
Colonisation of Sanskrit words: Distorting Dharma, Rashtra, and the soul of Bharat
This linguistic colonization misrepresented Bhartiya thought and disrupted societal structures and public understanding in post-colonial Bharat.
1. Dharma ≠ Religion
Perhaps the most damaging mistranslation is the equating of Dharma with 'religion'. In reality, Dharma refers to the cosmic order, righteousness, duty, ethical living, and the path of self-realization. It is not tied to belief systems, deities, or dogmas. Dharma is contextual—what is Dharma for a teacher is different from that of a ruler or a child. It is a code of conduct embedded in time, place, and identity (svadharma). The Abrahamic idea of 'religion', based on exclusive truth claims, worship of a single God, and rigid institutional structures, is fundamentally different. By forcefully mapping Dharma onto 'religion', colonial and missionary forces created deep confusion, codified personal laws based on rigid texts, and set the stage for communal divisions.
2. Rashtra and Desha ≠ Nation or Country
The Sanskrit Rashtra does not merely mean 'nation' in the European sense. A Rashtra is a sacred, cultural, and civilizational entity rooted in Dharma and shared spiritual values. It is not bound by geopolitical boundaries but by a consciousness—Bharat has been a Rashtra long before it became a 'nation-state'. The European model of a nation—emerging from treaties, colonialism, and power politics—views the state as a legal and administrative structure. This model was imposed on Bharat, diminishing its deep-rooted civilizational unity based on spiritual and cultural coherence, not political uniformity.
Similarly, Desha simply refers to land or region, and was never a fixed nationalistic construct. By equating Rashtra and Desha with 'nation' or 'country,' we began to measure Bharat using foreign yardsticks, erasing the soul from the body.
3. Swarajya ≠ Freedom
The word Swarajya, made famous by Bal Gangadhar Tilak and later echoed by Sri Aurobindo, was not just political independence. Swa-rajya means 'self-rule' at both individual and collective levels. It implies inner sovereignty—the mastery of one's senses, mind, and actions—as well as freedom from external domination.
Colonial powers reduced Swarajya to mere political 'freedom', akin to European notions of liberty or civil rights. But Bharatiya thought considers freedom incomplete unless it is accompanied by Swatantrata (self-dependence) and Atma-nirbharta (self-realization and self-sufficiency).
Today, even after political independence, the absence of Swarajya in intellectual, cultural, and economic spheres reflects a deeper bondage. True Swarajya begins with cultural decolonization.
4. Sanskriti ≠ Culture
Sanskriti refers to refinement, inner evolution, and civilizational maturity. It comes from the root 'kr' (to do) with the prefix 'sam' (well) — meaning 'well-crafted' or 'refined behavior and thought.' Sanskriti embodies values, traditions, ethics, arts, sci ences, and collective memory rooted in Dharma. The English term 'culture' is often limited to external expressions—art, music, food, fashion, or festivals. It is secular, often aesthetic, and lacks the depth of inner evolution that Sanskriti demands.
By substituting Sanskriti with 'culture,' we risk trivializing the soul of Bharatiya civilization, reducing it to 'cultural programs' or tourist-friendly 'heritage' rather than a way of life shaped by spiritual philosophy and lived wisdom.
5. Darshan ≠ Philosophy
Darshan literally means 'to see' or 'vision'. In Bharatiya tradition, it refers to experiential systems of viewing reality—not speculative philosophy but intuitive insight into the nature of existence. The six schools of Darshan (Nyaya, Vaisheshika, Sankhya, Yoga, Mimamsa, Vedanta) are both logical and experiential.
Western 'philosophy' derives from philo (love) and sophia (wisdom), but is often academic, analytical, and detached from practice. When Darshan is translated as 'philosophy,' the spiritual and experiential core of Bharatiya knowledge is lost.
For instance, Yoga is not a 'philosophy' or 'exercise' routine—it is a Darshan, a living system to experience and attain liberation (moksha). Reducing Darshan to speculative thought undermines its transformative potential.
