PIB Summaries 12 January 2026
Content Bhadrakali Temple Inscription & Somnath Legacy National Youth Day 2026 Bhadrakali Temple Inscription & Somnath Legacy Why in News? PIB highlighted a 12th-century Bhadrakali Temple inscription at Prabhas Patan. The inscription chronicles Somnath Temple’s reconstruction history, especially Solanki ruler Kumarapala’s role (1169 CE). Reinforces archaeological, epigraphic, and cultural continuity of Somnath amid repeated destruction and revival. Relevance GS I (Art & Culture / History): Temple architecture, epigraphy, Solanki dynasty. GS I (Indian Heritage & Culture): Sacred geography, continuity of religious traditions. GS II (Culture & Governance): Role of state patronage in heritage conservation. Chronology & Dating Inscription date: 1169 CE Valabhi Samvat 850 Vikram Samvat 1255 Period: Solanki (Chaulukya) dynasty, Gujarat’s medieval golden phase. Nature of the Inscription Eulogistic epigraph. Dedicated to: Param Pashupata Acharya Shriman Bhavabrihaspati. Spiritual preceptor of Maharajadhiraj Kumarapala (Anhilwad Patan). Language & tradition: Reflects Shaiva–Pashupata lineage. Combines mythology + historical memory (typical of medieval inscriptions). Somnath Temple Reconstruction Narrative Satya Yuga: Built by Chandra (Soma) in gold. Treta Yuga: Built by Ravana in silver. Dvapara Yuga: Built by Shri Krishna in wood. Kali Yuga: Bhimdev Solanki: Artistic stone temple (4th temple). Kumarapala (1169 CE): 5th reconstruction on same sacred site. Demonstrates how epigraphy blends sacred cosmology with verifiable medieval history. Role of Solanki Rulers Bhimdev Solanki: Constructed major stone phase of Somnath. Siddharaj Jaysinh: Known for justice, administrative consolidation. Kumarapala: Patron of temple revival after destruction. Symbol of state-backed religious reconstruction. Result: Prabhas Patan emerged as a hub of religion, architecture, literature. Archaeological & Architectural Significance Confirms: Continuity of sacred geography despite invasions. Use of Solanki-era architectural idioms. Reinforces Somnath as: A palimpsest site—layers of destruction and reconstruction. Museum preservation: Converts ruins into historical testimony, not mere relics. Cultural & Civilisational Dimensions Represents: Sanatan Dharma’s resilience. Valor, devotion, and cultural self-respect. Inscriptions as: Primary sources validating India’s temple-revival traditions. Symbolism: Somnath as a civilisational constant, not a static monument. Takeaway The Bhadrakali inscription at Prabhas Patan is a crucial epigraphic source linking mythology, Solanki-era statecraft, and the enduring civilisational resilience of the Somnath Temple. National Youth Day 2026 Why in News? National Youth Day observed on 12 January 2026, commemorating Swami Vivekananda’s birth anniversary. PIB outlines India’s youth empowerment architecture aligned with Viksit Bharat @2047. Highlights scale, outcomes, and convergence across youth engagement, skilling, employment, entrepreneurship, health, and civic participation. Relevance GS II (Governance & Social Justice): Youth policy, skilling, employment, health. GS III (Economy): Human capital, labour markets, entrepreneurship. Demographic Context Over 65% of India’s population below 35 years. Youth as: Demographic dividend Key drivers of economic growth, social cohesion, and governance renewal. Policy focus: Youth as partners, not mere beneficiaries. Institutional Framework Nodal Ministry: Ministry of Youth Affairs & Sports (MYAS). Whole-of-government approach: MYAS, MSDE, MeitY, MoHFW, DPIIT, MoRD, Defence. Emphasis on digital platforms, decentralised participation, outcome-based skilling. Youth Engagement, Leadership & Civic Participation Mera Yuva Bharat (MY Bharat) Autonomous body under MYAS; launched 31 Oct 2023. Technology-driven national youth platform. Core functions: Volunteering Experiential learning Leadership development Skill discovery Scale (as of 26 Nov 2025): 2.05 crore youth registered 14.5 lakh volunteering opportunities 16,000+ youth clubs 60,000+ institutional partners Governance logic: “Yuva Shakti se Jan Bhagidari” Youth as co-creators of development. MY Bharat Mobile App Mobile-first governance. Features: Multilingual interface AI chatbots, voice navigation Smart CV Builder