The wedding of Mahakumbh’s viral girl Mona Lisa Bhosle to Farman Khan in Kerala has taken a dramatic turn. Director Sanoj Mishra of ‘The Diary of Manipur’ has labeled it outright ‘love jihad,’ accusing organized networks with Kerala government backing.
In an IANS interview, Mishra highlighted alarming trends: 1,500 Kerala girls trafficked internationally via containers, plus rising vanishings in northern states. ‘Probe deeply, and trails lead straight to Kerala,’ he asserted, accusing the state of undermining Hindu traditions systematically.
He exposed Farman Khan’s activism at Shaheen Bagh during CAA protests, spotted with Sharjeel Imam, and tied him to PFI operatives. Mishra recounted conversion tactics, like those of Changur Baba, involving jobless youth luring vulnerable girls.
Farman, no established actor but a poster-boy sham, comes from humble Baghpat roots—his father mends shoes. Kerala, per Mishra, is a leftist stronghold breeding anti-Sanatan agendas, as depicted in exposé films on the region.
Mishra’s plea to PM Modi and Amit Shah is urgent: Investigate this as a national security issue protecting all Indian women, not isolated to one celebrity case. The director’s bold stance has ignited nationwide debates on interfaith marriages and hidden dangers.