Seventy years of Secularism: Unpopular Essays on the Unofficial Political Religion of India

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Seventy years of Secularism: Unpopular Essays on the Unofficial Political Religion of India is a 2018 book by Sandeep Balakrishna, with a foreword by David Frawley.


The shadow of the previous decades of independent India and its propaganda and intolerance under what was called a “secular socialist” rule still weighs heavily over the country. These regressive forces continue to have powerful support both inside and outside the country, in several state governments notably Kerala, Bihar and West Bengal, and in the judiciary and bureaucracy that are staunchly resistant, with considerable financial resources and their own enduring agendas.

This book is akin to a stocktaking after seventy years of Independent India, which is sorely needed today. The book attempts to explain what India was before secularism and foreign rule, which was a much more enlightened, expansive and prosperous civilisation than people recognise, and what it became afterwards, which was a shadow of alien domination and subversion.

India’s secularism in fact has been colonialism, not in disguise but in a bold new aggressive and intolerant form, propelled not by foreign rule but by the rule of foreign mindsets by Indians themselves. The present volume documents the cultural genocide that the Nehruvian-Marxist alliance wrought on India over the last seventy years, and its great civilisation of many thousands of years, under the name of secularism and socialism.

The next few decades of India should not be dominated by this biased and deceptive idea of secularism but by reclaiming and continuing India’s timeless and grand civilisation and culture, which is pluralistic and open, yet far beyond the confusion and propaganda about secularism that has made the word pejorative.