Prajna Kendra

Prajna Kendra

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Our mission is to restore 'Selfhood' by reclaiming and revitalizing the intellectual, cultural, and philosophical values of ‘Hindutva’.

15/06/2026

📢 Prajna Discourse

Join us for an engaging lecture on “Democratic System in Ancient Bharat” by Prof. Bhagwati Prakash Sharma, Former Vice-Chancellor, Gautam Buddha University.

Explore the rich democratic traditions and governance systems that flourished in Ancient Bharat and their relevance in contemporary discourse.

📅 03 July 2026, Friday
🕓 04:45 PM onwards (Tea & Snacks)
📍 Conference Hall, Prajna Pravah, Keshav Kunj

15/06/2026

📢 प्रज्ञा डिस्कोर्स

प्रबोध ज्ञान केंद्र द्वारा आयोजित व्याख्यान में आपका हार्दिक स्वागत है।

“प्राचीन भारत में लोकतांत्रिक व्यवस्था” विषय पर प्रतिष्ठित विद्वान प्रो. भगवती प्रकाश शर्मा, पूर्व कुलपति, गौतम बुद्ध विश्वविद्यालय, अपने विचार प्रस्तुत करेंगे।

आइए, प्राचीन भारत की लोकतांत्रिक परंपराओं, गणराज्य व्यवस्था एवं शासन-दृष्टि पर एक सारगर्भित विमर्श का हिस्सा बनें।

📅 03 जुलाई 2026, शुक्रवार
🕓 सायं 04:45 बजे से (चाय एवं अल्पाहार)
📍 कॉन्फ्रेंस हॉल, प्रज्ञा प्रवाह, केशव कुंज

12/06/2026

In frame - Dr. Vikram Sarabhai.

Dr. Vikram Sarabhai was the absolute mastermind who started India's space journey and laid the robust foundation for ISRO. He firmly believed that a newly independent nation needed its own indigenous satellite and rocket technology to stand tall and secure its sovereignty on the global stage. Under his brilliant leadership, Indian science began advancing at a breathtaking pace, completely catching global superpowers off guard during the intense Cold War era.

But on December 30, 1971, right when Bharat was on the verge of a massive scientific breakthrough, everything came to a sudden, tragic halt. While visiting a rocket launch site in Kovalam, Kerala, the 52-year-old visionary was found dead in his hotel room. He was completely healthy, highly active, and had zero history of prior illness. Despite the sudden, shocking, and highly suspicious timing of his demise, no autopsy or forensic check was ever conducted. His passing remains one of the darkest unsolved mysteries in Indian history.

[Vikram Sarabhai, ISRO history, Father of Indian Space Program, Indian scientific history, suspicious scientist deaths, Vikram Sarabhai mystery, Indian space research, Thumba rocket launch, space race India, unsung heroes of India, true history of India, forgotten history, trending history reels, educational reels, nationalist history India, Indian space program origins]

10/06/2026

In frame - Baba Bhan Singh (Sunet).

When we think of the brutal 'Kalapani' sentence at Cellular Jail, most people only remember one or two names. But the cells of the Andaman Islands hold the blood of many fierce unsung warriors. One such legend was Gadri Baba Bhan Singh.

Originally serving in the British police cavalry, he chose to leave his job to join the Ghadar Movement in America alongside Kartar Singh Sarabha. In 1915, he was arrested during an armed rebellion attempt, sentenced to life imprisonment, and deported to the living hell of Kalapani.

Even inside the torturous prison, his defiance never stopped. When a British guard abused a prisoner, Baba Bhan Singh stood up and fought back. As punishment, he was thrown into a suffocating 2.5-foot iron cage where he couldn't even sit or lie down. He endured extreme physical torture but never bowed. He attained martyrdom inside the jail, proving that the fire of freedom could never be caged.

[Baba Bhan Singh Sunet, Ghadar Party history, Kartar Singh Sarabha, Lahore Conspiracy Case 1915, Cellular Jail Andamans, Kala Pani history, Unsung Heroes of Bharat, Indian Revolutionary Movement, Punjab Freedom Fighters, True History of India, Veer Savarkar Cell, Cellular Jail Torture Cage]

10/06/2026

In frame: Madan Lal Dhingra 🎥

He was born into immense wealth in Punjab, with a life of luxury handed to him on a silver platter. But moving to London in 1906 changed his destiny forever.

At 'India House,' he connected with radical political activists and was deeply inspired by leaders like Veer Savarkar. Witnessing the brutal realities of British rule back home, Dhingra realized he couldn't sit back in comfort while his nation bled.

July 1, 1909. He took a step that shook the British Empire to its core. At a public function in London, Dhingra stood up and eliminated Curzon Wyllie—the top British official heading the intelligence network tracking Indian student revolutionaries.

He didn't run. He didn't hide. He stood his ground and surrendered on the spot.

During his trial at the Old Bailey, he refused a lawyer. He completely denied the authority of the British court, stating they had absolutely no right to try a Bharatiya on foreign soil.

When asked for a final statement, he didn't plead for mercy. Instead, he pulled a powerful, hidden declaration from his pocket. Looking the judge in the eye, he made it clear: his action was a justified strike in a war against a tyrant empire.

His words were so fierce, so defiant, that British authorities immediately tried to suppress and censor the official publication of his courtroom speech, terrified it would ignite a massive wave of armed rebellion across Bharat.

