First Quote Added
April 10, 2026
Latest Quote Added
"It’s when you’re losing that your true nature reveals itself. Be your best self even in loss"
"Parents with a bad attitude can’t expect children with a good one. Fix yourself first."
"Beauty is the biggest enemy of attitude"
"A country or culture can be best judged by how it treats its minorities"
"Great are those that are remembered for all the right reasons when they’re gone"
"Death is the moment when you stop believing in lies and learn the greatest truth"
"Death is the moment we receive a grade for the life we lived"
"Unless you are one with all humans, you are not human"
"If the mother is the boat's canopy, offering shelter to her children, the father is the sail and rudder, guiding them forward"
"Switching from one religion to another is like repeating the same error in a different form. As humanity grows wiser, the only meaningful conversion is beyond religion itself."
"Blaming others is the quickest route to stall your own growth."
"The Happiness Index of a culture can be judged by its festivals"
"Festivals are where you see the heart of a culture beating"
"Festivals are like rain after a long hot summer. They bring people together like dancing in the rain."
"Festivals celebrate the human race, in how we’ve conquered the Earth, the Skies and the Waters, and most importantly, our own collective vices."
"Every day should be a festival."
"Let festivals be a time when we all come together as one, equal in our shared humanity."
"Vanity is the new modern day slavery"
"if Men are enslaved by the lure of money, women are by vanity"
"racism is arrogance at the highest level"
"Racism is like blind men sitting in a dark room, convinced there’s nothing beyond its walls."
"Racism is a sweeping stroke of the brush of arrogance to demean an entire race, merely to assert one’s own superiority."
"Racism stems from a fundamental misunderstanding of human history."
"Weddings are festivals between festivals"
"Weddings are occasions where couples make vows and promises they cannot keep"
"Weddings are what keeps customs alive"
"Weddings are days when the unwed dream of theirs... and the wedded regret theirs."
"If culture were a living body, festivals are its beating heart."
"Happiness lies in family, pursuing your passions, and having enough money to enjoy both."
"The true happiness of a country is reflected in the eyes of its children."
"Change others only after you have transformed yourself."
"Changing others is simple; changing yourself is the real challenge."
"Change is the greatest mental barrier, but once you overcome it, new opportunities unfold."
"Change is impossible in a religion that thinks it’s seen the last prophet. Prophets come and go, and we have to change with them"
"I create art because a single image can convey a thousand words."
"I do art because I can’t convey certain ideas through other means"
"I do art because it's my shot at eternity"
"Tolerance is the ability to accept another's views, even when you believe they are incorrect."
"Tolerance involves pointing out what you believe to be another's mistake while allowing them to find their own path, rather than imposing yours on them"
"If tolerance were bees then its hive is in India"
"Life is a slow suicide, and it is happening to every intellectual."
"All these facts taken together were destructive of any theory other than the conspiracy to murder (of Gandhiji) by Savarkar and his group."
"Veer Savarkar was another Indian leader senior to Gandhi who was a firebrand revolutionary like those of Europe with whom he associated. He had a strong vision of Indian nationalism and was also not adverse tot using force to remove the British. He was a deep thinker and a yogi in his later years. Unfortunately his work was denigrated and distorted by leftist opponents. There was a concerted effort to malign him a Nazi because of his anti-leftist views, even though he was an opponent of Hitler and wanted India to join the war on the British side! Through Savarkar I gained a different idea of India's independence movement, which clearly was much more than the Gandhian images which is all that people in the West really know."
"In parenthesis, and with due respect, it strikes the modern reader that Savarkar’s writing is full of superlatives. In publications of lesser Hindutva writers, the situation is often much worse: they sound almost as emotional as Syed Shahabuddin’s diatribes. After all that Rishis and Tirthankaras and Buddhas have taught about the value of dispassionate observation, it is disappointing to find that Hindu writers cannot keep their cool and go off on an emotional tangent of either bombastic glorification or sterile self-pity."
