India, 1992 – Prayagraj
In the sacred city where the Ganga, Yamuna, and Saraswati meet, a new kind of Parliament was born—not for politics, but for Dharma.
Aryan Sen Gupta knew that political progress alone could not restore Bharat. India needed a living moral compass — one rooted in its civilizational DNA.
He stood at the banks of the Triveni Sangam and announced:
"Let there be a DharmaSansad — a Parliament not of power, but of purpose. Where saints, scholars, seers, and scientists debate not laws, but the soul of the nation."
. . .
🛕 What is DharmaSansad?
A non-legislative, constitutional advisory body.
Comprised of 121 members:
25 from Sanatan Dharma (various sampradayas)
15 from Indic tribal dharmas (e.g., Sarna, Sanamahi)
10 Dharmic scientists
10 Sanskrit scholars
15 gurus of Indian philosophy (Nyaya, Samkhya, Vedanta)
10 historians of Bharatiya origin
20 women dharma leaders
16 rotating members chosen by SanskritNet Sabha
They would not interfere with Parliament but offer yearly white papers on:
Culture
Dharma-based jurisprudence
Education values
Social discipline
Ethical science and commerce
Temple autonomy
. . .
📜 The First Resolutions
In its inaugural session at Kumbh Mela 1992, the DharmaSansad passed the following resolutions unanimously:
Establish January 22 (Ram Mandir Bhoomi Pujan) as Dharma Diwas nationally.
Call for a full audit and release of encroached Hindu temples under ASI and Waqf control.
Recommend Varnashrama Dharma education reinterpreted for modern dharmic ethics.
Demand the removal of colonial-era education and religious charity laws.
Propose restoring traditional temple-based Gurukul systems.
Oppose foreign religious conversion NGOs as unethical and destabilizing.
Aryan did not directly comment but ensured that each paper was tabled in the Parliament's cultural committee for formal debate.
. . .
🧠 Dharma Meets Data
Aryan linked the DharmaSansad with SanskritNet and VidyaSetu, so that its resolutions became curriculum, and its texts were digitized.
Each debate, whether on Ramayan's ethics or Shankaracharya's commentaries, was translated and transmitted to school servers across India.
Young Indians would now grow up watching rishis and professors debate logic and dharma — in their own language, in their own land.
. . .
🕯️ Revival of Public Dharma
The DharmaSansad launched:
Dharma Mandali in every state — local bodies of teachers and scholars.
Shraddha Yatras — pilgrimages that combined temple visits with dharmic volunteering.
Public Vyakhyans (lectures) at railway stations, community halls, and school campuses.
No preaching. Only logic, shastra, and tradition — intelligently revived.
. . .
🇮🇳 A Civilization Standing Up
Aryan later remarked in his journal:
"Politics builds nations. But Dharma sustains civilizations. One day, when my body is gone and my laws are forgotten, it will be DharmaSansad that remains. Because Bharat is not a country. It is an eternal dialogue."
And so, the dialogue had begun again.
