I have been guzzling down news from different sources since May 6, 2025, more precisely since the Pahalgam terror attack that shook the nation on 22nd April. Reading fiction has taken a backseat for now but the bibliophile in me bought a copy of Ramacharitamanas, thanks to Air Marshal AK Bharti. Yes, only a book lover can turn the country's DGAO into a book influencer.
In the press meet dated May 12, when a journalist shared lines penned by the famous poet Ramdhari Singh Dinkar in his question, the DGAO replied with a couplet from Ramacharitamanas (in pic shared above) adding that for the intelligent, a hint is enough. Cultural significance aside, what stood out garnering applause from even journalists who were not at the venue to be wooed was how the Air Marshal explained the 'why' behind Operation Sindoor and our strategy using just two lines from Tulsidas’s epic poem. I still have copies of ACK Valmiki’s Ramayana and C Rajagopalachari’s Ramayana published by Bharathi Vidya Bhavan from my childhood days in the book shelf, but I couldn't resist my temptation to grab a copy of Ramacharitamanas (this copy published by Gita Press Gorakhpur) after listening to Air Marshal AK Bharti.
No one wants war, everyone wants peace. And yet, they do appear together as in the title of Leo Tolstoy’s popular classic. For the considerable sample space in fiction I have explored from the genres - historical fiction/war fiction, I have a fair understanding of the environmental destruction, losses of all sorts - financial and emotional associated with a war. I don't have a family member serving in the Indian Armed Forces, I don't reside anywhere close to the border or conflict zone, but just the sound of the siren and visuals of blackout on my TV screen are enough to leave me with a churn in my stomach.
Pakistan has been actively breeding and fomenting terror and religious fanaticism on its soil for decades, ‘a dirty work’ they themselves have admitted doing. There isn't an iota of doubt about this for what else can explain the country borrowing money 28 times in 35 years from the IMF and yet unable to improve its economic health earning itself the tag ‘a debtor too big to fail’.
Operation Sindoor isn’t a war on our neighbour Pakistan that we started or waged with an intent to threaten their sovereignty or territorial integrity, it's a fitting reply and resounding slap to the terror they unleashed on innocents in Baisaran Valley in Pahalgam on 22nd April. Even when Pak shelled Indian towns across the border and showered drones on our cities, we thwarted those attacks and struck their military bases in a highly calibrated and precise fashion.
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