At a time when debates around identity, nationalism, secularism and cultural belonging dominate public discourse, few texts offer a more profound understanding of India’s civilizational ethos than the RSS-inspired Ekatmata Stotra. Recited daily in thousands of shakhas across the country, the Ekatmata Stotra is often misunderstood merely as a devotional hymn. In reality, it is a civilizational declaration of unity in diversity, a cultural map of Bharat and a practical affirmation of the timeless Indian principle: “Jata Mat, Tata Path” — as many opinions, so many paths.
The phrase “Jata Mat, Tata Path”, popularized by Sri Ramakrishna Paramahamsa, reflects the Indian understanding that truth can be approached through multiple traditions, philosophies, and spiritual disciplines. Contrary to the notion of exclusivism, the Ekatmata Stotra embodies this spirit in a remarkably comprehensive manner. A careful reading reveals that it is not a hymn dedicated to a single sect, deity or ideology. Rather, it is a celebration of the diverse streams that together constitute the vast ocean of Bharatiya civilization.
The very structure of the stotra demonstrates this inclusiveness. It begins by saluting the Supreme Reality, “Sachchidananda Rupaya Namostu Paramatmane” not a sectarian deity but the universal consciousness that transcends narrow boundaries. From there, the hymn moves across geography, spirituality, philosophy, literature, social reform, science and national life. Mountains, rivers, cities, scriptures, saints, philosophers, poets, warriors, scientists and reformers are all woven together into a single civilizational narrative.
Perhaps the strongest testimony to the principle of “Jata Mat, Tata Path” appears in the sections where the stotra reverentially mentions multiple religious traditions. Alongside the Vedas, Upanishads, Ramayana, Mahabharata and the Gita, it also pays respect to the Jain Agamas, the Tripitaka of Buddhism and the Guru Granth Sahib of Sikhism. This is not an accidental inclusion. It reflects an understanding that India’s spiritual heritage cannot be confined to a single path. The stotra recognizes the contributions of diverse traditions that emerged from Indian soil and enriched its civilizational consciousness.
In recent decades, various ideological narratives have sought to portray Sikhs, Jains, Buddhists and Hindus as entirely separate and competing identities, often overlooking their deep historical, cultural, and civilizational interconnectedness. The Ekatmata Stotra offers a powerful counterpoint to such divisive interpretations. It presents Bharat not as a collection of isolated communities, but as a civilizational family bound together by a shared cultural inheritance. By according equal respect to these traditions, the stotra illustrates how the RSS views Bharat through the lens of unity, continuity and mutual reverence rather than fragmentation and conflict. It affirms that while paths may differ, the civilizational spirit that nurtured them remains one.
For decades, critics have often portrayed the RSS as culturally rigid or intolerant of diversity. Yet the Ekatmata Stotra, which has been recited in RSS shakhas for generations, presents a different picture. The hymn does not erase differences; rather, it acknowledges them and integrates them into a larger framework of national and cultural unity. The inclusion of Buddhist, Jain, Sikh, Shaiva, Vaishnava and other traditions indicates an understanding of Bharat as a civilizational family rather than a uniform theological entity. In essence, unity is sought not through sameness but through shared cultural belonging.
Equally significant is the place accorded to women in the Stotra. In contemporary discourse, the RSS is frequently accused of being patriarchal. However, the Ekatmata Stotra offers a powerful response to such allegations. Unlike many traditional hymns that focus overwhelmingly on male figures, this Stotra deliberately remembers and honours a long line of extraordinary women from different periods of Indian history. Among those remembered are Arundhati, Anasuya, Savitri, Sita (Janaki), Draupadi, Kannagi, Gargi, Mirabai and Rani Durgavati. The list does not stop there. It further includes Ahilya, Rani Chennamma, Rudramamba, Sister Nivedita and Sarada Devi. These women represent different regions, communities, historical periods, and forms of excellence. Some symbolize spiritual wisdom, some moral courage, some political leadership, some social service and others intellectual achievement. As it says,
“Arundhatyanasooya cha
Saavitree Jaanakee Satee
Draupadee Kannagee Gaargee
Meera Durgaavatee Tathaa”
The significance of this inclusion is immense. Gargi represents the philosophical tradition and the intellectual freedom of ancient India. Savitri symbolizes determination and devotion. Mirabai embodies spiritual independence and devotion beyond social conventions. Rani Durgavati and Chennamma stand for resistance against oppression and political courage. Sister Nivedita, an Irish-born disciple of Swami Vivekananda, symbolizes the universal appeal of Indian civilization and service to the nation. Sarada Devi reflects spiritual motherhood and compassion.
By placing all these women in a collective pantheon of remembrance, the Stotra sends a clear message: nation-building and civilizational development are not exclusively male achievements. Women are equal participants in the making of Bharat. This aspect becomes even more noteworthy when one considers that the Stotra was composed long before contemporary debates on representation became fashionable. The inclusion of women was not a response to modern criticism but an organic recognition of their role in India’s cultural journey.
The breadth of the Stotra extends beyond religion and gender. It remembers philosophers such as Adi Shankaracharya, Ramanujacharya, Madhvacharya, Patanjali and Panini. It honours saints such as Chaitanya Mahaprabhu, Basaveshwara, Ravidas, Kabir, Guru Nanak, Tukaram and Shankaradeva. It celebrates poets including Kalidasa, Surdas, Tyagaraja, and even Ras Khan, the Muslim devotee of Krishna whose poetry became an integral part of Bhakti literature.
The presence of Ras Khan is particularly significant because it demonstrates that cultural belonging in Bharat has historically transcended religious labels. Similarly, the stotra remembers scientists and scholars such as Sushruta, Charaka, Aryabhata, Bhaskaracharya, Varahamihira, and others. It acknowledges kings, warriors, reformers, revolutionaries and social leaders from different regions of the country. From Kashmir to Kanyakumari, from Gujarat to Assam, the entire geography and history of Bharat find representation.
This is precisely why the Ekatmata Stotra remains relevant in contemporary Bharat. It presents a model of national unity that is neither rooted in political expediency nor based on coercive uniformity. Instead, it emerges from cultural memory and mutual respect. The hymn teaches that unity is possible when people recognize a shared civilizational inheritance despite differences in language, sect, philosophy, region or social background.
In a polarized age, where identity is often reduced to narrow categories, the Ekatmata Stotra offers a broader vision. It reminds us that Bharat has always been a land where multiple traditions coexist, where diversity is not a threat but a source of strength, and where national integration is built upon cultural harmony rather than homogenization. Ultimately, the Ekatmata Stotra is more than a prayer. It is a civilizational manifesto. It embodies the Bharatiya conviction that many paths can lead toward truth, that women and men together shape society and that national unity is strengthened when every community, region and tradition finds its place within the larger story of Bharat. In that sense, the Stotra stands as one of the most practical and enduring expressions of the ideal: “Jata Mat, Tata Path”.


















