Concern over India’s evolving demographics reached fever pitch as VHP national spokesperson Vinod Bansal took to X Tuesday, unveiling census insights from 1951-2011 that depict a seismic shift favoring Muslim growth at Hindus’ expense. ‘This trend demands immediate attention,’ Bansal declared, framing it as more than numbers—it’s about survival.
The catalyst: A Muslim leader’s rally cry for prolific childbearing—dismissing small families for ‘two dozen’ ambitions, flaunting family trees bursting with progeny. Bansal connects dots to population jihad revival, tactically amplified pre-elections yet nationally ominous.
Census cold facts: Population tripled to 1.2 billion. Muslims exploded five times to 172 million (9.8% to 14.2%); Hindus contracted to 79.8%. Impacts hit hardest in peripheries—200 districts, 300 tehsils reshaped, 116 villages Muslim-dominated, 9 states with Hindu minorities.
Bansal indicts radical cabals for violence, romantic entrapments, apostasy pressures, border breaches, and breeding blitzes, with secular governments’ soft-pedaling accelerating decline. Unity under threat.
Prescription: Hindus, marry young (19-25), birth three-plus for demographic resilience against foes foreign and fanatic. Muslim sisters, rise against medieval yokes like veils and polygamy that demean you while peers pioneer aviation. Empowerment awaits the aware.
Timed with political pulse, Bansal’s message reverberates, positioning demographics central to discourse. India’s story hangs in balance—proactive measures today ensure tomorrow’s harmony, lest engineered imbalances unravel the world’s largest democracy.
