Had the honour of meeting Hon. Prime Minister of India @narendramodi ji for inaugurating my biographical book 'Bharatvakya.' It is our nation's good fortune that we have a leader like PM Modi, who is steering Bharat to new heights. Under his leadership, every section of society has prospered and Indian culture has thrived globally. May Bhagwan Dattatreya give him more strength to work even harder for the progress of our nation, culture and society.
. K.E.M हॉस्पिटलने या सेजल पवार नावाच्या मुलीच�� गंभीर दखल घ्यावी, तिच्याविरुद्ध स्वतंत्र केस दाखल करावी, तिचा वैद्यकीय परवाना रद्द करावा आणि तिला वैद्यकीय क्षेत्रातून कायमचं बाहेर काढावं. जर वैद्यकीय क्षेत्रात असे असंवेदनशील डॉक्टर असतील, तर उद्या त्यांच्या उपचारांवर विश्वास ठेवणाऱ्या रुग्णांचं काय होणार, याची कल्पनाच करवत नाही. ज्या व्यवसायाचा पाया करुणा, संवेदनशीलता आणि मानवतेवर उभा आहे, त्या व्यवसायात जर माणुसकीच उरली नसेल, ���र तो पांढरा कोट हा केवळ एक मुखवटा ठरतो. ज्यांना देहदानासारख्या पवित्र आणि मानवतेच्या सर्वोच्च भावनेतून जन्मलेल्या कृतीचाही खेळ वाटतो, त्यांनी माणुसकीचा अर्थ समज��न घ्यावा. काही मूर्खांसाठी दुसऱ्यांच्या त्यागातही करमणुकीचा विषय शोधणं हेच विनोदाचं परिमाण बनलं आहे.
@Rj_pranit , स्टँडअप कॉमेडियन्सना (काही अपवाद वगळता) झाकलेल्या शरीर अवयवांबद्दल इतकं पिसाट कुतूहल का असावं? मानवी शरीर, मानवी नातेसंबंध आणि वैयक्तिक सन्मान यांना सतत दळभद्री विनोदांचा विषय बनवण्यात नेमकं कोणतं शौर्य आहे? दुर्दैव याचं वाटतं की अशा तुमच्या दळभद्री विनोदांमुळे आपणच भर चौकात नागडे होतो, हेही तुम्हाला समजत नाही. कपडे नसल्याने माणूस नागडा होत नाही; संवेदनशीलता, विवेक, संस्कार आणि सभ्यतेचा त्याग झाला की माणूस खऱ्या अर्थाने नागडा होतो.
तुम्हाला उद्या जर मुलं झाली आणि त्यांनी अजाण वयात आपल्याच बापाचे हे असले दळभद्री विनोद ऐकले, त्यावर हसले आणि नकळत त्याच रस्त्याने चालू लागले, तर तुम्हाला कसं वाटेल? त्यावेळीही तुम्ही त्याला “कॉमेडी” म्हणाल का? समाजाच्या पिढ्यांची अशा विनोदांमुळे मानसिक आणि भावनिक अधोगती होत असेल, तर त्या समाजात पुढे तुमचीही मुलं असतील, हे विसरू नका. त्यांनीही त्याच प्रदूषित मानसिकतेचा वारसा घ्यायचा आहे, जी तुम्ही टाळ्यांच्या आणि स्वस्त लोकप्रियतेच्या नादात निर्माण करत ���हात.
टाळ्यांच्या आवाजात कदाचित विवेकाचा आवाज ऐकू येत नसेल. पण त्याने वास्तव बदलत नाही.
मग करत बसा कॉमेडी.
@AmitShah @AmitShahOffice @Dev_Fadnavis @Devendra_Office @DevenBhartiIPS @BJP4Maharashtra @BJP4India @RSSorg @CMOMaharashtra @DGPMaharashtra @mieknathshinde @KEMHOSPITAL Pl take a strict cognizance of this. This is not in good taste for the society & the young generation.
. Your presence and encouragement at “Swatantrate Bhagwati” was truly inspiring for all of us. This programme was our humble and sincere attempt to pay tribute, through music, to the blazing patriotism, visionary thoughts, and timeless literary legacy of Swatantryaveer Savarkar.
