RSS Chief Mohan Bhagwat Declares India Will Become Vishwaguru at Mandir Ceremony

RSS chief Mohan Bhagwat declared at the Bharatdurga Mandir groundbreaking that India will become Vishwaguru or world leader. He urged citizens to shed the colonial mindset and start with small actions like daily prayers. Bhagwat compared current doubts about India's rise to skepticism before the Ram Temple verdict. He emphasized that India's path is essential for the world's future amid global conflicts.

Key Points: RSS Chief: India Will Become Vishwaguru

  • Mohan Bhagwat announces India will become world leader (Vishwaguru)
  • Calls for shedding colonial mindset and Western coating
  • Urges starting small with daily prayers at Bharatdurga Mandir
  • Compares doubts about India's rise to pre-Ram Mandir skepticism
3 min read

"Holy saints have announced, India will indeed become Vishwaguru...": RSS chief Mohan Bhagwat at Bharatdurga Mandir groundbrekaing ceremony

RSS chief Mohan Bhagwat at Bharatdurga Mandir groundbreaking says India will become Vishwaguru, urging citizens to shed colonial mindset and start small.

"If we back our resolve with our actions befitting that resolve, it gives rise to a power which is so capable that it does what it has to in a minute. - Mohan Bhagwat"

Nagpur, April 25

Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh chief Mohan Bhagwat stressed that the holy saints have announced that India will indeed become a world leader.

While attending the groundbreaking ceremony of the Bharatdurga Shaktisthal & Dharma Sabha in Nagpur on Friday, he addressed the gathering, saying that India will become the most powerful and the countrymen will have the opportunity to witness its greatness in this lifetime.

"Bharatdurga Mandir puja will be performed by every individual in every household across India every day. With that, the announcements made by saints today, that India will indeed become Vishwaguru, that whatever India lost will be restored, and that India will become powerful. We will have the opportunity to witness this in this lifetime itself. If we back our resolve with our actions befitting that resolve, it gives rise to a power which is so capable that it does what it has to in a minute. You have seen the blueprint; the temple will be built, and the idols of deities will be placed. We should start offering the prayers from our households," he said.

Further, he emphasised that if one wishes to become "Bharat," they must start small. Small steps will lead to greater results.

"After the 150-year-long colonialism by the British, a Western coating has covered our minds and brains. We will have to know India by taking it off. From our daily activities to deliberation on national matters, we will all have to be Bharat. This is not easy, but let's begin with small things. If one has to become Bharat, let's begin with small things. Ants are small and take tiny steps, but cover long distances with those tiny steps. Garuda (bird) can fly the entire sky; it can bear the weight of Lord Vishnu and carry Him anywhere. But if it doesn't take off, it cannot reach anywhere," he noted.

Bhagwat urged that people must stop stressing on the doubts regarding India's position in the world, underlining that such doubts also occurred before the Ram Temple in Ayodhya was established, and yet it did.

He asked if there will be a future at all if the world doesn't walk the path of India, underlining the extreme situations of conflict rising globally.

"If you see it right now, you cannot figure out if India is going to be Vishwaguru. Such is the system in the world; our position is yet to be solidified, and it is in process. Whether it would happen or not is what we feel. We will have to free ourselves from this doubt. Such were the doubts for Ram Mandir too. But eventually, the Supreme Court order came. What has to happen will certainly happen. Given the condition of the world today, if the world doesn't take the path of India, will there be a future? Do not have any doubts regarding what is essential," he said.

- ANI

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Reader Comments

M
Michael C
Interesting perspective. I'm an outsider looking in, and I've always admired India's philosophical depth. But "Vishwaguru" sounds like a big claim—India has many internal challenges like poverty and inequality to address first before assuming global leadership. The Ram Mandir comparison is apt for faith, but governance and spirituality are different realms.
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Kavya N
Finally someone speaking about our cultural roots without apologizing for it! We've been conditioned to look West for validation. The Bharatdurga Mandir project seems ambitious, and I love the concept of daily household puja connecting families to a larger national purpose. Let's see if the execution matches the vision. 🙏
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Ravi K
I appreciate the optimism but feel uneasy about mixing religious announcements with national destiny talk. India's strength lies in diversity—not just Hindu symbolism. The "Vishwaguru" concept should include all faiths and communities. Also, the Western coating critique is valid, but we should absorb good ideas from everywhere, not reject them outright.
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Sarah B
As someone who moved to India for work, I find this discourse fascinating. The confidence is inspiring, but the emphasis on "saints announcing" destiny seems counter to rational progress. India can be a world leader through innovation and education, not just temple-building. That said, cultural pride is important—every nation needs it.
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Akash W
"Garuda can fly the entire sky but must take off first"—best line! We keep doubting ourselves while other nations move ahead. I'm tired of the perpetual inferiority complex. Whether you call it Vishwag

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