Month: January 2026

Rishi & Reformers, Trending

Who Was Sushruta and Why Is He Called the Father of Surgery?

When we hear words like surgery or rhinoplasty, we instinctively think of modern hospitals, precise instruments, and advanced technology. It feels impossible to imagine such precision without proper lights or machines. But still, more than two thousand years ago, an Indian physician was already performing complex surgical procedures with...

Read More

Trending

Why Vasant Panchami Is Dedicated to Knowledge, Learning, and New Beginnings?

Have you ever thought, why do we wear yellow on Vasant Panchami? Why is it celebrated as the arrival of spring and blooming flowers? Well, beneath its gentle beauty lies a deeper purpose. The significance of this day is not just a seasonal celebration. It is a reminder that growth begins with knowledge, clarity, and …...

Read More

Trending

Who Broke India’s Gurukul System and Why It Never Recovered? 

British education taught us to memorise dates, pass exams, and respect authority on paper. What it quietly erased was the fact that India already had a deeply functional Gurukul system long before classrooms had bells and chalk dust. The gurukul system was not primitive. It was inconvenient for invasion and colonial narratives. It was...

Read More

Trending

Makar Sankranti: The Solar Shift That Marks a New Phase of the Year

Every year, around mid-January, something quietly powerful happens in the sky. The Sun changes its direction. Days begin to stretch. Warmth slowly returns. And without dramatic announcements, Makar Sankranti arrives. Unlike most Hindu festivals that follow the Moon, the day listens to the Sun. It marks the moment when the Sun enters...

Read More

Trending

Lohri: A Festival Rooted in Winter, Harvest, and Community

The Lohri festival is one of the most grounded and meaningful celebrations in North India. Observed every year on 13 January, Lohri marks the end of peak winter and the beginning of longer, warmer days. Celebrated most prominently in Punjab, Haryana, and parts of North India, Lohri is deeply connected to agriculture, seasonal cycles, and...

Read More

Trending

Why Most Hindu Rituals Start at Sunrise And Why Modern Life Broke That Rhythm?

Most Hindu sunrise rituals begin at dawn not because sunrise is vaguely auspicious, but because classical Hindu texts treated sunrise as the natural beginning of the day. Time was measured by light, not by clocks. Rituals followed the body’s alignment with the sun, not convenience. What modern life calls religion was once a practical...

Read More
Close