RSS The Long and Short of It (Devanura Mahadeva)
RSS The Long and Short of It (Devanura Mahadeva)
RSS The Long and Short of It (Devanura Mahadeva)
First published in English as RSS: The Long and the Short of It in 2022 by Eka, an imprint of
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Devanura Mahadeva asserts the moral right to be identified as the author of this work.
ISBN: 9789395767163
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CONTENTS
Foreword
Ramachandra Guha
Preface: As we begin…
3. It continues…
7. At least now…
Afterword
Yogendra Yadav
Notes
Translator’s Note
Giving Thanks
FOREWORD
Ramachandra Guha
As we begin…
T his little book is an attempt to look closely at the true nature and
objectives of the Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh (RSS), a step towards
making people aware of where the organisation is leading our country, and
to reveal the difference between its true colours and how it is perceived.
Make people aware, yes, but how? In our folklore, we hear the story of
the magician who breathes his life into a parrot, hides it in a cave beyond
the seven seas, and goes on to wreak mindless havoc in the world. Needless
to say, he is a magician. And a master of disguise to boot. His forms are
many. He excels at hypnotism, too. Apparently, nothing can harm him.
Because the parrot, which carries his life breath, is safe in a faraway cave.
The first thing to do in such a situation, if we set out to do anything at all, is
to find where this life breath is hidden. A search becomes necessary. As part
of such a search, I peered into the old, musty well of the RSS. What I saw
was terrifying. What this booklet contains is only a glimpse. If it offers even
a little inspiration to those who wish to write more expansively about the
RSS in the future, that alone would make it worthwhile.
1
Where is the RSS’s life breath hidden away?
Golwalkar’s God:4
The first and the most fundamental aspect is the urge for realisation of
the Supreme Reality permeating the entire Universe—whatever the name
given to it. Or in simple words, it is ‘to realise God.’ But where is God?
How can we know Him? How does He look? What are His appearances
[…] The description that He is nirakar (without form), nirguna (without
attributes) and all that leads us nowhere. Various ways of worship are
also evolved. […] But all this does not satisfy us who are full of activity.
We want a ‘living’ God. […]
Hence our forefathers, understanding the limitations of the human
mind and intellect, said, ‘humanity’ and all that is all right, but before
one can rise to that state, one should take a view of the Almighty with
certain limitations as it were, which one can understand, feel and serve.
The Hindu People, they said, is the Virāt Purusha, the Almighty
manifesting Himself. Though they did not use the word ‘Hindu’, it is
clear from the following description of the Almighty in Pursha Sūkta
wherein it is stated that the sun and moon are his eyes, the stars and the
skies are created from His nābhi (navel) and
(Brahmin is the head. King the arms. Vaishya the thighs and Shudra the
feet.) This means that the people who have this fourfold arrangement,
i.e., the Hindu People, is our God.
German race pride has now become the topic of the day. To keep up the
purity of the Race and its culture, Germany shocked the world by her
purging the country of the semitic Races—the Jews. Race pride at its
highest has been manifested here. Germany has also shown how well
nigh impossible it is for Races and cultures, having differences going to
the root, to be assimilated into one united whole, a good lesson for us in
Hindusthan to learn and profit by.7 […]
It is worth bearing well in mind how these old Nations solve their
minorities problem. They do not undertake to recognise any separate
elements in their polity. Emigrants have to get themselves naturally
assimilated in the principal mass of population, the National Race, by
adopting its culture and language and sharing in its aspirations, by losing
all consciousness of their separate existence, forgetting their foreign
origin. If they do not do so, they live merely as outsiders, bound by all
the codes and conventions of the Nation, at the sufferance of the Nation
and deserving of no special protection, far less any privilege or rights.
