We see Baba meeting with the Chief Minister (Tota Roy Chowdhury) and influential politicians. The conversation is chilling. The CM expresses concern about the police snooping around the ashram. Baba, sipping tea, replies with a smile: "Jab tak khilone ki dukaan hai, bacche royenge nahi" (As long as the toy shop is open, children won’t cry). He then gifts the CM a "donation" for his election fund—a suitcase full of cash. The message is clear: the ashram is now a money-laundering front, and the law is for sale.
But Episode 5 is where the benign mask of the ashram begins to crack irreparably. Titled simply as a continuation of the spiraling drama, this chapter serves as the emotional and ethical turning point of the season. It is no longer about blind faith; it is about the price of defiance. To understand the gravity of Episode 5, we must remember the shattering conclusion of Episode 4. Pammi, who had been sexually manipulated and assaulted by Baba under the guise of “spiritual healing,” was thrown out of the ashram. Her crime? Genuinely falling in love with the man she thought was a deity. After her abortion, forced by Baba to hide his crimes, Pammi becomes a pariah. She returns to her village, broken, only to find that Baba’s long arm of influence has already poisoned her family against her. Aashram Season 1 - Episode 5
As Baba sits on his golden throne, smiling at his followers, Pammi pulls out a small revolver. We see Baba meeting with the Chief Minister
The sound of a gunshot echoes—but we do not see who fired. Aashram Season 1 - Episode 5 is arguably the best episode of the entire first season. It balances social commentary with edge-of-the-seat drama. It takes the time to show the psychological toll of abuse while accelerating the police procedural plot. Baba, sipping tea, replies with a smile: "Jab