Friday, April 10, 2026

Rajmata Jijau: Mother of Swarajya

Rajmata Jijau: Mother of Swarajya

Rajmata Jijabai Bhosale, daughter of Lakhuji Jadhav, a powerful Maratha sardar, was trained in martial arts and administration from childhood. She grew up with strong moral values and a deep desire for Swarajya. From her early years, she witnessed both the grandeur of royal courts and the injustices suffered by ordinary people under foreign rule. These experiences shaped her conviction: only self-rule—Swarajya—could restore justice and dignity.

The Engineered Vision:

On February 19, 1630, at Shivneri fort, destiny answered her dream with the birth of Shivaji. Jijabai nurtured him not merely as a child but as the bearer of a mission. She told him inspiring stories from the Ramayana and Mahabharata, instilling values of courage, dharma, and justice. While masters trained him in the arts of war, Jijabai herself guided him in administration, exposing him to the workings of royal courts. Through this deliberate upbringing, she engineered her dream into a vision—preparing Shivaji to lead.

The Shared Dream:

As Shivaji grew, he shared this vision with his companions. At the Raireshwar Mahadev temple, they pledged to establish Swarajya, transforming a mother’s dream into a collective mission. More youths, later known as the Mavale, joined this cause, vowing to fight until their last breath. The dream had now become a shared fire.

At just sixteen, Shivaji captured the fort of Torna—his first triumph, the foundation of Swarajya. Guided by Jijabai’s vision, he adopted guerrilla tactics to challenge the mighty Mughal armies.

Shivaji was a keen judge of human character, a leader who inspired loyalty in his people. His leadership was marked by selflessness, compassion for his associates, and unwavering commitment. With loyal companions like Tanaji Malusare, Baji Prabhu Deshpande, Murarbaji, Yesaji Kank, Prataprao Gurjar, Hambirrao Mohite, and Bahirji Naik, Shivaji steadily advanced toward Swarajya.

The Realization:

Finally, on June 6, 1674, at Raigad fort, the dream became reality. Shivaji was crowned Chhatrapati Shivaji Maharaj, establishing the Maratha kingdom.

What began as Rajmata Jijabai’s conviction became an engineered plan, a shared mission, and ultimately a realized state—Swarajya!

Tribute to Jijau:

Vasudev Sitaram Bendre, renowned historian who conducted in-depth research on Chhatrapati Shivaji Maharaj and Maratha history has explained in his writings, the importance of  Rajmata Jijau's role.

'Bendre explained that Shivaji Maharaj received noble values, courage, and the inspiration to fight against injustice directly from Jijabai.

He portrayed Jijabai not only as a mother but also as a steadfast guide who supported Shivaji from childhood through the establishment of Swarajya.

Bendre highlighted her diplomatic skills and administrative abilities, especially during the period of Pune’s jagir, when she took great care of the people.'

Thus, Jijabai was not merely the mother of Shivaji Maharaj—she was the mother of Swarajya itself. Her vision became his mission, her sacrifice became his strength, and her dream became the destiny of a nation.

The story of Swarajya is, at its heart, the story of a mother’s dream engineered into reality.

Dr. Mahendra Ingale Pune, April 10, 2026

Author of Value‑Based Leadership

#EngineeringDreamsInspiringSouls #ValueBasedLeadership #EngineeringHeartBeats

Thursday, April 9, 2026

In the Middle of the Journey… …Engineering Dreams, Inspiring Souls

 In the Middle of the Journey…

                                     Engineering Dreams, Inspiring Souls

I am in the middle of writing Engineering Dreams, Inspiring Souls.

So far, I have said: Every dream comes true.

I have spoken of three types of dreams.

I have written about great people their dreams, and their achievements.

I have blended fact and fiction, prose and poetry.

My conviction is simple:

Words that originate from the soul touch the soul.

When words touch the soul, they inspire. When inspiration awakens, it helps to engineer a dream. When the engineered dream is nurtured with care, and one walks the path with hard work, the soul is inspired more. Thus, it becomes a circle—soul inspires dream, dream inspires soul.

Common Threads of Great Dreamers:

Some succeeded fully, some partially.

Some did not reach the end as they had envisioned.

Yet their efforts are praised.

Why?

Because they imbibed eternal values.

They lived selflessly.

They devoted their lives to the cause.

They remained grateful.

Natural Dreams vs. Engineered Dreams:

Many great authors have written about dreams.

But my book speaks of something different: Engineered Dreams.

Dreams with purpose.

Dreams carefully nurtured.

Dreams that demand discipline, sacrifice, and persistence.

Natural dreams may help, supplement, or inspire engineered dreams—if one develops the art, or with guidance of an expert. The subconscious mind is the bridge. It connects the two. It helps realize the engineered dream.