There are only two courses open to the foreign elements, either to merge
themselves in the national race and adopt its culture, or to live at its
mercy so long as the national race may allow them to do so and to quit
the country at the sweet will of the national race. That is the only sound
view on the minorities problem. That is the only logical and correct
solution. That alone keeps the national life healthy and undisturbed. That
alone keeps the Nation safe from the danger of a cancer developing into
its body politic of the creation of a state within the state.8
Savarkar on Nazism:9
The very fact that Germany or Italy has so wonderfully recovered and
grown so powerful as never before at the touch of Nazi or Fascist
magical wand is enough to prove that those political ‘isms’ were the most
congenial tonics their health demanded.
That the framers of our present Constitution also were not firmly rooted
in the conviction of our single homogeneous nationhood is evident from
the federal structure of our Constitution. Our country is now described as
a Union of states. Those that were merely provinces in the former set-up
are now given the status of States, with many exclusive powers. In fact, it
was the fragmentation of our single national life in the past into so many
exclusive political units that sowed the seeds of national disintegration
and defeat. The present federal structure has in it the same seeds of
disruption, which are already sprouting.10 […]
Towards this end the most important and effective step will be to bury
deep for good all talk of a federal structure of our country’s Constitution,
to sweep away the existence of all ‘autonomous’ or semi-autonomous
‘states’ within the one State viz., Bharat and proclaim ‘One Country, One
State, One Legislature, One Executive’ with no trace of fragmentational,
regional, sectarian, linguistic or other types of pride being given a scope
for playing havoc with our integrated harmony. Let the Constitution be
re-examined and re-drafted, so as to establish the unitary form of
Government.11
RSS, inspired by one flag, one leader and one ideology is lighting the
flame of Hindutva in each and every corner of this great land.
2
The documents speak in these ways…
Another point is, the book, Gita, had not been much known to the
generality of people before Shankarâchârya made it famous by writing
his great commentary on it. Long before that, there was current,
according to many, the commentary on it by Bodhâyana […] not a copy
even of that Bodhâyana Bhashya could I find while travelling throughout
India. It is said that even Ramanuja compiled his Bhashya from a worm-
eaten manuscript which he happened to find. When even this great
Bodhâyana Bhashya on the Vedanta-Sutras is so much enshrouded in the
darkness of uncertainty, it is simply useless to try to establish the
existence of the Bodhayana Bhashya on the Gita. Some infer that
Shankarâchârya was the author of the Gita, and that it was he who foisted
it into the body of the Mahabharata.
As a solution, problem of lingua franca, till the time Sanskrit takes that
place, we shall have to give priority to Hindi on the score of convenience.
The third important belief of the RSS is the supremacy of the Aryan race.
This is a deep-seated obsession of theirs. Hitler, the cruel dictator of that
special Aryan breed, is himself the role model for the RSS. Addressing the
students of Gujarat University, Golwalkar said:6
Golwalkar had narrated the story tellingly and with specific details. As if
he had seen everything with his own eyes. But here is the travesty. After
Golwalkar shared his idea of eugenics at Gujarat University, and the RSS’s
official weekly, Organiser, reported his speech, he took back his words.
Only, by then, it had already been documented and recorded. The question
was whether what he described was a fact of history, or whether it was just
a figment of the imagination. If Golwalkar retracted what he had said, it is
possible that he was admitting to a falsehood, a fabrication. When such
incidents occur, we should express regret over them. Instead, the RSS looks
at them with pride and treats them as tradition. Their narratives have seeded
the growth of falsehood everywhere. Such lies, intended to flourish until
they are checked and exposed, are spreading like weeds across the length
and breadth of India on WhatsApp and Facebook, and in the news media
and everyday conversations.
This method of creating false stories is Golwalkar’s contribution.
Humanism and the ways of civilisation seem to have left the RSS
untouched, which, along with its affiliates, is relentlessly sowing such
weed-like lies. Relentlessly.
