Put a real question to the world's oldest scripture — and get a clear, honest answer drawn straight from the hymns.
Download on the App StoreThe Vedas are large and layered, and you do not need to read them front to back. Start small, keep the source text in view, and build your understanding one passage at a time.
The Vedas are four collections: Rig, Sama, Yajur, and Atharva. Knowing that structure helps you place any passage you read.
Skip the cover-to-cover plan. Pick a single hymn or a short Upanishad and read it closely before moving on.
Pair a translation with the verse reference so you always know which text and section a line comes from.
When a verse raises a question, trace the answer back to its cited source. Comparing the reference with the explanation is how the reading actually sticks.
The Rig Veda is over three thousand years old — ten books, a thousand hymns, more than ten thousand verses of archaic Sanskrit. It has always been the preserve of scholars and priests.
Sukta lets anyone simply ask. Type a question — "Where did the universe come from?", "What did the Vedas say about death?" — and Sukta searches the actual hymns and answers you in plain modern English, with every claim cited to a specific verse.
Answers grounded in real, cited hymns — never invented.
Original Sanskrit alongside literal and modern translations.
One hymn each morning, with a plain-English reading.
Explore the Rig Veda book by book.
There is a real, fascinating conversation between ancient thought and modern science — and there is a great deal of nonsense that claims the Vedas "predicted" aircraft or nuclear weapons.
Sukta refuses the nonsense. Where a hymn genuinely echoes a modern idea, we say plainly that it is a philosophical resonance — never a scientific claim, never a prediction, never proof. Sukta is a study tool, not religious instruction. Every text is a public-domain translation.