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March 26, 2026
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The Mahabharata as an Indic Civilizational Framework: Dharma, Power, and Human Consciousness
March 15, 2026March 15, 2026COMMENTARYBy ISKCON Mayapur3 0

The Mahabharata as an Indic Civilizational Framework: Dharma, Power, and Human Consciousness

The Mahabharata is not merely an epic or religious text but a civilizational framework through which Indian society has long understood power, morality, and human conflict. Rather than offering rigid moral binaries, it presents dharma as contextual and relational, shaped by responsibility and awareness. Through complex characters and difficult choices, the epic explores the burdens of power, the psychology of action, and the consequences of ethical failure. In doing so, it functions as a living guide to navigating moral ambiguity within society.

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Nuwari of a Story!
March 08, 2026March 8, 2026STORYBy Charu Uppal1 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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Daily Feed

In VIDEO

The ancient ingenuity of water harvesting

The amazing feats of engineering built centuries ago by the people of India's Golden Desert to harvest water, are still used today -- and are often superior to modern water mega-projects.

In PERSPECTIVE

Kanwar Yatra – A first person perspective

Kanwar Yatra is one of the great spontaneous expressions of devotion of Hindu society which has numerous benefits to offer, both in the material as well as the spiritual realm.

In COMMENTARY, ESSAY

Śaṅkara Charitam – a re-telling – Chapter 09

In the 9th Chapter of Śaṅkara Charitam, Shri Ramesh Venkatraman takes us to the moment of Śaṅkara's Saṃnyāsa. The unfolding of events is captured; as well as the pre-requisites, eligibility and implications for Śaṅkara after taking the pledge of Saṃnyāsa.

In TRAVELOGUE

The Majestic Vaikunth Perumal temple: Kanchipuram (Part 3)

The magnificent ancient Vishnu temple from the rich Pallava heritage is a sight to behold.

In ESSAY

The Big Scandal of Indology

The way Indology has been shaped through the centuries has resulted in Indic knowledge being alienated from its own people.

In PERSPECTIVE

Brahmanism 101: The trail of Saraswati and the beginning of Kathenotheism

Brahmanism has been labelled as an insult all thanks to decades of propaganda which still cannot hide the divinity that underlies the word's origins.

In CONVERSATION

Indic civilization and knowledge

Pandit Vamadeva Shastri (Dr David Frawley) speaks with us about his journey into Hinduism and Indic knowledge traditions.

In THIS WEEK THAT YEAR

5th to 11th June

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

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 ESSAY

Witzel’s Realm – On Reputationist Concerns Over India’s Reclamation of its History

Western Indologists such as Witzel cannot seem to accept the fact that Hindus now are reclaiming their own history.

In ESSAY

Land, Culture and Humanity

Hindus have faced various inimical forces in Bharatvarsha's long history, much like the Jews who were driven out of their own land.

In COMMENTARY

Agni – The fire within

Agni's powers of transformation have for long been invoked by sadhakas to make rapid progress in their spiritual journey.

Daily Feed

In ESSAY

Swami Karpatri Ji: The forgotten Dharma SamarAt

The various causes taken up Swami Karpatri in the service of Sanatana Dharma deserve much more recognition.

In DEBATE

Dating of Mahabharat and Ramayan

How far back in the past did the events described in the epics really take place?

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 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 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.

In DEBATE, COMMENTARY

Varna And Birth

It is one of the strangest ironies that, despite being an intricate part of our daily lives, we do not have any theory explaining Varna, Jati, and Kula. It is also not clear whether caste, understood as a class system, can be the foundation for understanding the complex arrangement of Varnas and Jatis in Indian society. One of the biggest sources of contradictory strands is the issue of whether Varna is by birth or not.
Chittaranjan Naik concludes that birth is not the cause of Varna, as popularly understood; it is the identifier.

In PERSPECTIVE

Chequered Brilliance of Raja Man Singh of Amer

The often mischaracterised Raja Man Singh of Amer was a dharm-rakshak who only had the best Hindu interests at heart.

In CONVERSATION

Vedantin Musings and the Nature of Reality

Swami Sarvapriyananda Maharaj from the Ramakrishna Order is one of the leading lights in Vedanta, teaching its philosophy world-over.

In BOOK REVIEW

The Fate Of Muslims Under Soviet Rule : A Review

"Communism, as the logical outcome of materialism, cannot but be hostile to religion in all its aspects. Thus from the very beginning, the Communists aimed at the destruction of religious belief and worship in Soviet Russia." 
Halley Kalyan pens a review of “The Fate Of Muslims Under Soviet Rule” - a booklet about Soviet government rule in regions that had a significant population of practicing Muslims, by Erich W Bethman (1958); and highlights the shared antagonism towards religion (Hinduism in particular in the Indian context) between the Communist dogma and the Indian version of Secularism.

In PERSPECTIVE

करवा चौथ की सामायिक प्रासंगकिता

करवा चौथ का व्रत सामुदायिक, पारिवारिक और पति-पत्नी के रिश्ते को प्रगाढ़ करने का सुन्दर प्रयास है।

In ESSAY

Buddha, Shankara and Vivekananda – Milestones of Indian spirituality

The three great sages of the Indic spiritual tradition, while reacting to the times they lived in, gave expression to the same truth in different ways.

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.

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