INDORE: What a mother hears, the child remembers — or so the epics say. Abhimanyu learned how to breach a battle formation before he was born. Madhya Pradesh is turning that belief into policy with Garbh Sanskar rooms planned across govt hospitals to “educate the mind of the fetus”.These dedicated spaces are meant to guide expectant parents through prenatal care rooted in traditional Indian practices, from positive thinking and lifestyle discipline to diet and emotional well-being. The idea: shape the mind of the unborn.CM Mohan Yadav announced the initiative Sunday in Indore, placing it under the Ayushman Bharat scheme and linking it to the Union ministry of Ayush.The programme promises “structured prenatal guidance aimed at holistic foetal development”, blending Ayurveda with modern medicine. Speaking at the Divya Santan Prakalp (Divine Child Project) event, Yadav framed Garbh Sanskar as a long-term investment. “This is about nurturing a physically, mentally and ethically strong future generation,” he said. “It combines scientific understanding with India’s traditional knowledge systems.”Future govt hospital designs will mandatorily include Garbh Sanskar rooms, he said, signalling a shift in how public healthcare approaches pregnancy. Yadav said allopathy practitioners are increasingly recognising the value of comprehensive prenatal care, while the state continues to promote normal deliveries and strengthen maternal and child health infrastructure. To underline the belief behind the project, the CM reached into the epics. Abhimanyu and Ashtavakra symbolise how learning and values can be absorbed in the womb, he said. The pandemic showed the power of integrated healthcare, where Ayurveda and allopathy worked side by side, he added.He also pointed to the scientific relevance of rural lifestyles, indigenous diets and traditional Indian kitchens.Officials said the programme will counsel couples on nutrition, mental health, emotional bonding and prenatal practices, positioning pregnancy as both a medical and cultural journey. There is, however, an unspoken caveat embedded in the very story driving the idea: mothers must stay awake for the full session. Abhimanyu learned how to enter the deadly Chakravyuha while still unborn — but not how to exit. His mother Subhadra fell asleep midway through the lesson. The result was fatal.