With the support of the Department of Cultural Affairs, the programme became more grand, meaningful, and deeply touching for the audience. Your good wishes and support will continue to inspire and strengthen such nation-oriented artistic endeavours. 🙏🇮🇳 @ShelarAshish@narendramodi@BJP4India@BJP4Maharashtra@RSSorg@Dev_Fadnavis@Devendra_Office@myogiadityanath@AmitShah@AmitShahOffice@narendramodi
राष्ट्रभक्ती आणि अदम्य धैर्य य���ंचे तेज��्वी प्रतीक असलेले स्वातंत्र्यवीर विनायक दामोदर सावरकर यांच्या १४३ व्या जयंतीनिमित्त आमच्या सांस्कृतिक कार्य विभागामार्फत प्रभादेवी येथील पु. ल. देशपांडे महाराष्ट्र कला अकादमी येथे आयोजित करण्यात आलेल्या ‘स्वतंत्रते भगवती’ या सांगीतिक कार्यक्रमास उपस्थित राहून रसिक प्रेक्षकांशी संवाद साधला.
प्रख्यात शास्त्रीय गायक डॉ. भरत बलवल्ली यांनी स्वातंत्र्यवीर सावरकरांच्या देशभक्ती��र गीतांचे प्रभावी सादरीकरण केले.
यावेळी माजी खासदार विनय सहस्त्रबुद्धे, मुंबई विद्यापीठाचे कुलगुरू रविंद्र कुलकर्णी, अखिल भारतीय विद्यार्थी परिषदेचे प्रदेश सहमंत्री शांतनू बिरोजे, सांस्कृतिक कार्य संचालनालयाचे संचालक श्रीराम पांडे, पु. ल. देशपांडे महाराष्ट्र कला अकादमीच्या संचालिका मीनल जोगळेकर आणि अन्य मान्यवर उपस्थित होते.
#SwatantryaVeerSavarkar #स्वतंत्रते_भगवती
. A grand musical, poetic and dance presentation on the occasion of the 143rd Birth Anniversary of Swatantryaveer Vinayak Damodar Savarkar.
“Swatantrate Bhagwati”
Presented by the Government of Maharashtra, Cultural Affairs Department and Directorate of Cultural Affairs, Maharashtra State, this special programme is based on the immortal poetry, scientific vision and nation-building philosophy of Swatantryaveer Savarkar. All are specially invited for this programme.
Poetry: Swatantryaveer Vinayak Damodar Savarkar.
Music: Dr. Bharat Balvalli
Anchoring: Vighnesh Joshi
Artists:
Nachiket Desai, Sharayu Date, Shivam Singh and Dhanashri Apte & Disciples.
Date: Friday, 29th May 2026
Time: 6:30 PM
Venue: Ravindra Natya Mandir, Prabhadevi, Mumbai
Entry is Free through free invitation passes. Seating will be on a first-come, first-served basis. Let us come together to experience the fiery spirit of patriotism, poetry, music and cultural pride.
Jai Hind! Vande Mataram !
@narendramodi@BJP4India@BJP4Maharashtra@CMOMaharashtra@Dev_Fadnavis@friendsofrss@ShefVaidya@RSSorg@RandeepHooda@myogioffice@SunilAmbekarM@AshwiniUpadhyay@ShelarAshish@MinOfCultureGoI@DrMohanBhagwat@RamdasAthawale
This entire drama of Gen Z revolution, and the desire to create a Nepal or Bangladesh-like situation in India, is not only illogical but also deeply irresponsible. By encouraging such narratives, the opposition is only exposing its desperation and digging its own political grave.
Before 2014, the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) was not in power for nearly 30 years, except for one full term under Atalji. Yet, they never tried to capture power through violence, street chaos, or some manufactured revolution. They worked patiently on the ground. RSS workers went door to door, convinced people, spread their ideology, built their organisation from scratch, and after decades of hard work, they came to power through the mandate of the people.
Today, Congress and several opposition parties appear so desperate to return to power that they are indirectly pushing young people onto the streets, hoping to use their anger as a shortcut to political relevance, while they themselves continue to sit comfortably at the top.
Now, let us talk about revolution. Can a country as vast, diverse, and complex as India witness a revolution? Yes, and we have already witnessed one. Was it easy for a non-Congress party to come to power in 2014 after nearly 70 years of Congress dominance? Certainly not. That change did not happen overnight. It was a revolution, but a democratic one. From Tier 1 cities to the remotest villages, people used the power of their vote to bring change. That is real revolution.
