In today’s India, children aged 8 to 14 are being groomed into becoming “spiritual gurus” — not by choice, but as a shortcut to fame and money. With limited job prospects even after higher education, some parents see their child’s pravachan skills as a ticket to lakhs via live events, YouTube, and donations. But at what cost? When innocence becomes a tool for marketing and spirituality turns into a business model — is this true devotion, or commercial exploitation of childhood?