The
latest
bridal
ad
of
actress
Alia
Bhatt
for
a
clothing
brand
did
not
go
down
well
with
actress
Kangana
Ranaut,
and
she
made
sure
to
express
her
displeasure
on
social
media.
Those
who
are
unaware
about
the
ad,
it
shows
Alia
questioning
the
concept
of
'kanyadaan'
at
weddings.
She
says,
"Am
I
a
thing
to
be
donated?
Why
only
kanyadaan?"
Earlier,
many
netizens
also
reacted
to
the
ad
and
slammed
Alia,
as
well
as
the
clothing
brand
for
looking
down
at
Hindu
rituals.
Joining
the
bandwagon,
Kangana
captioned
the
post
as,
"Humble
request
to
all
brands
.....
don't
use
religion,
minority,
majority
politics
to
sell
things
....
Stop
manipulating
naive
consumer
with
shrewd
divisive
concepts
and
advertising...
#mohey
@aliaabhatt
@moheyfashion
@stylebyami."
In
her
Instagram
post,
she
wrote,
"We
often
see
a
Martyr's
father
on
television
when
they
loose
a
son
on
the
border
they
roar
don't
worry
I
have
one
more
son,
uska
bhi
daan
main
iss
dharti
Maa
ko
dunga...
Kanyadaan
ho
ya
putradaan...
The
way
a
society
looks
at
the
concept
of
(lack
of
equivalent
word
in
English
or
Urdu
using)
renunciation
shows
it's
core
value
system...
When
they
start
to
look
down
upon
the
very
idea
of
daan...
Then
you
know
it
is
time
for
reestablishment
of
Ram
Rajya....
The
king
who
renounced
everything
he
ever
loved
only
to
live
the
life
of
a
Tapasvi
(monk)
Please
stop
mocking
Hindus
and
their
rituals....
Dharti
and
woman
both
are
mothers
in
scriptures
they
are
worshipped
as
goddesses
of
fertility....
Nothing
wrong
in
seeing
them
as
precious
and
very
source
of
existence
(shakti)."
In
another
post,
Kangana
wrote
that
Hinduism
is
very
sensitive
and
scientific
when
it
comes
to
gene
pools
and
bloodlines.
"In
a
marriage
a
woman
leaves
her
Gotra
and
bloodlines
and
enters
another
gene
pool
and
gotra...
She
needs
not
only
her
own
father's
permission
but
also
of
forefathers
and
ancestral
whose
blood
flows
in
her
veins...
for
this
smooth
transition
father
allows
her
everyone's
side
and
releases
her
from
her
any
gotrarin..
But
woke
dimwits
won't
understand
this
complex
science...
Better
to
simply
ban
such
adds
and
shut
them
up," wrote
the
Queen
actress.