6. Jāti ≠ Caste
Jāti refers to community, often based on occupation, locality, and shared customs. It was never a static or rigid birth-based system. With thousands of jātis across Bharat, the system was fluid, and social mobility was possible. The British censuses and legal codes rigidified jāti into 'caste'—a term borrowed from Portuguese casta, meaning breed or race. This racialized the Indian social structure and created a hierarchical system that aligned with colonial control mechanisms. The distorted caste system we see today is a colonial construct, not a native one. By fixing jātis into permanent social categories, colonizers divided our society to rule it more easily. This division still exploited today for political gain.
7. Karma ≠ Fate
Karma means action. It is a law of cause and effect, empowering individuals to shape their destiny through their actions, thoughts, and intentions. It places moral and ethical responsibility on every being.
Colonial translators, unfamiliar with the concept, portrayed Karma as 'fate' or 'destiny'—a passive acceptance of suffering. This misinterpretation painted Bharatiyas as fatalistic, submissive people who accepted oppression as karmic justice.
In truth, Karma is not about helplessness but accountability. The colonial view undermined agency and created the illusion that Bharatiya society was inherently submissive.
8. Guru ≠ Teacher
A Guru is not just a teacher, but a remover of darkness (gu = darkness, ru = remover). The Guru leads the disciple on a spiritual journey, imparting not just knowledge but wisdom, transformation, and inner awakening. Western education views the teacher as an instructor, often limited to subject matter expertise. The colonial system replaced the sacred Guru-shishya parampara with formal classroom models, devoid of emotional bonding, spiritual connection, or ethical training.
9. Moksha ≠ Heaven
Moksha is liberation—freedom from the cycle of birth and death, realization of the Self, and unity with the infinite consciousness (Brahman) which is the ultimate goal. 'Heaven' in Abrahamic faiths is a reward for belief and good conduct, often a physical paradise. By equating moksha with heaven, the colonial mindset turned a deep philosophical goal into a simplistic post-death reward. The colonization of Sanskrit terms was not accidental; it was a deliberate act of erasing indigenous worldviews and replacing them with Western frameworks. This has led to decades of misunderstanding among foreigners including Bharatvasis.
Correcting the colonial distortion of Sanskrit terms requires educational reforms, responsible media and academic usage, active efforts by cultural institutions to decolonize vocabulary, and a shift in public discourse beyond colonial binaries. Reclaiming the true essence of words like Dharma, Rashtra, Sanskriti, and Swarajya is not just about language, it is key to Bharat's civilizational revival through authentic reinterpretation and not mere revivalism.
(The writer is an Expert, Creative Economy)

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles

The Hindu
40 minutes ago
- The Hindu
Russia says it downed 142 Ukrainian drones, including 27 over Moscow region
Russia's Defence Ministry and the mayor of Moscow said it had downed 142 drones overnight, including 27 over the Moscow region. The drones were reportedly shot down over a number regions in the European part of Russia, as well as over the Black Sea. The latest attacks included four drones headed toward the Russian capital, which were downed on Sunday morning, Moscow Mayor Sergei Sobyanin said on Telegram around 1000 local time (0700 GMT). Also Read | Russia pounds Kyiv with another major missile and drone attack According to Russia's aviation watchdog Rosaviatsia, four major airports serving Moscow - Sheremetyevo, Vnukovo, Domodedovo and Zhukovskiy - were affected, resulting in 134 flights being redirected. By 1000 Moscow time, only two airports remained closed to air traffic - Vnukovo in the Moscow region and Grabtsevo in the Kaluga region.