Revolution does not always mean coming onto the streets and inciting violence. In fact, that is far easier than creating a true democratic revolution through awareness, organisation, conviction, and votes.
What happened in West Bengal recently was also a revolution. Bengali people from across India, and even from abroad, spent thousands of rupees and travelled all the way to Bengal just to cast a single vote. That was a far more powerful act than any street violence. Since 2021, Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh (RSS) workers have lost their lives in post-poll violence despite doing nothing wrong. Their families have faced assault, harassment, and intimidation. Was that not part of a difficult democratic struggle?
And now, some leftists sitting in the USA think they can create a revolution in India through Instagram reels, comment sections, and online propaganda. Do they really think Gen Z is that foolish? Or do they simply take the youth for granted because they need a shortcut to power?
The Gen Z of this country knows what is right and what is wrong. We question the government when needed, whether it is on the NEET paper leak, UGC-related concerns, unemployment, education, or any other issue. That is democracy. But India’s Gen Z is not foolish enough to come onto the streets and engage in violence just because politically motivated people with no clear ideology want to capture power by hook or by crook.
Questioning the government is democracy. Protesting peacefully is democracy. Voting with conviction is democracy. But using the youth as political fuel for chaos is not revolution, it is manipulation. India does not need a manufactured tool-kit revolution of violence. India needs democratic awareness, responsible questioning, and the courage to vote for change when needed.
@abhijeet_dipke@CJP_2029@dhruv_rathee@BJP4Maharashtra@BJP4India@AmitShahOffice@AmitShah@PIBHomeAffairs@HelleLyngSvends@Dev_Fadnavis@dpradhanbjp@HMOIndia@SureshChavhanke@INCIndia@AamAadmiParty@msisodia
This entire drama of Gen Z revolution, and the desire to create a Nepal or Bangladesh-like situation in India, is not only illogical but also deeply irresponsible. By encouraging such narratives, the opposition is only exposing its desperation and digging its own political grave.
Before 2014, the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) was not in power for nearly 30 years, except for one full term under Atalji. Yet, they never tried to capture power through violence, street chaos, or some manufactured revolution. They worked patiently on the ground. RSS workers went door to door, convinced people, spread their ideology, built their organisation from scratch, and after decades of hard work, they came to power through the mandate of the people.
Today, Congress and several opposition parties appear so desperate to return to power that they are indirectly pushing young people onto the streets, hoping to use their anger as a shortcut to political relevance, while they themselves continue to sit comfortably at the top.
Now, let us talk about revolution. Can a country as vast, diverse, and complex as India witness a revolution? Yes, and we have already witnessed one. Was it easy for a non-Congress party to come to power in 2014 after nearly 70 years of Congress dominance? Certainly not. That change did not happen overnight. It was a revolution, but a democratic one. From Tier 1 cities to the remotest villages, people used the power of their vote to bring change. That is real revolution.
Revolution does not always mean coming onto the streets and inciting violence. In fact, that is far easier than creating a true democratic revolution through awareness, organisation, conviction, and votes.
What happened in West Bengal recently was also a revolution. Bengali people from across India, and even from abroad, spent thousands of rupees and travelled all the way to Bengal just to cast a single vote. That was a far more powerful act than any street violence. Since 2021, Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh (RSS) workers have lost their lives in post-poll violence despite doing nothing wrong. Their families have faced assault, harassment, and intimidation. Was that not part of a difficult democratic struggle?
And now, some leftists sitting in the USA think they can create a revolution in India through Instagram reels, comment sections, and online propaganda. Do they really think Gen Z is that foolish? Or do they simply take the youth for granted because they need a shortcut to power?
The Gen Z of this country knows what is right and what is wrong. We question the government when needed, whether it is on the NEET paper leak, UGC-related concerns, unemployment, education, or any other issue. That is democracy. But India’s Gen Z is not foolish enough to come onto the streets and engage in violence just because politically motivated people with no clear ideology want to capture power by hook or by crook.
Questioning the government is democracy. Protesting peacefully is democracy. Voting with conviction is democracy. But using the youth as political fuel for chaos is not revolution, it is manipulation. India does not need a manufactured tool-kit revolution of violence. India needs democratic awareness, responsible questioning, and the courage to vote for change when needed.
