Tuesday, September 30, 2025
Health is wealth. Bharatwasi should not go American way by outsourcing their kitchens to Zomato and Swiggy...
Saturday, September 27, 2025
The Knights Return, The World Reawakens — Where Does Hindu Civilization Stand?
700 years later, the Knights Templar return to the Vatican.
To many, this may just be a symbolic gesture — a revival of a forgotten medieval order. But for those who understand history, signs like these are never trivial. Across the world, a civilisation churn is underway:
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Christianity is seeking renewal.
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Islam is consolidating and asserting itself.
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China is reviving its Confucian–imperial past in a modern avatar.
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The West, the Middle East, and the Far East are rearming — not just militarily, but culturally.
So where does that leave us — the children of one of the oldest living civilisations?
Hindu Civilisation: An Ancient Giant Awakening or Falling Back Asleep?
Hinduism — or more correctly, Sanatana Dharma — is not just a religion. It is a civilisational superstructure, encompassing philosophy, science, art, ecology, economics, and politics.
But here's the problem: we have forgotten this.
We have:
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Allowed others to write our history.
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Aped Western frameworks in our education, governance, even self-worth.
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Worshipped non-violence of a feeble so-called Father of Nation without realising the depth of our civilisation.
It’s time to ask:
Will Hindu civilisation flourish as an independent force in the 21st century?
Or will we fade into oblivion, remembered only in museums and yoga studios?
Let’s Talk Honestly About Gandhi and Independence
For decades, the story we've been told is simple:
"Ahimsa led to freedom."
This is incomplete — and increasingly, dangerous.
Yes, Gandhi’s moral example inspired millions. But did it alone defeat the British Empire?
Absolutely not.
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Subhas Chandra Bose and the Indian National Army caused deep concern among British generals.
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The Royal Indian Navy Mutiny of 1946 shook the empire’s confidence.
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World War II drained Britain's resources and will.
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Political changes in London, not just movements in India, drove withdrawal.
The truth is more nuanced. Gandhi was a part of the story, not the whole story.
Wake Up — Or Risk Disappearing
Other civilisations are mobilising.
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The Muslim world is asserting power through oil, ideology, and pan-Islamic solidarity.
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The Christian world is regaining its roots, reasserting identity and moral clarity.
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The Chinese are redefining socialism with Confucian characteristics — proud of their past and determined about their future.
But here in Bharat?
We still:
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Speak of our heritage in English.
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Let our children grow up without knowing a shloka, a sutra, or a story from our own Itihasa.
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View our texts as “myths” and others’ stories as “history.”
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Think that being secular means hating ourselves.
This is civilizational suicide.
How Do We Reclaim the Future?
Not with hate.
Not with empty nostalgia.
But with clarity, confidence, and constructive work.
Here’s a battle plan:
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Revive our languages — Sanskrit, Tamil, Bengali, Kannada, Marathi… each one holds civilizational wisdom.
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Reclaim our narratives — from school textbooks to films, let’s tell our stories our way.
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Invest in dharmic institutions — schools, think tanks, research centers.
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Stop idolizing pacifism — dharma includes Kshatra (warrior energy) too.
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Raise children with rooted pride — not arrogance, but confidence.
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Reconnect with our core texts — Bhagavad Gita, Arthashastra, Yoga Sutras, Panchatantra...
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Support leaders who think civilizationally — not just politically.
This Is Not Just About Survival — It’s About Leadership
Sanatana Dharma is not just a relic of the past.
It is a blueprint for the future:
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Ecological balance without dogma.
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Mind–body integration.
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Rational spirituality.
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Decentralised polity.
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Sacred economics.
In a fractured world, our dharma can heal — if we’re bold enough to live it.
Come On, Guys. The Time Is Now.
Enough sleepwalking. Enough apologising. Enough waiting for others to validate us.
If others are reclaiming their Crusaders and Caliphates, let us reclaim:
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Rama and Krishna’s clarity.
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Chanakya’s strategy.
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Vivekananda’s fire.
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Bose’s courage.
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Saraswati’s wisdom.
This is a civilisational call. Not a battle of hate — but a march of strength.
🔥 Let the world rise in their ways.
Let us rise in ours.
🇮🇳 Jai Bharat. Jai Dharma. 🕉️
Friday, September 26, 2025
The railway developed in North East, Jammu and Kashmir - and other difficult terrain and then successful rail based missile launchers - the tactical defence policy - joining the dots...
