Why Are We Doing this ?
Ask an Indian child today to name five Greek gods, and they'll rattle them off instantly. Ask them to name five figures from the Mahabharata beyond the obvious ones, and watch them struggle.
They know Norse mythology from Marvel movies. They know Japanese culture from anime and American history from Netflix. But ask them about the Chola bronzes, the majesty of Takshshila, or the poetry of the Bhakti saints, and you're met with blank stares.
This isn't their fault. It's ours. We've allowed our children to grow up as strangers in their own civilizational home.
They consume stories, but not their own. They admire ancient wisdom, but from Greece and China, not from the texts that shaped this land. They search for identity and meaning, but the tools they need—their own heritage—have been rendered invisible or inaccessible.
The consequences go deep. This cultural disconnect creates a generation unmoored—borrowing frameworks from everywhere else to understand themselves, unable to access the profound philosophical and artistic resources of their own tradition. It's an identity crisis playing out in millions of homes, and it's getting worse with each passing year.
But it doesn't have to be this way.
The knowledge exists. The stories are there. The traditions are still alive—barely. What's missing is the ecosystem: quality books that make Indic culture accessible, creators who can tell these stories with contemporary power, programs that connect young minds with their heritage in ways that resonate.
We're building that ecosystem. Not out of nostalgia, but out of necessity. Because a generation disconnected from its roots is a generation adrift. Because our children deserve to inherit their full civilizational legacy, not fragments and stereotypes.
This foundation exists to give them back what should have always been theirs.