3
It continues…
T he RSS tries to pull out the teeth and nails of Jaina, Bouddha, Sikh,
Lingayat and other dharmas that were born in India and rejected the
Chaturvarna order. Saying ‘They are part of us’, it swallows them up and
subsumes them into the Chaturvarna order. On another front, it unleashes its
groups and attacks Islam and Christianity, religions that refuse to allow the
Chaturvarna Hindu order to swallow them up. These attacks come in a
variety of forms, and in many guises. They are not new. The game of
disguise and deception is perhaps something the RSS was born with.
Here is an example. In a letter dated 14 March 1948, soon-to-be president
Dr Rajendra Prasad wrote to Home Minister Sardar Vallabhbhai Patel, ‘I am
told that RSS people have a plan of creating trouble. They have got a
number of men dressed as Muslims and looking like Muslims who are to
create trouble with the Hindus by attacking them and thus inciting the
Hindus. Similarly, there will be some Hindus among them who will attack
Muslims and thus incite Muslims. The result of this kind of trouble amongst
the Hindus and Muslims will be to create a conflagration.’1 If they were
doing all this back then, what must they be doing now? How many more
disguises they must be wearing these days! And who knows how many
more are to come?
The smear campaign against Tipu Sultan is a good example of how the
RSS and its progeny create falsehoods. Tipu ruled the state of Mysore
between 1782 and 1799. The RSS ideologues claim that, in Kodagu, he
converted 69,000 Hindus to Islam. If you look at the population figures in
the gazetteer, and regardless of how you do the math, the Kodagu province
had fewer than 69,000 people then. If the RSS claim were true, wouldn’t
Kodagu be populated only by Muslims today? But the Muslim population
in Kodagu is just 15 per cent.2 The story of Tipu’s hatred of Hindus is a
planted lie. The tragedy is that this weed-like lie is thriving, and the RSS
and its affiliates are reaping the harvest of it. When you consider all this, it
becomes clear that they have no God within. Falsehood is their family deity.
It looks like these manufacturers of falsehood have hanged their conscience.
The main reason for the RSS’s hatred of Islam and Christianity is that
they refuse to dissolve into the Chaturvarna order. That fact makes these
two religions hard for the Chaturvarna Hindu sect to accept. The thinking in
the RSS is to make these religions submit at any cost, and render them
lifeless by depriving them of any rights in India. As we saw earlier,
Golwalkar believed Hitler’s Nazism held for Hindus ‘a good lesson’ on the
need to maintain racial purity and ensure that all foreigners are assimilated
into ‘the national race’, or make them ‘live at its mercy’. Such is his vision,
an imitation of Hitler’s anti-Semitism.
But in truth, have all Muslims and Christians in India migrated from
foreign lands? Isn’t it true that a majority of people following these faiths
are those who converted from Hindu communities to escape the debilitating
Chaturvarna order and the caste system? Following the arrival of Islam in
India, the first to convert—lured by power, status, ministerships and
military positions—were mostly north Indian Aryan Brahmins, weren’t
they?3 Aren’t Aryan Brahmins found among the Muslims settled in
Pakistan, a country the RSS detests? The RSS wants nothing to do with
these truths. Posing as a representative of the larger Hindu majority, this
Hindutva sect has cast a spell on innumerable liberal Hindu communities
and filled them with hatred against Muslims and Christians. Its aim is to
draw them into its fold by declaring a war of hate against those religions.
The RSS wants a war of hate. The majority community of former
Shudras, made up of countless castes and sects, who fall victim to hate and
participate in the war, will have its wings quietly clipped. In this war of
hate, the rights of these former Shudras will be snatched away. The
Scheduled Castes, Scheduled Tribes and Backward Classes have been
asserting their Constitutional rights, demanding their due in education,
employment and politics, and organising to struggle for them only because
they have had clear caste and community identities. Amid calls of ‘all
Hindus are one’, when these former Shudras, now shorn of their identities,
enter the furnace of the Hindu–Muslim war of hate as Hindus, their
Constitutional rights are obscured. It would be as if they were all caught in
the net of the petty Chaturvarna sect of Hindutva, and as a result, the
dictates of the Brahmins, the head, would decide how the Kshatriyas as the
arms rule, the Vaishyas as the thighs conduct their trade, and the Shudras,
like their ancestors, serve the others and crawl through their lives after
losing their Constitutional rights.4 India would then appear like it has
returned to the past.
