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Honoring Dr. I. J. Singh: Enduring Legacy of Sikh Scholarship, Dharmic Unity, and Seva

This tribute reflects on Dr. I. J. Singh’s enduring legacy as a scholar of Sikhism whose life integrated faith, rigorous reasoning, and seva into a coherent method. It outlines how careful definitions, hermeneutic humility, and evidence-based argument advanced both public understanding and institutional ethics in the Sikh Community. It highlights miri-piri as a practical design…
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Safeguard Sanskrit with ‘Special Heritage’ Status: A Blueprint for Dharmic Cultural Revival

On 11 May 2026, the Hindu Shree Foundation called for a “Special Heritage” status for Sanskrit, framing it as a pragmatic route to cultural revival and inclusive nation-building. The proposal, distinct from Sanskrit’s existing Classical Language recognition, targets preservation ecosystems—manuscripts, scripts, pedagogy, research, and digital infrastructure. Designed well, such a framework would unify Dharmic traditions—Hindu,…
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Saints Power a Nationwide Dharmic Renaissance: Alok Kumar on Ethical, Voluntary ‘Ghar Wapsi’

Advocate Alok Kumar (VHP) noted in Goa that saints are catalyzing a nationwide wave of ‘ghar wapsi’ by expanding Dharmic awareness at the grassroots. This analysis frames ‘ghar wapsi’ as a voluntary, plural, and constitutionally grounded homecoming to Dharmic heritage encompassing Hinduism, Buddhism, Jainism, and Sikhism. It explains the legal context (Articles 25–28 and state…
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Upamana in Mimamsa Darshana: Unlocking How Comparison Becomes Valid Knowledge in Hindu Epistemology

Upamāna, or comparison, is treated in the Mimamsa Darsana as a disciplined source of valid knowledge that aligns testimony, perception, and relevant similarity. Rather than a loose metaphor, it is a technical pramāṇa with clear conditions: credible prior śabda, relevance of features, and the absence of defeaters. Classical debates—especially with Nyāya—clarify whether comparison yields the…
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When Power Outpaces Wisdom: Ancient Dharmic Insights to Heal a Wealthy, Wounded World

Modern society holds immense technological power and material wealth, yet faces crises born of its own momentum. Drawing on Hinduism, Buddhism, Jainism, and Sikhism, this analysis explains how shakti (power) must be yoked to viveka (wisdom) through dharma to restore ecological balance, social harmony, and inner clarity. It maps Purusharthas to contemporary dilemmas, applies yama–niyama…
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Kundalini Tantra Unveiled: A Scientific, Dharmic Guide to Awakening the Serpent Power

This comprehensive guide presents Kundalini Tantra as a precise, ethical, and integrative science shared across dharmic traditions. It clarifies yogic anatomy (nadis, chakras, sushumna nadi) and explains how breathwork, bandhas, mudras, mantra, and meditation organize subtle energy safely. A stepwise 12-week framework details how to build foundations with yama-niyama, asana, and pranayama before progressing to…
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Rethinking Death and Consciousness: Rigorous Evidence for Reincarnation and Dharmic Convergence

Modern neuroscience commonly assumes that consciousness ends at death, yet decades of rigorous field research—initiated by Ian Stevenson at the University of Virginia—has documented hundreds of cross-cultural cases suggestive of reincarnation. The strongest reports involve young children who spontaneously recount verifiable details of a previous life, exhibit phobias or behaviors matching the prior death, and…
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Why Sanskrit Calls Humans “Nara”: Deep Origins, Dharma, and the Power of Karma

The Sanskrit term “nara” does more than denote a human being; it encodes a civilizational understanding of agency, ethics, and liberation. Its deep Indo-European etymology, rich scriptural presence, and philosophical nuance explain why Hinduism treats human life as uniquely suited to dharma and karma. Classical distinctions—sañcita, prārabdha, and kriyamāṇa karma—show how present choices reshape experience.…
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Looking Back with Purpose: Transformative Lessons from a Dharmic Journey toward Unity

Purposeful retrospection, grounded in dharma, transforms memory into a tool for growth rather than self-critique. Drawing on Ahimsa, Anekantavada, and Karma Yoga, this reflection-centered approach fosters inner clarity, ethical action, and resilience. Practical methods—mindfulness, meditation, and a five-step weekly framework—translate insight into consistent habits. Community support through satsang, sangha, and the Guru–Shishya Tradition amplifies learning…
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Ancient Hinduism on Conversion: Inclusive Paths, Organic Belonging, and Dharmic Unity

Ancient Hindu society did not rely on a single, formal rite of conversion. Instead, belonging developed organically through practice, ethics, and community participation. Outsiders who resonated with Hindu thought were welcomed via temples, festivals, and guilds, reflecting a civilizational commitment to religious pluralism. Textual references such as Vratya-stoma and Mlēccita-śuddhih emphasize social restoration rather than…
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Empathy Over Control: Dharmic Wisdom for Advice that Respects Autonomy and Dignity

This reflection explores a core dharmic principle: advice should empower, not control. Drawing on the Bhagavad Gita and parallel insights from Buddhism, Jainism, and Sikhism, it shows how empathy, autonomy, and compassion guide ethical counsel. The discussion connects ancient Hindu teachings to modern contexts—family, workplace, and community—where respectful guidance builds trust and accountability. It outlines…
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Complete Guide to Manu in Hinduism: Discover the Timeless Law-Giver Beyond Gender and Time

This article examines Manu as both archetype and title within Hindu cosmology, clarifying how fourteen Manus guide each kalpa and why the role is best understood as beyond gender and bound to time cycles. It situates Manusmriti within the broader Dharmashastra tradition, highlighting contextual interpretation and ongoing ethical refinement. The narrative of Vaivasvata Manu and…

