The Sindoor Stunt: How a Bhagoda Turned Grief into a Photo Op
The Sindoor Stunt: How a Bhagoda
Turned Grief into a Photo Op
Nautanki Gappu
Oh, what a spectacle! The Grand
Master of Houdini politics himself has outdone every known stunt: our Prime
Minister, the self-proclaimed ascetic-warrior, has decided to bestow Sindoor on
women across India, a sacred ritual, traditionally reserved for a husband. But
why bother with tradition when you can just cosplay as the guardian of marital
bliss while 26 families are still counting their dead?
Let’s start with the basics.
Narendra Modi: marital status? It’s complicated. He’s married because,
awkwardly, he had to write it down on an MP declaration form. He’s not divorced;
paperwork is too much admin. He’s not a widower; his wife is alive, breathing,
and presumably as mystified as the rest of us. So, what is he? The closest
descriptor: Bhagoda the runner, the escape artist, the guy who said
"I do" and then promptly vanished like a bad magician.
And yet, here he is, handing out
Sindoor like party favors. Because who cares if Hindu tradition specifies that
Sindoor is placed by a husband as a sign of marriage and commitment?
Technicalities! Rituals! Small print! Modi's here to rewrite 5,000 years of
tradition with a few photo ops.
But wait, it gets better.
According to the man himself, he spent 35 or 40 years, depending on the camera
that he is in front of and the fools he is telling a story to. Which raises
some interesting questions about his timeline. Did he start this heroic career
in kindergarten? Before or after he squeezed in a bachelor’s and master’s
degree from the prestigious WhatsApp University? The math is fuzzy, but who
needs facts when you have blind devotion and good lighting?
This sindoor-distributing
roadshow isn’t just tone-deaf; it's an insult layered in delusion. While
families mourn, he's out here posing as the national protector of sindoor. News
flash: real sindoor is not some cheap token to be dished out by politicians
angling for votes. It’s sacred. It’s personal. It’s emotional. But try telling
that to the cheering crowds of WhatsApp scholars nodding enthusiastically
between forwarded messages of dubious provenance.
And the cherry on top? This same
brave heart, this "56-inch chest," once bowed before the U.S.
President and pulled back from military action when India had an upper hand.
Courage! Valor! Or, you know, strategic retreat disguised as diplomacy, but
sure, let’s call it protecting sindoor.
Meanwhile, his party members are
busy blaming the Army for being “lazy” and calling a Colonel “the sister of
terrorists.” Because when you can’t win wars or save lives, the next best thing
is to point fingers.
The sindoor spectacle should
enrage every thinking Indian. But don’t expect much from the Godi media, their
job is to yell into cameras, froth at the mouth, and convince you that this
bhagoda handing out sindoor is your knight in saffron armor.
Is he? If he truly protected
sindoor, why are widows still crying? Why are there funerals instead of
celebrations?
Sindoor isn’t just red powder.
It’s not a prop for election theatre. It’s a symbol of life, love, commitment, things
you don’t get to mock with a PR campaign.
But why let facts and feelings
get in the way of a good show? In the land of WhatsApp degrees and TV
anchors-turned-hype men, truth is whatever their leader declares it to be, tradition,
history, grief, all sacrificed at the altar of a selfie moment.
Welcome to the great sindoor
circus. Bring popcorn.
Sundor par bure fas gaye modi ab fake news dikha kar palla jhad liya
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