On the midnight of August 15 1947 when Nawab Nehru was spouting unintelligible nonsense in English in Delhi, a 60-year old man quietly sat down at his desk as usual in Bangalore and began to write.
A poem. In what's today called classical Kannada. It was a poem and a song. A stava, a stuti. To Bharatavarsha & BharatavarshA. A national song. A song celebrating freedom as a festival, as a parva.
A memorable verse from it: "Bharata Mata! May you never give birth to a son or daughter who is not a warrior, may you never give birth to a son or daughter who does not serve you."
But Bharata Mata had to still suffer the curse called Nawab Nehru for 70 Years.
The poem is titled Swatantrabharata Stava. The author is Maharshi D.V. Gundappa.
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Since Irfan Habib is in the news again, here is a four-part series I had written way back in 2019. Happy reading!
--- 1. Tarikh-i-Habibi—Being the Partial Chronicle of Irfan Habib: The Progenitor dharmadispatch.in/history/tarikh…
In full solidarity with #IStandWithIsrael, here are some lessons for Hindus.
1. Israel and India began around the same time after colonization ended. 2. From then, till now, the world has always stood by Israel. 3. Why?
Because:
-- a. Israel was not cursed with a Nawab Nehru.
-- b. Showing Strength commands respect. Not Nehru's red rose of peace.
4. Compared with Israel for the same period, India has suffered far too many Izlamic terror attacks. Each attack only emboldened the perpetrators because of Nehruvian pusillanimity.
Exemplary act by Sri @AmitShah vis a vis the Dharma-Danda or Sengol (Tamil). The Dharma Danda is as old as Sanatana Dharma itself. Merely its design, form, shape, etc., varied from time to time, empire to empire.
The Dharma-Danda has a literal, symbolic, practical and ethical value. As its wielder, the king embodied Dharma in the combined realms of sovereignty, protection, military, and jurisprudence. Hindu texts dealing with the coronation ritual are both delightful & ennobling to read.
At the time of coronation, the Purohita would tap the king's head thrice with the Dharma-Danda proclaiming, "Raja Dharmiko Bhooyaat" -- May the King become an upholder of Dharma. Only after this would the king sit on the throne.