I am a polytheist, so I insist that the Goddess deserves as much respect as the God. But the anglicised elite follows British English, which privileges the One Male God. In British English, God is written with an uppercase G (with an uppercase H for Him as well), but... 5/n
... Goddess with a small g (with lowercase h for her), to show the inferior status of the Goddess. I would surrender to this grammar rule earlier. But as I became more successful, I insisted that my polytheist faith be respected, regardless of grammar rules... 6/n
...and Goddess also be written with an uppercase G. My publisher agreed. However, a media website publishing an excerpt from my book Raavan (in 2019), changed Goddess to goddess without my approval/knowledge. I asked my publisher to have the website restore the uppercase G, 7/n
... for if they are publishing an excerpt, they HAVE to follow my book, and can't change it. I even had my publisher explain my reasons. But the media website refused. So, my publisher & I pulled back the excerpt. The disdain the anglicised elite has for the polytheist, 8/n
... idol-worshipping (their term for murti puja), nature-worshipping ways of us real Indians, is what truly grates. n/n