Cultural Marxism & Bharat:
I didn’t grow up hearing the term Cultural Marxism. I wasn’t taught it in school. But over the years, watching what’s happening around me in universities, on social media, in Bollywood, and even in our temples. I felt something was deeply wrong.
Our civilization, Bharat, which has stood strong for over 10,000 years, is now being eaten from within. Not by weapons. Not by foreign invasions. But by an ideology that teaches our youth to hate who they are, to be ashamed of Dharma, of Sanskriti, of Bharat Mata.
This ideology, which I now understand is Cultural Marxism, is not just a Western export. It’s now deeply embedded in our own institutions in colleges, media, and even NGOs. And unless we fight it head-on, we risk losing not just our youth, but the very soul of our nation.
What Exactly is Cultural Marxism?
Let me simplify it.
Marxism, at its core, was about class war: rich vs poor. But that failed in many places. Some Western thinkers, such as Gramsci, Marcuse, and the Frankfurt School, decided to attack something else: culture.
They said: If we can break people's faith in their religion, family, gender roles, and traditions, we can control their minds. Instead of revolutions in the streets, they wanted revolutions in classrooms, TV shows, and social media.
And that’s exactly what they’ve done. They replaced economic struggle with identity struggle:
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Men vs. Women
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Dalits vs. Savarnas
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Hindus vs. Minorities
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Parents vs. Children
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“Queer” vs. Traditional Gender Roles
In short, they’ve made victimhood a badge of honour, and tradition a symbol of oppression.
How It Came to Bharat
Let me be clear, this wasn’t an accident. Cultural Marxism came to India strategically.
After Independence, our education system didn’t decolonize. In fact, it got worse. Nehru’s love for Soviet-style socialism made Marxist ideology respectable in elite circles. Slowly, our universities became breeding grounds for anti-Indian, anti-Hindu narratives.
Places like JNU, TISS, Jadavpur, and Ashoka University became the epicentres of this disease.
Real Story - JNU 2016
I remember watching news clips in 2016, students shouting “Bharat tere tukde honge!” in the heart of our capital. And the shocking part? Professors defended them! It wasn’t just free speech, it was ideological subversion. Funded, organised, and encouraged.
Footage of slogans shouted at JNU
At that moment, I realized our own tax money is being used to create youth who will one day betray the nation.
Their Playbook - How Cultural Marxism Works
1. Destroy the Family
They attack the joint family system, push alternative lifestyles, and promote hyper-individualism. Concepts like “gender fluidity”, and “chosen families” are being introduced in Indian schools with foreign support. Even cartoons now preach gender ideology.
In one Delhi school, a “gender sensitization” workshop asked 12-year-olds to define their sexual orientation. Parents were kept in the dark.
2. Weaponize Caste Against Hindus Only
Yes, caste injustice exists. But Cultural Marxists use it not to reform, but to demonize. Only Hindu casteism is shown as evil. No one talks about caste-based hierarchy in Islam or Christianity in India.
In Kerala churches, Dalit Christians still sit at the back. But that doesn’t make it to Netflix or NDTV.
Instead, Manusmriti is blamed for everything, and entire communities are made to feel collective guilt, especially Brahmins.
3. Ally with Islamists and Anti-Nationals
They form a dangerous alliance: Leftists provide ideology, Islamists provide aggression, and foreign NGOs provide money. Together, they push narratives like “Hindutva is fascism”, “India is no country for minorities”, and “RSS is the biggest threat to democracy”.
Look at Shaheen Bagh. A protest hijacked by this Islamo-left gang. Placards read “Hindu Rashtra Nahi Chalega” and the media glorified it!
Impact on Our Youth: What I See Around Me
I’ve seen bright, intelligent Indian youngsters who should be building Bharat become mentally colonized:
1. Identity Confusion
They don't know who they are. They’re ashamed of wearing a tilak, chanting a mantra, or touching their parents’ feet. Many of them think being Hindu means being regressive.
One of my cousins was told by her sociology professor: “Ramayan is a Brahminical tool to control women.” She started questioning every ritual at home.
2. Guilt & Shame
Young Hindus are made to feel like villains. They’re told their faith is full of casteism, patriarchy, and superstition. They’re taught about Misinterprited Manusmriti, but never about Chanakya, Kalidasa, or Swami Vivekananda.
A Dalit student in IIT told me: “The leftists on campus made me believe all upper-caste students hate me. But when I stayed with them, I found more love than politics.”
3. Nihilism and Depression
When you destroy family, faith, and cultural roots, you create lost souls. Youth turn to drugs, porn, extreme ideologies, or depression. India now has one of the highest suicide rates among students, but no one links it to this cultural collapse.
Who’s Funding All This?
This isn’t spontaneous. There’s big money behind this. Global institutions fund Indian NGOs, think tanks, and media to spread these ideas:
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Ford Foundation, Rockefeller Foundation, Soros's Open Society, and Equality Labs all fund woke activism in India.
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In universities like JNU or TISS, scholarships often come with ideological strings attached.
This is foreign ideological warfare, hidden behind the mask of “social justice”.
What’s the End Goal?
The final aim of Cultural Marxism in Bharat is clear:
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Break our civilizational unity.
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Divide us by caste, gender, region, and religion.
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Replace Dharma with Western moral relativism.
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Turn our youth into global consumers with no cultural spine.
Conclusion
Cultural Marxism is not a theory anymore. It is a reality. It’s the soft war being waged against Bharat every single day in classrooms, on OTT screens, in Twitter threads, and behind NGO curtains.
But we are not helpless. Our civilization has survived invasions, genocides, colonization, and partition. We will survive this, too.
But only if we stop being silent observers and become active warriors.
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