This book exhibits the role of the Indian people played in the world's progress, and what sufferings they had endured from other nations. The book focuses at the language, literature and the religion of early races and the primitive forest tribes which settled into the communities. He enlightens how Hinduism while sufficing to organize the Indian communities into a social and religious confederacy and why it failed to knit them together into a coherent nation. It also discusses the crush by the Hindu's to the greatest conquerors of India such as the Mughals, who had ruled for 130 years. It discusses how British has saved the Delhi Empire from dismemberment by the Hindu Marhattas, Rajputs, and Sikhs because of the joint interest of all the Indian races. This book would be useful for the young people who look on history as a record of facts and not merely as a compendium of philosophy. It would be the handbook for the historians, researchers who has a keen interest in the history of India and its races.