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March 5, 2026
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Latest Posts

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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Communal Echoes in ‘Secular’ Discourse : Tropes and Themes in Naseeruddin Shah’s ‘Secular’ Rants
January 21, 2026January 21, 2026COMMENTARYBy Sriram Chellapilla0 0

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.

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Citta-Vṛtti-Nirodhaḥ: The Discipline of Stillness in Pātañjala Yoga
January 12, 2026January 12, 2026COMMENTARYBy Pavan Kumar Garikapati0 0

Citta-Vṛtti-Nirodhaḥ: The Discipline of Stillness in Pātañjala Yoga

The author explains that Yoga is not a technique of suppression but a disciplined process of stilling the mind’s fluctuations - Citta-Vṛtti-Nirodhaḥ. Drawing on Vyāsa’s Bhāṣya, nirodhaḥ is presented as a progressive settling of mental modifications back into their unmanifest source. As the vṛttis dissolve, puruṣa is no longer obscured by reflection in citta and abides in its own svarūpa. Yoga thus culminates not in transformation, but in the revelation of the seer’s ever-present clarity.

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Daily Feed

In ESSAY, PERSPECTIVE

On Secularism And Its Adoption By The Indian State

Indian courts today are actively employing a method, created by the Christians and for the Christians, in matters related to Hinduism.

In STORY

‘Flight of the Deity’ from Modhera – Part 1

An ancient connection draws a professor to a land which feels to him as home.

In TRAVELOGUE

The Ancient Barabar Caves near Gaya

The Mauryan era Barabar Caves of the Ajivika sect are perhaps the oldest man-made caves in India.

In STORY

Suryanar Kovil, Kumbakonam – Part 1

The attraction towards a so-called modern outlook is hard to resist as one struggles to retain the traditions of one's ancestors.

In PERSPECTIVE, COMMENTARY

Gyaana and Adhikara

Should trade secrets be revealed to all and sundry? Do the custodians of groundbreaking technology and classified information have the right to shield their secrets from prying eyes? If yes, then the courtesy should be extended to ancient dharmik knowledge systems as well - the concept of Adhikara of access to exclusive information and knowledge; and access should only be granted to those with Adhikara as allowed by Dharma Shastras.

In ESSAY

A Timeline of Ayodhya – Part 1

A chronological order through what several disciplines — archaeology, epigraphy and history in particular — have contributed to our knowledge of the ancient city of Ayodhya.

In ESSAY

The Concept of Pakistan in the Vedas

Many northwestern tribes were are at war with Vedic kingdoms from the rest of India, similar to Pakistan's position in today's time.

In BOOK REVIEW

Brainwashed Republic

Decades of propaganda in our school textbooks have brainwashed our youth into despising their own heritage.

In BOOK REVIEW

The Personality of Śrī Kr̥ṣṇa (Śrī Kr̥ṣṇana Vyaktitva)

While pointing out some of the excesses that have crept into the popular tales around Kr̥ṣṇa, the author asks us not to shirk them but to look at them in the light of discernment.

In ESSAY

An unreal moment for our nation

The desecration of the Indian flag is a wakeup for many of us who take our sovereignty for granted.

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 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.

Daily Feed

In PERSPECTIVE

A diversity of white saviours

By reducing the motives of those involved in debates on Indian history to racial prejudice, Devdutt Pattanaik lazily brushes aside the diversity in the politics of those engaged in the intellectual battle. Predictably, he turns out to be wrong on many counts.

In TRAVELOGUE

Chandori’s secret

Severe droughts in Maharashtra led to a surprise discovery of beautiful temples on the Godavari basin that give a fascinating account of the region's history.

In BOOK REVIEW

Dissecting Hinduphobia

The West's categories have been force-fitted on India making our civilisation seem crude and archaic.

In BOOK REVIEW

Aavarana – The Veil

The long history of Islamic destruction and its implications on the modern Indian have to be acknowledged for an unencumbered future.

In ESSAY

The Concept of No-Mind

Mushin No Shin is a Zen expression meaning the mind without mind and is also referred to as the state of "no-mindness".

In ESSAY

The Silent Brahman

Silence and action can both co-exist in our lives, encompassed in the Supreme Consciousness; as part of an integral philosophy.

In ESSAY

Dealing with the Loss of One’s Spiritual Master

What should one do when one's guru leaves their body and goes elsewhere? How do we continue without our guru?

In POETRY

Sung by the God: I (The Beginning)

The banners were unfurled, the ominous call issued; Warriors royal and common alike, who approached The open gateway to their...

In ESSAY

Bhakti Dampati – Divine Couples in Devotion to Sri Hari

The Vaishnava dampati gan help us understand the true essence of the conjugal relationship in a marriage.

In ESSAY

The Eternal Dasas of Sree Padmanabha Swamy – IV (Making of Modern Travancore)

This period in the history of the Travancore kingdom set the stage for the modern state of Kerala.

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 PERSPECTIVE

Decolonising the Indian Education System – Why Our Approach is Flawed

Recent efforts to decolonise the Indian education system, particularly through rewriting NCERT textbooks, focus on reclaiming India's intellectual heritage by infusing indigenous knowledge into the curriculum. However, merely altering content without changing the deeper intellectual foundations upon which it rests will only result in superficial change. True decolonisation demands a shift from western frameworks of how we teach, learn and evaluate knowledge, to genuinely embrace India's philosophical and cultural traditions at every level of education.

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