India’s Defence Minister Rajnath Singh has stirred major political chatter with a striking statement asserting that although Sindh is not part of India today, “borders can change,” and the region could “return to India” in the future. Speaking at an event, he highlighted the cultural and civilisational connection between India and Sindh, referencing leaders like LK Advani and the enduring reverence for the Indus River.
The comment has sparked intense debate across political and diplomatic circles as Singh reiterated that Sindh was, is, and will always remain civilisationally Indian. This follows his earlier remarks expressing confidence that Pakistan-occupied Kashmir (PoK) would return to India without military action.
00:00Rajnath Singh has made a significant statement regarding Pakistan's third largest province, Sindh.
00:05Rajnath Singh declared that borders are subject to change.
00:08He might be but smart sabi and boar.
00:10And when we talk about the land, the borders can always be changed.
00:15Union Defense Minister Rajnath Singh made a big statement regarding Sindh on Sunday.
00:19Addressing an event of the Sindhi community in Delhi, Rajnath Singh said that today,
00:23even if the land of Sindh is not a part of India, culturally, Sindh will always remain a part of India.
00:30As far as land is concerned, borders keep changing.
00:33Who knows, tomorrow Sindh might become a part of India again.
00:37And I would also like to mention the Honorable Mr. Lal Krishna Advani here.
00:42I was our leader and he remained so even today.
00:46L.K. Advani has written in one of his books that Sindhi Hindus, and particularly those of his generation,
00:52have still not been able to fully accept the separation of Sindh from India.
00:57Not just within Sindh, but throughout the entirety of India.
01:02Hindus traditionally held the Indus river to be profoundly sacred.
01:05And many Muslims living in Sindh likewise maintained the conviction that the waters of the Indus were no less holy than the revered Abiz Amzam from Mecca.
01:13I am quoting him.
01:18Advani Ji's quote.
01:20Today, the land of Sindh, my brothers and sisters, it may not be a part of India, but it's civilization.
01:29From a civilizational standpoint, Sindh will always remain a part of India.
01:33And as for the land itself, borders can certainly change.
01:38Who knows, tomorrow Sindh might return to India once again.
01:41But our people who are from Sindh...
02:06Sindh, but our people of Sindh are our very own people of Sindh.
02:15Those who have always held the Indus river sacred, they will forever remain our own.
02:22Wherever he may be found, he will always be ours.
02:26Actually, after the 1947 partition, Sindh province became part of Pakistan.
02:30This is Pakistan's third largest province.
02:32Before independence, not a large number of people from the Hindu community also lived in Sindh.
02:37The Sindhi community is named after the residents of Sindh.
02:39So that's all for now.
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