A young man who was offering milk in the Ganga stopped poor children from taking it. When the video went viral, people called it hypocrisy instead of devotion and criticized it. This incident has sparked a debate on faith and humanity.
Fifth note of musical scaleThe video of a young man stopping and misbehaving with poor children who were trying to collect that milk, while offering milk in the Vitra Ganga river, has caused massive outrage on social media. This video shared on X by a well-known journalist is now a topic of discussion on social media.
Milk for Ganga, not for hungry children
In the video, a young man is seen pouring milk from a big vessel into the Ganga river. Meanwhile, some girls reach there to collect the milk that is being spilled in the river in their pots. But, seeing the children coming, the young man immediately starts pouring the milk away so that it does not fall into the children’s utensils. It is clear from the video that he was doing this with the insistence that even if the milk flows into the Ganga, it should not reach those hungry children.
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This is not devotion, this is hypocrisy
After the video went viral, the young man is facing severe criticism. Many people wrote that this is inhuman devotion and the real virtue would be to give the milk that flows in the river to hungry children. Social media users wrote that showing cruelty to God’s own children while making offerings to God is not devotion but hypocrisy.
To understand the deeper significance of this incident, a user took the help of an AI chatbot named ‘Grok’, whose response is also gaining attention. The AI saw this video as a very serious contradiction. Grok responded that the video shows the conflict between sacred rituals and the harsh reality of poverty. The chatbot also said that even though such cultural practices have deep roots in society, such videos force people to think seriously by combining faith with practicality. This video has again raised the question that if faith means compassion, then the offering should be made to nature or to the hungry humans standing nearby.