Why ‘Bharat Mata Ki Jai’ Upsets Some People: A Truth No One Talks About
#longthread
Yaar, have you ever noticed one strange thing?
In India, saying “Bharat Mata Ki Jai” should be the most normal thing, right? Like we say “Jai Hind,” or “Vande Mataram.” It’s a line full of love, respect, and pride for our motherland. But somehow, somewhere… this one line makes some people uncomfortable.
And no one wants to talk about why.
Let’s talk today - straight, without filters.
1. First, what’s wrong in saying “Victory to Mother India”?
Bharat Mata means Mother India. She is not a political symbol. She is not a religious idol. She is a feeling. An emotion. A heartbeat.
When we say “Bharat Mata Ki Jai,” we are not forcing anyone to convert, or pray, or even agree with us. We’re just showing love for the land we’re born in.
Then why are there debates? Why are there protests?
2. “Don’t force me” - That’s the new logic.
Some people say, “Don’t force me to say it.” Arre bhai, who’s forcing? Nobody is pushing it down your throat. But why the anger if someone else says it proudly?
It’s not just about choice. The truth is - many people have been brainwashed.
In schools, universities, social media, even in Bollywood - this love for the nation is often shown as “jingoism”, “toxic nationalism”, or “political drama”.
Slowly, slowly… some youth have started feeling ashamed of their own country.
Imagine, when someone says “Long live India”, there are people who feel offended. Strange, no?
3. The deeper truth: It’s not about the slogan. It’s about identity.
See, the line “Bharat Mata Ki Jai” stands for something bigger.
It stands for civilisation - a Hindu civilisation that respects rivers, trees, cows, women, and soil as sacred. In this land, we worship the earth as our mother.
But this idea scares some people. Why?
Because they don’t believe India is one culture. They say India is just a geographical area, nothing else. No common roots. No common soul.
So for them, saying Bharat Mata is a threat. It shakes their narrative.
4. And some politicians? They love this confusion.
Let’s be honest - many netas and “intellectuals” have made a career out of dividing people. Language, region, religion - divide and rule is still happening.
They know that if people start uniting with slogans like “Bharat Mata Ki Jai”, their vote-bank politics will die. So they attack these slogans. Label them as “communal” or “fascist.”
Bas, confusion begins.
5. But the truth is simple…
You may say “Allahu Akbar,” or “Wahe Guru Ji Ka Khalsa,” or “Jai Shri Ram” - that’s your belief.
But when we say “Bharat Mata Ki Jai,” that’s our collective identity. That’s our matr bhoomi. That’s beyond religion.
It’s not about Hindu or Muslim. It’s about Indian. Our maa.
And if loving your mother is now called “controversial”… then something is seriously wrong.
6. Colonial hangover: Still treating India like a company, not a country
You know what’s messed up?
Even after 75+ years of independence, many Indians still think in English brains. They’ll proudly say “God Save the Queen,” wear suits in 45°C heat, quote western philosophers… but they’ll laugh at “Bharat Mata.”
Why? Because they were taught to believe India is just a “post-colonial experiment.”
But the truth? India is not a product of 1947. She is an ancient civilisation.
They can’t digest that. So they mock it.
7. When Bollywood becomes anti-Bharat in disguise
You’ll see it in movies too. Watch carefully.
The villain shouts “Bharat Mata Ki Jai,” and they show him as a fanatic. The hero is “cool,” “secular,” and says “I believe in humanity, not slogans.”
What’s the message?
That loving your country too much is backward.
They’ve slowly made patriotism look like extremism.
And we didn’t even realise when that poison entered our minds.
8. Fake intellectuals = Real damage
Let’s talk about the so-called “liberals.”
These are the same people who light candles for foreign protests but go silent on Indian soldiers’ deaths. They cry for global warming, but won’t plant one tree for Bharat. They’ll quote American Constitution, but won’t even read our Rigveda or Bhagavad Gita.
They feel Bharat Mata is too “Hindu-sounding.”
So what? Bharat is Hindu. That’s our civilisational root. Doesn’t mean others are excluded. Just like a banyan tree has many branches - but one main trunk.
These people hate the root, but want the fruits. Hypocrisy, no?
9. They’re not just scared of the slogan. They’re scared of unity.
Think deeply.
“Bharat Mata Ki Jai” is not just words. It’s a chant that unites 1.4 billion people. Different castes, states, religions - but one mother.
That chant has power.
That chant gave strength to freedom fighters. That chant gave courage to soldiers. That chant brought lakhs of people on the streets for Bharat’s pride.
