In the charged political arena of Uttar Pradesh, opposition leader Akhilesh Yadav has condemned Chief Minister Yogi Adityanath’s recent jibe at a Shankaracharya as an act of ‘verbal violence’ and outright sinfulness. Posting vehemently on social media platform X, Yadav warned of divine retribution not just for the speaker but for bootlickers who clapped in approval.
The flashpoint was Yogi’s assembly retort to Swami Avimukteshwaranand: ‘Every person can’t claim to be a Shankaracharya.’ Akhilesh countered with sharp poetry—’No matter the robe, speech betrays the soul’—positioning the words as a profound disrespect to Hinduism’s spiritual guardians. He emphasized that such rhetoric poisons discourse and invites karmic fallout on enablers who thumped desks in flattery.
Delving deeper, Yadav spotlighted alleged cover-ups in the Mahakumbh mishaps, where official figures on fatalities were disputed, compensations vanished into corrupt channels, and unresolved queries lingered for grieving families. He challenged Yogi’s authority: a leader dodging personal prosecutions has no right to impugn sacred offices.
Yadav cleverly needled Yogi’s verbal gaffe on ‘law’s rule’ versus ‘justice’s reign,’ forecasting comical corrections or ritualistic atonement. He diagnosed the root as unchecked ego, which corrupts character and invites public scorn, echoing the adage about ill-chosen words.
Tying it to BJP’s history of communal polarization, Yadav forecasted a voter revolt. He mocked potential endorsements of controversial films and predicted a post-election reckoning: ousting the regime for one that fosters harmony, complete with carefree communal meals. The slur against Shankaracharya, he noted, stains legislative records indelibly—beyond mere rebuke.