The oldest racist organisation in the world is all set
to celebrate the centenary of its existence. The Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh
(RSS) was founded in 1925 with the specific goal of unifying the Hindus in
India under a religious and cultural banner. The Indian Independence struggle that
was going on in full force at that time was no concern of the RSS. Though it
gave the liberty to its individual members to take part in the struggle, the
organisation’s official policy was to stay clear of it altogether. That was
only one of the many paradoxical ironies that marked the RSS which was a
nationalist organisation that cared little for the Independence of the nation.
Today, the Prime Minister of India is
a man who was trained and nurtured by the RSS. Shashi Tharoor wrote a massive book
on the paradoxes that underscore the personality of Mr Narendra Modi. The RSS
and paradoxes go hand in hand, if we take Modi as a specimen of the
organisation’s great achievements. Tharoor’s final assessment of Modi in that
book is as a “narrow-minded, mean-spirited” man who cannot “rise above his
sectarian political origins to the levels of statesmanship and good governance.”
One could say the same thing about his roots, the RSS, too.
There is no deep vision that
underlies the philosophy of the organisation. Expediency seems to be its only
real guiding principle. Probably, Lord Krishna of the Mahabharata is their ultimate
inspiration with his readiness to adopt unorthodox, pragmatic, and morally
ambiguous methods to achieve dharmic goals. The rules of war were bent to suit
his purposes, deception was practised whenever that suited him, ethical codes
were reinterpreted, and even the nature was manipulated. The RSS and the entire
right-wing in India do the same things today in the name of Sanatan Dharma.
One contemporary example. The cow became a religious totem in rather recent past of India’s history. Why? M S Golwalkar, one of the staunchest members of the RSS, told Varghese Kurian (quoted in his autobiography I Too Had a Dream) that the cow was a strategic symbol for unifying the Hindus. Expedient strategy, that’s all what the cow is in the end for the advocates of Hindutva. It is easy to manipulate people’s emotions with the help of some religious symbols. The cow, thus, became a religious symbol. If we look at the living conditions of the wandering cows in North India, we will understand how much love their militant protectors possess for them.
The ostentatious temple built by the
Modi government in the disputed land of Ayodhya has similarly nothing to do
with spirituality; that is another expedient strategy for rousing people’s
passions for a political cause.
Bhanwar
Meghwanshi joined the RSS at the age of 13. Though he belonged to an
untouchable caste, he rose to become a karyavah in the organisation’s rigid
hierarchy, because of his passionate nationalist spirit. He hated Muslims with
a venomous passion though he had never encountered a Muslim in his life
personally. He joined thousands of karsevaks (volunteers) in Ayodhya. He
participated in riots. Hindutva was an intoxication for him. Until the deep-seated
falsehoods of his organisation disillusioned him totally. The RSS men were, in
his own words, “petty, mean-minded, and hypocritical.” [In his autobiography I
Could Not be Hindu]
While the RSS led to the loss of
Bhanwar Meghwanshi’s religious faith, Shashi Tharoor succeeded in retaining his
faith and went on to give us his reasons for it in his book Why
I am a Hindu. Hinduism is “the only major religion in the world,”
he says, “that does not claim to be the only true religion.” “Hinduism is a
civilization,” he goes on, “not a dogma. Hinduism is a faith that allows each
believer to stretch his or her imagination to a personal notion of the creative
godhead of divinity….”
That Hinduism which is a great
philosophy and a profound civilization has been straitjacketed by some “narrow-minded,
mean-spirited” men in the RSS and its affiliate organisations. When the Sangh,
as the RSS is known commonly in India, celebrates the centenary of its
foundation, it can do well to contemplate on what they have done to a great
tradition, a philosophy, a civilisation.
I find a lot of things about religions quite complicated.
ReplyDeleteThey are complicated because there is no logic in religion, only dogmas and beliefs. And a whole continuum of emotions.
DeleteHari OM
ReplyDeleteHmmm... I might point out the Ku Klux Klan is some sixty years older than the RSS, but that doesn't detract from the body of your message here. A key difference is the klan are seen as the terrorists they are and are now few in number. Somehow the RSS is accepted, even sanctioned.
You say to Pradeep there is no logic in religion - certainly in the daily practice and ritualistic form, but I would defend Advaita Vedanta as a philosophy of profound logic. The problem lies, as with physics or astronomy or any advanced area of research, too few folk are prepared to do the work to make the discoveries availble to them - they wish only to be led, to be fed dogma and told what to believe, told that to question is a mistake, and, sadly, that paves the way for the sort of mess we now see. YAM xx
Yes, Yam, as usual you have put my views into better perspective. Actually I know that the problem is not with religion but the practitioners. The manipulators, rather. My persistent problem is that most believers don't seem to understand their religion and they go by wild emotions. Logic is nowhere, let alone spiritual experience.
DeleteReading your words after a long gap. The picture you've chosen to go with the text says it all. Have read the comments too. It boggles the mind to witness that which is being perpetuated in the name of religion today. The root cause for the growing blindness is --in Yamini's words--'they wish only to be led'.
ReplyDeleteGlad to see you here after a long time.
DeleteI'm seriously concerned about what's happening in India these days. Little good...
This is such a terrible time. Worldwide. So many of these types of groups are currently flourishing.
ReplyDeleteTrue and worrying.
Delete