“Many who visit Parliament are so overwhelmed by its grandeur that they often miss the stories told on its walls.” — Sudha Murty at the book launch
On April 1, 2026, at the historic Samvidhan Sadan (the old Parliament House), Vice President C.P. Radhakrishnan and Lok Sabha Speaker Om Birla unveiled a remarkable coffee table book: Tides of Time: Bharat’s History through Murals in Parliament. Its author — Sudha Murty, philanthropist, celebrated writer, and Member of Parliament (Rajya Sabha) — describes it not merely as a book about art, but as a “profound reclamation of India’s civilisational narrative.” Through 124 mural panels depicted in high-definition on red sandstone-textured paper with gold accents, the book guides readers through five millennia of Indian history — from the Indus Valley Civilisation to Independence — as told through the paintings that line Parliament’s corridors.
🏛️ The Parliament Murals: A Living Gallery of Democracy
The murals of the Indian Parliament are singular in the world of legislative architecture. While most Western parliaments favour neoclassical austerity, India’s founding leaders envisioned their Parliament as a space that should embody what Nehru called the “genius of the Indian people.”
In 1954, under the guidance of Prime Minister Jawaharlal Nehru and a committee of artists and historians, a large-scale project was commissioned to paint the ground-floor corridors of Parliament House. The mandate: depict Indian history from earliest recorded times to the dawn of Independence. The 58 original murals in Samvidhan Sadan form the heart of Murty’s book, with newer additions extending the narrative further.
The book reproduces these works in high-definition on red sandstone-textured paper with gold accents — a deliberate design choice that mirrors the visual language of Parliament itself, making the book feel less like a publication and more like a portal.
Imagine if every wall of your school had paintings telling the complete story of your country — from ancient cities to freedom fighters — and most students walked past them every day without reading a single one. That is what Parliament’s corridors are like. Sudha Murty’s book is essentially a guided tour of those walls, written for every Indian citizen who never got to walk those corridors.
📜 From Mohenjo-daro to the Age of Empires
The book follows a chronological and thematic arc across India’s civilisational journey. Each cluster of murals represents a distinct era, with Murty’s prose adding historical context and emotional resonance.
Indus Valley Civilisation: The opening murals depict the sophisticated urban planning of Mohenjo-daro — grid streets, drainage systems, and standardized weights — establishing that India’s story begins with mastery of civic life and long-distance commerce, not conquest.
Philosophy and Ethics: Panels dedicated to Maharishi Valmiki, Ved Vyas, and the teachings of the Upanishads illustrate how Indian governance has always been rooted in Dharma. The murals of Gautama Buddha and Lord Mahavira represent the era of spiritual and intellectual awakening — non-violence and compassion as pillars of statecraft.
The Golden Age of Governance: The Maurya and Gupta empires receive extended treatment. The murals of Emperor Ashoka — particularly his renunciation of war after Kalinga and his embrace of peace — occupy a central place. Chanakya’s administrative genius and the Gupta era’s standards for taxation, welfare, and justice are presented not merely as historical facts but as templates of governance still relevant today.
Medieval Pluralism and Resilience: The book moves through the Bhakti and Sufi movements as evidence of India’s innate pluralism. The architectural marvel of the Konark Sun Temple, the maritime dominance of the Chola Dynasty, and the figure of Chhatrapati Shivaji Maharaj — representing the concept of Hindavi Swarajya (self-rule) — mark the transition toward the modern idea of a sovereign nation-state.
| Historical Era | Key Figures / Events in Murals | Core Theme |
|---|---|---|
| Indus Valley | Mohenjo-daro urban planning | Civic mastery & commerce |
| Vedic / Classical | Valmiki, Ved Vyas, Buddha, Mahavira, Upanishads | Dharma, non-violence, philosophy |
| Maurya / Gupta Empires | Ashoka (post-Kalinga), Chanakya, Gupta administration | Governance, welfare, justice |
| Medieval Period | Bhakti-Sufi movements, Konark Temple, Chola maritime trade | Pluralism, art, global trade |
| Pre-Colonial Resistance | Chhatrapati Shivaji Maharaj, Hindavi Swarajya | Sovereignty and self-rule |
| Independence Struggle | 1857 Uprising, Dandi March, Gandhi, Patel, Bose | Freedom, sacrifice, democracy |
⚖️ Reclaiming India as the Mother of Democracy
The most intellectually significant contribution of Tides of Time is its systematic documentation of India’s pre-modern democratic traditions — directly countering the colonial-era narrative that democracy was a Western gift to India.
