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Why Did India Bury Its Greatest Poem?

  The monument stands. The mirror is broken. The nation sleeps. Written in 1912, when India groaned under British colonial rule, Maithili Sharan Gupt’s epic masterpiece  Bharat Bharati  was never merely a poem—it was a surgical incision into the national conscience. Across three sections—Atit Khand (The Past), Vartaman Khand (The Present), and Bhavishyat Khand (The Future)—Gupt diagnosed a civilization suffering from amnesia, self-loathing, and paralyzing internal fractures. Over a century later, India has achieved political independence, economic might, and global stature. Yet the same diseases Gupt catalogued—caste warfare, intellectual mimicry, moral compromise, and the evasion of self-confrontation—persist. India has deified the poet while burying his poem, treating  Bharat Bharati  as a historical monument to be admired rather than a mirror to be feared. This article explores the timeless relevance of Gupt’s critique, the uncomfortable parallels between 1...

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