logo
In current global scenario, India must strive to become self-reliant: RSS chief

In current global scenario, India must strive to become self-reliant: RSS chief

Time of India10 hours ago
1
2
Nagpur: In the current global scenario, India must strive to become self-reliant, but that goal will remain incomplete unless the country rediscovers its own identity, said Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh (RSS) sarsanghchalak Dr Mohan Bhagwat on Friday.
Speaking at the inauguration of the Dr Keshav Baliram Hedgewar International Gurukul at the new Waranga campus of Kavi Kulguru Kalidas Sanskrit University on Wardha Road, Bhagwat underscored the critical link between cultural self-awareness and national strength. Though he didn't directly castigate anyone, RSS sources said his remarks may have come in view of United States President Donald Trump's move to impose a 25% tariff against India.
"If we want to be truly self-reliant, we must first fully understand our own 'swaroop' — our intrinsic nature," he said. "Where there is selfhood, there is strength, energy, and prosperity. When we forget our essence, decline sets in. That is what history has taught us."
The RSS chief traced India's past glory to a period when the country was rooted in its cultural identity. "Even by western historical accounts, India led the world from the year 1 to 1600 AD.
by Taboola
by Taboola
Sponsored Links
Sponsored Links
Promoted Links
Promoted Links
You May Like
5 Books Warren Buffett Wants You to Read In 2025
Blinkist: Warren Buffett's Reading List
Undo
Our downfall began when we started forgetting who we are," he said, adding that British colonial rule deepened this loss by enslaving not only territory but also the Indian intellect and minds.
Bhagwat highlighted the role of language in expressing national character. "Language is the medium through which we express our inner nature. The way a society thinks is reflected in how it speaks," he said. He warned against blindly embracing western concepts like global markets, which he said failed to resonate globally, unlike India's inclusive philosophy of Vasudhaiva Kutumbakam (the world is one family).
Strongly advocating the revival of Sanskrit, Bhagwat remarked, "To know Sanskrit is to know India. It is the source of all Indian languages and the largest reservoir of vocabulary. Anyone who knows Sanskrit can learn other languages quickly." He emphasized that Sanskrit must return to everyday use and that it should not be confined to academics or liturgy. "Universities have a crucial responsibility in ensuring Sanskrit gains janashray — public adoption — along with rajashray or state patronage," he said.
The Sangh supremo said India's path to becoming Atmanirbhar lies not just in economic or technological strides but in reconnecting with its foundational identity. "Swatatva — our inner truth — is the seat of real strength, intellect, and prosperity. When this is forgotten, decline begins," he said, drawing parallels with India's history and the colonial erosion of native pride.
Bhagwat also pointed to traditional Indian households where Sanskrit chants are memorised and recited despite speakers not understanding the language.
"This shows that Sanskrit can survive in practice, but we now need to bring it into conversation," he stressed.
While acknowledging the academic study of Sanskrit, Bhagwat pointed out its limited use in daily life. "I passed the final examination of Sanskrit Bharati, but I still cannot speak it fluently. That's the issue — without vyavahar (usage), learning remains incomplete," he admitted.
He said that Sanskrit, which houses India's collective memory and is the mother of most Indian languages, makes learning other tongues easier.
"To know Sanskrit is to know India. Every Indian must engage with it — in schools, in homes, in public life," he said.
Stressing that a truly self-reliant India must rediscover its Swatatva — the inner essence and identity that define the nation — Bhagwat called for a cultural and linguistic renaissance rooted in Indian traditions, particularly through daily use of Sanskrit.
Chief minister Devendra Fadnavis, higher and technical education minister Chandrakant Patil, KKSU vice-chancellor Hare Ram Tripathi, former vice-chancellors Pankaj Chande and Uma Vaidya, and director Krishna Kumar Pandey were present.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Rahul Gandhi claims Arun Jaitley was sent to 'threaten' him fr opposing farm laws
Rahul Gandhi claims Arun Jaitley was sent to 'threaten' him fr opposing farm laws

Economic Times

time19 minutes ago

  • Economic Times

Rahul Gandhi claims Arun Jaitley was sent to 'threaten' him fr opposing farm laws

