Ask Osho!

What is the background of the political stance regarding Morarji Desai and Indira Gandhi?

Synthesized from Source definition

"Choose leaders who embody flexibility and contemporary wisdom, not those who cling to outdated dogmas and impose their superstitions on the masses."

According to Osho, his stance isn’t personal but principled: he opposes Morarji Desai as a symbol of Hindu chauvinism, superstition, autocracy, and out-of-date mentality. He distrusts politicians in general as a “necessary evil,” often driven by inferiority and lust for power. If politics must exist, choose flexible, scientific, contemporary minds rather than stubborn dogmatists who impose private fads on a nation.
Osho says he’s not against people but against old, bossy, superstitious ideas—they make bad leaders, so choose open, modern, scientific ones instead of power-hungry rulers.
Why this matters practically
- Judge leaders by values and methods, not personalities.
- Prefer flexible, science-based decision-making over dogma.
- Be wary of power-seekers who impose private beliefs on everyone.
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