@abhijeet_dipke@CJP_2029@dhruv_rathee@BJP4Maharashtra@BJP4India@AmitShahOffice@AmitShah@PIBHomeAffairs@HelleLyngSvends@Dev_Fadnavis@dpradhanbjp@HMOIndia@SureshChavhanke@INCIndia@AamAadmiParty@msisodia
This entire drama of Gen Z revolution, and the desire to create a Nepal or Bangladesh-like situation in India, is not only illogical but also deeply irresponsible. By encouraging such narratives, the opposition is only exposing its desperation and digging its own political grave.
Before 2014, the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) was not in power for nearly 30 years, except for one full term under Atalji. Yet, they never tried to capture power through violence, street chaos, or some manufactured revolution. They worked patiently on the ground. RSS workers went door to door, convinced people, spread their ideology, built their organisation from scratch, and after decades of hard work, they came to power through the mandate of the people.
Today, Congress and several opposition parties appear so desperate to return to power that they are indirectly pushing young people onto the streets, hoping to use their anger as a shortcut to political relevance, while they themselves continue to sit comfortably at the top.
Now, let us talk about revolution. Can a country as vast, diverse, and complex as India witness a revolution? Yes, and we have already witnessed one. Was it easy for a non-Congress party to come to power in 2014 after nearly 70 years of Congress dominance? Certainly not. That change did not happen overnight. It was a revolution, but a democratic one. From Tier 1 cities to the remotest villages, people used the power of their vote to bring change. That is real revolution.
Revolution does not always mean coming onto the streets and inciting violence. In fact, that is far easier than creating a true democratic revolution through awareness, organisation, conviction, and votes.
What happened in West Bengal recently was also a revolution. Bengali people from across India, and even from abroad, spent thousands of rupees and travelled all the way to Bengal just to cast a single vote. That was a far more powerful act than any street violence. Since 2021, Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh (RSS) workers have lost their lives in post-poll violence despite doing nothing wrong. Their families have faced assault, harassment, and intimidation. Was that not part of a difficult democratic struggle?
And now, some leftists sitting in the USA think they can create a revolution in India through Instagram reels, comment sections, and online propaganda. Do they really think Gen Z is that foolish? Or do they simply take the youth for granted because they need a shortcut to power?
The Gen Z of this country knows what is right and what is wrong. We question the government when needed, whether it is on the NEET paper leak, UGC-related concerns, unemployment, education, or any other issue. That is democracy. But India’s Gen Z is not foolish enough to come onto the streets and engage in violence just because politically motivated people with no clear ideology want to capture power by hook or by crook.
Questioning the government is democracy. Protesting peacefully is democracy. Voting with conviction is democracy. But using the youth as political fuel for chaos is not revolution, it is manipulation. India does not need a manufactured tool-kit revolution of violence. India needs democratic awareness, responsible questioning, and the courage to vote for change when needed.
@abhijeet_dipke@CJP_2029@dhruv_rathee@BJP4Maharashtra@BJP4India@AmitShahOffice@AmitShah@PIBHomeAffairs@HelleLyngSvends@Dev_Fadnavis@dpradhanbjp@HMOIndia@SureshChavhanke@INCIndia@AamAadmiParty@msisodia
This entire drama of Gen Z revolution, and the desire to create a Nepal or Bangladesh-like situation in India, is not only illogical but also deeply irresponsible. By encouraging such narratives, the opposition is only exposing its desperation and digging its own political grave.
Before 2014, the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) was not in power for nearly 30 years, except for one full term under Atalji. Yet, they never tried to capture power through violence, street chaos, or some manufactured revolution. They worked patiently on the ground. RSS workers went door to door, convinced people, spread their ideology, built their organisation from scratch, and after decades of hard work, they came to power through the mandate of the people.
Today, Congress and several opposition parties appear so desperate to return to power that they are indirectly pushing young people onto the streets, hoping to use their anger as a shortcut to political relevance, while they themselves continue to sit comfortably at the top.
Now, let us talk about revolution. Can a country as vast, diverse, and complex as India witness a revolution? Yes, and we have already witnessed one. Was it easy for a non-Congress party to come to power in 2014 after nearly 70 years of Congress dominance? Certainly not. That change did not happen overnight. It was a revolution, but a democratic one. From Tier 1 cities to the remotest villages, people used the power of their vote to bring change. That is real revolution.