Digital certificates & badges At launch: 1.81 crore youth 1.20 lakh organisations onboarded. MY Bharat 2.0 MoU (30 June 2025): MYAS + Digital India Corporation. Objectives: Deeper digital engagement Career services, mentorship, Fit India integration. Strategic intent: Empower Amrit Peedhi Align youth governance with Digital Public Infrastructure (DPI). National Service & Social Capital National Service Scheme (NSS) Launched 1969. Coverage: 657 universities 20,669 colleges 11,988 schools Annual engagement: ~39 lakh volunteers Focus: Community service National integration Personality development. Key instruments: National Integration Camps Republic Day Parade Camp National Youth Festivals. Viksit Bharat Young Leaders’ Dialogue (VBYLD) Reimagined National Youth Festival. 2nd edition: 9–12 Jan 2026, Bharat Mandapam. Participation: ~3,000 youth 100 international delegates. Process innovation: Four-stage Challenge Track 50.42 lakh youth participated in digital quiz. Outcome: Youth policy ideas presented to national leadership. Youth & National Security Agnipath Scheme Launched 15 June 2022. Youth aged 17.5–21 recruited as Agniveers for 4 years. Outcomes: 46,000 trained in first batch (2023) ~1.5 lakh enrolled till Feb 2025 Governance logic: Youthful armed forces Skills + discipline + post-service employability. Education-to-Employment Pipeline PM-SETU Investment: ₹60,000 crore. Objective: Modernise 1,000 Government ITIs. Model: 200 hub ITIs + 800 spoke ITIs “Government-owned, industry-managed”. Linked initiatives: 1,200 vocational labs in JNVs & EMRS. Alignment: NEP 2020 Aspirational districts Tribal & remote inclusion. Skill India Ecosystem Skill India Mission (SIM) Launched 15 July 2015. Beneficiaries since 2014: 6+ crore. Restructured programme (2022–26): Outlay: ₹8,800 crore Merged PMKVY 4.0, NAPS, JSS. Pradhan Mantri Kaushal Vikas Yojana (PMKVY) Total enrolment (till 31 Oct 2025): 1.76 crore. Trained: 1.64 crore. Evolution: PMKVY 1.0 → PMKVY 4.0. Shift to On-the-Job Training (OJT). Inclusivity: 45% women Strong SC/ST/OBC participation. Future-ready skills: AI, drones, robotics, IoT. Jan Shikshan Sansthan (JSS) Non-formal, doorstep skilling. Beneficiaries (2018–2025): 32.5 lakh. 82% women beneficiaries. Focus: Non-literates School dropouts Marginalised communities. National Apprenticeship Promotion Scheme (NAPS) Since 2016: 49.12 lakh apprentices engaged. NAPS-2 (2025–26): Target: 13 lakh apprentices. Instrument for industry-integrated skilling. Rural Youth & Livelihoods DDU-GKY Rural youth placement-focused scheme. Placement rate: ~65%. Trained: 16.9 lakh Placed: 10.97 lakh. RSETIs Bank-led entrepreneurship model. Trained (till June 2025): 5.67 crore candidates. Emphasis: Credit linkage Self-employment. Entrepreneurship & Employment Pradhan Mantri Viksit Bharat Rozgar Yojana Announced 15 Aug 2025. Outlay: ₹1 lakh crore. Target: 3.5 crore jobs in 2 years. Dual incentive: Youth wage support Employer contribution subsidy. Startup India Launched 16 Jan 2016. Recognised startups (Oct 2025): 1.97 lakh. Key pillars: Ease of doing business Tax incentives Fund of Funds (₹10,000 crore). Structural shift: Rise of Tier-II & Tier-III startups. Startup India Seed Fund Scheme (SISFS) Early-stage risk capital. Approved: 219 incubators ₹945 crore. Pradhan Mantri MUDRA Yojana 10 years completed (2025). Loans sanctioned: 53.85 crore ₹35.13 lakh crore. Focus: Women First-generation entrepreneurs. Health, Fitness & Well-being Fit India Movement Launched 29 Aug 2019. Behavioural change approach. Instruments: Fit India School Certification Sundays on Cycle Fitness Pledge Fit India App. Youth Spiritual Summit & Kashi Declaration Held July 2025, Varanasi. Theme: “Nasha Mukt Yuva for Viksit Bharat”. Kashi Declaration: 5-year roadmap Youth-led, stakeholder-defined roles. Integrates: Spiritual capital + public health governance. Rashtriya Kishor Swasthya Karyakram (RKSK) Launched 2014. Target group: 10–19 years. Six domains: Nutrition Mental health SRH Substance misuse Violence & injuries NCDs. Shift from curative to preventive-adolescent-centric model. Takeaway National Youth Day 2026 underscores India’s shift from welfare-centric youth policy to a participation-driven, skill-linked, and purpose-oriented youth governance model aligned with Viksit Bharat @2047.