In India, we grant equal status to myth and history as records of the past, as vehicles of fact and truth. So, it should come as no surprise that as the nation is being remade, both myth and history have turned into battlegrounds and contested spaces as we seek justifications for our disparate visions of who we are and who we should be in the still young 21st century. The last decade has seen a profusion of reconfigured histories and re-visioned mythologies, almost all of them exclusionary, that have burst the banks of discourse and flooded the plains of our lives—monuments and people, as much as narratives, have become abominations, symbols of past terrors and injustices that must be eliminated. In the quest for national and cultural purity, on the basis of religion, caste and gender, more and more of us are being erased, as fully as possible, from the new narratives.