CHAPTER 7

A THOUSAND PAGES OF TRUTH

When I finally gathered all the pieces of evidence collected over thirty-five years—the travel notes, the rare manuscripts, the inscriptions, the interviews, the archaeological observations, the temple geometries, the timelines from different civilizations, and the testimonies from scholars across continents—I realised something very simple, yet overwhelming:

This could not be expressed in a short book. Not even in a series of articles. It would require nothing less than a 1,000-page scripture of truth.

This was not ego. This was mathematics.

The sheer volume of evidence demanded space. The depth of distortion demanded clarity. The centuries of silence demanded voice.

And most importantly—Mother India deserved a complete work, not a compromised summary. This mission was too heavy for any ordinary effort. I tried to find collaborators. Researchers. Editors. Writers. Historians. But I quickly realised:

  • Most people lacked the courage to question accepted narratives.
  • Some feared ridicule from mainstream academia.
  • Some wanted to shape the content according to their ideology.
  • Some were enthusiastic at first but withdrew when they saw the scale.
  • And many simply did not have the patience for a mission of this intensity.
  • Some were scared of victimization by the Congress government.

This was when the truth dawned on me:

This burden had been assigned to me alone. No team could carry it. No committee could complete it. No institution would support it.

Just like the Rishis who sat alone under trees, just like authors of ancient texts who worked in caves and forests, this work, too, demanded aloneness.

But aloneness is not loneliness—when purpose becomes your companion, and truth becomes your breath.

A Decision That Redefined My Life

Once the scale of this task became clear, I understood that I could not live an ordinary life and undertake an extraordinary mission at the same time.

Something had to give. So, in early 2014, I took a decision that changed the direction of my life:

I took total retirement from all business and environmental activities. I handed over my work with full trust. I stepped away from routines, responsibilities, and expectations. And I shifted myself from Kolkata to Mount Abu in March 2014.

Not for rest. Not for retreat. Not for spiritual tourism.

But for discipline, concentration, and inner silence— the three ingredients required for the birth of a great work.

Living in Isolation Was Not Escape — It Was Commitment

At Mount Abu, away from the noise of the world, without distractions, without social obligations, I began the real work:

Organizing thousands of pages of notes. Digitizing decades of photographs. Cross-referencing timelines. Verifying historical inconsistencies. Reconstructing civilizational maps. Rewriting suppressed narratives. Presenting evidence in a logical, chronological manner. Untangling colonial layers from original truths.

This was not writing; it was excavation.

This was not authorship; it was awakening.

And yet, a Painful Realisation: The Book Alone Will Not Change India

Even as I immersed myself in this mission, a sobering truth stood before me:

“Even after the book is published, it will not bring immediate change.”

Why?

Because:

For decades, the system built during the Congress governments created a rigid academic ecosystem in which any attempt to correct India’s civilizational narrative is immediately resisted. This happens because:

  •       School textbooks are controlled by committees that still follow colonial and post-colonial frameworks.
  •       Universities are dominated by old academic clubs that protect outdated theories.
  •       Historians fear losing prestige if they acknowledge new findings that contradict their earlier positions.
  •       Media avoids narratives that challenge the establishment, preferring the “safe” colonial versions of history.
  •       Government machinery moves slowly due to bureaucracy, making meaningful reform extremely difficult.

But I did not lose heart.

A book does not need to change a nation overnight. A book only needs to ignite. Ignite one mind. One teacher. One parent. One student. One leader of the future.

And from that one spark, a forest of awakening can grow.

That is why I continued.

That is why I stayed in isolation. That is why this chapter had to be written. Because this work is not about quick results. It is about civilizational correction—something that demands not months, but generations.