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Gita Press is an Indian publishing house based in Gorakhpur, Uttar Pradesh, recognised as one of the world's largest publishers of Hindu religious texts. It is known for producing inexpensive editions of the Bhagavad Gita, the Ramcharitmanas, the Upanishads, the Puranas, and a wide range of devotional literature in Hindi, Sanskrit, English, and several other Indian languages. The press is operated by Gobind Bhawan-Karyalaya, a registered society headquartered in Kolkata.
| Type | Publishing house (non-commercial trust) |
|---|---|
| Headquarters | Gorakhpur, Uttar Pradesh, India |
| Founded | 1923 |
| Founders | Jaya Dayal Goyandka, Ghanshyam Das Jalan |
| Parent organisation | Gobind Bhawan-Karyalaya, Kolkata |
| Flagship publication | Kalyan (Hindi monthly), Kalyana-Kalpataru (English monthly) |
| Primary subjects | Hindu scripture, devotional and didactic literature |
Gita Press was established with the explicit aim of disseminating Sanatan Dharma literature at affordable prices. The institution traces its origin to Jaya Dayal Goyandka, a Marwari businessman and Gita expositor who founded the Gobind Bhawan satsang in Kolkata in 1922. Dissatisfied with the quality and accuracy of contemporary editions of the Bhagavad Gita, he set up a press at Gorakhpur the following year to print a corrected edition. Ghanshyam Das Jalan and, later, Hanuman Prasad Poddar (known as "Bhaiji") played central roles in shaping the editorial direction of the press.
The press publishes texts in Hindi, Sanskrit, English, Gujarati, Marathi, Bengali, Tamil, Telugu, Odia, Kannada, Malayalam, Nepali, Assamese, and other languages. Its catalogue includes:
Books are sold close to cost price, and the press does not accept commercial advertisements in Kalyan. The publications are typically printed on inexpensive paper, with simple bindings and standardised typography, allowing wide circulation across pilgrimage centres, temples, and bookstalls in railway stations.
Gita Press has had a substantial influence on the popular dissemination of Hindu scripture in twentieth-century India. By producing affordable, mass-circulated editions of canonical texts, it has shaped lay familiarity with the Bhagavad Gita and the Ramcharitmanas across generations and regions. Its editions are widely distributed through temples, pilgrimage sites, and family households. Scholars of modern Hinduism have studied the press as an important institution of print culture, conservative religious publishing, and the consolidation of a pan-Indian devotional readership in Hindi.
In 2021, the Government of India announced the Gandhi Peace Prize for that year to Gita Press in recognition of its contribution to social, economic, and political transformation through non-violent means.