Indian National Congress
How the Congress Party has Surrendered to the Breaking India Forces
An essay tracing the near-comprehensive trajectory of the consequences of the Congress-Communist cosy relationship
Indian National Congress
An essay tracing the near-comprehensive trajectory of the consequences of the Congress-Communist cosy relationship
Marxist Historians
A 1969 Marxist pamphlet titled "Communalism and the writing of Indian History" led to the wholesale falsification of Indian history and invented a new class of historians who were branded Communal
Marxist Historians
An account of the origins of history distortions in the Indian academia
Amit Shah
Nothing has changed. The centerstage of the theatre of Jihad-fuelled carnage largely remains the same. Only that its side wings have jutted out and continue to expand westwards—from West Bengal to Uttar Pradesh…that other theatre of the same carnage located at the near-extreme north-western India, Punjab, was lost
Article 370 Abrogated
Read Part One: Abrogating Article 370: Will Pakistan Cease to Exist? The Vale of Kashmir has an enduring and enchanting quality as geography. It stands in splendid isolation from everything around it. It is an exquisite, well-watered and well-wooded valley in the midst of desolate snowy peaks that do not
Indian History
How history writing in India was systematically destroyed through institutional takeover
Indian National Congress
Let’s look at two representative instances[i] from the post-independence history of India drawn at random. Both concern the same people, both are related to each other and both provide a good framework of reference to understand much of the seventy-year-long national economic woe that followed. 1. On Nehru’
Indian Freedom Struggle
In the previous part discussing R.C. Majumdar’s frank and objective critique of Mohandas Karamchand Gandhi, we had seen how Majumdar showed, using Gandhi’s own words, that Satyagraha had no fair role in India’s struggle for freedom. In the present episode, we present a continuation of the
Indian Freedom Struggle
We have briefly introduced the invaluable contributions of Sitaram Goel, one of the strongest voices in the post-Independence era of India speaking up for and defending Sanatana Dharma, and at the same time, offering sledgehammer-like blows to the combined forces of the residues of imperialism that had so horribly wrecked
Indian National Congress
In adversity, he was a unifier, in victory, magnanimous, in defeat, equanimous, and in exit, gracious. Atal Bihari Vajpayee. This is his finest hour. Mesmerising Orator A late rainy monsoon evening, 1991. The familiar venue of the National College grounds in Bangalore was overflowing, throbbing with energetic anticipation awaiting the