On Sunday, September 21, 2025, Haridwar’s sacred Chandi Ghat witnessed a very special picture. In the month of Pitru Paksha, when Hindus traditionally offer tarpan for the peace of their ancestors, something far greater unfolded. A collective tarpan was performed — not for individual families, but for the countless unknown Hindu souls who gave their lives over centuries to protect Dharma, faith, and culture. These martyrs, who never sought glory and whose names were lost to history, were honoured together in a ceremony that touched every heart present.
1,400 Years of Blood-Soaked History – 800 Million Hindus Martyred for Sanatan and Indian culture
The event was led by Meenakshi Sharan, founder of the Ayodhya Foundation, who gathered Hindus from across India and abroad, along with saints, veterans, and community leaders. As she spoke, she reminded everyone of a truth often forgotten: that over the last 1,400 years, nearly 800 million Hindus embraced death rather than abandon Sanatana Dharma. They faced invasions, persecution, and violence, yet chose sacrifice over surrender. They faced the sword of invaders but chose martyrdom over conversion or compromise. It is because of their courage, she said, that we still stand as Hindus today, holding on to our identity, culture, and way of life.
Saints, Social Leaders, and Global Hindu Community Unite
Every participant expressed that this was not just a ritual — it was a historic moment of awakening for Hindu society. What made the ceremony even more powerful was the unity it inspired. Saints, social workers, retired soldiers, businessmen, and ordinary devotees all came together with one purpose — to remember and to pay homage. They poured water into the Ganga, offered prayers, and silently pledged to carry forward the legacy of their ancestors. The air was heavy with devotion, yet filled with strength, as if the souls of the martyrs themselves were present, blessing those who remembered them.
“Among the many Hindu and social organizations, Dr. Kuldeep Dutta, Founder of Shashwat Bharat Trust (Dehradun), Col. (Retd.) Vivek Gupta, RVS Mani, industrialist Ashok Kumar Windlass, Dr. Charudatt Pingale and Shriram Lakutekar of Hindu Janajagruti Samiti, Kamal Gautam from Hindu Raksha Manch (Himachal Pradesh), Col. Hony Bakshi, and Dr. Mahendra also participated.
A Global Movement of Remembrance
Dr. Sharan also revealed how this movement is rapidly growing. Each year, more national organizations — including Hindu Janajagruti Samiti, Sanatan Prabhat, Hindu Raksha Manch, Shashwat Bharat Trust, Garh Sena, Hindu Yuva Morcha, Bharat Raksha Manch, and the Eternal Hindu Foundation — are joining the cause.
And it is not confined to India alone. Hindus in Kenya, Indonesia, Malaysia, Thailand, Australia, London, Dubai, Canada, and Singapore have begun organizing similar collective tarpan ceremonies, keeping alive the memory of ancestors who safeguarded Sanatana Dharma at the cost of their lives.
The images from Haridwar are more than just pictures of a ritual; they are a reminder, a call to awaken. They urge us to stay united, to stay rooted, and to carry forward the civilization that so many laid down their lives to protect. This was not just a tarpan — it was an act of gratitude, a moment of awakening, and a sacred promise to the martyrs of Sanatan.































