Review of Who is Raising Your Children by Rajiv Malhotra & Vijaya Viswanathan


Rating: 5/5

This book shouts a warning I agree with: children’s minds are being shaped by ideas and systems that many parents don’t even notice, and those influences matter a lot. The authors make it clear they want parents and educators to wake up and see how certain global education frameworks and agendas can change what kids learn and value.

What the book warns about

The central message is simple: some international programs and popular Western K–12 models bring concepts into classrooms that may not fit India’s cultural and social needs. The authors point out specific frameworks like comprehensive sexual education, social-emotional learning, and global citizenship education as areas where influence seeps into schools and homes. They urge caution and careful study before accepting these wholesale.

How the book explains where influence comes from

The book walks through the channels — international agencies, NGOs, curriculum designers, researchers, and even policy alignments — that transmit ideas from global agendas into local classrooms. It shows how decisions at high levels filter down into everyday lessons, activities, and school goals, and it asks who is really deciding what children are taught.

Why the authors want an India-rooted approach

The authors argue that education should respect Bharatiya heritage and be tailored to India’s specific needs rather than merely mirroring foreign models. They believe India would be safer and stronger if schools and curricula were realigned with local culture, values, and priorities instead of automatically following frameworks designed elsewhere.

What the book says about policy

The book points to examples like the National Education Policy 2020 and international Sustainable Development Goals as places where alignment can unintentionally import agendas. The authors ask policymakers to study the failures of some foreign systems, especially issues in American K–12 education, before copying them. That part felt urgent to me — they want practical vigilance, not slogans.

The authors’ perspective and experience

Vijaya Viswanathan brings hands-on education experience, including homeschooling and curriculum work rooted in Indian traditions, and Rajiv Malhotra brings a long history of writing on civilizational and cultural issues. Together they use examples, metaphors, and policy analysis to make their case. Their combined viewpoint felt grounded to me — lived experience plus broad cultural critique.

Who I think should read this book

I want every parent, teacher, and policymaker to read it. If you care about what children learn and who shapes their values, this book gives a map of the forces at work and practical reasons to pay attention. It doesn’t hide its position — it asks you to choose where you stand, and I found that honesty refreshing.

Final words

Reading this book felt like sitting with two people who care deeply about our next generation and are willing to call out uncomfortable truths. I finished feeling more alert and more determined to ask questions about curricula, classroom programs, and the influences around my children. If you want a clear, passionate case for protecting local values in education, this book delivers it. 

Review of Freedom on Trial: Twelve Cases That Shaped India’s Struggle for Independence by Akash Vajpai


Rating: 5/5

When I started reading Freedom on Trial: Twelve Cases That Shaped India’s Struggle for Independence, I felt like I was entering a part of history that is usually left in the background. This book made me see that the freedom struggle was not only fought with protest, sacrifice, and movement on the streets, but also inside courtrooms, where the British tried to use law as a weapon and the freedom fighters turned trials into a part of resistance. That idea itself made the book feel very powerful to me.

A Different Side of Independence

What I liked most is that this book does not tell the freedom story in a usual way. It focuses on twelve landmark cases connected to India’s struggle against colonial rule. The book brings together important names and important moments from the legal side of the freedom movement, including figures like Mahatma Gandhi, Bhagat Singh, Bal Gangadhar Tilak, and Vinayak Damodar Savarkar. For me, that makes the book feel special, because it shows that our independence was defended not only by courage outside the court, but also by courage inside it.

Why This Book Felt So Important to Me

This book really made me feel that many of these trials are not given enough space in school books. We usually hear the bigger names and the bigger movements, but we do not always hear enough about the courtroom battles that shaped public memory and political awakening. This book brings those forgotten or less-talked-about moments back into focus, and that is why I found it so important. It reminded me that the struggle for independence was not one single road, but many roads, and the legal battles were one of the strongest among them.

The Courtroom Scenes That Stayed With Me

While reading, I could almost imagine the atmosphere of the courtroom, the pressure in the air, the tension between colonial authority and patriotic defiance, and the way every trial became more than just a legal proceeding. It felt like each case carried the voice of a bigger nation behind it. The book presents these trials as turning points, not just events, and that is what made the reading experience feel alive to me. I kept thinking that these were not ordinary court scenes. These were moments where history was being argued, challenged, and remembered.

My Favourite Chapters

My favourite chapters were definitely the INA Trial, the Trial of Udham Singh, and the Trial of Bhagat Singh. These chapters stood out to me the most because they have so much force in them. They are not just chapters about punishment or accusation. They feel like chapters about courage, sacrifice, and the kind of spirit that does not bend easily. I loved how these parts made me think of the freedom struggle in a more emotional and deeper way. They showed me that these trials were not separate from the independence fight. They were fully a part of it. And for me, that is exactly why these chapters became the most memorable.

The Story of Resistance Behind the Trials

What this book does beautifully is turn legal history into something deeply human. It shows me that when freedom fighters stood in court, they were not just defending themselves. They were also defending the larger idea of India’s future. Every case felt like it had two battles at once. One battle was in the courtroom, and the other was in the hearts and minds of the people watching from outside. That is what made the book so gripping for me. It gave the feeling that justice was being tested, and at the same time, the spirit of the nation was being strengthened.

The Way the Book Added Value to History

I also liked that the book comes from a writer who has a strong legal background. Akash Vajpai is an Advocate-on-Record practising before the Supreme Court of India and the Delhi High Court, and that background shows in the way this subject is handled. The book feels informed by legal understanding and historical respect at the same time. Because of that, the trials do not feel dry or distant. They feel meaningful, layered, and connected to the bigger story of the nation.

Final Thoughts

For me, Freedom on Trial is not just a history book. It is a reminder that India’s independence struggle was fought in more places than we are usually taught. It made me respect those legal battles as an important part of the freedom movement, and it made me feel proud that such stories are being brought back into focus. I loved the way the book highlighted the courtroom as a place of resistance, and I especially loved the chapters on the INA Trial, Udham Singh, and Bhagat Singh. This is one of those books that makes history feel bigger, deeper, and more alive.