The recent Pahalgam incident is a painful reminder of how, in Kaliyug, religion is no longer a way of life but has become a spectacle, manipulated for personal gain. Once meant to guide humanity, religion is now being weaponized by extremists to justify violence.
Who are these people committing atrocities in the name of religion?
They are humans too, just like us. But their minds have been programmed with one dangerous belief: “Anyone who doesn’t follow your religion is your enemy.”
Through sophisticated indoctrination, powerful minds plant this ideology into unemployed, vulnerable youth. These perpetrators later take public responsibility with prid, —not for justice, but just to show presence.
If we call them demons, we won’t be wrong—yet they are even worse.
In Satyug, the war between gods and demons was for amrit (nectar). In Tretayug, the battle between Ram and Ravan gave us Ramayana, a sacred scripture.
In Dwapar, the Mahabharata gave us the divine wisdom of the Bhagavad Gita.
But what is the purpose of wars in Kaliyug?
These battles are not fought for higher values. They are waged just to assert dominance. The tragedy is that this war will continue until we reach the root cause.
At the root is the manipulation of unemployed youth, offered money and coded with a belief that anyone who rejects their faith deserves to die.
What Must Be Done?
Through this blog, I want to emphasize:
We must change this mindset.
Those who believe “our religion is supreme and everyone else is the enemy” are living inan illusion.
Change in ideology is only possible when the schools that code such hatred are shut down.
Lessons from Pahalgam
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India needs one education system — no separate religious schooling that divides young minds.
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Religious beliefs must remain private — the moment they are displayed, competition begins. And when such competition ends in bloodshed, it is no longer healthy.
We cannot—and must not—tolerate a competition that ends in the death of humanity.