ANI "I don't think you have an idea...": Rahul Gandhi claims Arun Jaitley sent to "threaten" him Congress leader Rahul Gandhi on Saturday claimed that the NDA government had sent the late Union Finance Minister Arun Jaitley to "threaten" him for trying to fight against the farm laws that were introduced by the Narendra Modi government earlier."I remember when I was fighting the farm laws, Arun Jaitley was sent to me to threaten me. He told me, 'If you carry on opposing the government, fighting the farm laws, we will have to act against you. ' I looked at him and said 'I don't think you have an idea who you are talking to,'" Rahul Gandhi said. The Congress leader addressing the Annual Legal Conclave 2025 also launched a scathing attack on the Election Commission of India (ECI), alleging its complicity in large-scale voter fraud."The truth is that the election system in India is already dead. The Prime Minister of India holds office with a very slim majority. If 15 seats were rigged, we suspect that the number is over 70 to 80, he would not have been the Prime Minister of India. We are going to prove to you in the coming few days how a Lok Sabha election can be rigged and was rigged," Gandhi said. The Congress leader went on to credit lawyers, among others, for obtaining freedom from British rule, saying that the freedom movement was fought legally in actuality. However, he alleged that the constitutional architecture built by lawyers was being "destroyed". In the annual legal conclave titled 'Constitutional Challenges - Perspectives & Pathways' organised by Congress, Gandhi said that all talks about the constitution wouldn't happen if it weren't for lawyers. "You (lawyers) are the people who started Congress. Congress was essentially (made up of) lawyers. We wouldn't have got freedom if the lawyers of this country had not fought for freedom. All this talk about the constitution, the constitution would not be here if it had not been for lawyers," Gandhi said while addressing the gathering here. Crediting lawyers for envisioning the constitution, the Leader of Opposition (LoP) Lok Sabha said that the entire constitutional architecture is a result of a legal mind and fraternity, since it would have been impossible for people who don't understand law to frame the constitution. "Freedom movement was actually fought, in large measure, legally. You are the backbone of the Congress party. You are also the people who envisioned the constitution. It would have been impossible for people who don't understand the law to frame this (constitution). It was the legal mind, fraternity that built the entire architecture," he added. Gandhi asserted that the architecture built by lawyers was being "destroyed" systematically at every front. "I am telling you this, that it is the architecture that you build, which is being destroyed today. It is being systematically unravelled on every front. Some of it is visible while the other is hidden," he said. Speaking on the Rafale deal, Gandhi claimed that a document clearly mentioned that the PMO and the National Security Agency (NSA) interfered with the deal. He said that the document would have brought down any government in any country of the world, but nothing happened. "We had a document on the Rafale deal. The document said clearly, black and white, that the Prime Minister's office and the NSA have interfered in the Rafale deal and damaged it. This document itself would have brought down any government in any country of the world. Nothing happened. You know where the document went. You know where the document died," he top leaders, including Congress President Mallikarjun Kharge, KC Venugopal, Abhishek Singhvi, Ajay Maken, Priyanka Gandhi Vadra, Mukul Wasnik, Jairam Ramesh, Karnataka CM Siddaramaiah, Telangana CM Revanth Reddy, Himachal Pradesh CM Sukhvinder Singh Sukhu, Ashok Gehlot, Bhupinder Hooda, Prithviraj Chavan, Digvijaya Singh, Bhupesh Baghel, Gaurav Gogoi, Salman Khurshid, DK Shivakumar were present at the conclave.

Indians Boycott Turkey: Tourism Falls 37% Over Ankara's Support To Pakistan During Operation Sindoor
Indians Boycott Turkey: Tourism Falls 37% Over Ankara's Support To Pakistan During Operation Sindoor

Time of India

time21 minutes ago

  • Time of India

Indians Boycott Turkey: Tourism Falls 37% Over Ankara's Support To Pakistan During Operation Sindoor

Indians are speaking with their wallets. Following Turkey's open support to Pakistan during Operation Sindoor, and confirmed use of Turkish-made drones against Indian forces, Indian tourism to Turkey has dropped by a staggering 37% in June 2025, the peak travel season. Official Turkish data shows just 24,250 Indian tourists visited this June, down from 38,307 last year. Travel portals like MakeMyTrip and EaseMyTrip have stopped promoting Turkish packages. PM Modi highlighted Turkey's alignment with Pakistan and China at the UN and OIC. Now, with Lt Gen Yasar Kadioglu's military visits to Pakistan and public praise from Field Marshal Munir and Shehbaz Sharif for Erdoğan, India is not taking it lightly. This video breaks down the fallout, India's diplomatic pushback, and the massive economic impact of India's global influence. Watch the full report.#indiaturkeyrelations #operationsindoor #turkeytourismdrop #indiantravellers #turkeypakistanties #songardrones #pakistanturkeyaxis #indianbacklash #tourismnews #easemytip #makemytrip #turkeyboycott #foreignpolicyindia #pmmodi #shehbazsharif #asimmunir #receptayyiperdogan #breakingnews #trending #bharat #toi #toibharat #indianews

Explained: Why India shouldn't lose sleep over Trump's 25% tariffs
Explained: Why India shouldn't lose sleep over Trump's 25% tariffs

