GLOBAL DIASPORA UNITES UNDER RAM JANAKI SANSTHAN POSITIVE BROADCASTING HOUSE TO COMBAT NUCLEAR FAMILY CRISIS AND REVIVE TRADITIONAL VALUES
GLOBAL DIASPORA UNITES UNDER RAM JANAKI SANSTHAN POSITIVE BROADCASTING HOUSE TO COMBAT NUCLEAR FAMILY CRISIS AND REVIVE TRADITIONAL VALUES
NEW DELHI -- In an unprecedented digital convergence marking International Family Day, the Ram Janaki Sansthan Positive Broadcasting House (RJS PBH) orchestrated a massive transnational dialogue addressing the rapid disintegration of the traditional family unit and its cascading socio-economic consequences. Driven by the philosophy of "Vasudhaiva Kutumbakam" (The World is One Family), the 560th consecutive broadcasting event brought together diplomats, international community leaders, and domestic policymakers to formulate a concrete action plan against the rising tide of hyper-individualism, loneliness, and cultural detachment.
Under the leadership of Uday Kumar Manna, National Convener and Founder of RJS PBH, the forum transformed from a standard cultural celebration into a critical policy and social strategy session. The dialogue operated on the premise that the breakdown of the "Sanskaari Parivar" (Cultured Family) is not merely a localized social issue but a global crisis that fuels mental health epidemics, economic instability in aging populations, and a severe loss of cultural identity among the Indian diaspora. The core mission outlined was transitioning from a structured family unit to a unified global family, heavily relying on positive journalism and narrative engineering to combat pervasive media negativity.
THE DEMOGRAPHIC SHIFT AND SOCIAL IMPLICATIONS
The most pressing angle explored during the summit was the severe psychological and social toll of the modern nuclear family structure. Sunil Kumar Singh, Programme Director at the Indian Council for Cultural Relations (ICCR), Ministry of External Affairs, delivered a forensic breakdown of the current social decay. He highlighted that the blind adoption of Western cultural paradigms—where children are pushed toward absolute independence post-high school—has triggered an unintended crisis of isolation. While this model promotes financial independence, it has simultaneously eroded the foundational values of cooperation, tolerance, and shared sacrifice.
Singh painted a grim picture of the contemporary social landscape, noting that the breakdown of intergenerational dialogue has led to a direct spike in clinical depression, marital divorces, and extreme alienation among the elderly. He stressed that the traditional Indian joint family was never just an arrangement of blood relatives, but the primary institution for moral education and psychological resilience.
This sentiment was heavily reinforced by Sweety Paul, a former senior manager at the India Trade Promotion Organisation. She sparked a profound emotional debate by recounting a consultation with a former colleague based in the United States. The colleague, torn between his American career and his 92-year-old father in India, sought her counsel. Paul unequivocally advised him to return and serve his father, arguing that abandoning aging parents in the pursuit of foreign capital is a moral failure that plagues the modern diaspora. She boldly stated that modern parents are increasingly failing to provide "spiritual fertilizer" to their children, resulting in a generation that views eldercare as a burden rather than a fundamental duty.
Dr. Jai Bhagwan Dahiya, a retired principal and veteran educator, brought the conversation back to grassroots social conditioning. He advocated for the revival of deeply rooted micro-habits, such as greeting the earth upon waking and embedding community inclusion in personal celebrations. During an interactive segment with Uday Kumar Manna, Dr. Dahiya proudly introduced his grandsons, Tanish and Neev , as living examples of the next generation absorbing these vital cultural legacies.
ECONOMIC IMPACT AND DIASPORA DYNAMICS
Beyond the sociological impact, the symposium deeply analyzed the economic utility and power dynamics of the joint family system. Sushil Mahajan, Director of Empower Technology Private Limited and co-organizer of the event, presented a compelling economic case for the traditional family structure. Mahajan revealed that his own 18-member joint family successfully operates a unified chemical manufacturing business. By distributing corporate responsibilities—production, marketing, and finance—among brothers and nephews, the family has created a micro-economy that inherently resists corporate burnout and internal trust deficits. His testimony served as empirical proof that traditional living arrangements can yield high-level operational excellence and market competitiveness.
The economic narrative expanded globally through the insights of Narendra Kumar Jain, President of the Rajasthani Samaj in Mauritius. Jain traced the economic evolution of the Indian diaspora, noting how indentured laborers who arrived in Mauritius generations ago relied entirely on unified family structures to survive, eventually rising to the absolute pinnacles of economic and political power in the country. Jain represents a living five-generation family structure, which he credits for his vast network and success as a business and financial consultant.