On August 17, 1909, at just 24 years old, he walked to the gallows. His final wish was to be cremated with Hindu rites.

An unsung titan who traded a life of extreme privilege for ex*****on, just so his country could breathe free. 🇮🇳

[Madan Lal Dhingra, Veer Savarkar, India House London, Indian Freedom Struggle, Unsung Heroes of Bharat, Indian Revolutionaries, True History, Forgotten History of India, Sanatan History, Freedom Fighters]

09/06/2026

In frame - Madan Lal Dhingra
He was born into a wealthy family in Punjab. Seeking a bright future, he traveled to London in 1906 but life in the UK changed him forever.
While in London, he came into contact with political activists at the 'India House,' where he was deeply inspired by leaders like Veer Savarkar. Seeing the harsh realities of British rule back home, Dhingra decided he couldn’t sit back and live a life of luxury while his country was suffering.
On July 1, 1909, he took a step that shocked the British Empire. At a public function in London, Dhingra shot and killed Curzon Wyllie, a top British official who headed the intelligence network tracking Indian student revolutionaries.
Dhingra did not try to escape and was arrested. During his trial at Old Bailey, he refused a lawyer and stated that his actions were a direct protest against the foreign occupation of his motherland.
Dhingra’s trial became the ultimate stage for his resistance. He absolutely refused to recognize the authority of the British court, stating that they had no right to try an Indian on foreign soil.
When the court asked if he wanted to make a statement, Dhingra didn't plead for his life. Instead, he read out a powerful, premeditated declaration that he had kept hidden in his pocket. He looked the judge in the eye and stated that his act was a justified assassination in a war against a tyrant empire. He explicitly stated that just as a German would have the right to kill a British occupier if Germany were invaded, he had the exact same right as an Bharatiya. His words were so defiant that the British authorities tried to suppress the official publication of his courtroom speech, fearing it would ignite a massive wave of armed rebellion back in Bharat.
On August 17, 1909, at just 24 years old, he was executed in London. His final wish was to be cremated with Hindu rites.

[Indian Martyrs, Freedom Struggle, Unsung Heroes, Forgotten History, Madan Lal Dhingra story, Madan Lal Dhingra trial scene, India House, Curzon Wyllie assassination, Indian revolutionaries in London]

Photos from Prajna Kendra's post 07/06/2026

Incredible Sessions on Hindutva by Incredible personalities. ✨✨

05/06/2026

In frame - Gopal Chandra Mukhopadhyay aka Gopal Patha.

You’ve been sold a massive lie. You’ve been systematically conditioned by sanitized history textbooks to believe that your ancestors were passive, weak, and always ready to surrender. You were taught to accept every blow in silence under the guise of unilateral peace. But the brutal, blood-stained reality of 1946 will send chills down your spine.
August 1946. The infamous "Direct Action Day" was unleashed on the streets of Calcutta. This wasn't a random community riot; it was a cold, calculated, state-backed genocide designed to systematically wipe out the Hindu population and permanently alter the region's demographics through pure terror. For three agonizing days, the administration deliberately looked away, the police stayed hidden, and thousands of innocent civilians were slaughtered. They believed the indigenous population’s spirit was broken and that they would die begging for mercy but they made one fatal miscalculation. They forgot what happens when true Hindu blood is pushed to the absolute wall.
Gopal Chandra, a simple meat-shop owner whom the elite completely disregarded, rose like a towering fortress. While big political leaders sat in safe rooms pleading for peace treaties, this one ordinary man's protective consciousness ignited. He didn't wait for permission. He mobilized local youths, organized a fiercely disciplined defense network, and launched a counter-offensive so swift and terrifying that within 72 hours, the aggressive mobs were running for their lives. He single-handedly balanced the scales of history. When later asked to surrender his weapons for political optics, he bluntly refused—stating that a sword raised to protect the innocent is sacred.

04/06/2026

In frame - Swami Laxmanananda Saraswati.

We’ve been raised on a sanitized, pacified version of modern Indian history. You’ve been trained by deep-rooted narratives to believe that protecting your cultural roots is a secondary matter. You think the fight for Hindutva and Bharat’s true "Swa" (selfhood) is just an academic debate. But the brutal, blood-stained reality is that whenever a powerful voice stands up to reclaim the indigenous soul of Bharat, global networks and their local proxies unleash pure terror to silence them.

Swami Laxmanananda Saraswati wasn't just an ordinary monk living in seclusion; he was a fierce shield guarding Bharat’s vulnerable borders. For decades in Odisha’s tribal heartland of Kandhamal, he single-handedly fought against heavily funded, aggressive Christian missionary machinery that was systematically wiping out indigenous culture through deceptive mass conversions. He didn't just preach; he brought back the proud consciousness of Hindutva to the grassroots, reviving the true spirit of "Swa" among lakhs of tribal brothers and sisters who had been disconnected from their roots.

His massive cultural re-awakening completely broke the monopoly of foreign funds and international conversion syndicates. A tribal population reclaiming its proud civilizational identity was an absolute nightmare for those who wanted to fracture Bharat from within. When these Christian missionary lobbies couldn't break his resolve through false media propaganda, court cases, or physical threats, they chose absolute violence. On the sacred night of Janmashtami in 2008, armed elements stormed his ashram and brutally assassinated the 84-year-old sanyasi.

Stop sleeping on your own heritage. Reclaim your roots and realize your identity has been fought for by martyrs. Wake up.

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