Revolution does not always mean coming onto the streets and inciting violence. In fact, that is far easier than creating a true democratic revolution through awareness, organisation, conviction, and votes.
What happened in West Bengal recently was also a revolution. Bengali people from across India, and even from abroad, spent thousands of rupees and travelled all the way to Bengal just to cast a single vote. That was a far more powerful act than any street violence. Since 2021, Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh (RSS) workers have lost their lives in post-poll violence despite doing nothing wrong. Their families have faced assault, harassment, and intimidation. Was that not part of a difficult democratic struggle?
And now, some leftists sitting in the USA think they can create a revolution in India through Instagram reels, comment sections, and online propaganda. Do they really think Gen Z is that foolish? Or do they simply take the youth for granted because they need a shortcut to power?
The Gen Z of this country knows what is right and what is wrong. We question the government when needed, whether it is on the NEET paper leak, UGC-related concerns, unemployment, education, or any other issue. That is democracy. But India’s Gen Z is not foolish enough to come onto the streets and engage in violence just because politically motivated people with no clear ideology want to capture power by hook or by crook.
Questioning the government is democracy. Protesting peacefully is democracy. Voting with conviction is democracy. But using the youth as political fuel for chaos is not revolution, it is manipulation. India does not need a manufactured tool-kit revolution of violence. India needs democratic awareness, responsible questioning, and the courage to vote for change when needed.
@abhijeet_dipke@CJP_2029@dhruv_rathee@BJP4Maharashtra@BJP4India@AmitShahOffice@AmitShah@PIBHomeAffairs@HelleLyngSvends@Dev_Fadnavis@dpradhanbjp@HMOIndia@SureshChavhanke@INCIndia@AamAadmiParty@msisodia
This entire drama of Gen Z revolution, and the desire to create a Nepal or Bangladesh-like situation in India, is not only illogical but also deeply irresponsible. By encouraging such narratives, the opposition is only exposing its desperation and digging its own political grave.
Before 2014, the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) was not in power for nearly 30 years, except for one full term under Atalji. Yet, they never tried to capture power through violence, street chaos, or some manufactured revolution. They worked patiently on the ground. RSS workers went door to door, convinced people, spread their ideology, built their organisation from scratch, and after decades of hard work, they came to power through the mandate of the people.
Today, Congress and several opposition parties appear so desperate to return to power that they are indirectly pushing young people onto the streets, hoping to use their anger as a shortcut to political relevance, while they themselves continue to sit comfortably at the top.
Now, let us talk about revolution. Can a country as vast, diverse, and complex as India witness a revolution? Yes, and we have already witnessed one. Was it easy for a non-Congress party to come to power in 2014 after nearly 70 years of Congress dominance? Certainly not. That change did not happen overnight. It was a revolution, but a democratic one. From Tier 1 cities to the remotest villages, people used the power of their vote to bring change. That is real revolution.
Revolution does not always mean coming onto the streets and inciting violence. In fact, that is far easier than creating a true democratic revolution through awareness, organisation, conviction, and votes.
What happened in West Bengal recently was also a revolution. Bengali people from across India, and even from abroad, spent thousands of rupees and travelled all the way to Bengal just to cast a single vote. That was a far more powerful act than any street violence. Since 2021, Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh (RSS) workers have lost their lives in post-poll violence despite doing nothing wrong. Their families have faced assault, harassment, and intimidation. Was that not part of a difficult democratic struggle?
And now, some leftists sitting in the USA think they can create a revolution in India through Instagram reels, comment sections, and online propaganda. Do they really think Gen Z is that foolish? Or do they simply take the youth for granted because they need a shortcut to power?
The Gen Z of this country knows what is right and what is wrong. We question the government when needed, whether it is on the NEET paper leak, UGC-related concerns, unemployment, education, or any other issue. That is democracy. But India’s Gen Z is not foolish enough to come onto the streets and engage in violence just because politically motivated people with no clear ideology want to capture power by hook or by crook.
Questioning the government is democracy. Protesting peacefully is democracy. Voting with conviction is democracy. But using the youth as political fuel for chaos is not revolution, it is manipulation. India does not need a manufactured tool-kit revolution of violence. India needs democratic awareness, responsible questioning, and the courage to vote for change when needed.