Railways in Difficult Terrain: Building for War, Disguised as Peace
Jammu & Kashmir:
Northeast:
Sikkim:
Rail-Based Missile Systems: Hidden in Plain Sight
From Static Defence to Mobile Deterrence
Civil-Military Fusion: Gati Shakti Meets Defence Planning
| Feature / Country | 🇨🇳 China | 🇮🇳 India |
| Rail-Mobile Missiles | DF-41 ICBMs: Known to utilize rail-mobile launchers for enhanced survivability and operational flexibility, making detection and targeting extremely difficult. | Agni / Shourya Variants: Consideration for rail mobility, though not yet confirmed operational for active deployment. This would provide similar strategic advantages to China's rail-mobile systems. |
| Strategic Rail Lines (Key Examples) | Tibet Railway: Extends to key strategic locations near the Line of Actual Control (LAC), facilitating rapid troop and materiel movement to high-altitude border regions. | Bilaspur–Leh Railway & Sivok–Rangpo Rail Line: Under construction or planned, these lines aim to improve connectivity to critical border areas, significantly reducing travel times and logistics challenges for military deployments. |
| Overarching Strategic Doctrine / Initiative | Civil-Military Fusion Doctrine: Integrates civilian technological advancements and infrastructure into military applications, blurring the lines between civil and defense sectors to leverage national resources comprehensively. | Gati Shakti Master Plan + DRDO + Border Infrastructure Push: A concerted effort to create a seamless multimodal connectivity network, with DRDO's defense technology advancements and dedicated border infrastructure development working in tandem to strengthen national security. |
Dots Connected: Infrastructure as Deterrence
Monday, September 22, 2025
If we don't learn from history, history will repeat itself - in 1972 the NRIs were evicted from Uganda - the deja vu for NRIs in USA?
The Decree:
The Community:
Reasons for the Expulsion:
The Impact:
Resettlement:
Saturday, August 30, 2025
Bihar - the intellectual centre of ancient Bharat - from Mata Sita to many more - people of Bihar, wake up and choose your leader wisely - know your real history...
People of Bihar...
It's time for you to wake up and reclaim your glorious past. You were the intellectual nerve centre of ancient Bharat.
Come on... guys ...
wake up and reclaim your true place in the history of Bharat.
You must not be called as the land of a few crooked, immoral politicians of present Bharat.
Raise up your frequency...
Vibrate in your past glorious historical frequency.
Remember, you are from the land where great kings, great sages and great leaders once roamed.
So wake up and win this political battle of civilisation....
Here's the Nemo of the society is just trying to open up your third eye.
Read ON...
Bihar holds a prominent place in the intellectual and spiritual history of ancient Bharat. The region, particularly the ancient kingdoms of Magadha and Mithila, was a cradle of major religions, philosophies, and political thought.
Spiritual and Philosophical Hub 🕉️
Bihar is the birthplace of two of the world's major religions: Buddhism and Jainism.
Gautama Buddha attained enlightenment at Bodh Gaya and delivered his first sermon in Sarnath (near Varanasi, though his life and teachings are deeply tied to the region). The name "Bihar" itself is derived from the word "vihara," meaning a Buddhist monastery.
Mahavira, the 24th and last Tirthankara of Jainism, was born in Kundalagrama near Vaishali and achieved nirvana at Pawapuri, both located in Bihar.
The region was also a sacred destination for Sikhs, as Guru Gobind Singh, the tenth Sikh Guru, was born in Patna.
The ancient kingdom of Mithila, the land of Mata Sita, was a renowned center of Vedic learning and philosophy. The court of King Janaka was a celebrated hub for scholarly debates and discussions, attracting thinkers from across ancient Bharat.
Intellectual Center and Educational Institutions 🎓
Ancient Bihar was home to some of the world's earliest and most prestigious universities, which attracted scholars from all over Asia.
Nalanda University, established in the 5th century CE, was one of the world's first residential universities. It was a renowned center for higher learning, with a vast library and a curriculum that included Buddhist philosophy, logic, medicine, mathematics, and astronomy.
Vikramashila University, founded by the Pala emperor Dharmapala in the 8th century, was another major center for Buddhist learning, particularly known for its Tantric studies.
Odantapuri University was also a significant monastic center established during the Pala Empire.
These institutions, along with the city of Pataliputra (modern Patna), attracted brilliant minds.
Notable Personalities ✨
Bihar has produced a remarkable number of historical figures who shaped the course of Indian history and philosophy.
Chanakya (also known as Kautilya or Vishnugupta), the brilliant strategist and author of the Arthashastra, was a professor at Taxila and served as the chief advisor to Chandragupta Maurya, helping him establish the vast Mauryan Empire from its capital at Pataliputra.
Chandragupta Maurya and Emperor Ashoka, two of the greatest rulers of ancient India, were born in this region and ruled from Pataliputra.
The ancient mathematician and astronomer Aryabhata, who gave the world the concept of zero and calculated the value of pi, was born and worked in Pataliputra during the Gupta period.
Panini, the great grammarian who formulated the rules of Sanskrit grammar, is also associated with the region.
The poet and playwright Vatsyayana, author of the Kamasutra, is believed to have lived in Pataliputra.


