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"It was a wonderful experience interacting with you and appreciate the way you have planned and executed the whole publication process within the agreed timelines.”
Subrat SaurabhAuthor of Kuch Woh PalThis book’s fundamental purpose is to help understand the importance of volunteerism—not as charity, but as civic muscle. Why should we volunteer? What can a volunteer actually do? And how can public-spirited volunteers—armed only with conviction and community—reshape a state hollowed out by elite capture and apathy?
The journey begins with a hard look at why democracy fails: not by accident, but by design—through wealth inequality that distorts elections before a single vote is cast, media filters that manufacture consent, and foreign actors who exploit democratic openness to destabilise nations from within. In this broken landscape, the book asks: Can ordinary people—especially the financially constrained, the unarmed, the “powerless”—still bend the arc of power toward justice?
Can do-gooders without deep pockets take on oligarchs who own the rules of the game? Can volunteers without weapons confront a fully armed and loaded State that confuses dissent with sedition? To answer these questions, the book turns to history and philosophy—to Rome’s collapse, to Plato’s cave, to Sree Narayana Guru’s quiet revolution, to the disciplined networks of the RSS, and to the moral clarity of grassroots movements across continents.
What emerges is not a manifesto, but a field journal of hope grounded in realism: a roadmap for the Philosopher Volunteer—someone who combines inner strength with strategic action, who builds parallel systems of self-reliance, and who understands that real change doesn’t begin in parliaments, but with something that is profoundly human – straightforward and heartfelt conversations and dialogue.
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Your review has been deleted and won’t appear on the book anymore.Robin Abraham
Robin Abraham is a practicing pediatrician presently working in Kerala. He has great passion for environmental and poverty related issues, and volunteers for the same in his spare time. He has worked to propagate organic farming as part of a small voluntary effort to build a sustainable world.
He is also a keen observer of current affairs, and obsessively “scours” news webpages and forums on the internet. Endless surfing online has given him the insight and knowledge with which he has written this book.
He strongly believes that volunteerism is a powerful tool to change the world. Even if just a small fraction of the population spares their time for social issues, there can be profound change effected for the better good.
India
Malaysia
Singapore
UAE
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