In a moment of immense national pride and cultural validation, Bharat has secured a place on UNESCO’s prestigious Memory of the World (MoW) Register for two of its most profound and enduring knowledge systems — the Shrimad Bhagavad Gita and Bharat Muni’s Natyashastra. With their inscription among 74 new entries this year, Bharat’s tally of recognised documentary heritage now stands at 14, showcasing the timeless relevance and universal appeal of its civilisational wisdom.
Embracing Holistic Perspectives
For Millennials and Gen Z seeking emotional clarity and authentic self-expression, Shrimad Bhagavad Gita and Natyashastra serve as ancient yet powerful guides. Shrimad Bhagavad Gita helps navigate inner struggles with purpose and peace, while the Natyashastra acts as a timeless GPS for the modern soul—enhancing how we communicate, connect, and present ourselves. In a world where social media often distorts simple truths, these texts offer grounded, holistic perspectives that cut through the noise. It’s a call to rediscover the original blueprints for living with intention, emotional balance and clarity.
Why This Recognition Matters
UNESCO’s Memory of the World Register is an elite archive of humankind’s most valuable intellectual legacies. Inclusion in this register means global acknowledgment of a text’s enduring impact on society, culture, ethics, and human thought.
The Shrimad Bhagavad Gita and Natyashastra have long been Bharat’s cultural lodestars. Their global recognition is a reaffirmation of Bharat’s ancient contributions to human consciousness, art, and communication — now officially documented on the world stage.
“The journey of preparing the nomination dossiers for Shrimad Bhagavad Gita and Natyashastra was both rigorous and rewarding. Addressing the review comments from the UNESCO committee posed significant challenges, especially when it came to establishing historical context and universal value,” shared Dr Ramesh Chandra Gaur, Member, International Advisory Committee – UNESCO Memory of the World, and Head, Kalanidhi Division, IGNCA.
Cracking UNESCO Code
Achieving this recognition was the result of a focused, high-stakes process led by a team from IGNCA led by Dr Gaur. UNESCO’s standards for entry are exceptionally rigorous, demanding proof of global relevance, historical authenticity, and preserved accessibility. For Shrimad Bhagavad Gita, its global footprint, which has already been translated into over 80 languages, has supported the case. Yet the team still had to answer extensive technical queries and submit historical documentation across repositories in Bharat and abroad.
Natyashastra, however, needed deeper groundwork. The team compiled references from ancient manuscripts, linked the text’s influence across centuries, and demonstrated its continuing relevance in communication, performing arts and digital media. The original manuscripts from Bhandarkar Oriental Research Institute, Pune, expert validations, and weeks of restructuring dossiers contributed to the approval. This wasn’t merely an academic submission — it was a cross-disciplinary effort that blended archival science, scholarship, diplomacy, and cultural advocacy.
Wisdom for Digital Age
Shrimad Bhagavad Gita is a manual for the mind. In just 700 verses, it distills the complexity of life into simple but profound truths.
Written by Ved Vyas, Shrimad Bhagavad Gita exists in the ancient Sharada script—one of the oldest known scripts. Over 100 manuscripts with various commentaries are available today, many held in foreign repositories like the British Library, Oxford University, and institutions in Germany. Unfortunately, many of these are inaccessible.
We must make a concerted effort to retrieve or digitise these collections to ensure universal access. In Bharat, the oldest manuscript of Shrimad Bhagavad Gita is around 650-year-old, while an even older 800-year-old version sits in Oxford, out of reach.
In a world where Gen Z constantly navigates both digital and emotional filters, the Gita offers clarity. It talks of self-awareness, detachment from outcomes, action without ego, and wise decision-making. Corporate leaders and global thinkers quote it for its psychological depth and leadership insights.
When social media throws a thousand narratives at you, Shrimad Bhagavad Gita grounds you in your own truth. It reminds us that peace doesn’t lie in likes or follows, but in self-realisation.
Ancient Blueprint of Communication
While Shrimad Bhagavad Gita guides how to live, Natyashastra teaches how to express life. Penned by Bharat Muni around 200 BCE, this encyclopedic treatise on dramaturgy is the world’s oldest surviving work on performance arts. Far from obsolete, it’s a vibrant guide to modern storytelling.
Its manuscripts, mostly in Sanskrit and Devanagari script, hold lessons for creators today. In the age of reels and memes, storytelling is everything. The Natyashastra unpacks emotion (rasa), body language, vocal tone, and audience engagement—making it a handbook for actors, filmmakers, influencers, and strategists alike.
From Netflix to Instagram, today’s content game is rooted in principles the Natyashastra mapped out millennia ago. It captures how aesthetics shape emotion and how stories move people.
This milestone is more than a moment. It’s a movement—from distraction to depth, from noise to wisdom. Let’s bring these works into classrooms, podcasts, films, and festivals. When ancient knowledge meets modern relevance, real change happens. Let’s not just preserve these texts. Let’s live them.
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