Indian Constitution Origin According to Sanatan Dharma

The Divine Origin of the Monarchy Constitution of Nation


Indian Constitution Origin According to Sanatan Dharma


Chapter 1: Origin of the Constitution

Parmeshwar First Ganapati created a monarchical constitution for nation-building.

Incarnations of Bhagwan Shankar, Dattatreya, Parashurama, Ram, Krishna, Buddha, and Kalki established Sanatan Dharma and the constitution.

Concept of dual celestial Earth: whenever Bhagwan establishes Sanatan Dharma and monarchy, Satan establishes a fake religion and democracy.

 

Chapter 2: Types of Constitutions

2.1 Monarchy vs Democracy

 

Feature

Monarchy

Democracy

Power Distribution

100% ruling ministers

75% ruling, 25% opposition

Opposition Rights

None

Can interfere in legislature and executive

National Planning

Smooth, uninterrupted

Disrupted by opposition, risk of treason

Citizen Unity

Promotes patriotism

Can foster inequality, casteism

Ministerial Accountability

Immediate punishment for treason/corruption

Often unpunished

National Objective

Nation-first

Personal or party gain, corruption

 

Chapter 3: Pillars of the Monarchy Constitution

Three Pillars: Economics, Parliament, Judiciary

Three Homes: Legislature (Parliament), Executive (government firms), Judiciary (courts)

24 Sections: 8 each in Economics, Parliament, and Judiciary

Ministerial Ratios: Economic 1:1, Parliamentary 1:2 (minister & deputy), Judiciary 1:3 (hear, examine, judge)

Separation of Roles: Ministers/magistrates work only in legislature; executive officers in executive home; executive magistrates in judiciary

3.1 Economics Sections

Manufacturing, Agriculture-Husbandry, Entertainment-Tourism, Marketing-Broking, Retail Services, Government Firms, Banking-Finance, Import-Export

Ministers: 8, plus Chief Minister of Economy per state, Prime Minister of Economy for nation

3.2 Parliament Sections

Education, Development, Property, Defence, Foreign, Health, Revenue, Culture

Ministers: 8, Deputy Ministers: 8, Chief Minister of Parliament per state, Prime Minister of Parliament for nation

3.3 Judiciary Sections

Domestic, Social, Cultural, Government, Industrial, Prestige, Executional, International

Magistrates: 8 for hearing, 8 for examining, 8 for judgment

Chief Justice per state, Prime Justice for nation

 

Chapter 4: Fundamentals of Monarchy Constitution

Single king, religious & educated, elected based on intelligence and contributions

King serves for life; ministers may change but king remains

Citizens: Original citizenship vs Refugee citizenship

Equal rights for original citizens; refugee citizens’ rights graded

One identity card for all communities; no caste-based privileges

States may have different languages/cultures, but national culture must follow Sanatan Dharma

 

Chapter 5: Partition of the Nation

Area and population determine division

Hierarchy: Village → Taluka → City → Metropolis → District → State → Nation → United Nation → Union Nation → World Nation

24 units combine to form higher levels (24 villages = 1 taluka, etc.)

 

Chapter 6: Parliament of the Nation

Four levels: Nation Parliament, United Nation Parliament, Union Nation Parliament, World Nation Parliament

State Parliament: 8 economic ministers, 16 parliament ministers, 24 magistrates; Speaker = Chief Ministers of Economy, Parliament, Judiciary (3)

National Parliament: 3 chief ministers per state; Speaker = Prime Ministers of Economy, Parliament, Judiciary + Prime Advisor + King (5 prime humans)

 

Chapter 7: Currency of the Nation

Four types: Nation, United Nation, Union Nation, World Nation

Currency must be eternal → Image of Parmeshwar Ganapati

One currency, one bank per nation; no private banks

Currency changed every 18 years

International trade rules for united, union, and world nations

 

Chapter 8: Framework of the Constitution

Eight fundamental elements:

Citizenship and Rights

Facilities and Reservations

Currency and Property

Religion and Culture

Education System

Justice System

Electoral Process

Economic Policy

Articles failing these elements must be amended or constitution recreated

8.1 Citizenship and Rights

Two types: Original & Refugee

Original citizens: Full rights in parliament, judiciary, executive

Refugee citizens: Rights based on purpose; may gain full citizenship upon fulfilling duties

8.2 Facilities and Reservations

Emergency aid based on need, not caste/religion

Economic, intellectual, and physical reservations given individually, not caste-based

8.3 Currency and Property

One currency, one property department

Currency ≤18 years

Land/natural resources are national assets, no private ownership

8.4 Religion and Culture

Nation identity tied to Sanatan Dharma

Citizens may follow different cultures, government adheres to one religion and culture

8.5 Education System

Include indigenous scientists & scholars

Three pillars: Cultural schools, Economic institutions, Research universities

Free education, economic support, and invention encouragement

8.6 Justice System

Eight courts: Domestic, Social, Cultural, Government, Industrial, Prestige, Executional, International

Court decisions final within court; National laws decided in Parliament House

8.7 Electoral Process

Jobs in parliament, executive, judiciary based on competence

Selection based on intellect, physical strength (if needed), and mental stability

Exception: Voluntary service without salary allowed

8.8 Economic Policy

Balanced production & pricing of goods/services

Categories of National Industries and Public-Private Sectors

Tariff control & commodity markets

International trade based on fair currency or barter in case of overvaluation

Conclusion: This Gudi Padwa 2026, I am embarking on the creation of India’s new Constitution. Writing this Constitution may take me around 5 years, and bringing it to life across India could take 10–20 years. I do not have the patience to tolerate injustice—but I possess extraordinary patience and determination to fight for justice and a better nation. 

I had my first job in 2005, and at that time, I wished to work in 10 different fields. By 2025, I had been worked in more than 20 different fields. In 2009, I developed a desire to become a massage therapist, and by 2023, I have provided body massage services to a thousand clients. In 2016, I wished to write a book on Sanatan Dharma; my first scripture was published in 2025, another is in the process of being published, and two more, Kedi Purana and Kedi Kand, are currently being written. Now, in 2026, I have the desire to write a common constitution for all countries of the world. I have already drafted a list and written a short chapter. Perhaps in 10–15 years, the entire constitution will be completed.

I have madness, but I am not mad. I do not act impulsively or according to rigid plans; I act according to time, place, and circumstances. I do not fear failure, because I do not work to achieve success just to sit quietly. Even if I fail in writing the constitution, I will not be saddened, because I have 3–4 other missions, and between every mission, I have so much fun that the mission itself becomes my enjoyment. Even if I succeed in writing the constitution, I will not find peace, because I seek the joy of victory. After every victory, I desire a new conquest. In the end, despite thousands of failures, I want to emerge victorious.

Note: This content represents a summary of Chapter 31 from "The Spine of Sanatan Dharma", a 33-chapter work authored by Kedi Ganapati.


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