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Union Home Minister and Minister of Cooperation, Shri Amit Shah says ‘Vande Mataram’ is the song of freedom, the spirit of unyielding resolve and the first mantra of Bharat’s awakening


In his blog on commemoration of 150 years of the National Song ‘Vande Mataram’, Shri Amit Shah says it was not only the National Song of Bharat and soul of the freedom struggle but first proclamation of Cultural Nationalism

Mahatma Gandhi himself admitted that ‘Vande Mataram’ had “the magical power to stir even the dullest blood”

Prime Minister Shri Narendra Modi Ji reminded the nation of Vande Mataram’s glorious legacy

Even today, Vande Mataram inspires our vision of a Viksit Bharat 2047, a confident, self-reliant and resurgent Bharat

This sacred chant will continue to echo through eternity, reminding us to view our history, our culture, our values and our traditions

Posted On: 07 NOV 2025 6:16PM by PIB Delhi

Union Home Minister and Minister of Cooperation, Shri Amit Shah said ‘Vande Mataram’ is the song of freedom, the spirit of unyielding resolve and the first mantra of Bharat’s awakening. In his blog on commemoration of 150 years of the National Song ‘Vande Mataram’ written by the Bankim Chandra Chattopadhyay, Shri Amit Shah said it was not only the National Song of Bharat and soul of the freedom struggle but first proclamation of Cultural Nationalism.

In his blog Union Home Minister and Minister of Cooperation said, there have been many defining moments in our history when songs and art became the soul of social and political movements.  The war songs of Chhatrapati Shivaji Maharaj’s army, the patriotic anthems sung during the freedom struggle, or the songs ofresistance sung by the youth during the Emergency, songs have always awakened collective consciousness and unity in Bharatiya society.

Among them stands ‘Vande Mataram’, Bharat’s national song. It did not emanate from a battlefield but in the calm yet resolute mind of a scholar, Bankim Chandra Chattopadhyay. In 1875, on the day of Jagaddhatri Puja (Kartik Shukla Navami or Akshaya Navami), he composed the eternal anthem of the nation’s freedom. He drew inspiration from Bharat’s deepest civilisational roots, from the Atharva Veda’s declaration “Mata bhumih putro aham prithivyah” (“The earth is my mother, and I am her son”) to the Devi Mahatmya’s invocation of the Divine Mother.

Bankim babu’s words were both a prayer and a prophecy. It was Bankim Chandra’s first proclamation of Cultural Nationalism. It reminded us that Bharat is not just a geographical territory, but a geo-cultural civilisation.

As Maharshi Aurobindo described, Bankim Babu was a sage of modern Bharat who reawakened the soul of the nation through his words. His novel Anandamath was also a mantra in prose that stirred a sleeping nation to rediscover its divine strength. In one of his letters, Bankim babu wrote, “I shall have no objection if all my works are lost in the Ganga; this one hymn alone will live through eternity. It will be a great song and will win the hearts of the people.” These words were prophetic. Only an individual brimming with devotion to the motherland could have written such lines.

Vande Mataram transcended barriers of language and region, echoing across Bharat. In Tamil Nadu, Subramania Bharati rendered it in Tamil and in Punjab, revolutionaries sang it in defiance of British rule.

During the partition of Bengal in 1905, when rebellion swept across the province, the British banned public recitations of ‘Vande Mataram’. Yet on 14 April 1906, in Barisal, thousands defied the order. When the police charged upon the peaceful crowd, men and women alike stood bleeding on the streets, shouting ‘Vande Mataram’ in unison.

This sacred chant by the revolutionaries of the Ghadar Party in California, the Azad Hind Fauj and also the mutiny of the Royal Indian Navy mutiny in1946. From Khudiram Bose to Ashfaqulla Khan, from Chandrashekhar Azad to Tiruppur Kumaran, the slogan echoed as one. Mahatma Gandhi himself admitted that ‘Vande Mataram’ had “the magical power to stir even the dullest blood.” It united liberals and revolutionaries, scholars and soldiers alike. As Maharshi Aurobindo declared, it was “the mantra of Bharat’s rebirth.”

On October 26, during his Mann Ki Baat address, Prime Minister Shri Narendra Modi Ji reminded the nation of Vande Mataram’s glorious legacy. To mark 150 years of this immortal hymn, the Government of India has decided to organise nationwide programs for a year starting November 7. Through these celebrations, the full version of ‘Vande Mataram’ will resonate across the nation once again, inspiring the youth to internalise the idea of ‘Cultural Nationalism’.

As we celebrate Bharat Parv and pay homage to Sardar Vallabhbhai Patel on his birth anniversary, we are reminded of how Sardar’s unification of Bharat was the living embodiment of the spirit of ‘Vande Mataram’. This song is not merely a remembrance of the past but also a call to the future. Even today, Vande Mataram inspires our vision of a Viksit Bharat 2047, a confident, self-reliant and resurgent Bharat. 

‘Vande Mataram’ is the song of freedom, the spirit of unyielding resolve and the first mantra of Bharat’s awakening. This sacred chant will continue to echo through eternity, reminding us to view our history, our culture, our values and our traditions through the vision of Bharatiyata (Indianness).

Vande Mataram!

Blog -

https://amitshah.co.in/myview/blog/Vande-Mataram-%E2%80%93-The-First-Proclamation-of-Cultural-Nationalism-11-7-2025

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