Harsha Rinchariya’s spiritual sojourn post-Mahakumbh inspired thousands, blending glamour with godliness. Yet, the Bhopal-based figure is reverting to her modeling roots, alleging vested interests in religious hierarchies are stifling her growth.
‘Some gaddi occupants actively prevent my progress,’ she disclosed in a candid interview, enduring ongoing troubles but shielding names. This marks a pragmatic shift from full-time devotion.
‘I abandoned my profession entirely, but realized dependency on donations isn’t my path,’ she elaborated. ‘Religious outreach thrives with own means; I’ll manage career alongside duties now.’
Survival basics underscore her resolve. ‘Money buys necessities—no endless charity exists,’ she said, facing character assassination without allies.
She decried the tactics: ‘No names, but persistent disruptions, engineered crises, and vows to cap my success—immoral. Elements among sadhus perpetuate this.’
Clarifying misconceptions, ‘I didn’t ’embrace’ Sanatan Dharma; I’m born Hindu. Work on youth programs, social media drives, and girls’ initiatives is paused, not the faith abandoned.’
Post-festival visions for dharma education among the young, particularly females, met roadblocks. ‘Powerful seats block my service to society,’ Rinchariya concluded, highlighting tensions between tradition and trailblazers in India’s spiritual landscape.