@abhijeet_dipke@CJP_2029@dhruv_rathee@BJP4Maharashtra@BJP4India@AmitShahOffice@AmitShah@PIBHomeAffairs@HelleLyngSvends@Dev_Fadnavis@dpradhanbjp@HMOIndia@SureshChavhanke@INCIndia@AamAadmiParty@msisodia
. @dhruv_rathee The essence of democracy gives you the right to question and the freedom to decide your own choices regarding your thought process, not to cheer foreign states when they try to humiliate India’s elected Prime Minister for the sake of trivial global applause. Debate policies. Protest decisions. Challenge the government relentlessly. That is democracy.
But when your hatred for one man becomes so deep that you celebrate India being unnecessarily mocked abroad, it stops being “accountability” and starts looking like political insecurity wrapped in moral superiority.
The same people who sermonise about protecting institutions and respecting democracy have no problem applauding foreign journalists when they try to belittle the mandate of millions of Indians before the world.
Opposing a government is your democratic right. Rooting for India’s embarrassment overseas is a reflection of your bitterness, not bravery.
You don’t weaken PM @narendramodi by insulting India on foreign platforms; you only expose how far your resentment has consumed your judgment.
Shame on you and such प्रजाति of people…!!
Modi deserves to be humiliated everywhere he goes.
He has not given a single press conference in 12 years since he became the Prime Minister. He fails to fulfill the basic transparency and accountability requirements of being a leader.
I would like to encourage foreign journalists from other European countries to ask him questions wherever they see him, just like @HelleLyngSvends did. Embarrass him so much that he is forced to show some accountability in front of people. You will be doing great service for India’s progress.
The essence of democracy gives you the right to question and the freedom to decide your own choices regarding your thought process, not to cheer foreign states when they try to humiliate India’s elected Prime Minister for the sake of trivial global applause. Debate policies. Protest decisions. Challenge the government relentlessly. That is democracy.
But when your hatred for one man becomes so deep that you celebrate India being unnecessarily mocked abroad, it stops being “accountability” and starts looking like political insecurity wrapped in moral superiority.
The same people who sermonise about protecting institutions and respecting democracy have no problem applauding foreign journalists when they try to belittle the mandate of millions of Indians before the world.
Opposing a government is your democratic right. Rooting for India’s embarrassment overseas is a reflection of bitterness, not bravery.
You don’t weaken PM @narendramodi by insulting India on foreign platforms; you only expose how far your resentment has consumed your judgment.
Shame on you and such प्रजाति of people…!!
तिरुपती की पावन भूमि पर मध्यप्रदेश के कैबिनेट मंत्री एवं मेरे परम स्नेही @prahladspatel जी के साथ देवदर्शन, आध्यात्मिक चर्चाएँ और आत्मीय संवादों में समय कैसे बीत जाता है, इसका आभास ही नहीं होता। हमारी इन मंगलमयी भेटों के दौरान मध्य प्रदेश के अनेक मान्यवर मंत्रीगणों से भी सौहार्दपूर्ण एवं सहज चर्चा करने का अवसर प्राप्त हुआ। विशेषतः मध्यप्रदेश के मुख्यमंत्री मा. @DrMohanYadav51 जी एवं केन्द्रीय कृषी मंत्री मा. @ChouhanShivraj जी से मुलाक़ात अत्यंत सुखद रही।
तिरुपति की पावन भूमि पर मध्यप्रदेश के कैबिनेट मंत्री एवं मेरे परम स्नेही @prahladspatel जी के सुपुत्र प्रबल के विवाह समारोह में उपस्थित रहने का सौभाग्य प्राप्त हुआ। यह अवसर मेरे लिए अत्यंत विशेष, आत्मीय और स्मरणीय रहा। प्रहलाद सिंह पटेल जी का स्नेह, सरलता और भारतीय संस्कारों के प्रति उनकी निष्ठा सदैव प्रेरणादायी रही है।
नवदाम्पत्य प्रबल और पुत्रवधू हिमांशी को हृदयपूर्वक शुभाशीष, उनका वैवाहिक जीवन प्रेम, विश्वास, आनंद, समृद्धि और मंगलमय ऊर्जा से सदैव आलोकित रहे। ईश्वर से प्रार्थना है कि दोनों का जीवन सौहार्द, संस्कार और सुखद सहयात्रा का सुंदर उदाह��ण बने। @pspoffice
The main attraction of the movie along with other things “the music” songs and the BGM by @korgator Prasad S & His compositions possess an extraordinary spiritual fragrance, where every note carries longing, surrender, stillness, devotion, and grace. There is a rare emotional purity in the music of the movie that touches the deepest corners of the heart without demanding attention.