So naturally, those who profit from division - they will fear it. They will attack it. Because unity scares them.
10. Ask yourself: If not Bharat Mata, then who?
They say, “Why should I say Bharat Mata?” Okay, fine.
Then what will you say?
Are you proud of India or not?
If yes, then why is it so hard to say three simple words with love?
And if no - then what are you even doing here? Enjoying everything this land gives, but feeling nothing in return?
That’s not freedom. That’s entitlement.
11. Final truth: Loving your nation is your birthright - not a political opinion
Let them say what they want. Let them mock. Let them twist things.
But remember - loving your maa is never wrong. And Bharat is your Maa.
“Bharat Mata Ki Jai” is not just a slogan. It’s an emotion. It’s a tribute. It’s your heartbeat speaking aloud.
Don’t let them silence that heartbeat.
Say it loudly, with pride -
Bharat Mata Ki Jai. 🇮🇳
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Killing Gurukuls & Sanskrit Legacy: How They Imposed Western Education on Bharat
#longthread
Let’s not sugarcoat this.
India didn’t just lose a war. It lost its soul.
And that loss didn’t happen with swords or bullets.
It happened when they killed our Gurukuls, silenced Sanskrit, and gave us English-medium chains in the name of “modern education.”
Most people still don’t realise - this was not just about “learning”…
It was about erasing memory. Erasing identity. Erasing Bharat.
1. Gurukuls: The Heart of Sanatan Bharat
Before the British came, India was not an illiterate jungle.
We had lakhs of Gurukuls - ancient schools where:
- Students lived with Gurus, learned discipline and Dharma.
- Maths, astronomy, medicine, logic, arts, ethics - everything was taught.
- Education was free, funded by society and temples.
- Sanskrit was the medium - precise, powerful, and deeply rooted in Dharma.
Even foreigners admired it.
Chinese travellers like Xuanzang wrote about India’s massive knowledge systems.
Nalanda, Takshashila, Mithila - these were global universities.
Then came the British.
And everything changed.
2. The British Agenda: Break the Backbone of Bharat
Lord Macaulay wrote a letter in 1835 that still hurts like a slap.
He said:
“We must do our best to form a class of Indians who are Indian in blood and colour, but English in taste, in opinions, in morals, and in intellect.”
Translation?
Make Indians ashamed of being Indian.
Replace their thinking. Cut them off from their roots.
Let me say this straight - something very clever (and very dangerous) is happening in our country. It’s not in your textbooks. It’s not on TV debates. But it’s right in front of us.
And most people don’t even realise it.
1. Once it was Divide and Rule. Now it’s Blame and Rule.
In the name of “equality” and “justice,” a new political strategy is being used: Anti-Brahminism.
Yes, the very same Brahmins who were once respected for their knowledge, discipline, and dharmic lifestyle - are now painted as the villains of history.
Every time elections come close, some political party or influencer suddenly starts talking about “Brahmin oppression,” “caste power,” or “Brahminical patriarchy.” Have you noticed?
Why now? Why so suddenly?
Because it works. Blame one community and get votes from others.
2. But Let’s Be Honest. Who Really Holds Power Today?
Most Brahmins today are middle-class or even poor. They don’t control industries. They don’t control politics. They don’t dominate media or Bollywood.
Still, they are blamed for everything - from ancient caste problems to modern economic inequality.
It’s like blaming today’s youth for what their great-great-grandfathers might have done.
Sounds fair?
But this blame game is not about fairness. It’s about control.
Everyone loves quoting the Bhagavad Gita these days.
Even those who’ve never touched it.
You’ll see people using lines like “Karm karo, fal ki chinta mat karo” or “Atma amar hai” - on social media, in speeches, even in WhatsApp statuses.
But here’s the honest question:
Have you actually read the Gita, even once? Or are you just showing off?
Let’s talk about this. Like truthfully. Like brothers and sisters who’ve grown up hearing the name “Gita,” but maybe never opened the book.
1. The Gita is Not a Self-Help Book
Nowadays, people treat Gita like some motivational quote collection.
They pick 2-3 lines and use it to sound wise. But the Gita is not a book of gyaan for Instagram captions. It is a war manual for the soul.
It’s born in the middle of a battlefield, not inside a peaceful ashram.
Krishna didn’t speak it in a classroom. He gave it to Arjuna right before a bloody war, when Arjuna was crying, shaking, and ready to quit.
So if you think it’s just about “being positive” and “doing karma” - bhai, you’re missing the whole point.
