Thursday, May 21, 2026

Alexander’s Dream of One World

 

Alexander’s Dream of One World

The fighting was over. Alexander had won a huge empire. But as he looked around, he realised something important.

The people in his empire were very different. They spoke different languages, believed in different gods, and lived in different ways. If they stayed divided, his empire would not last.

So, Alexander made a new plan. He didn’t want to rule separate people—he wanted to bring them together as one.

He ruled not one person, but many.

From the plains of Macedon to the deserts of Persia, languages shifted, gods changed, customs clashed. Victory had given him land—but not unity.

And Alexander, unlike many conquerors, understood this danger.

So, he chose a bold path:
not to rule over Persians and Greeks—but to bind them into one people.

He wore Persian robes.
He bowed to Persian gods.
He raised Persians into power beside Greeks.

His own generals murmured.
His soldiers grumbled.

But Alexander saw further than they did.

If he ruled only as a Greek king, his empire would fracture.
If he became something greater—something new—his empire might endure.

He was no longer just a conqueror.
He was attempting to become a bridge between worlds

Wednesday, May 20, 2026

136. The Kingdom of Sikander: A Memoir of Lost Heaven

 

136. The Kingdom of Sikander: A Memoir of Lost Heaven

*An Anecdote from the Valley*

Legend holds that the fair-skinned peoples of Kashmir, Gilgit, the Hunza Valley, and Baltistan are descendants of Alexander the Great’s soldiers. Readers of Rudyard Kipling’s *The Man Who Would Be King* — or viewers of the superb film adaptation — will recall how the local tribes awaited the return of Sikander, Alexander’s son. There may, in fact, be substance to this charming legend.

Alexander fought his way through the Khyber Pass and entered northern India via the Indus Valley in 327 BC. The following year, he won a major battle against the local king at Hydaspes, but his army refused to march any deeper into the subcontinent. Before returning to Persia, he left behind many thousands of his elite Macedonian troops, with orders to marry local women and establish Greek satrapies. In classical times, Macedonians and most Greeks were a fair-skinned, blue-eyed people — revealing their northern, even Germanic, roots. They were a far cry from today’s Hellenes, who are products of centuries of mixing with Ottoman Turks, Slavs, and other Balkan peoples.

Cut off from India and Afghanistan by the ramparts of the Karakoram and the Himalayas, the Greco-Kashmiri gene pool remained relatively isolated until modern times. The result is people who appear strikingly different from their neighbours — like marooned survivors from a lost shipwreck, beached and forgotten long ago on a strange, uncharted island.

Many natives of Hunza, Kashmir, the Swat Valley, and Chitral look distinctly Aryan. The Kafir Kalash — a little-known non-Muslim tribe with the curious custom of selecting the village’s strongest man to mate with all its virgins — appear as though they have followed this practice for centuries, perhaps to preserve their gene pool. Where did these fair-skinned people come from, if not from Alexander’s hoplites?

*The light-skinned peoples of Kashmir, Gilgit, the Hunza Valley, and Baltistan are descendants of the soldiers of Alexander the Great, the legend says. And maybe it is true. Maybe the Macedonians did stay, did marry, did build a kingdom in these impossible mountains. But if Sikander’s soldiers ever return to claim their inheritance, they will find only bones and bunkers — and a people who have forgotten how to live without war.*

*The kingdom in the clouds remains: still beautiful, still scarred. And no one is about to hand over heaven, of all places, to a hated enemy. *

Xxx

Tuesday, May 19, 2026

Hindu Kush

Hindu Kush 

The name "Hindu Kush" refers to a major mountain range that historically marked the northwestern frontier of the Indian subcontinent. The most cited origin traces to 14th-century traveller Ibn Battuta, who described it as "Hindu-killer" due to the deaths of countless Hindu slaves from India who perished from cold and harsh conditions while being trafficked northward to Central Asia by Muslim traders and invaders. Ibn Battuta, crossing the passes around 1333 CE, noted that the extreme weather claimed so many Hindu captives en route to markets in Turkestan that the range earned its grim cross. This interpretation persists in local Afghan lore and popular accounts, linking it to the medieval slave trade during invasions by figures like Mahmud of Ghazni and Timur.