When one looks at the RSS from the inside, a couple of other aspects
need to be noticed. It is not a solitary organisation trying to wake up the
ghosts of the past and make them real in the present. It has also shaken
awake its young offspring. The details are explained in a book titled Param
Vaibhav Ke Path Par, published in 1997 by Suruchi Prakashan, a publishing
house that publishes RSS literature. It lists among the brood about forty
organisations, such as the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP), Akhil Bharatiya
Vidyarthi Parishad, Hindu Jagran Manch, Sanskar Bharti, Vishwa Hindu
Parishad and Bajrang Dal. This was the number in 1996. Who knows how
many more it has spawned since? Even the federation called Dharam
Sansad comes under the RSS. Sri Rama Sene, founded by an expelled
member of the Bajrang Dal in Karntaka, is also among them. These are the
friends and relatives of the RSS. When such groups go on the rampage and
earn notoriety, it is customary for the RSS to say it has no connection with
them. But we shouldn’t be deceived. They share an umbilical link with the
RSS.
The most terrible of all is the manner in which the RSS tames the
volunteers who come into its fold. Golwalkar says:5
If we say that we are part of the organization and accept its discipline
then selectiveness (chunna) has no place in life. Do what is told. If told to
play kabaddi, play kabaddi, told to hold meeting then meeting… For
instance some of our friends were asked to go and work in politics that
does not mean that they have great interest or inspiration for it. They
don’t die for politics like fish without water. If they are told to withdraw
from politics then also there is no objection. Their discretion (vivek) is
just not required.
T oday, the BJP, one of the RSS’s many offspring, holds the reins of
power at the centre and also in some states. In Karnataka, too, it has
managed to seize power, doing this, that and the other.
In the early Seventies, the RSS—and the Jana Sangh, the predecessor of
today’s BJP—wriggled into Jayaprakash Narayan’s (JP’s) movement
against Indira Gandhi’s corrupt misrule. With that, its fortunes changed.
Rejected by society thus far, it started gaining acceptance. At the time of
joining the Janata Party, formed just then, the chief of the RSS had
promised JP that members of the Jana Sangh would give up their dual
membership. Prominent among those who made this promise were A.B.
Vajpayee, L.K. Advani and Balasaheb Deoras, then the chief of the RSS. JP,
who had regarded them as tall leaders, took their word at face value.
However, even as leaders with RSS roots mixed with the members of the
Janata Party, they didn’t give up their dual membership. The promise was
broken. The RSS had won JP’s trust only to let him down. In his twilight
years, JP recalled what had transpired, and despaired, ‘They betrayed my
trust.’
During the Emergency, the Delhi district magistrate had ordered JP’s
arrest under the Maintenance of Internal Security Act,1 and transferred him
to the Chandigarh district jail for security reasons. Given how fragile his
health was, JP was confined in the Post Graduate Institute of Medical
Research, the ward and guest house of which were notified as a prison
under the Criminal Procedure Code. G.M. Devasahayam was the district
magistrate in Chandigarh then, and therefore his custodian in jail. He
became close to JP in the course of their interaction, a relationship that
continued even after JP was released. Devasahayam shares these details in
an interview with Ajaz Ashraf.2
Since then, the saga of the RSS and the BJP’s betrayal has spread across
the length and breadth of the country. The BJP portrays Pakistan as a
permanent enemy, blames it even for minor squabbles here, pits one
community against another, creates an atmosphere of fear, and on occasion,
even starts disturbances and points fingers at the Muslims. In short, the
party has ruined the peace all around, and risen to power amid the ensuing
confusion, suspicion and hatred. Now, the vast, richly abundant and diverse
Hindu religion, made up of hundreds of sects and half a dozen dharmas, has
been pushed to despair, much like JP, to say, ‘Even I was deceived.’