2. The Gita is Meant to Shake You
The Gita is not soft.
It questions your attachments. It crushes your ego. It asks you to destroy your weakness, your fake image, your fear.
It tells you:
“You are not this body. You are not your emotions. You are not this temporary identity.”
That hits hard, no?
Because we’ve spent our whole lives saying,
“I’m a Hindu.”
“I’m a Brahmin.”
“I’m a businessman.”
“I’m a victim.”
“I’m depressed.”
“I’m tired.”
“I’m too emotional.”
How NCERT Silently Deleted Hindu Glory - A Truth You Were Never Told
#longthread
They didn’t just write history… they reprogrammed us.
Socho zara - hamare school ke textbooks ne humein kya sikhaya?
Aur kya chhupa diya?
We grew up thinking we were reading “facts”. But in reality, we were being taught a filtered, twisted, and softened version of Indian history - where Hindu civilization was downplayed, and even glorified invaders got hero status.
Yeh koi galti nahi thi. Yeh ek sochi samjhi planning thi. And NCERT was right at the center of it.
1. Brave Hindu kings became footnotes.
Maharana Pratap, Shivaji Maharaj, Raja Dahir, Samudragupta, Rani Durgavati…
These were warriors who fought against Islamic invasions, protected Dharma, saved temples, and built kingdoms rooted in justice and self-rule.
But NCERT taught us they were “regional rulers”, “rebels”, or “small players”.
In contrast, Akbar, Babur, and others were celebrated. As if they were the founders of real India.
So you’re telling me - the defenders are ‘local’ and the attackers are ‘national’?
2. Glorious temples were reduced to stone buildings.
Do you know the Kailash Temple in Ellora was carved top to bottom from a single mountain - with no machines?
The Konark Sun Temple is a solar calendar. The shadows of its wheels tell exact time.
The Brihadeshwara Temple has no binding cement and still stands earthquake-proof after 1,000 years.
But our history books? They barely mention them.
Temples are described as “structures” or “pilgrimage spots”, with zero focus on architecture, science, or culture behind them.
For centuries, Hindus stood together - different languages, different customs, different regions - but one shared civilisational soul: Sanatan Dharma.
Then one crack became many.
One identity became fragments.
One civilisation began fighting within itself.
Caste was once a system of balance.
Now it is used as a weapon of division.
But who really benefits from this?
Let’s open this truth - step by step.
1. British didn’t divide Hindus by accident. They studied us first.
The British spent decades researching Indian society before ruling it.
They found that Hindus had deep inner unity - rituals, festivals, temples, dharma.
So they looked for the one line they could exploit: Jati (caste).
They took what was once flexible and duty-based, and froze it into rigid identity.
And then they made laws, records, and censuses based on caste - not to preserve it, but to control and divide.
2. Caste was never about hate. It became hate later.
In ancient India:
- A Brahmin could become a warrior.
- A Kshatriya could become a sage.
- A Shudra could learn scriptures.
- Valmiki, the sage who wrote the Ramayan, was born outside any caste.
It was about karma and dharma - not blood and ego.
But after invaders and colonisers came, caste was turned into a trap.
One that made Hindus fight each other… instead of protecting Dharma together.
You know every Hollywood superhero.
You know Ashoka Chakra. You’ve heard of Gandhi. Maybe Netaji.
But can you name even 5 Hindu warriors who fought to protect Dharma?
Can you name the kings who held the sword when temples were burning?
Can you recall the names of those who never bowed - even at the cost of their lives?
You can’t.
And this is not your fault.
Because for the last 1,000 years, Hindu bravery was hidden.
Sanatan resistance was erased.
And we were told - “You were always victims, never fighters.”
That is the biggest lie ever sold.
1. The history books you read were never written for you.
After 1947, India became free.
But the minds stayed colonised.
Our textbooks still praised invaders like Akbar and called them “great.”
They whitewashed Aurangzeb, Ghazni, Khilji…
And skipped the names of Hindu kings who fought and defeated them.
Not once. Not twice. For centuries.
The result?
You grew up thinking Hindus only got freedom because of Gandhi.
But freedom was fought for with swords soaked in dharma long before that.
2. They taught us to respect surrender, not resistance.
How many times were you told the story of Prithviraj Chauhan?
That he defeated Ghori once… and let him go. Then lost later.
They made him look foolish.
But they never told you the story of King Hammir Singh of Mewar,
Who captured Ghori’s general, refused all bribes, and beheaded him in full court.