Try GOLD - Free

Responding to terror with wisdom: The Bhagavad Gita's timeless message

The Sunday Guardian

|

May 04, 2025

In a tragic event at Pahalgam, more than twenty innocent tourists were brutally murdered in a terror attack.

- ACHARYA PRASHANT

Responding to terror with wisdom: The Bhagavad Gita's timeless message

Reports state that the terrorists specifically chose their victims along religious lines before killing them. This was not an act of random violence; it was a calculated attempt to destroy communities, spread fear, destabilize the region, divide people, and weaken the local economy.

This is no moment to let oneself be overwhelmed by mindless fury or reactive anger, as that is exactly what the forces operating behind such conduct desire. At such a moment, when sorrow and bewilderment grip the mind, what we need is firmness and fearlessness born of wisdom.

WHY IS THE GITA RELEVANT IN SUCH MOMENTS?

Understanding, leaving us bewildered, enraged, and afraid. The Bhagavad Gita, too, starts at the same place—the battlefield of Kurukshetra where base emotions rule, and clear action is obfuscated by feeling. Terrorists seek not just to take lives, but to unsettle us from inside. Terrorism inflicts us with war; Gita tells us how to respond when challenged with wars. The Gita was revealed not in a secluded and peaceful environment, but on the battlefield of Kurukshetra, when Arjun, the greatest archer of his era, was paralyzed by grief and uncertainty. Much like Arjun, we too frequently experience moral ambiguity and face inner conflict. Terrorism is not just a confrontation with violence; it is a confrontation with a breakdown of

To let Gita help us, it is not to be worshipped as a symbol, nor recited out of habit, but to be understood and used as a mirror to examine the workings of our provoked and distressed mind. In times of severe crisis, like a terror attack, when inner balance is lost and fear overcomes reason, it will act as a living guide.

UNDERSTANDING THE ROOTS OF TERROR

MORE STORIES FROM The Sunday Guardian

The Sunday Guardian

Remembrance of God

Dhikr, meaning remembrance, that is, remembrance of God, is one of the basic teachings of Islam.

time to read

1 mins

November 09, 2025

The Sunday Guardian

The Sunday Guardian

Scientists find E. Coli spreads as fast as swine flu

Researchers have, for the first time, estimated how quickly E. Coli bacteria can spread between people, and one strain moves as fast as swine flu.

time to read

1 mins

November 09, 2025

The Sunday Guardian

Sugarcane farmers bring Karnataka government to its knees

The ongoing agitation by sugarcane farmers in Karnataka's Belagavi district took a violent turn on Friday.

time to read

3 mins

November 09, 2025

The Sunday Guardian

THE COURAGE TO STAND WHEN THE WORLD LOOKS AWAY

What connected the honorees was not ideology, religion, or ethnicity. It was the understanding that freedom is not merely a right; it is a responsibility.

time to read

3 mins

November 09, 2025

The Sunday Guardian

The Sunday Guardian

EXTERMINATE MOSQUITOES TO ERADICATE EIGHT DEADLY DISEASES

Till now, Iceland, with a harsh, unique climate and geographical isolation, was the only country in the world that was completely free of mosquitoes. Three mosquitoes were found in the Kjos valley in October 2025. Scientists blamed rising temperatures due to climate change and increased travel for these arrivals. Mosquitoes are vectors for deadly diseases like malaria, dengue, chikungunya, Japanese encephalitis, Zika, yellow fever, West Nile virus fever, and filariasis. In 2023, there were an estimated 263 million malaria cases and 597,000 deaths globally. World Malaria Day on 25 April and National Dengue Day on May 16th in India highlight the need for public education, continued investment, and sustained political commitment for prevention and control measures, especially before the monsoon season. ‘Chikungunya' means \"to become contorted,\" (due to severe joint pains) in the Kimakonde language in Tanzania and Mozambique.

time to read

5 mins

November 09, 2025

The Sunday Guardian

PRESIDENT TRUMP NEARING THE FREE FALL PRECIPICE

The Democrats performed hara-kiri on themselves by electing as NYC Mayor, Zohran Mamdani, a candidate who could make the Democrats unelectable in much of the US. What could preserve the Democratic Party would be the continuation as President of the US by Donald Trump.

time to read

5 mins

November 09, 2025

The Sunday Guardian

Migration from home: Is it a curse or a blessing?

Bihar's migration debate deepens as remittances reshape rural life and social realities.

time to read

3 mins

November 09, 2025

The Sunday Guardian

The Sunday Guardian

The House of Mr Vance

Religious conversions have entirely different connotations for Hindus due to the coercive, including violent, nature of both Islamic and Christian proselytizing in the Indian subcontinent. In Western liberal societies, such as the US, however, religious conversions do not evoke the same response.

time to read

5 mins

November 09, 2025

The Sunday Guardian

The Sunday Guardian

AI boom drives Taiwan's exports to record $61.8 billion in October

Taiwan's exports in October surged 49.7 per cent year-on-year to USD 61.8 billion, a record monthly high, driven by strong global demand for artificial intelligence technologies (AI), according to Focus Taiwan.

time to read

1 mins

November 09, 2025

The Sunday Guardian

WELFARE DELIVERY, MODI FACTOR PROPELLING NDA IN BIHAR POLLS

The Bihar elections opened with opposition parties confident that Nitish Kumar's long incumbency and public fatigue courtesy his 20 years of rule would translate into a difficult contest for the NDA. In the early phase of campaigning, this seemed plausible. The same feeling was also shared by top National Democratic Alliance leaders while interacting with journalists privately, including by two senior BJP Union Ministers, who spoke to this correspondent before and after the poll schedule was announced.

time to read

5 mins

November 09, 2025

Listen

Translate

Share

-
+

Change font size