. Today, on the sacred 7th of May 2026, our film @Krishnavataram8 arrives before the world with the divine blessings of Lord Jagannath. This is not merely the release of a motion picture; it feels like the unfolding of a prayer woven through cinema, music, silence, devotion, and emotion.
@HGFilmsofficial (The Director) and his entire team have created a deeply sensitive and spiritually moving experience that reveals Lord Krishna not only as the Supreme Divine, but as the eternal embodiment of love itself. The film delicately touches those unseen emotional shades of Krishna where compassion becomes music, silence becomes दर्शन, and love becomes the very breath of existence. It feels as though Krishna, while leaving this world, left fragments of His own heart behind for humanity to discover through devotion.
The legendary Prakash Kapadia has written dialogues with extraordinary philosophical depth and emotional intensity. His words do not merely describe Krishna, they unveil Him layer by layer, allowing the audience to experience the tenderness, pain, divinity, playfulness, sacrifice, and cosmic love that exist within His consciousness. There are moments in the film where the dialogues feel less like writing and more like timeless revelations flowing from another realm. Irshad Kamil ji also has penned great songs which create magic on the screen.
And then comes the soul of the film — its music.
The music composed by Prasad S is not something one simply listens to; it slowly dissolves into the listener’s inner being like sacred incense lingering in the air of an ancient temple long after the lamps have faded. His compositions possess an extraordinary spiritual fragrance, where every note carries longing, surrender, stillness, devotion, and grace. There is a rare emotional purity in his music that touches the deepest corners of the heart without demanding attention — it simply enters silently and stays forever.
Prasad’s understanding of emotion through sound is profoundly exceptional. He has not composed mere melodies for this film; he has sculpted states of consciousness. The background score breathes with Krishna’s compassion, smiles with His leelas, and weeps with His separation. Certain musical passages continue to echo within the soul long after the scene has ended, like a distant flute still calling from the banks of Vrindavan. His music possesses that rare divine quality where silence itself begins to sing.
What touches me even more deeply is his humility. Prasad said to me that I was one of the driving forces behind the music of Krishnavataram, but the truth is, he himself is one of those divinely chosen souls blessed with rare sensitivity, grace, and sincerity. Despite his immense talent, he remains extraordinarily grounded, soft-spoken, and pure-hearted, someone who never claims success as his own alone, but lovingly shares its light with every co-artist who walks beside him. Perhaps that quiet humility, more than even his brilliance, is what makes him truly special to me.
I feel very fortunate to have lent my voice and written lyrical expressions for the background score of this sacred cinematic journey.
May Krishnavataram & its music awaken devotion, love, and inner stillness in every heart it touches. Because Krishna was not loved merely for being God, Krishna was loved because He understood the language of the human soul. SO REQUESTING EVERYONE TO GO TO THE NEARBY THEATRES AND WATCH THE MOVIE “KRISHNAVATARAM” AND WITNESS THE MAGNIFICENCE OF LORD KRISHNA !! @korgator@rajkurup@sanghaviharsh@poonam_shroff@raam_mori@TripathiiPankaj@ShefVaidya@DrSJaishankar@netanyahu
. Today, on the sacred 7th of May 2026, our film @Krishnavataram8 arrives before the world with the divine blessings of Lord Jagannath. This is not merely the release of a motion picture; it feels like the unfolding of a prayer woven through cinema, music, silence, devotion, and emotion.
@HGFilmsofficial (The Director) and his entire team have created a deeply sensitive and spiritually moving experience that reveals Lord Krishna not only as the Supreme Divine, but as the eternal embodiment of love itself. The film delicately touches those unseen emotional shades of Krishna where compassion becomes music, silence becomes दर्शन, and love becomes the very breath of existence. It feels as though Krishna, while leaving this world, left fragments of His own heart behind for humanity to discover through devotion.