Jain also highlighted the massive economic synergy expected in the coming months. He announced a 15-country Person of Indian Origin (PIO) event scheduled for August 11 to 16 in Mauritius, focusing on five-generation families and cultural talent. Furthermore, he revealed that a monumental Global Organization of People of Indian Origin (GOPIO) international conference will be hosted in Mauritius from September 12 to 14. This economic summit will feature delegations from over 30 countries to discuss diaspora investments, trade assistance, and sector-specific global economic integration.
CONTROVERSIES AND CULTURAL CLASHES
A prominent thread of controversy and debate wove through the symposium regarding the modern obsession with overseas migration and the resulting cultural amnesia. Narendra Kumar Jain issued a stark warning and a direct challenge to parents who eagerly push their children to places like the United States and London without establishing a structural tether to their homeland. He argued that the current trend of children staying away for a decade without returning is a catastrophic failure of parenting. He implored the diaspora to mandate a one-month annual return to India for their children to prevent the complete erasure of their heritage.
Rashmi Mishra, Founder and Director of Inspiring Indian Women in the United Kingdom, addressed the identity crisis faced by the younger diaspora. She noted that children born in the UK often develop foreign accents and a disconnect from their roots, yet they harbor a deep, unarticulated hunger for Indian identity. Mishra shared a poignant observation from Independence Day celebrations in London, where the diaspora desperately clamors for small Indian flags and lapel pins—a testament to a starving cultural identity. She challenged the RJS PBH forum to create specific programming targeting these foreign-born youths to bridge this widening cultural chasm.
Rakesh Manchanda provided a philosophical critique of the modern educational and societal framework, contrasting it with the organic justice found in childhood play. He argued that true happiness and conflict resolution are inherent in human nature, visible when children play fairly, but are systematically stripped away by a hyper-competitive, paper-leak-ridden, and commodified modern education system.
STRATEGIC ANNOUNCEMENTS AND FORWARD ROADMAP
The event served as a major launchpad for several strategic initiatives by Ram Janaki Sansthan Positive Broadcasting House, charting a rigorous operational rhythm for the remainder of the year. Uday Kumar Manna announced that RJS PBH has officially declared 2026 as the "Year of Positive Resolution Revolution" (Sankalp Kranti Varsh).
To build toward this, a highly structured timeline was released. On May 20, the organization will host a special program dedicated to the International Day for Biological Diversity, acknowledging that family preservation is intrinsically linked to environmental preservation. On May 21, Sweety Paul will host a memorial program for her late mother, setting a precedent for using personal memorials to fund and fuel positive social dialogues. On May 30, coinciding with Hindi Journalism Day, RJS PBH will launch its comprehensive monthly newsletter to document these historical proceedings.
A major media and press conference is scheduled for July 24 in New Delhi, celebrated as "Positive India Uday Diwas," where exemplary social workers will be introduced to the national media.
The crescendo of these efforts will culminate in a week-long international Independence Day festival in early August. On August 7, a special musical evening will be held in memory of Narendra Kumar Jain's father, the late Mahendra Kumar, honoring his legacy of running blind associations and eye hospitals. On August 9, coinciding with August Kranti Diwas, RJS PBH will host a massive physical and virtual gathering in New Delhi where their 7th documentary book will be officially released and dedicated to the concept of "Seva Tirth" (Pilgrimage of Service), with hopes of catching the attention of the Prime Minister's Office.
THE OATH AND CONCLUSION
The summit reached its climax under the spiritual guidance of BK Rajshree from the Brahmakumaris. She decoded the word "FAMILY" as a psychological and operational blueprint: Faith in each other, Affection without bias, Motivated to be friends with children, Ideal/Inspiration in actions, Listen and Respect for all including domestic workers, and Yielding to Unity with each other.
In a powerful moment of digital solidarity, BK Rajshree administered a unified oath to the global participants. With right hands raised across multiple time zones, the attendees repeated a solemn pledge to transform their homes into cultured families, maintain an atmosphere of absolute positivity, and dedicate their life's mission to expanding the concept of the cultured family into a unified global family.
The 560th RJS PBH broadcast concluded not merely as a celebration, but as the drafting of a comprehensive social contract. By leveraging the economic power of the diaspora, directly challenging the cultural neglect of modern parenting, and creating a strict operational rhythm of positive media events, Uday Kumar Manna and his global coalition have launched a highly structured offensive against the isolation of the modern age. The message delivered was uncompromising: true global supremacy and societal peace cannot be achieved through economic dominance alone, but through the uncompromising preservation and expansion of the cultured human family.
Akanksha Manna
Head Creative Team
RJS PBH -RJS POSITIVE MEDIA
8368626368.
www. rjspbh.com
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