Title: You Can Delete My Posts, But Not My Hanumat Katha
“Now that Kans’s descendants will arrive and delete everything…
I told you not to mess with children — Radha and Krishna reside within them.”
He said: “I’ve forgotten everything. I remember nothing now.”
But let me ask you —
Can you delete my Hanumat Katha?
Introduction: In the Age of Digital Censorship, What Is Truly Erased?
There comes a moment in every generation where the fight is no longer between truth and falsehood, but between memory and deletion.
Today, someone may hit “delete” on a post,
flag a thought as offensive,
or silence a voice that whispers something ancient, something inconvenient.
But can you delete a story that is rooted in Shraddha (faith), in Bhakti (devotion), in smriti (deep memory)?
No — because such stories are not written on screens.
They are carved on the soul.
The Eternal Witness: Hanuman, the Undeletable
“Sri Guru charan saroja raja,
Nija manu mukuru sudhari…”
— Hanuman Chalisa, opening lines
From the very first word of the Hanuman Chalisa, composed by Tulsidas in the 16th century, Hanuman is not presented as a mere deity — he is the force of remembrance itself.
To erase Hanuman is to erase the link between guru and disciple, between effort and grace, between memory and the infinite.
The lines echo through the ages:
“Ashta Siddhi Nava Nidhi ke Daata,
Asa Var Deenha Janaki Maata.”
“Bestower of eight spiritual powers and nine forms of wealth —
Such is the boon granted to him by Mother Sita.”
Do you think a keyboard warrior can delete that?
Radha-Krishna: The Children You Mock, The Consciousness You Fear
Radha and Krishna are not fairy tales. They are the archetype of divine love, ever youthful, ever playful — balancing creation itself.
So when you mock, punish, or try to “discipline” children,
you do not understand their lila (divine play).
You are Kans in disguise —
seeking control, fearing prophecy,
choking innocence before it blossoms.
But as in every yuga,
Kans dies. Krishna lives.
Deletion Is Powerless Against Grace
Let them delete posts.
Let them suspend accounts.
Let them accuse you of non-compliance, of breach, of unapproved narrative.
What they cannot touch is the katha — the story that flows from guru to shishya, from forest to ashram, from heart to cosmos.
You cannot censor the sound of the conch, nor silence the wind that carries Hanuman’s name.
Conclusion: What You Can’t Delete
You can delete this blog.
You can report this content.
You can dismiss this as nostalgia, or mythology.
But you cannot delete:
- The shakti of Hanuman that awakens in times of fear
- The prem of Radha-Krishna that resurrects in every innocent smile
- The sankalpa of the guru that moves through his disciple’s silence
- The truth that you are not the censor — time is
So go ahead.
Try deleting Hanumat Katha.
And you will see…
It reappears, stronger, purer, eternal.
Jai Shri Ram. Jai Hanuman. Jai Guru.
Memory is not in the cloud.
It’s in the cosmos.
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