, however, lies the eternal love story of Prabhu Shri Rama and Mata Sita; a divine saga that transcends the boundaries of time and serves as the very essence of the epic.

In ESSAY

The need for the rise of the dormant Kshatriya spirit

If our civilisation has to survive and thrive, we must awaken the Kshatriya within us. There is no other way.

In TRAVELOGUE

Jina Kanchi – The forgotten Jain legacy of Kanchipuram

Home to the oldest living Jain traditions in Tamil Nadu, Jina Kanchi dates back to the Pallava king, Simhavarman, in 550 CE.

In EXCERPT

Significance of Hindu Society

Despite suffering from repeated invasions and a degenerative climate in their society, Hindus have still managed to sustain their culture, though the future is dependent upon their will to conserve it.

In ESSAY

Immigrants were once welcomed in Assam – Part 1

Sentiments involving immigrants from Bengal into Assam have ebbed and flowed as time has gone by.

In TRANSLATION

The story of Rama in the Granth Sahib

Sri Rama's dharmic existence served as the guide for the Gurus while composing the Granth Sahib.

In DEBATE, ESSAY, HISTORY

Hindu, Hinduism, Hindudtva – Part 2

In the second part, Dr. Pingali Gopal discusses the evolution of political Hindutva after independence, and sheds light on the failure to define the basic terms as we struggle with the alleged rise of ‘Hindu fundamentalism'.

In COMMENTARY, TEMPLE TRAIL

Ayodhya Forever

Dr. Koenraad Elst recounts his recent trip to Ayodhya, while analysing its historicity and devotional zeal; and takes an evaluative look at the road ahead for Hindus to preserve important dharmik sites from the tourism-driven, possibly unnecessary beautification and commercialisation.

In COMMENTARY

Academic bullies

Audrey Truschke may have an eminent position in the academe, but the record of her ideological and academic mentors is such that she must be more restrained in how she engages with and addresses the 'outsiders'.

Daily Feed

In PERSPECTIVE

India's love of mountains

The Indian civilization is so deeply indebted to the many mountain ranges of the subcontinent that any cultural resurgence must begin from an effort of ecological conservation.

In ESSAY

Jagatgurus in Kaliyuga – Part 1

The Jagatgurus have laid the foundation of Bharat and help sustained our civilisation for millennia.

In ESSAY

India: The land of traditions, not religions(Part 2)

Religion creates a configuration that creates western culture, a role that ritual plays in producing Indian culture.

In TRAVELOGUE

The Golden Era of Indic Civilisation – Angkor (Part 4)

The temples of Angkor are a standing testimony of the Indic influences not only in religion and iconography but also in script and language.

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 ESSAY, CASTE IN STONE

Caste: Purusha and Varna

The dominant school of academic scholarship on the caste system makes very serious mistakes in understanding and conveying the meaning of the most fundamental Indic concepts of Purusha and Varna.

In PERSPECTIVE

Inside the Temple Crisis: Governance and Preservation Challenges

Across India’s temple towns, rising tourist footfall, evolving governance structures, and new revenue models are reshaping how sacred sites are administered and preserved. Temples, once self-sustaining civilizational institutions, are increasingly treated as revenue-generating assets, with properties sold, offerings monetized, and darshan commodified. Rema Raghavan writes that this commercialization displaces local communities, erodes ritual continuity, and weakens the organic moral oversight once provided by resident devotees. As temples transform from living centers of worship into tourist spectacles, the intimate bond between deity, devotee, and community frays. Restoring temples as civilizational epicenters, she argues, requires accountable governance, empowered local participation, and an uncompromising commitment to ritual and heritage preservation.

In PERSPECTIVE

Modern myths around Ramayana

The trend of vilifying Lord Rama and glorifying Raavan comes from a total ignorance of what is actually written in the Ramayana.

In STORY

‘Flight of the Deity’ from Modhera – Part 2

The followers of Surya Devta still rever him even after centuries of turmoil.

In ESSAY

A Tribute to a General – From a Common Man

General Bipin Rawat’s style as any defence strategist would tell us, thought beyond the army and how to arouse the army spirit in every average Indian.

In EXCERPT

Legacy of Muslim Rule In India – Politics and Integration

The Muslim legacy of expansionism still resonates in their politics and their willingness to integrate with the rest of India.

In COMMENTARY

India and the human cycle

How Sri Aurobindo's theory of human cycles applies to the contemporary world and what does the future look like for the east and the west.

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