hidden image

Mandani and Winning!

Robert Clements Robert Clements
10 Nov 2025

Every morning while in New York, I had to walk past the mayor's lovely villa to get to the riverfront in Manhattan for my morning walk. When I read about young Zohran Mamdani's victory in New York's mayoral elections, I felt a thrill ripple through me.

Thirty-two years old, son of immigrants, Muslim, and yet none of that mattered in the end. What mattered was his ability, eloquence, energy, and ideas. He did not ask for sympathy or support based on identity. He simply stood up, spoke his truth with passion, and won.

It reminded me of another man who once walked into the world's most powerful political office. Barack Obama. His name was unfamiliar, his skin colour different, and his ancestry foreign to the land he would lead. Yet when he spoke, people listened. They did not hear a black man; they heard a leader. They did not see his race; they saw his reason. He rose not on the crutches of privilege or reservation, but on the wings of merit and the conviction that he could.

And that, dear readers, is what I wish our young people would learn. The world does not bow to those who demand pity or preference. It listens to those who earn respect through confidence, clarity, and competence. You may not be born into privilege, but if you can speak with passion and think with purpose, you already possess the tools to win.

We, as a people, must learn to celebrate that. Somewhere along the way, we have begun to rely too heavily on labels. We say we deserve something because we belong to the majority community or the reservation category to which we belong. But do we realise how much joy there is in winning without any crutch? How much thrill there is in knowing that you succeeded because you were the best?

Look at those who have reached the top through their talent. They walk straighter, not with arrogance but with assurance. They know they earned every bit of their success. They don't whisper, "I got it because of my background," but proudly say, "I got it because I worked for it."

To all the young people reading this, even to those who have grown older but still dream, remember this: confidence in yourself is more powerful than any certificate that says you deserve special treatment. When you believe in your own worth, others begin to believe in it too.

So, stop waiting for someone to open the door for you. Build the key yourself. Speak, study, work, and persist till your skill becomes impossible to ignore. And when that happens, the world will not see your religion, your age, your colour, or your community. It will only see your merit.
Win through merit, and watch how sweet victory tastes when it is wholly yours...

Recent Posts

On April 9, I was in Karnal as a resource person at the 2026 Delhi Province Assembly of the Indian Missionary Society (IMS), an indigenous order of the Catholic Church. One thing that attracted me to
apicture A. J. Philip
13 Apr 2026
The proposed FCRA Amendment Bill, 2026, has sparked fears that expanded state powers to seize NGO assets may bypass constitutional safeguards, disproportionately affect minority institutions, and shri
apicture Jacob Peenikaparambil
13 Apr 2026
A comforting myth of Congress–Christian affinity masks a harder truth: when justice required administrative fixes, the state acted; when it demanded constitutional courage for Dalit Christians, it hes
apicture John Dayal
13 Apr 2026
The Supreme Court of India affirmed marriage as a partnership of equals, ruling that a wife's refusal to perform chores is not cruelty. By declaring "wife is a life partner, not a maid," it reinforces
apicture Jessy Kurian
13 Apr 2026
Public Interest Litigation transformed access to justice in India, empowering courts to defend the marginalised. As calls to curb it emerge, the debate centres on balancing concerns about misuse with
apicture Joseph Maliakan
13 Apr 2026
Amid the fallout from the Iran war, India's LPG shortage exposes a widening gap between official assurances and lived reality—fuel scarcity, rising prices, and migrant distress reveal a fragile energy
apicture Frank Krishner
13 Apr 2026
The Strait of Hormuz remains a volatile global lifeline, where Iran's "Hormuz Gambit" leverages geography to wield outsized influence—threatening energy flows, unsettling markets, and forcing major po
apicture Fr John Felix Raj & Dr Sovik Mukherjee
13 Apr 2026
In the muddy piece of a Hindu land, Where caste was stitched into human skin, And untouchability carried chains heavier than iron, A child was born beneath a fractured sky Not to inherit the Hindu
apicture Dr Suryaraju Mattimalla
13 Apr 2026
Amid escalating Middle East conflicts, petrodollar power and Zionist geopolitics frame a world gripped by conflict, moral crisis, and competing national visions. Unchecked ambition, ideological absolu
apicture Peter Fernandes
13 Apr 2026
nobody calls a selfish person aunty with affection. That title, in our country at least, comes with invisible expectations. To care. To guide. To smile even when the knees protest.
apicture Robert Clements
13 Apr 2026