Engineered Dreams vs. Mission and Vision

In today’s world, organisations define their mission and vision. It is essential for growth.

  • Vision defines long‑term aspiration. It is broader and more subjective in nature.
  • Mission defines current purpose and provides a roadmap to achieve the vision.
  • Goals and objectives break the mission into measurable steps.

An Engineered Dream is not the same as a vision. Vision is aspirational but usually restricted to enterprises, organisations, and institutions. Engineered Dream goes beyond both.

Engineered Dream has  a psychological dimension. It is more subjective than vision, yet more powerful. It is not confined to organisational growth. It embraces:

  • Nation‑building
  • Social transformation
  • Spiritual awakening
  • Movement from self to collective, from individual to shared purpose

Towards a New Concept:

I have not come across this idea in literature before. “Engineering Dream” is a new concept. David McClelland’s work on Need for Achievement is somewhat similar—scientific, psychological. But Engineering Dream, Inspiring Soul is different.

It is a presentation of facts in a poetic way.

A blend of fact and fiction.

A dialogue with the soul.

Legacy:

My earlier works—Engineering Heart Beats and Value-Based Leadership: Engineering Dreams, Inspiring Souls—provide a strong foundation for this book.

Every leader is a dreamer. He envisions a dream, works relentlessly to realize it, faces challenges, and endures struggle in the process.

Engineering is the practical application of science. When the word engineering is used as a gerund, it becomes a noun—referring to the process of creating, designing, and building. Engineering is the manifestation of creativity.

Thus, these three books form a trilogy—bound by a common anthology of values and vision.

Invitation to Readers:

If your soul has been inspired by the words written so far, or if you have suggestions, write to me at mvingale@gmail.com.

This is not just a book.

It is a dialogue with readers.

It is a circle of inspiration.

It is an invitation to engineer your own dream.

Dr. Mahendra Ingale @ Pune, April 9, 2026

Author of Value-Based Leadership

#EngineeringDreamsInspiringSouls #ValueBasedLeadership #EngineeringHeartBeats

Wednesday, April 8, 2026

Battle for Dignity

Battle for Dignity

Some battles are fought for dignity,

Struggles endured, battles fought silently.

When the storms subside, tears descend,

Not of triumph, but gratitude to those who guided.

 

People, nature, destiny—

Individually, sometimes collectively—

They bathe the soul in remembrance,

Making tears sacred, pious, pure.

 

The fight for self becomes a fight for all

Beyond life, beyond death.

No hatred for the opponent,

No curse for the incident.

 

The fighter knows the path he chose,

Lonely, patient, steady, it flows.

Not to impress, not to prove,

But to guard the dignity with love.

 

Dr. Mahendra Ingale @ Pune, April 8, 2026

Author of Value-Based Leadership

#EngineeringDreamsInspiringSouls #ValueBasedLeadership #EngineeringHeartBeats

The Dream that Walked Free

The Dream that Walked Free

For decades, Nelson Mandela carried a dream.
A dream of freedom.
A dream of dignity.
A dream of a South Africa where all could stand equal.
 
Such dreams test patience.
They test endurance.
They demand that the dreamer remain unbroken, even in chains.
They demand a price.
 
Mandela knew the price.
He paid it with years of his life,
Twenty-seven years behind prison walls.
Chains could bind him, but never his dream.
 
The dream did not break.
It did not weaken.
It did not fade away.
It lived in the hearts of his people.
It grew stronger in silence.
It waited for the day when freedom would walk free.
 
In 1990, Mandela stepped out of prison.
The dream stepped out with him.
 
He became the face of reconciliation, not revenge.
He became the architect of a new South Africa.
 
In 1993, Mandela received the Nobel Peace Prize.
The world recognized not only his struggle,
But his vision of peace and unity.
 
In 1994, he was chosen to lead his nation.
It was more than an election.
It was history turning a page.
The dream was realised.
But more than realised—it was shared.
It became a vision for humanity:
That justice can rise from oppression,
That peace can follow pain.
 
From Mandela’s dream we learn:
Some dreams demand years.
Some dreams demand sacrifice.
But when endured, they transcend.
They walk free!
 
Dr. Mahendra Ingale @ Pune, April 8, 2026
Author of Value-Based Leadership
#EngineeringDreamsInspiringSouls #ValueBasedLeadership #EngineeringHeartBeats

Monday, April 6, 2026

Walking Together, Walking Alone

 Walking Together, Walking Alone

I love to walk with people near,

As much as walking lone, sincere.

I held his hand to walk with me,

He walked a while, then set it free.