The legendary Prakash Kapadia has written dialogues with extraordinary philosophical depth and emotional intensity. His words do not merely describe Krishna, they unveil Him layer by layer, allowing the audience to experience the tenderness, pain, divinity, playfulness, sacrifice, and cosmic love that exist within His consciousness. There are moments in the film where the dialogues feel less like writing and more like timeless revelations flowing from another realm. Irshad Kamil ji also has penned great songs which create magic on the screen.
And then comes the soul of the film — its music.
The music composed by Prasad S is not something one simply listens to; it slowly dissolves into the listener’s inner being like sacred incense lingering in the air of an ancient temple long after the lamps have faded. His compositions possess an extraordinary spiritual fragrance, where every note carries longing, surrender, stillness, devotion, and grace. There is a rare emotional purity in his music that touches the deepest corners of the heart without demanding attention — it simply enters silently and stays forever.
Prasad’s understanding of emotion through sound is profoundly exceptional. He has not composed mere melodies for this film; he has sculpted states of consciousness. The background score breathes with Krishna’s compassion, smiles with His leelas, and weeps with His separation. Certain musical passages continue to echo within the soul long after the scene has ended, like a distant flute still calling from the banks of Vrindavan. His music possesses that rare divine quality where silence itself begins to sing.
What touches me even more deeply is his humility. Prasad said to me that I was one of the driving forces behind the music of Krishnavataram, but the truth is, he himself is one of those divinely chosen souls blessed with rare sensitivity, grace, and sincerity. Despite his immense talent, he remains extraordinarily grounded, soft-spoken, and pure-hearted, someone who never claims success as his own alone, but lovingly shares its light with every co-artist who walks beside him. Perhaps that quiet humility, more than even his brilliance, is what makes him truly special to me.
I feel very fortunate to have lent my voice and written lyrical expressions for the background score of this sacred cinematic journey.
May Krishnavataram & its music awaken devotion, love, and inner stillness in every heart it touches. Because Krishna was not loved merely for being God, Krishna was loved because He understood the language of the human soul. SO REQUESTING EVERYONE TO GO TO THE NEARBY THEATRES AND WATCH THE MOVIE “KRISHNAVATARAM” AND WITNESS THE MAGNIFICENCE OF LORD KRISHNA !! @korgator@rajkurup@sanghaviharsh@poonam_shroff@raam_mori@TripathiiPankaj@ShefVaidya@DrSJaishankar@netanyahu
. Heartiest Congratulations to @narendramodi, @AmitShahOffice, @SuvenduWB, @NitinNabin and all the people of West Bengal who supported and voted for good governance. While @narendramodi ji has thanked all the citizens of West Bengal for this spectacular mandate to the @BJP4India, I think it would be in order for him to thank @MamataOfficial, @sagarikaghose, @MahuaMoitra, @abhishekaitc, @derekobrienmp@sayani06 also for they made the huge @BJP4India win possible by their utter irresponsible uterences & unabashed minority appeasement and threatening the common man of dire consequences of voting for @BJP4Bengal .
The "Dara Hua Hindu" voted enmass and without fear due to unprecedented security arrangements made by @AmitShah ji to ensure violence free elections.
. Heartiest Congratulations to @narendramodi, @AmitShahOffice, @SuvenduWB, @NitinNabin and all the people of West Bengal who supported and voted for good governance. While @narendramodi ji has thanked all the citizens of West Bengal for this spectacular mandate to the @BJP4India, I think it would be in order for him to thank @MamataOfficial, @sagarikaghose, @MahuaMoitra, @abhishekaitc, @derekobrienmp@sayani06 also for they made the huge @BJP4India win possible by their utter irresponsible uterences & unabashed minority appeasement and threatening the common man of dire consequences of voting for @BJP4Bengal .
The "Dara Hua Hindu" voted enmass and without fear due to unprecedented security arrangements made by @AmitShah ji to ensure violence free elections.
The Lotus blooms in West Bengal!
The 2026 West Bengal Assembly Elections will be remembered forever. People's power has prevailed and BJP's politics of good governance has triumphed. I bow to each and every person of West Bengal.
The people have given a spectacular mandate to BJP and I assure them that our Party will do everything possible to fulfil the dreams and aspirations of the people of West Bengal. We will provide a Government that ensures opportunity and dignity to all sections of society.
@BJP4Bengal