Some scholars propose "Hindu Koh," meaning "mountains of India" or "Hindu mountains," as a simpler geographic descriptor, with "Kush" as a variant of the Persian "Kuh" for mountain; Mughal emperor Akbar reportedly tried renaming it this way in 1586 to appease Hindu subjects.  The slave-death theory, however, remains the earliest documented and most widely referenced

In shadowed passes where the wild winds wail,
Hindu Kush stands, a graveyard etched in stone,
Where captive souls from India's sunlit vale
Met winter's bite, their final breaths a moan.
Named for the slaughter of the weary throng,
Slaves chained in torment, lost to icy wrong.

From Ibn Battuta's quill, the tale unfolds,
Of merchants marching north through frozen hell,
Where Hindu blood turned peaks to crimson gold,
And countless perished 'neath the mountain's spell.
No mercy in those heights, no gentle call,
Just echoes of the fallen, one and all.

Yet some whisper "Kuh," the mountain's tongue,
A boundary bold 'twixt realms of faith and fire,
Akbar sought to cloak its dirge unsung,
Renaming grief to soothe an empire's pyre.
But history's scar remains, unbowed, severe,
Hindu Kush whispers death through every year.

Ref:

[iranicaonline]

[sanskritimagazine+1youtubewikipedia+1]

[.youtubedharmapedia]

Monday, May 18, 2026

# Visa to Paradise

 

# Visa to Paradise

*A satirical short story*

## Part One – The Queue at the End

When Ramesh died—quietly, in his sleep, after a lifetime of cutting queues and fudging tax returns—he expected either eternal silence or the strum of heavenly harps. What he did not expect was a queue.

A long one.

It twisted through a grey, misty corridor lit by fluorescent tubes that buzzed like irritated bees. At the front stood a heavy door with a brass plaque: 

**GATE OF PARADISE – ISSUANCE SECTION** 

*Please have your documents ready. No chai breaks. *

Underneath, in smaller script: 

*“By order of Yamraj, Lord of Death & Immigration.”*

Ramesh patted his pockets. He had no documents. He had died in his pyjamas.

The queue moved forward. Each soul before him was turned away by a bored clerk who looked like a government employee who had been dead for three thousand years and still hadn’t received a promotion.

“Passport?” 

“I… I didn’t know I needed one.” 

“Next.”

When Ramesh’s turn came, he offered his best smile. “Good morning, sir. I was wondering—”

“Passport or return slip to narak?” the clerk said without looking up.

“Neither, but you see, I lived a very decent life. I never stole more than office stationery.”

The clerk stamped a form. “Take this. Go to Counter 2. Bring a passport, visa stamps from each lifetime, proof of good deeds on letterhead from a recognised deity, tax receipts for sins, and a character certificate from your local pundit. If any document is missing, you will be processed to the lower floors.”

Ramesh looked at the stamp. It read: **“INCOMPLETE – RETURN TO SAMSARA.”**

Thus began the satirical truth: in heaven, as on earth, paperwork is the real purgatory.

---

## Part Two – A Vacancy Opens Up

It so happened that just then, a vacancy arose in heaven. A minor angel had retired (burnout from listening to too many bhajans). Yamraj, the Lord of Death, issued an advertisement:

 **“URGENT RECRUITMENT – HEAVEN ADMINISTRATION”** 

*Position: Celestial Gatekeeper (Temporary, may become permanent after 100,000 years probation)* 

*Requirements: Must have performed at least one selfless deed on Earth. Proof required in triplicate. * 

*Interviews to be held in Narak Conference Hall, Room 101. Bring original documents + photocopies (both sides).*

The news spread across the afterlife. Millions applied. The screening committee—three old clerks with ink-stained fingers—reduced the list to four. Only four souls had managed to submit all forms without a single spelling mistake.

