Acharya Prashant discusses the potential for India to lead a global renaissance based on Advaita Vedanta. He notes that while India is a vast nation of 1.4 billion people, its diversity and opposing streams make a unified national awakening difficult to imagine. He suggests that while powerful movements of awakening may originate within India, they are realistically more likely to find success and acceptance abroad first. This is because the Indian mindset is often frozen in time and filled with confused notions and superstitious beliefs that were never cleared by a historical renaissance similar to the one in the West. He explains that fighting these deeply ingrained and irrational beliefs is tiring and humiliating, as there is great resistance even to questioning them. Acharya Prashant expresses his desire for the nation that provided core spirituality to the world to not be deprived of its own fruits, yet he acknowledges that achieving this within India remains an uphill task. He observes that Indians are more likely to follow a movement once it has already gained success and validation in other countries.