A new medical college has been shut for admitting the “wrong” kind of Indians. That a regulator twisted itself to make this possible is bad enough; that people are celebrating it marks a new moral low
Fr. Gaurav Nair
India boasts GDP rankings, yet shuts a medical college because the 'wrong' students got in. In Reasi, merit via NEET met prejudice, standards became excuses, and patients lost care.
A. J. Philip
From Somnath to Ayodhya, history is being recast as grievance and revenge as politics. Myths replace evidence, Nehru and Gandhi are caricatured, and ancient plunder is weaponised to divide the present
Ram Puniyani
When leaders invoke "revenge" and ancient wounds, politics turns supposed grievances into fuel. From Somnath to Delhi, history is repurposed to polarise, distract from governance, and normalise hate,
Jacob Peenikaparambil
As Blackstone and KKR buy Kerala's hospitals, care risks becoming a balance-sheet decision. The state's current people-first model faces an American-style, insurance-driven system where MBAs replace d
Joseph Maliakan
Christians are persecuted in every one of the eight countries in South Asia, but even prominent religious groups, Hindus and Muslims, and smaller groups of Sikhs and Buddhists, also find themselves ta
John Dayal
"The Patronage of 'Daily-ness': Holiness in the Ordinary"
Pride runs deeper than we often admit. It colours the way we see ourselves, shapes the circles we move in, and decides who gets to stand inside those circles with us. Not all pride works the same way.
India's problem is no longer judicial overreach but executive overdrive. Through agencies, procedure and timing, politics now shapes legality itself. Courts arrive late, elections are influenced early
India is being hollowed out twice over: votes bought with stolen welfare money, and voters erased by design. As politics becomes spectacle and bribery becomes policy, democracy slips from "vote chori"
Thomas Menamparampil
Oh my follower, You named yourself mine. To gain convenience Personal, professional, political Without ever touching
Our chains are more sophisticated. They are decorated with religion. Polished with patriotism. Justified with fear of 'the other.' We are told someone is always trying to convert us. Someone is always
Robert Clements