Their interview cards arrived by spectral post:

*“You are hereby summoned to appear before the High Throne of Yamraj. Dress code: White (no holes). Be on time. Lateness will result in automatic disqualification and reassignment to the Department of Unanswered Prayers.”*

---

## Part Three – The Four Candidates

### Candidate No. 1 – Atma Ram

Yamraj sat on a throne made of filing cabinets. His face was the colour of a storm cloud, but his reading glasses gave him an oddly bureaucratic air.

“Name?” 

“Atma Ram, my Lord.” 

“Atma Ram,” Yamraj repeated. “Soul of God. Impressive. Residence?” 

“The Cremation Grounds, my Lord.” 

“I see. And during your tenure at the cremation grounds, what was your occupation?”

Atma Ram coughed. “I… facilitated transitions.” 

“You pushed people into the fire before they were dead,” Yamraj said, sliding a report across the desk. “You sold wood from stolen pyres. You mixed ashes of buffalo with the ashes of saints and sold them as holy relics. You even pocketed the teeth of the departed and resold them as ‘Buddha’s molars.’ Am I lying?”

Atma Ram’s mouth opened and closed like a dying fish.

“Why do you want to come to heaven?” 

“Because,” Atma Ram whispered, “I am fed up with worldly things.” 

Yamraj removed his glasses. “You *are* worldly things. You are their mouldy residue. You have done nothing but accelerate the arrival of souls to my doorstep—and half of them came without proper paperwork because of you. Return to the cremation grounds. And this time, stay.”

*Candidate No. 1 – Rejected.*

---

### Candidate No. 2 – Neek Ram

 

“Name?” 

“Neek Ram, Lord.” 

“Translation?” 

“‘Good Lord’ or ‘Virtuous God,’” Neek Ram said with a hopeful smile. 

“And your deeds on Earth reflect this noble name?”

The file opened. Yamraj read in silence. Then he looked up.

“You have not done a single good deed in seventy-three years. You did not harm anyone, true—but you also never helped. You never gave a rupee to a beggar, never stopped to lift a fallen scooter, never even held a door open. Your life was a zero. A perfect, inert, useless zero.”

Neek Ram shuffled his feet. “I will improve my activities in heaven, Lord. Once I settle in, I promise I’ll—”

“Heaven is not a training ground,” Yamraj said. “It is a destination. You should have practised goodness on Earth, where it costs something. Here, virtue is mandatory. You cannot *learn* it after arrival. Return.”

“But where will I go?” 

“To the Department of Mild Inconvenience. It is neither heaven nor hell. Just a very long wait for a bus that never comes.”

*Candidate No. 2 – Rejected. *

---

### Candidate No. 3 – Balak Ram

“Name?” 

“Balak Ram, sir.” 

“Child of God. Cute. What was your profession on Earth?” 

“I worked in a hospital, Lord. As a nurse.”

Yamraj’s expression softened—then hardened as he read the file.

“Balak Ram, you swapped newborn babies for profit. When a rich couple delivered a stillborn, you sold them a live child from a poor mother and told her the infant died. You did this seventeen times. You made money from the tears of parents.”

Balak Ram wept. “I was young. I needed the money.” 

“Everyone needs money. Not everyone trades human grief for it. Return.”

“To where?” 

“To the maternity ward of hell. You will deliver screaming receipts for eternity.”

*Candidate No. 3 – Rejected. *

---

### Candidate No. 4 – Sant Ram

Yamraj sighed. The third candidate had left a bad taste. He called the last one.

“Name?” 

“Sant Ram, my Lord.” 

“Saint of God. And where did you reside on Earth?” 

“Lane Number 420, Sector 7, Ganga Nagar.”

Yamraj put down his pen. “Lane 420. The penal code for fraud. Promising.”

He opened the file. “Tell me, Sant Ram—have you ever spoken a lie?”

“Never, my Lord. I have never told a single untruth in my entire life.”