Murty highlights two key mural subjects that carry enormous exam and GDPI relevance:
- The Vaishali Republic: One of the world’s first known republics, the Licchavi republic of Vaishali (in present-day Bihar) had elected representatives and a functioning assembly centuries before the Athenian democracy that is typically celebrated as democracy’s birthplace. The Parliament murals depicting Vaishali reinforce India’s claim to the title “Mother of Democracy.”
- The Kudavolai System of the Cholas: In South India, Chola-era village assemblies called Sabhas used a remarkable “pot-ticket” system to elect local leaders — name-inscribed palm leaf tickets were placed in a pot, and a child drew them randomly to determine the winner. This is one of the earliest documented random-selection democratic mechanisms in the world, predating many Western electoral innovations.
By placing these murals at the center of her narrative, Murty argues that the modern Indian Parliament is not a transplant from Westminster — it is the natural flowering of a democratic instinct rooted in Indian soil for thousands of years.
Don’t confuse the Kudavolai system with the Vaishali Republic. Vaishali was in North India (Bihar) and was a republic with elected representatives at the state level. The Kudavolai system was in South India under the Chola dynasty — a village-level democratic lottery system for local assemblies (Sabhas). Both are cited as evidence of India’s ancient democratic traditions.
🌅 The Freedom Struggle: The Final Murals
The book concludes with the murals depicting India’s long march to Independence — the section Murty frames with the most emotional intensity. Three moments define this final chapter:
- The 1857 Uprising: The murals capture what the book calls India’s first organised collective resistance to colonial rule — the event that forced the British Crown to dissolve the East India Company and rule India directly.
- The Dandi March (1930): The mural of Gandhi leading the 241-mile walk to break the Salt Law is presented as the visual centrepiece of civil disobedience — a moment where an entire nation’s defiance was crystallised into a single act of walking.
- The Leaders: Mahatma Gandhi (moral force), Sardar Vallabhbhai Patel (integration and administration), and Netaji Subhas Chandra Bose (armed resistance and international diplomacy) are depicted as complementary, not competing, visions of freedom.
The Mural Project Timeline: Commissioned in 1954 under PM Nehru → 58 original murals in Samvidhan Sadan (old Parliament House) → newer additions bring total to 124 panels covered in the book → Unveiled by VP Radhakrishnan + Speaker Om Birla at Samvidhan Sadan, April 1, 2026.
🌍 Why This Book Matters: Beyond Coffee Table Art
Tides of Time operates on multiple levels simultaneously — as an art book, a history text, a political statement, and a civic education tool. Its significance extends across several dimensions relevant to current affairs and competitive exams:
- Civilisational Narrative: The book participates in a larger contemporary debate about India’s self-understanding — asserting that Indian democracy, Indian philosophy, and Indian governance have deep indigenous roots that predate colonial modernity.
- Samvidhan Sadan: The choice of Samvidhan Sadan (the old Parliament, renamed from “Central Hall” era usage) as the launch venue is symbolically significant — the book is about the murals within its walls, and its launch there completes a circle between content and context.
- Sudha Murty’s Position: As a Rajya Sabha MP (nominated), Murty brings unusual credibility — she writes about Parliament’s murals as both a legislator who works in those corridors and an author who has spent decades making history accessible to ordinary Indians.
- Civic Education: By making Parliament’s art accessible in book form, the work democratises the “Temple of Democracy” — ensuring citizens who will never walk those corridors can still understand the story their nation chose to paint on its most important walls.
The book’s central argument — that India is the “Mother of Democracy” — is increasingly present in official discourse. The G20 India Presidency (2023) used this phrase prominently. Does identifying ancient democratic traditions strengthen modern democratic institutions, or can it sometimes be used to deflect scrutiny of present-day democratic health? How should citizens engage with a nation’s historical self-image?
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Tides of Time was launched on April 1, 2026, at Samvidhan Sadan — the old Parliament House, whose murals are the very subject of the book.
The Kudavolai system was used by the Chola dynasty in South India. Village assemblies called Sabhas used a pot-ticket lottery method to elect local leaders — one of the earliest documented democratic mechanisms in the world.
The 58 original murals in Parliament House were commissioned in 1954 under PM Jawaharlal Nehru, with the goal of depicting Indian history from earliest recorded times to Independence.
The Vaishali Republic was established by the Licchavi clan in present-day Bihar (North India). It is cited as one of the world’s first known elected republics, predating many Western democratic institutions.
The book was unveiled by Vice President C.P. Radhakrishnan (Chairman of Rajya Sabha) and Lok Sabha Speaker Om Birla — both Houses of Parliament represented at a launch in Parliament’s own historic building.