"Most secularists pretend not to know [the] unambiguous position of Savarkar’s (in many cases, they really don’t know, for Hindu-baiting is usually done without reference to primary sources). Likewise, Savarkar’s plea for caste intermarriage to promote the oneness of Hindu society is usually ignored in order to keep up the pretence that he was a reactionary on caste, an “upper-caste racist” (as Gyan Pandey puts it), and what not. There are no limits to secularist dishonesty... [It] is just another case of secularist justice: Hindu are damned if they do, damned if they don’t."
"Here, Godse denies once more that Savarkar had played a role in the assassination. Approver Digamber Badge kept on making this very allegation, possibly because he or the investigating police officers expected some reward from Pandit Nehru in exchange for catching such a big fish. HMS leader and Godse’s lawyer L.B. Bhopatkar revealed several years later, in Manohar Malgonkar’s The Men Who Killed Gandhi.., that Dr Ambedkar, the Law Minister in Nehru’s Cabinet at that time, met him secretly to inform him that Nehru was personally interested in involving Savarkar, though there was no evidence to prove Savarkar’s complicity. His mere imprisonment was successful enough in eliminating him from politics. Manohar Malgonkar, in The Men Who Killed Gandhi writes ‘The strain of the trial, and the year spent in prison while it lasted, wrecked Savarkar’s health and finished him as a force in India’s politics.’ At any rate, the prosecutor could not produce the slightest evidence connecting Savarkar with the murder. In August 1974, Badge admitted to an interviewer that his testimony against Savarkar had been false. Ever since, journalists reluctant to give up the polemical advantage of connecting the main Hindutva ideologue with the murder, glibly introduce him as ‘a co-accused in the Mahatma murder trial.’ In Nehruvian ‘secularism’, superficiality of thought is compensated for by thoroughness in dishonesty."
"Right from his early days in the Andamans, Vinayak encouraged people to speak in Hindi....Till then, government records were maintained in Urdu, and even Hindi was written in the Persian script. Vinayak strongly advocated the implementation of the Devanagari script as it was the one in which the oldest language of the subcontinent, Sanskrit, was written. During his interactions with local merchants in his capacity as the foreman of oil collections, Vinayak passed this zeal on to them too. Through his influence, a girls’ school that was started in the Andamans began a compulsory teaching of Hindi in the Devanagari script."
"Back in mainland India, a new movement was brewing. It is important to understand this issue because it sets the context in which Vinayak penned his magnum opus on Hindutva and his belief in the need for Hindu society to organize itself politically. The concept of Hindutva continues to be a contentious one in Indian politics even today..... Meanwhile, it was in the dark confines of Ratnagiri prison that Vinayak began writing his magnum opus on his political philosophy—his conception of what constituted a ‘Hindu nationalist identity’. These were distilled from his experiences in the Andaman and Ratnagiri jails with respect to the conversions, his own attempts at shuddhi and sangathan and the raging debates in the country surrounding the Khilafat agitation. The word that he popularized and which holds immense political currency in contemporary India was ‘Hindutva’ or ‘Hindu-ness’."
"Despite being born in an orthodox and religious Chitpawan Brahmin community, Vinayak despised the caste system right from childhood. This has been illustrated in the kinships he developed with children from various castes and strata of society, and how he dined at their homes. At a time when most members of his community forbade sea travel for fear of a loss of caste, Vinayak was among the few Brahmins who travelled to London for his education. He had no qualms about going non-vegetarian as well, unlike most Brahmins of the time. As his political thoughts matured during his long years of incarceration, he penned essays on the abhorrent practice of the caste system and untouchability and how these sapped the nation of all vitality. Advocating a strong case for their total, complete and unconditional eradication at a time when these ideas were not yet a part of the political discourse popularized by either Gandhi or Ambedkar, he was the first to envision a casteless India."
"Savarkar is widely reviled in Indian history as an apostle of hate; through a reading of Hindutva I argue that he might better be understood as a spurned lover . . . Hindutva in its time was also a reminder to a Hindu community that even if Gandhi had left the political milieu, there was no need to worry. A political Hindu and a true nationalist was back and ready to lead India, even from behind prison walls. Hindutva was a pugilistic punch thrown against Gandhi in the competitive political ring for national leadership."