Yamraj smiled thinly. “That itself is a lie, because I see here that as a priest, you recited inauspicious mantras at weddings—the ones meant for funerals—and funeral mantras at weddings. You did it deliberately, because the family that paid more got the ‘auspicious’ version. The rest got curses disguised as blessings.”

Sant Ram turned pale. “I… I was just following market demand.”

“And your reason for wanting heaven?” 

“I wish to learn Sanskrit, my Lord. Properly. So that I can charge higher fees. More *dakshina*.”

Yamraj leaned forward. “Let me understand. You have defrauded the living. You have weaponised holy words. And now you want to come to heaven to *upskill* for better fraud?”

“When you put it that way—”

“I put it exactly that way. Return to the mortal realm. Reincarnate as a form. A tax form. You will be filled out, stamped, and filed in error for seven lifetimes.”

*Candidate No. 4 – Rejected. *

---

## Part Four – The Moral of the Mess

Yamraj closed all four files and turned to his chief clerk, Chitragupta.

“No one,” he said, “wants to come to heaven for heaven itself. They want to escape something, or they want to exploit something, or they want to improve something they should have fixed on Earth. Has no one simply lived well?”

Chitragupta consulted a ledger the size of a small car. “Fourteen people, my Lord, in the last ten thousand years. They went straight to the VIP lounge. No interviews. No paperwork.”

“What did they do?”

“They were kind without recording it. They gave without receiving a receipt. They forgave without witnesses. They did not apply for heaven. They simply arrived, and the door opened.”

Yamraj nodded. “Then put up a new notice.”

Chitragupta took out his quill. “What should it say?”

Yamraj thought for a moment, then dictated:

*“NOTICE: Heaven is not a promotion. It is not a reward for cleverness. It is not a training college. It is the natural resting place of those who forgot to keep score. All others, please form a queue to the left. Tax receipts will be audited. Bring your own pen.”*

**THE END**

*With sincere apologies to R.K. Sharma and All India Radio’s “Hawa Mahal.” Bureaucracy is equally funny in every language. *

Sunday, May 17, 2026

Visa to Paradise: The Andhaka Copycat Claim

Visa to Paradise: The Andhaka Copycat Claim


*A Satirical Short Story*


When Andhaka — son of Hiranyaksha, boon-granted by Brahma, conqueror of the three worlds, pursuer of the devas all the way to Mount Mandara — was finally impaled on Shiva's trident, something strange happened.


He didn't die.


Well, he did. But then another Andhaka rose from his blood. And another. And another. The battlefield became a forest of thousand-eyed, thousand-limbed demons, each one identical to the original.


Then Kālī came. And she drank every drop.


The last Andhaka — the original — watched as his copies were devoured. Then Shiva's third eye opened. Andhaka's sins burned away. He fell to his knees.


*"I am sorry,"* he said.


Shiva forgave him. Made him a Gaṇa chief.


Then Andhaka died. For real this time. And woke up in a beige hallway.


---


### Part One: The Intake


The sign read: **AFTERLIFE RECEPTION — GAṆA DIVISION (FORMER ASURAS) — COUNTER 11**.

A cheerful clerk with a single head (refreshingly simple) greeted him. "Welcome! Andhaka, correct? Son of Hiranyaksha? Chief Gaṇa? We have your file. It's... unusual."


"How so?" Andhaka asked, his thousand eyes now reduced to a normal two (the Gaṇa makeover).


"You died multiple times. The Liṅga Purāṇa account alone records: one original death by trident, then approximately twelve thousand copy-deaths by Kālī. Each copy was a distinct entity. We need to determine which one is *you* — the real Andhaka — before we can process your visa."


"I am the original!"


"All twelve thousand copies said that. Right before Kālī ate them. Do you have any proof of originality?"


Andhaka thought. "I... was impaled on Shiva's trident for a while. The copies were destroyed quickly."


"That's not proof. Copies can claim they were impaled too. We need a *witness*."


---


### Part Two: The Witness Testimony


The court summoned **Vīrabhadra** — the fierce Gaṇa commander who had fought Andhaka's copies.


