Why I built Ghar.
One person's attempt to make sure the next generation doesn't lose what the last one knew by heart.
The gap no app was filling.
I grew up watching my family do puja at home. When I wanted to bring those practices into my own home, I realized I didn't actually know how. YouTube gave me hour-long videos. Websites gave me contradictory advice. And no app answered the simplest question:
"What do I actually do, step by step?"
That's the gap Ghar fills. Every practice is a walkthrough you can follow, with numbered steps, materials lists, and pronunciation guides. I built it because Hindu home practice shouldn't require a priest or a YouTube degree. It should be as simple as opening an app.
What Ghar stands for.
Practice is the point
Ghar doesn't give you articles to study. It gives you steps to follow. Because tradition lives in doing, not just knowing.
Wherever you are is the right place to start
Forgot everything? Never learned? Just curious? Ghar meets you there. Three difficulty levels mean you never have to pretend to know more than you do.
Your tradition, not a generic version
Hinduism is beautifully diverse. Ghar respects sampradaya differences and presents practices within their tradition, never flattening everything into one generic version.
Human-written. Scholar-reviewed.
Every word in Ghar is written and reviewed by people who understand these traditions deeply. No AI-generated spiritual content. Ever.
Get in touch.
For general inquiries, reach out to us. We read everything that comes in.