India Today

time24 minutes ago

  • India Today

Explained: Why India shouldn't lose sleep over Trump's 25% tariffs

When Donald Trump announced a sweeping 25% tariff order targeting Indian exports, effective August 1, it had all the hallmarks of a trade provocation. Yet in Delhi's ministries and Mumbai's market floors, the response was consensus across policy circles is clear: Trump's move is less about trade policy and more about leverage. A pressure from threatening retaliation, India is opting for dialogue. Commerce Minister Piyush Goyal told Parliament that the government would 'safeguard the interests of our farmers, workers, and small entrepreneurs".The Ministry of External Affairs reaffirmed that the broader US–India partnership 'has weathered transitions and challenges' and should not be derailed by short-term frictions.25% TARIFF TO HAVE LIMITED IMPACTStrategic affairs expert Brahma Chellaney has been one of the few voices raising alarm over what he calls the "lopsided" nature of the trade expectations coming from pointed out that even under a new trade accord, the United States would retain relatively high tariffs on Indian goods—comparable to what it maintains on Vietnam and the Philippines, around 19–20%. In return, India would be expected to impose zero tariffs on most US imports, a clearly uneven 25% tariff order, while headline-grabbing, is unlikely to trigger major macroeconomic tremors. According to estimates by ICRA, Nomura, and ANZ, the GDP impact is expected to be modest, around 0.2 to 0.4 percentage points. India exports roughly $87 billion worth of goods to the US annually—just 2 to 3% of its total likely to take a near-term hit include traditional export mainstays: textiles, gems and jewellery, auto components, and seafood. But core sectors like pharmaceuticals, IT services, and high-end engineering remain relatively INDIA A 'DEAD ECONOMY'? ASK AMERICAN CONSUMERSStill, the frustration behind the tariff move isn't rooted in deficit calculations alone. Trump has publicly derided India's economy as a 'dead economy,' but data tells another story, especially when it comes to what American consumers depend top four exports to the US—pharmaceuticals, textiles, electricals and electronics, and jewellery—form a critical part of American supply chains. India ranks among the top five import destinations for the US in pharma, textiles, and jewellery. In electronics, India is one of the fastest-growing exporters to the US.'The total volume of 'Made-in-India' smartphones grew 240% year-on-year and now accounts for 44% of smartphones imported into the US, up from only 13% of smartphone shipments in Q2 2024,' according to Canalys data cited in this India Today DIU report. In the last quarter, India emerged as the dominant player in mobile handset shipments to the tariffs on key import destinations such as India could push up domestic prices for American consumers, especially in sectors where substitution is neither immediate nor HOLDING UP THE INDIA–US TRADE DEAL?The underlying tensions go beyond tariffs. Chellaney warns that the United States is not just demanding better market access but is pushing India to rewrite domestic policy in ways that could have long-term noted that India would be expected to open its agricultural and dairy markets, even though industrial-scale American imports could shatter India's family farms and undermine its food United States also expects India to ramp up purchases of American energy products by tens of billions of dollars annually. And despite already being a growing buyer of US arms, India would be nudged to increase its defence imports expectations haven't been officially acknowledged by Indian negotiators. But several of these themes have surfaced in earlier trade talks between the two countries, and officials say regulatory changes are already being quietly evaluated, including customs streamlining and possible tariff rationalisation on select capital INDIA MUST STAND ITS GROUNDExporters, meanwhile, are not standing still. Many are pivoting toward the EU, ASEAN, and Middle East markets, especially in sectors like engineering goods and climate-aligned manufacturing. The recently signed India–UK free trade agreement is expected to generate over Rs 500 billion annually and contribute 0.06% to India's GDP in the long term, signalling new avenues for growth.'A 25% US tariff may put some pressure on India's export-driven sectors like engineering goods, textiles, and jewellery. This move underscores the growing trend of protectionism and may compel India to diversify export markets, push for FTA negotiations, and accelerate domestic value addition to maintain global competitiveness,' said Ajay Garg, CEO, SMC Global Securities.'While Trump's trade policies unsettle global supply chains, India's resilience and economic agility are emerging as key differentiators. Notably, regional competitors like Bangladesh and Sri Lanka are still facing steeper tariffs, weakening their edge,' Garg added. 'Amid global uncertainty, India remains one of the fastest-growing major economies, poised to lead the next phase of emerging market growth.'Still, the deeper concern lies not in tariffs themselves, but in what they represent. Chellaney argues that this isn't merely about trade, it's about shaping the architecture of India's future economic dependencies. 'Conceding quietly,' he says, 'can become a pattern.'Opposition parties have accused the government of being too passive in the face of what they see as a coercive gambit. But export bodies and trade associations have largely backed New Delhi's calm approach. They have urged exporters to renegotiate contracts directly with US buyers, share cost burdens, and reinforce India's reputation as a reliable trade insist that India's sovereignty on food security, defence procurement, and digital trade remains non-negotiable, regardless of tariff TARIFF PLAYBOOKIt may be noted that the 25% tariff order isn't about economics; it's Trump playing the same old game. Trump's tariff playbook thrives on calibrated disruption: loud threats, sudden reversals, and pressure designed to unsettle rather than resolve. Sometimes he calls India a close ally. The next moment, it's a 'dead economy.' The inconsistency is the now, India is not retaliating, but there's little reason to lose sleep over what may well be another of Trump's arm-twisting theatrics.- Ends advertisement

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store