Before gods had names and temples had walls, the sacred flowed freely among people... Goddess of the Indus brings alive a forgotten world and the moment it began to disappear. Before the rise of patriarchal faiths and priestly power, there was a time when the sacred was woven into daily life... when nature, earth, and the feminine were sacred. Set in the land of the Indus 3,200 years ago, Goddess of the Indus brings to life an ancient world at the crossroads of spiritual awakening, social change, and the birth of religion. The story follows Syam, a gifted artisan, and his mother Meheraani, the living embodiment of the Mother Goddess of Ambikshala... a hidden sanctuary devoted to goddess spirituality and ancient South Asian traditions. Following a painful separation, they journey through love, betrayal, and revelation, guided by sages and threatened by forces that seek to reshape the sacred into hierarchy and control. Through their intertwined paths, the novel explores how the spirit turns into religion, how sexuality turns from sacred to profane, and how humanity learns to live divided. Yet within that loss lies remembrance... of a time when life itself was sacred, and the divine feminine still walked within and among us. Evocative and thought-provoking, Goddess of the Indus invites readers of historical fiction, spiritual seekers, and lovers of myth to rediscover an ancient truth still alive within the human heart. “A richly woven tale of betrayal, loss, love, and hope, Goddess of the Indus invites readers into the lives of memorable characters whose journeys within a shifting ideological landscape force us to reflect on our present long after the last page is read.” -Dr. Sadaf Ahmad, Professor of Anthropology at LUMS and author of Female Police Officers in Pakistan “The vivid characters felt like real members of my family from centuries past, their struggles and choices echoing the same social, cultural, and religious dynamics we struggle with to this day. Reading this book helped me reclaim my history, creating an emotional link with ancestors whose lives still shape mine.” - Dr. Fouzia Saeed, Social Scientist and author of Taboo “A timeless meditation on power and devotion, on how hierarchy and formalism shape and silence the soul, and how love, art, and the search for meaning can rekindle the sacred even in a fractured world. Beautifully crafted, it lingers like a quiet echo of life itself.” -Amra Munawar, Director of Rexdale Community Hub, Ontario, Canada