CHAPTER 21

THE NATIONAL ANTHEM — A COLONIAL SHADOW STILL ECHOING IN FREE INDIA

When I wrote in my 2014 letter that “Millions are singing ‘Jan-gan-man’ as the national anthem without knowing the truth behind it,” I was expressing a deep pain — not out of disrespect, but out of love for Bharat. A nation cannot rise on inherited symbols of slavery. A free civilization must sing its own soul.

Yet today, millions of schoolchildren recite a song that:

  • was introduced in a British imperial event,
  • was tied to King George V’s visit,
  • refers to territories lost in Partition,
  • omits sacred rivers that define Bharat,
  • contains politically bounded geography,
  • does not reflect the civilizational spirit of India,
  • and was never intended to be a national anthem of an awakened Bharat.

This is not criticism. This is truth.

The Forgotten Origin — A Song Born in a British Durbar

  In December 1911, King George V visited India for the Delhi Durbar. Jana-Gana-Mana was sung in his honour.

British newspapers of that time proudly reported:

“A song in praise of the emperor was sung.”

The programme notes confirm it. Eyewitnesses confirm it.

Even Rabindranath Tagore later clarified the “misconception,” but the context remains undeniable:

The song was performed for the British monarch.

Is this appropriate for the anthem of a free civilization?

The Geographic Limitation — A Map Frozen in 1911

The anthem mentions:

पंजाब, सिंध, गुजरात, मराठा द्राविड़, उत्कल, बंग विंध्य, हिमाचल…

But this list is not exhaustive, not civilizational, not timeless.

It is a selective administrative map of British India, not the eternal sacred map of Bharat.

It excludes:

  • Ganga’s full sacred geography
  • Yamuna
  • Saraswati
  • Narmada
  • Godavari
  • Kaveri
  • Krishna
  • Brahmaputra
  • Tungabhadra
  • Tapti
  • The Seven Rivers (Sapta-Sindhu)
  • The Four Dhams (Badrinath, Dwarka, Jagannath, Rameshwaram)
  • Twelve Jyotirlingas
  • Fifty-one Shakti Peethas
  • Ayodhya, Mathura, Kashi, Ujjain, Kedarnath, Puri, Kamakhya
  • The Vindhya range’s spiritual significance
  • The Himalayas as Devabhumi in full glory

And Sindh, still mentioned in the anthem, is no longer a part of India.

No modern nation recites an anthem referencing territories it lost.

This is not just a political mismatch. It is a psychological fragment.

A national anthem should reflect the timeless civilizational geography of Bharat, not the provincial boundaries of the British Raj.

The Spiritual Absence — It Does Not Invoke Bharat Mata

  India is not a political entity. India is a civilizational mother.

But Jana-Gana-Mana:

  • does not invoke Bharat Mata,
  • does not name sacred rivers,
  • does not invoke the Himalayas as Devabhumi,
  • does not honour the spiritual geography of India.

It is beautiful poetry — but it is not the spiritual anthem of a civilization.

The Emotional Disconnect — Children Sing Without Understanding

  Every day, millions of children sing this song mechanically. They do not know:

  • Its British association,
  • Its geographical limitations,
  • Its civilizational incompleteness,
  • Its historical context.

A national anthem must ignite the heart, not merely produce sound.

The Freedom Fighters Sang Something Else

  In the freedom movement, the song that shook the empire was Vande Mataram.

British rulers banned it because it awakened revolution. This alone proves its spiritual and national power.

Every great patriot — Lala Lajpat Rai, Tilak, Aurobindo, Bose, Savarkar, and thousands more — saw Vande Mataram as the soul-anthem of Bharat.

It invokes:

  • Bharat Mata
  • the rivers
  • the fields
  • the Himalayas
  • the spirit of sacrifice
  • divine feminine energy
  • the unity of the nation

It carries the vibration of Sanskrit, Shakti, and Sanatan.

What a National Anthem Must Reflect

A true anthem must:

  • Honour the rivers and mountains of Bharat,
  • Reflect the sacred geography,
  • Echo the civilizational memory,
  • Invoke the divine mother,
  • Inspire courage,
  • Create unity,
  • Awaken patriotism,
  • Carry the fragrance of the Vedas,
  • Be timeless — yesterday, today, tomorrow.

Jana-Gana-Mana is a good song. But it is not a civilizational anthem.

What India Deserves

  India deserves an anthem that reflects:

  • The Himalayas,
  • The Seven Rivers,
  • The sacred land,
  • The divine feminine,
  • The civilizational soul,
  • The timeless unity of Bharat,
  • The spiritual bravery of the freedom movement.

India deserves:

Vande Mataram. Or an even deeper Sanskrit anthem rooted in Rigveda, Devi Suktam, Vishnu Sahasranama, or a new composition embodying Bharat’s sacred geography.

India deserves a song that belongs to her soul, not her colonial past.

My Conclusion

  Millions sing Jana-Gana-Mana with sincerity. There is no disrespect in this chapter.

But the anthem of Bharat must reflect Bharat.

Not British India. Not 1911. Not geography frozen in colonial time. Not a ceremonial verse sung for King George V.

A free civilization must sing a free song.

Bharat must rise with a voice worthy of her past, her present, and her eternal future.

Vande Mataram. Or a fuller Sanskrit anthem. Nothing less.