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Saturday, April 20, 2024

Flying Beast Gaurav Taneja schools Karwa Chauth hating journalist, questions hypocrisy

The leftist-liberal cabal leaves no chance to sneer upon Hindu rituals. Though the Dharmic front doesn’t have many representatives among the “social media influencer” crowd, popular YouTuber Gaurav Taneja aka Flying Beast never fails us.

After Diwali, if there is any Hindu festival that triggers the anti-Hindu brigade the most, it is the Karwa Chauth. The beautiful festival, popularly observed by the Hindus in the northern states like Punjab, Haryana, and parts of Uttar Pradesh, has been popularized throughout Bharat and overseas by movies and serials.

Married women in Madhya Pradesh, Bihar, Rajasthan, and other states have also started observing the fast, holding the Pooja, and praying for their husband’s health, well-being, and long life. Unfortunately, the festival has also been dubbed “misogynistic”, “anti-women”, and many other names by the feminist coterie.

This year, independent journalist Neha Dixit took to her social media hands to lecture the Hindu women of the northern belt during the festival. In her viral post, the contributor to The Hindu and The Outlook Magazine addressed the Karwa Chauth observers as her “sister” and claimed, “No man is worth staying hungry for,” encouraged them to party, shop, eat, and shared elaborate details of how she planned to feast that day.

The journalist stated, “Nothing good has ever come out of staying hungry. You will only be hangry.” Sharing a screenshot of the anti-Karwa Chauth rant, Gaurav Taneja asked the “journalist” if this claim applies to those who hold monthly fasts. Though the former pilot and law aspirant didn’t name any community, one can easily understand that Gaurav’s pun was intended for the Islamic fasting of Roza that no liberal, leftist, or science enthusiast has even had the guts to question.

Neha Dixit, through her writings, has presented herself as a “well-wisher” of the Muslim community, and doubting an Islamist ritual would go against chosen propaganda. That is why, when the world was standing tall with the anti-Hijab protesters in Iran, Neha Dixit decided to target the harmless Karwa Chauth.

Gaurav’s rebuttal to Dixit has generated massive retweets, which shows that the people of Bharat are done with fake liberals whose only commitment in life is towards the anti-Hindu agenda. Some users have asked pretty interesting questions as well.

Gaurav hails from a Punjabi family settled in Kanpur. His wife, Ritu Rathee Taneja, is also a captain who received her flying training in the US. Besides being a successful professional in a demanding occupation that needs an excellent knowledge of multiple streams of science, Ritu is also a mother of two lovely daughters. Despite her work and family commitments, Ritu has always observed Karwa Chauth with great devotion.

The women of this country should look up to Ritu Rathee as their hero, for she is a successful woman who has attained the delicate balance of a high-paying career and a loving family. There are scores of social media feminists who neither have full-time jobs nor worthy personal commitments. They are living a miserable life behind the keyboard. The last thing one should do is allow these Hinduphobic individuals to influence their thoughts.

Hinduphobic feminists seldom give value to relationships. They are averse to life-long commitments and are often driven by the urge to engage in random and reckless short-lived courtship. Such individuals often don’t realize the importance of that one relationship that makes 16 hours of hunger insignificant.

It is also unfortunate that they usually do not get into a relationship worth skipping a couple of meals. Hence, if such an individual asserts that no man is worth staying hungry for, chances are they (or whichever pronoun they identify with) are just sharing their grief and frustration. This statement is certainly not a general rule, and the multitudes of blissfully married Hindu women observing Karwa Chauth prove that traditions and commitment are here to stay.

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