 

Perhaps his steps grew weak, grew slow,

Perhaps new paths called him to go.

Perhaps he has found his own way,

And chose to walk a different day.

 

I did not plead, I did not bind,

For destiny shapes every kind.

His path was his, my path was mine,

Two journeys drawn by fate’s design.

 

And yet I know, in time, again,

Another soul will share the lane.

But if no hand should join my own,

I’ll walk with courage—walk alone.

 

Dr. Mahendra Ingale @ Pune, April 7, 2026

Author of Value-Based Leadership

#EngineeringDreamsInspiringSouls #ValueBasedLeadership #EngineeringHeartBeats

The Dream That Transcended

The Dream That Transcended

On August 28, 1963, from the steps of the Lincoln Memorial, Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. shared a vision: I have a dream that one day…” 

That day, 250,000 people shared his dream.

It was not the dream of one man, nor for one man. 

It was a dream for humanity. 

It was a dream for justice. 

It was a dream for equality.

Such dreams test courage. 

They test resilience. 

They demand that the dreamer remain steadfast, whatever comes in the way.

Such dreams always ask for a price. 

A heavy price. 

A price of life.

Dr. King knew it well.

On the evening of April 4, 1968, he stood on the balcony of a Memphis motel, speaking quietly with a friend. 

A rifle cracked. 

A bullet struck. 

His life was cut short. 

But his dream was not silenced. 

The dream refused to die.

Dr. Martin Luther King Jr., who rose as a civil rights leader, became the voice of nonviolent resistance in America. His leadership in the Montgomery Bus Boycott, the March on Washington, and the Selma campaign helped dismantle segregation and advance civil rights legislation.

In 1964, he was awarded the Nobel Peace Prize. Yet his greatest reward was the millions he inspired with his vision of justice and equality.

Though his life ended in Memphis, his dream lives on. 

It has transcended. 

It beats in the hearts of millions. 

It reminds us that a dream endured in sacrifice becomes eternal!

Dr. Mahendra Ingale @ Pune, April 7, 2026

Author of Value-Based Leadership

#EngineeringDreamsInspiringSouls #ValueBasedLeadership #EngineeringHeartBeats

Sunday, April 5, 2026

The Dream of a Runner!

The Dream of a Runner!

A little boy, frail in body and struggling to walk, went with his mother to pray every morning. He watched boys and girls of his age running freely across the ground. His heart longed to join them. He dreamed of running like them. And he dreamed not only of running, but of winning—first in school, then in county, then in matches far beyond.

He prayed with his mother. He persevered. He practiced walking straight. He stumbled. His knees bruised and bled. Yet he continued. Each step was painful. Every fall was a lesson. Every scar was a reminder of his resolve. And one day, he discovered he could walk without faltering. He could walk straight. Fast. Steady. His heart leapt with joy. Confidence surged. He was ready to chase his dream.

The school announced a running event. He trained tirelessly, imagining himself not just participating, but finishing first. The day arrived. The pistol fired. He forgot the world. His eyes fixed only on the track ahead. He ran, swift as the bullet itself, and crossed the mark first. Victory was his. Confidence became conviction. He practised harder. He entered county matches. He won medals. He rose to state, then national competitions, each time proving himself.

And then came the day—the Olympics. His dream had carried him here. He had engineered it with sweat, prayer, and relentless practice. Standing at the mark, one leg bent, the other braced, he waited. The silence before the shot was heavy. His breath was steady. His heart was ready. The pistol burst. He threw his heart in the air. And he chased it with every ounce of body and soul. He ran like lightning. Like destiny itself.

His mother, seated in the gallery, held her breath.

She stood up and shouted, “Run, my boy… run… run fast, faster!”

And in a fraction of a second, she saw him touch the mark.

The dream was fulfilled. The engineered dream had come true.

Do you know him?

He was Carl Lewis.

Carl Lewis, born in 1961, stands among the greatest athletes in history. Between 1984 and 1996, he captured nine Olympic gold medals, redefining excellence on the world stage. Renowned for his dominance in the 100m sprint and long jump, he repeatedly broke records and became a living symbol of speed, perseverance, and discipline.

His journey reminds us that dreams—when engineered with faith, relentless practice, and unwavering determination—can ascend to the highest arenas of achievement.

Dr. Mahendra Ingale @ Pune, April 2, 2026

Author of Value-Based Leadership

#EngineeringDreamsInspiringSouls #ValueBasedLeadership #EngineeringHeartBeats

Rajmata Jijau: Mother of Swarajya

Rajmata Jijau: Mother of Swarajya Rajmata Jijabai Bhosale, daughter of Lakhuji Jadhav , a powerful Maratha sardar, was trained in martial...