When I wrote in my letter:
“Sir, I shall very much appreciate if you can give me time to talk to you. I am even willing to offer myself full-time without any consideration but to serve our Nation,”
I was not seeking a formal meeting or recognition. I was not asking for a position, status, or privilege. My request for time came from a deeper purpose—because I had a vision for India that had matured within me for decades.
My life’s mission has always stood upon two pillars: restoring India’s true civilizational history and restoring India’s eternal bond with Nature. Both these pillars are inseparable. Both were weakened over centuries. Both must rise again if India is to reclaim her natural and civilizational leadership in the world.
Long before I drafted my 2014 letter, and long before I travelled across sixty countries collecting historical evidence, a soft but persistent message began calling from within. I named this message Prakriti Ki Pukar—the Call of Nature.
It took shape as a collection of nine deeply meaningful environmental songs. These songs remind humanity that we survive because Nature allows us to survive—because trees breathe for us, rivers sustain us, soil feeds us, and the sun nurtures us. Every day, these songs play at Green Mall, carrying their message gently into the hearts of children, elders, and visitors from all walks of life.
These are not songs of entertainment. They are songs of awakening—songs that remind us of the ancient Indian truth that treating Nature as divine is not an act of religion, but an act of gratitude.
To further strengthen this mission, I created Prakriti Vandana—a collection of ten short lyrical poems dedicated to Ma Prakriti. These verses are simple enough for a child to recite, gentle enough to comfort the elderly, and universal enough to belong to every human being, regardless of religion or belief.
These poems carry no rituals, no doctrines, and no religious identity. They are pure expressions of gratitude—offering reverence to the earth, the sky, the water, and the elements that support all life. These verses play regularly at Green Mall, creating a serene atmosphere where Nature becomes a teacher, a companion, and a silent guide.
Through Prakriti Vandana, I wished to show the Prime Minister that India’s spiritual ecology is not new; it is as ancient as the Vedas and as universal as the open sky.
One of the deepest visions I wished to share with the Prime Minister was my dream of establishing Ma Prakriti Mandirs across India. These temples are unlike any built before. They do not contain stone idols, religious rituals, priests, or sectarian boundaries. Instead, they honour Nature herself as the universal Mother.
At the centre of the Ma Prakriti Mandir stands a vibrant clay statue of Ma Prakriti—seated upon a lotus, surrounded by cosmic planets, holding the Earth tenderly in her hands. This statue, now placed at Green Mall, is not an idol of ritual worship; it is a symbol of cosmic motherhood, reminding us that every creature, every tree, every mountain, and every river is her child.
Ma Prakriti Mandirs can exist in public parks, schools, universities, cities, and villages. They can unify people beyond the boundaries of caste, creed, language, and religion. They can inspire ecological duty, spiritual harmony, and a new form of devotion that belongs to all humanity.
My request for time was not for a photograph or a symbolic gesture. It was to present a complete national blueprint—linking environmental revival, civilizational revival, education, culture, and global leadership. I wanted to show how Prakriti Ki Pukar, Prakriti Vandana, and the Ma Prakriti Mandir movement could transform India into a global model of ecological consciousness.
India can lead the world not merely through technology or economic strength, but through her spiritual ecology—the timeless message that the Earth itself is sacred, and that humanity must live in harmony with Nature.
Although the meeting never happened, the vision remains alive. Prakriti Ki Pukar continues to inspire. Prakriti Vandana continues to elevate. And the Ma Prakriti Mandir at Green Mall stands as living proof that Nature can be honoured without dividing humanity.
The day India returns to Nature; India will return to herself. And through her, the world will rediscover balance, harmony, and peace.