Vīrabhadra appeared in full armor, scowling. "I killed Andhaka seventy-three times. Each time, a new one rose from the blood. It was exhausting. I do not recommend it."


"Can you identify the original?" the judge asked.


Vīrabhadra squinted at Andhaka. "The original was the one who *begged for forgiveness*. The copies just screamed. So if this one says he's sorry, he's probably the real one."


Andhaka knelt. "I am sorry. For everything. The conquest. The abduction attempt. The mountain-uprooting. The yajña-hindering. The Apsara-napping. All of it."


Vīrabhadra nodded. "That's him."


The judge wrote: *"Original Andhaka identified by Vīrabhadra via sincere apology. Copies are considered deceased and without independent soul status. Their visas are void."*


---


### Part Three: The Son Āḍi


The clerk then pulled up another form. "Andhaka, you have a son. Name: Āḍi. Mother unknown. Please provide parentage details for his inheritance."


Andhaka's thousand heads (now absent) would have argued. Instead, his single head sighed. "I don't remember. There were many years. Many asura women. Āḍi is my son. That is all I know."


The court ruled that Āḍi would be recognized as **Legal Heir of Andhaka (Asura Estate)** . However, since Andhaka had been forgiven and made a Gaṇa, his asura wealth (three worlds, various palaces, a collection of stolen Apsaras) was forfeit to the celestial treasury. Āḍi would receive a small pension of 100 EterniCoins per celestial year — enough to live modestly in Purgatory Annex.


Āḍi later filed an appeal. It is still pending.


---


### Part Four: The Blood Copy Administrative Nightmare


Despite Vīrabhadra's testimony, the court still had to account for the twelve thousand copies. Each copy, while lacking an independent soul, had nevertheless *existed* for a brief period. The Rāmāyaṇa and Mahābhārata accounts differed on who killed the final Andhaka — Shiva's third eye or Kālī — but agreed on the blood copies.


The judge summoned **Kālī** (via celestial deposition). The goddess appeared as a towering, dark figure, her tongue red with symbolic blood.


"Kālī," the judge said, "did you consume the copies?"


"I did. Every single one. They were delicious. Not spiritually, of course. I am a goddess, not a cannibal. But metaphorically."


"Are the copies considered 'alive' before consumption?"


"They were moving, fighting, and bleeding. If it bleeds, it lives. But their lives were not meaningful. They had no memory, no identity, no karma. They were photocopies."


The court ruled: **Blood copies are classified as 'Temporary Combat Entities'** — not eligible for afterlife processing, but requiring a *Bulk Deletion Certificate*. Andhaka was required to sign a single form acknowledging that all copies had been consumed and would not be resurrected.


He signed. His hand did not shake.


---


### Part Five: The Verdict (Forgiveness Final)


The final verdict was, surprisingly, merciful — because Andhaka had genuinely repented, both on the trident and in the courtroom.


- **Parentage**: Son of Hiranyaksha. No spiritual parentage from Shiva-Parvati in this version. (The court noted the inconsistency with earlier Puranas but accepted the Liṅga Purāṇa as the governing text for this case.)

- **Boon**: Upheld. He was killed by Shiva (and/or Kālī, by extension). No violation.

- **Blood copies**: Deleted. No further responsibility.

- **Son Āḍi**: Recognized. Pension granted.

- **Crimes**: Conquest, abduction attempts, yajña-hindering, mountain-uprooting. All pardoned due to sincere repentance and Shiva's forgiveness.


**Outcome**: Andhaka is granted **Paradise Visa Tier 1 (Gaṇa Privileges)** . He will reside on Mount Mandara as a chief of Shiva's attendants. His duties include: guarding the mountain, welcoming pilgrims, and — as penance — cleaning the *Śveta forest* where he was once slain (according to the Rāmāyaṇa account). Once a week, he must attend a *Humility Workshop* led by Prahlada (who tried to warn him).


Additionally, Andhaka is forbidden from ever desiring Parvati again. A *Magical Restraint Order* has been placed on his heart. He has agreed to it.


