Jai Hind Project

Jai Hind Project Committed towards bringing better and more heroes and role models to the youth of India.
(1)

18/12/2025

“Chhota parivaar, sukhi parivaar.”
A slogan from Doordarshan days. Still relevant or totally outdated?

On this , we hit the streets to ask students about something that affects all of us: India’s growing population.

From traffic to job crunch, water shortage to housing, it’s all connected.
The big question is, what can we actually do about it?
Education? Awareness? Policy change? Tough convos?

Watch the full video and tell us in the comments ki aap kya sochte hain India ki is badhti population ke baare mein.
(population, vox pop, genz, youth, Dehradun, streets, students, India, problems, unemployment, poverty, trend, fyp, college students, World population day, China)

18/12/2025

Fire (1996), directed by mehta, was India’s first mainstream film to center a le***an relationship.

It challenged censors, sparked riots, and ignited a national conversation on q***r love and women’s agency. Not just cinema, but a historic milestone in South Asian q***r resistance.

It quietly unpacks how conformity is passed down as culture and how silence often becomes a woman’s only inheritance.

In a time where Gen Z is reclaiming identity, autonomy, and truth, Fire still holds relevance. It does not scream for attention. It simply stays with you, unsettling what you think you know.

Watch it to remember how resistance once began with a whisper.
(fire, q***r film, lgtbq+, movie, le***an, cinema, protest, movie recommendation, fyp, bollywood, theatre, ban, homosexuality, taboo)

18/12/2025

Kahani abhi baaki hai, mere dost...
That was just the first step towards the hope that Anju ji and DK ji brought into so many lives.

But the path was never easy, and not one that everyone chooses.

If you can’t wait to know what happened next, watch the full video now on our channel.

Or just stay tuned for Part 2.

(Betiyaan Foundation, Jai Hind Stories, Part 1, Women Empowerment, Self Defence, Meerut, Girl Boss, fyp, Documentary, short film)

17/12/2025

Across India, countless artisans spend their days shaping forms that the rest of the country later calls God. Their workshops are small, often tucked between busy lanes or behind modest homes, yet from these spaces emerge the figures that become central to some of India’s most celebrated rituals.

The life of a murtikar sits at an unusual intersection of culture and economy. The work demands long hours, seasonal commitment and a level of precision that comes only with years of practice. Earnings remain modest, shaped by local markets and negotiations that rarely match the effort involved. Still, the craft continues, sustained by lineage, community and a quiet sense of dignity.

For many artisans, satisfaction lies not in numbers but in the knowledge that their creations will stand in homes, pandals and temples far beyond their own reach. The act of making a murti becomes both livelihood and identity, linking personal routine with collective belief. In a country where festivals move millions, the murtikar remains one of the least visible contributors to that celebration.

This film explores that world, where creation is constant, recognition is minimal and faith is carried forward by hands that rarely pause.

Watch the full documentary on YouTube!

(Murtikaar, God, Idols, Indian God Idols, Mandir, Durga Pooja, Statues, Ganesh Chaturthi, Documentary, Bharat)

01/12/2025

Violence against women is the second biggest crime in India. The first is being a woman.

Girls grow up being told to adjust, stay quiet, forgive fast, and hold the family together even when that family is hurting them. Over 30 percent of married women in India have faced physical, sexual, or emotional abuse, yet most never report it. In places like rural Rajasthan, silence is not rare, it is routine.

Anita Soni broke that silence. She survived an abusive marriage, faced gaslighting, rumors, and social exile. But instead of backing down, she built Pakka Saheli, a sisterhood of over 8,000 women, and helped more than 1,000 survivors seek legal help and start again.

They say what happens behind closed doors is no one else’s business. But what if behind those doors, a woman is quietly being erased?

And how many more Anita Sonis will it take before we call this what it is, a failure not of culture, but of collective conscience?

Be their voice and strength. Be their cape.
Connect with Anita ji and her team to support their fight:
📧 Email: [email protected]
📞 Call: +91 9414205040

(Details to donate in the comments)

Credits for
Footage:
Edited clip:

(Domestic violence, dowry, Rajasthan, alimony, Barmer, drum case, Meghalaya case, dowry death, trigger warning, harassment, beating, marriage, blood donation, ngos working for women, organisation fighting domestic violence, legal help, chunri pratha, storytelling, marriage is scary)

Bharat probably deserves an apology.For everything we said we’d fix and didn’t.For every shortcut, every shrug, every “c...
10/11/2025

Bharat probably deserves an apology.
For everything we said we’d fix and didn’t.
For every shortcut, every shrug, every “chalta hai.”

But maybe we deserve one too.
For being asked to keep believing when it’s easier not to.
We’ve both messed up, both kept going.
Maybe that’s the point.
Who really owes who more at this point?

(Official apology, new trend, bharat, sorry, Indian, civic sense, corruption, air pollution, waste, humanity, heroes)

To read is not only to learn. It is to imagine, to rebel quietly, to claim dignity. Tomorrow at 6 PM, a story arrives th...
19/09/2025

To read is not only to learn. It is to imagine, to rebel quietly, to claim dignity.

Tomorrow at 6 PM, a story arrives that is less about books, more about what books reveal about us.

Stay tuned. Coming soon on our YouTube Channel!

“Koi bhi desh perfect nahi hota… usse perfect banana padta hai.”Remember that line from Rang De Basanti?It hit hard in t...
12/08/2025

“Koi bhi desh perfect nahi hota… usse perfect banana padta hai.”
Remember that line from Rang De Basanti?
It hit hard in the theatre because it felt like the truth. It still is.

Freedom was not just handed to us in 1947.
People fought for it, bled for it, built it.
And now, it is on us to decide what happens next.

The real test of patriotism is not standing for the anthem once a year, but standing up for what is broken every day.

It is noticing when the gaps in our country’s promise show up in the streets, the schools, the Parliament, the neighbourhood and choosing to do something about it.

Because this is not just history to remember.
It is a future we are still writing. And whether that future is perfect or not depends on who shows up.



Sources:
1. Data related to Women in Parliament - Inter-Parliamentary Union (IPU) – Women in Parliament 2025 Report
2. Data related to Child Labour in India - Census of India 2011 – Primary Census Abstract on Child Labour
3. Data related to Manual Scavenging - Press Information Bureau (PIB), Ministry of Social Justice and Empowerment – “Number of Identified Manual Scavengers”
4. Data related to Child Marriage in India- National Family Health Survey-5 (2019–21) – India Factsheet

Address

Dehradun, Uttarakhand
Dehradun

Alerts

Be the first to know and let us send you an email when Jai Hind Project posts news and promotions. Your email address will not be used for any other purpose, and you can unsubscribe at any time.

Contact The Organization

Send a message to Jai Hind Project:

Share