New Indian Express
an hour ago
- New Indian Express
'Trump before Trump': Orban's illiberal model on show in Hungary
BUDAPEST: At the American embassy in Budapest, the atmosphere has changed since US President Donald Trump was sworn in six months ago. "No more public scoldings. No more moralising from podiums," the new charge d'affaires Robert Palladino told guests, including several Hungarian ministers, at this month's US Independence Day celebration. Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orban wants the European nation to serve as a laboratory of far-right ideas and an inspiration for Trump, whom the nationalist describes as "a great friend", and is hoping for a US presidential visit. Self-touted as a "Trump before Trump", Orban has transformed the national life of Hungary, an EU member and home to 9.5 million people, during his 15-year rule. In his drive to build what he has called an "illiberal state", he has been accused of silencing critical voices from the judiciary, academia, media and civil society, and of restricting minority rights. Trump's predecessor Joe Biden once accused him of "looking for dictatorship." 'Open-air museum' "Hungary is like an open-air museum, whose leader appears to have proved it is possible to bring back the so-called good old days," Zsolt Enyedi, a senior democracy researcher at Vienna-based Central European University, told AFP. "Illiberal ideas have been institutionalised," he added. Both Trump and Orban target minorities, including the LGBTQ community. "Orban realised there was not a strong public resistance to incitation against vulnerable groups... so he leveraged these to campaign," the researcher said. "Similarly, Trump deports people without going through due process as American conventions would dictate," Enyedi added.


Time of India
5 hours ago
- Time of India
Israel asks US to support relocation of Palestinians from Gaza to third countries
Israel's Mossad chief David Barnea has reportedly asked the United States to help persuade several countries—including Ethiopia and Indonesia—to accept large numbers of Palestinians displaced from the Gaza Strip. This revelation, first reported by Axios, signals the most concrete diplomatic push yet seen behind Israel's controversial plan to encourage 'voluntary' relocation out of Gaza. Earlier this week, Mossad director David Barnea met with White House envoy Steve Witkoff in Washington, D.C., presenting a request for active U.S. involvement in seeking pathways for mass relocation of Palestinians. Barnea claimed that Ethiopia, Indonesia , and Libya had expressed openness to receiving substantial numbers of Gazan refugees, and suggested the U.S. could provide diplomatic and economic incentives to encourage them to agree. Explore courses from Top Institutes in Select a Course Category Technology Design Thinking Leadership healthcare Digital Marketing Data Science Healthcare CXO Degree PGDM Finance Product Management Cybersecurity others Management Data Science Artificial Intelligence Public Policy Others Operations Management Data Analytics Project Management MCA MBA Skills you'll gain: Duration: 12 Weeks MIT xPRO CERT-MIT XPRO Building AI Prod India Starts on undefined Get Details White House officials did not confirm any policy support. Witkoff 'remained non-committal,' according to sources briefed on the meeting, and it is unclear what, if any, role the U.S. might eventually play. The governments of Ethiopia, Indonesia, and Libya declined to comment before publication, and none have publicly confirmed a willingness to take in Gazan refugees. Gaza's humanitarian catastrophe Gaza's population—about 2 million people—has faced devastation in recent months, with near-total displacement, widespread destruction, and severe shortages of food and basic supplies. According to the UN and humanitarian agencies, Israeli military operations have resulted in the deaths of over 59,000 Palestinians, most of whom are women and children, since October 2023. Live Events Israel has developed contingency plans, including herding the remaining Gaza population into a small 'humanitarian zone' near Egypt, further raising concerns about long-term intentions to depopulate the enclave. Netanyahu and Trump: A shared vision? President Donald Trump floated a similar proposal earlier in 2025, suggesting that all Palestinians be relocated while Gaza is 'rebuilt.' The idea met fierce resistance from Arab nations, European allies, and human rights organizations, effectively stalling the plan. Despite international backlash, Israeli officials—particularly from Netanyahu's far-right coalition—have continued to pursue the concept, directing Mossad to identify potential host countries and launch diplomatic overtures. Netanyahu has described the goal as 'free choice,' claiming that anyone wishing to leave Gaza should be able to do so, denying allegations of forced displacement. International outcry and legal ramifications The Israeli government's goal of reducing Gaza's population and moving Palestinians abroad has provoked outrage. Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu 's administration insists any displacement would be 'voluntary,' yet legal experts and international human rights groups have labeled the plan a potential war crime and warned of the risk of ethnic cleansing. A U.S. senator, Chris Van Hollen, called Israel's request 'outrageous and sickening,' urging the U.S. to reject any involvement in what he termed 'ethnic cleansing of Palestinian civilians from Gaza'.