---


### Epilogue


Andhaka — now a serene Gaṇa with a single head and two calm eyes — stands at the gate of Mount Mandara. Pilgrims arrive. He blesses them. He does not mention his past.


Once a celestial year, Kālī visits. She does not eat him. She pats his head and says, "Good copy."


Shiva passes by occasionally. He does not speak. He simply nods. That is enough.


And on the wall of the Celestial Intake Hall — beneath a painting of Kālī drinking the blood of Andhaka's copies, with Shiva watching from his bull — a new plaque reads:


> *"A thousand copies may rise from a single drop. But only one soul can ask for forgiveness — and mean it."*


**OM NAMAH SHIVAYA**


---


**THE END**

Saturday, May 16, 2026

ALEXANDER AND HIS HORSE BUCEPHALUS

 ALEXANDER AND HIS HORSE BUCEPHALUS

Bucephalus became calm in Alexander’s presence and allowed himself to be gently handled. Alexander turned the horse’s head so he would not see his own shadow, which had been frightening him. He quietly removed his cloak and smoothly leapt onto the horse’s back. Instead of trying to force or control him harshly, Alexander gave him freedom and encouraged him with his voice. The horse ran swiftly across the plains.

At first, the king and his courtiers watched in fear, but soon their fear turned into admiration and delight. After the horse had run enough, Alexander easily guided him back and returned safely. The courtiers praised him, and King Philip proudly said that Alexander deserved a kingdom greater than Macedon.

Alexander had understood the horse’s nature correctly. Bucephalus became gentle and obedient, always responding to his master. He would even kneel on his front legs so Alexander could mount him more easily. Alexander kept him for many years and made him his favorite war horse. Stories were told about the horse’s intelligence and bravery in battle. When prepared for war, Bucephalus seemed proud and excited, and he would allow no one but Alexander to ride him.

What happened to Bucephalus in the end is not certain. One story says that during a battle, Alexander was surrounded by enemies. Bucephalus, though badly wounded, struggled with all his strength to carry Alexander to safety. Once he had done so, he collapsed and died from exhaustion.

Another story suggests he survived and lived to the age of thirty, which is very old for a horse. When he finally died, Alexander honored him with a grand burial and built a small city in his memory, called Bucephalia.

Bucephalia was an ancient city built by Alexander the Great in memory of his horse Bucephalus. It is believed to have been located near the Jhelum River in present-day Pakistan, close to where the famous Battle of the Hydaspes was fought.

Brave young Alexander, bold and bright,
Tamed a wild horse none could ride.
Bucephalus ran swift and free,
Across the plains with strength and glee.

With gentle hands and fearless heart,
He calmed the horse right from the start.
Together strong in every way,
They rode to glory day by day.

Friday, May 15, 2026

The White Pillar at the End of the World

 The White Pillar at the End of the World

In the lavishly illustrated medieval manuscript of Alexander and Dindimus—a dialogue between Alexander the Great and the Brahmin philosopher Dindimus—one of the final images captures a poignant climax: Alexander erecting a towering white pillar at the farthest edge of the known world. This striking scene serves as a powerful ending to his epic tale. The relentless conqueror, who had devoted his life to pushing beyond every horizon, pauses at last to plant this gleaming monument, a stark testament to the farthest reach of his ambition.

A great white pillar marks the furthest point Alexander had reached.

Whether such a pillar was ever physically raised remains an exciting historical question. Ancient sources like Arrian's Anabasis describe Alexander reaching the Hyphasis River (modern Beas) in 326 BCE, where his weary troops mutinied, forcing a retreat—but no pillar is mentioned there. Later legends, amplified in medieval romances, enhance this with symbolic flourishes drawn from Herodotus's tales of boundary markers set by earlier explorers. Here, the pillar rises above mere history; it represents the uncertain boundary between human aspiration and mortal limitation. With its erection, the outward thrust of conquest yields to the adamant pull homeward, reminding us that even Alexander, son of Zeus, could not outrun the world's confines.