How Was a Hindu Family?
The father worshiped Murugan.
The mother worshiped Perumal.
The son worshiped Shiva.
The daughter worshiped Durga.
Everyone knew that "there is only one God in many forms."
No one hated each other. No one stopped worshiping their deity.
Everyone went to Shiva temples.
Everyone went to Vishnu temples.
All festivals were celebrated together.
They worshiped Karuppannasami as their family deity and also worshiped the Goddess.
Then came the outsiders, bringing their own imagined gods. They entered the land of Bharat.
The Hindu saw that even these imagined gods ultimately reached the one and only Supreme God.
He respected the outsider's god as well.
But the outsider could not understand the Hindu’s broad-mindedness.
And the Hindu could not understand the outsider’s narrow thinking.
The outsider could not grasp how a Hindu even let atheists live peacefully.
Then, using money to sway the father, violating the mother, confusing the people with sweet words about love and mercy, mocking their gods, instilling fear—they converted the Hindu.
By converting just one man, the entire family’s religion changed.
Women lost their freedom. They were veiled, dressed like widows, and confined within the home.
Before:
- Temples always had festivals.
- The birth of a child was a celebration.
- Weddings were grand festivals.
- Even funerals had rituals filled with meaning.
Hindus wore beautiful tilaks on their foreheads, adorned gold jewelry, and dressed in fine clothes.
But after conversion, they were shut inside homes.
When Hindus left their temples and visited places built by the outsiders, all they heard was deathly silence, wailing, and mourning.
Joy was lost. Sorrow filled the air.
Women were locked inside.
Adornment vanished, and they were dressed like widows.
Male dominance grew.
The family, once devoted to the gods who had protected them for generations, now turned against their own faith.
The converted Hindu still knew deep inside that he was once a Hindu.
He remained good at heart—but he was now buried instead of cremated.
Without the sacred last rites, he wandered as a lost spirit.
The belief in ghosts and spirits grew stronger.
He had abandoned his family deity for money.
He had restricted the free worship that his family once enjoyed.
He believed his new god had only one form and forgot that divinity exists within himself, as taught by Hindu Dharma.
After he died, his converted children started believing that they were the true descendants of the outsiders.
They hated Hindus.
Instead of hating those who once enslaved and violated their women,
they considered them their ancestors.
They dreamed of reclaiming Bharat for their new faith.
They sided with anyone who spoke against Hindus.
They voted for those who opposed Hindus.
Seeing this, corrupt politicians formed parties against Hindus.
They spoke against Hinduism.
They rejected Hindu festivals.
Looking at Hindus, who worshiped multiple gods in harmony, they spread false claims that Hindus fought over their gods.
But they never spoke about how outsiders spread religious hatred.
Politicians paid money to buy votes from Hindus who did not understand their own greatness.
They ridiculed Hindus who understood their heritage.
They used the converted Hindus themselves to spread hatred against Hindus.
Converted people, still carrying Hindu names, insulted Hindus.
Through them, corrupt leaders took control.
But now, the time for Hindus to awaken has come.
The era of corrupt rule is ending.
Even after 1,000 years of foreign rule, Hindus never disappeared.
They will not fall for the lies and violence that converted their ancestors.
One day, even the converted will realize the truth and return to Hinduism.
This is the destiny of Bharat.
Just as Hindus were misled into Buddhism and later returned to Hindu worship,
one day, as Bharat becomes prosperous again, even those who converted out of fear and money will return to Hinduism.
They will breathe the air of freedom once again.
Women will regain their independence.
They will once again worship the divine feminine—Durga, Mahalakshmi.
Other religions are man-made.
They struggle to sustain themselves through preaching and forced conversions.
But Hinduism—Sanatana Dharma—is eternal.
The Vedic deities themselves protect it.
That is why, even after 1,000 years of destruction, it has never disappeared.
Even today, Hindus number over 800 million in Bharat.
And not just in Bharat—
Hindus are found all over the world.
Like clouds covering the sun for a while, the truth may be hidden temporarily,
but when the clouds clear, even those who converted will return to their mother faith.
What Should Hindus Do?
- Read the history and stories of your favorite deity.
- Understand the meaning behind them.
- Visit the temples of your gods and see their grandeur.
- Help those who serve in temples.
- Learn and speak about your heritage in your family.
If Hindus do this, they will never be converted.
Instead, those who have been forced into restricted religions will return to Hinduism.
They will once again breathe free air.
!
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