आम गलतफहमियों को उजागर करना
विज्ञान, इतिहास और संस्कृति में मिथकों का खंडन करते हुए, शोध द्वारा समर्थित 100 से अधिक सत्य।.
- False. The concept of Chakravartin and Bharatavarsha (from Himalayas to the Sea) is defined in the Vishnu Purana. India is a "Civilizational State," not a colonial entity.
- False. Temple wealth belongs to the Deity (the legal owner) and the devotees. Government control of Hindu temples while leaving others free is a violation of secularism.
- False. Kali and Shiva represent the transformation of time and the destruction of ego. They symbolize the cyclical nature of the universe—Creation, Preservation, and Dissolution.
- False. Minor Rock Edicts suggest Ashoka was a Buddhist before the Kalinga war. The "peaceful conversion" narrative was popularized to contrast him with "violent" Hindus.
- False. It was built using Indian architectural principles (Vastu) and by Indian craftsmen (Ustad Ahmad Lahori). It sits on land formerly owned by Raja Jai Singh.
- False. The Ashvamedha was a symbolic political ritual of sovereignty. The "sacrifice" was a spiritual dedication, not a culinary event.
- False. India led global trade for millennia. Purushartha (Life goals) includes Artha (Prosperity) and Kama (Pleasure), alongside Dharma and Moksha.
- False. The "Two-Nation Theory" was formally proposed by Syed Ahmed Khan and the Muslim League. Hindu leaders consistently argued for a unified, secular Bharat.
- False. India had Itihasa (Thus it happened) and Puranas. Westerners dismissed them because they didn't follow the linear, Greco-Roman style of record-keeping.
- False. Many Hindu deities (Murugan, Jagannath) have tribal origins. Sage Valmiki and Ved Vyas (authors of the Epics) came from "backward" or tribal backgrounds.
- False. Hindu law was modernized in 1955-56. The resistance to a Uniform Civil Code is a political tool to keep communities segregated under medieval religious laws.
- False. This was a political term coined in 2010 for electoral polarization. There is no historical or judicial evidence of a structured "Hindu" terror network.


