“Sita Ram Goel Vindicated: Falta heralds Hindu tsunami – Virendra Parekh”, Bharat Bharti, May 28, 2026
“What Bengal thinks today, the rest of India will think tomorrow. This was said once upon a time, when Bengal led the Indian renaissance in the nineteenth century. Though a truncated part of that great land, West Bengal is now on its way to reclaim that status. Three weeks have passed since the Hindu storm swept away the corrupt, decrepit and divisive regime led by Mamata Banerjee. A new Bengal, unimaginable just a couple of months back, is emerging into view under a fresh, no-nonsense and unapologetically nationalist state government. Bangladeshi infiltrators are running back home, fencing of border is underway, namaz on road is banned, temples and other properties of Hindus occupied by hoodlums of the earlier regime are being liberated, dreaded goons are paraded in underclothes through the market and illegal structures are being bulldozed. In short, garbage accumulated over decades of the Congress, Communist and TMC rule is being cleared. This is necessary, though far from sufficient, to put the social and public life back on the rails, and also to attract capital, revive investment and revitalise the industry and economy.
Bengal, powered by Hindu assertion, has accelerated India’s march towards Hindu Rashtra. If there was any doubt left, it was clinched by the re-poll in Falta, until recently a stronghold of Jahangir Khan, a henchman of TMC half-boss Abhishek Banerjee. Election in this constituency was countermanded after the detection of widespread electoral malpractices by Jahangir Khan and his men. In the by-election held on May 21, Khan who had earlier threatened to slit the throat of the police officer who warned him of legal action, meekly withdrew from the context, was untraceable on the polling day and lost deposit.
But the election was no longer about any candidate or party. It was about expression of Hindu resolve. The polling was about 87 per cent, unprecedented for a re-poll which could not influence the formation of the government or political scene in the state in any manner. Hindus voted massively, around 97 per cent. Every single vote went to the BJP, which won the seat with a margin of over one lakh votes. Muslims too voted heavily, about 73 per cent, mostly for CPM. Not a single vote went to BJP…….”
Read full article at bharatabharati.in
