🎬 Bollywood’s Anti-Hindu Obsession: A Cinematic Attack on Sanatan Dharma
For decades, Bollywood has claimed to represent “India.” But when you dig deeper, a pattern emerges a clear ideological war against Hindus, masked under the glitter of "art", "secularism", and "freedom of expression." This is not cinema anymore; it’s a well-funded cultural attack. And it’s time we call it out unapologetically.
Not Just Coincidence. It’s an Agenda:
Why is it that whenever Hindu traditions are shown on screen, it’s usually with mockery, violence, superstition, or villainy?
- Hindu gods are mocked,
- Temple priests are shown as rapists or greedy frauds,
- Sacred symbols like tilak, rudraksha, or the Bhagavad Gita are either ridiculed or used by villains.
Meanwhile, characters from other religions are portrayed with grace, sympathy, or moral superiority.
📽️ Just Look at These Films
🔴 1. PK – Shiva chased around like a clown. Temples mocked. But not a single joke on Islam or Christianity.
🔴 2. Oh My God – Entire business model of temples questioned, priests mocked, yet not one word against churches or madrasas.
🔴 3. Adipurush – They distorted our Ramayana, insulted Bhagwan Ram, made Bajrang Bali a street thug. They turned a divine story into a cartoonish mockery.
🔴 4. Kedarnath – A clear case of glorifying “love jihad.” A Muslim boy “saving” a Hindu girl in one of our most sacred places.
🔴 5. Brahmastra – Ranbir enters a Durga Puja wearing shoes. Would they ever dare show that in a mosque?
🔴 6. Tandav – Open insults to Bhagwan Shiva, trivialized on a college stage. Massive protests followed. But the intent was clear.
🔴 7. Annapoorani – A movie about a Brahmin girl cooking non-veg and offering it to Bhagwan. This isn’t “progressive” this is pure hate.
🔴 8. Laxmmi Bomb – They named it after Goddess Lakshmi, tied it to horror, ghosts, and spirits. Why do they never name ghosts after Mary or Fatima?
🔴 9. Padmaavat – Claimed to glorify Rajput pride, but in reality, it romanticized a barbaric invader like Alauddin Khilji.
🔴 10. The Kerala Story – This one finally showed the truth about Islamic conversion and ISIS recruitment. And yet, they tried to ban it, calling it “communal.”
This Is Just The Tip:
We have identified at least 50+ such films over the last 20 years, and if we go deeper into older Bollywood, we’ll easily cross 100 films that either:
- Insult Hindu rituals and scriptures,
- Show Hindu saints as frauds or criminals,
- Push love jihad narratives,
- Downplay Islamic/Christian crimes,
- Use Hindu icons in villain roles.
This isn’t coincidence. This is calculated propaganda, funded, scripted, and protected.
The Impact on Bharat’s Youth:
Every film like this feeds one idea into the minds of our children:
👉 “Being Hindu is backward.” 👉 “Temples are evil.” 👉 “Hindu gods are mythology, but other religions are sacred.” 👉 “Sanatan Dharma is a joke.”
And the result? We have a generation that:
- Feels ashamed to wear tilak,
- Thinks Ramayan and Mahabharat are just stories,
- Considers temples "superstitious places,"
- Accepts Western or Abrahamic ideals as “modern” and “liberating.”
We Must Fight This Narrative War
Cinema is not just entertainment, it’s a weapon. And today, that weapon is being used to undermine Bharat’s cultural foundation.
We must respond:
✅ Boycott such films - every rupee they get is a bullet against Dharma.
✅ Promote Dharmic cinema - support films that respect our roots like Kantara, The Kashmir Files, Ramayana, Chaava, and others.
✅ Expose the agenda - write, post, speak, and awaken the youth.
✅ Create alternate media - it's time we build our own platforms where Sanatan voices won’t be shadowbanned.
Conclusion: The Battle Is On
This isn’t just about films. It’s about who tells our story. For too long, our stories have been told by those who hate our gods, mock our temples, and twist our culture.
We need to reclaim our narratives through books, films, songs, and education. If we lose the cultural war, the political and economic victories won’t matter.
Sanatan Dharma is not mythology. It is eternal. But it must be defended. Even on the silver screen.
Jai Shree Ram. Jai Bharat.
Comments
Post a Comment