How many promises the BJP made before coming to power, how many
disguises it wore! Not just one or two. Narendra Damodardas Modi
declared that all Indians would get Rs 15 lakh in their bank accounts if the
black money stashed away by Indians in foreign banks was brought back.3
Innocent Indians believe it could still happen, since Modi had said so
himself. Who has received this money? If indeed the black money did come
back, what happened to it? Modi also said he would create crores of jobs
every year.4 He has created unemployment like never before.5 Who is to ask
him, who is to tell him? He said he would double farmers’ incomes. But he
didn’t spare even their existing incomes. In fact, he caused them to crash.6
He lets nothing survive. He lives by selling public assets to private parties.7
He has taken foreign debt to never-before highs.8
When you look at all this, you fear that Modi will push the country to
bankruptcy with fantastic promises and colourful words. It doesn’t bother
him that unemployment is rising, it doesn’t bother him that prices are
skyrocketing. His rule is such that it ignites hatred between communities—
it makes citizens seethe with hatred, and then makes them fall asleep by
feeding them more hatred. Even those who voted the BJP to power have
reached a point of despair.
At the root of all this is the degeneration of people’s power. The people’s
representatives are not responsive to the joys and sorrows of those who
chose them. When you look at India’s political parties, you will see that
they can be classified into three categories: (1) single-person-led party
politics, (2) family-controlled party politics and (3) politics steered by an
organisation that pays no heed to Constitutional norms. All three are
detrimental to democracy. Parties found across India fall into one or the
other of these categories. The BJP, controlled by an organisation that shows
little regard for the Constitution, now steers the country. Just as
representatives elected from the first two categories are more loyal to the
individuals and families that control them than to the people who elected
them, representatives from a party controlled by an organisation that is
indifferent to the Constitution are more loyal to that organisation than to
their voters or even their party. This is more dangerous to democracy than
anything else. Today, there can be no other reason why the BJP legislators,
parliamentarians and ministers, leaders big and small, climb over each other
to make a noise to impress the RSS, which regulates their party.
We should note another feature of party politics when it is regulated by
an organisation with scant regard for the Constitution. Prime Minister Modi,
who won a majority for the BJP, is projected as a strong leader. But he is
only an utsava murti, a replica of the temple deity taken out during a
procession. The real deity sits in Nagpur, inside the RSS shrine. The utsava
murti dazzles everyone across the length and breadth of the country. It is
hailed everywhere. The qualifications for an utsava murti are the ability to
put up a show and the canniness to give an emotional colour to things that
spin out of control, and create a commotion, and thus take attention away
from the problem. It should also know how to mesmerise people and remain
totally loyal to the deity ensconced in the sanctum sanctorum. That’s all it
takes.
Don’t we see all of this today? Another potential tragedy for democracy
is that the leader of the party, already regulated by an organisation that cares
little for the Constitution, is decided by the deity inside the sanctum
sanctorum. It is like a priest handing a flower to a supplicant. Everything is
a puppet show! If a new puppet dances better to a given tune than the
current one, and shows more colour, dazzle, devotion and cunning, it enters
the stage wearing a mask of strength or astuteness. It becomes the leader.
The puppet that played the leader earlier is flung aside. However strong, no
leader who refuses to dance as instructed survives for long. Just imagine,
this is the plight of those elected by citizens. It is a frightening situation.
And it is more harmful to democracy than anything else could be. A
perilous development.
All of these factors come together to make the lives of people miserable.
If the prime minister—and leader of the BJP, a party controlled by an
organisation that is heedless of the Constitution—had any competence,
unemployment would have come down. Prices would be under control. He
wouldn’t be running the government by selling public assets. He wouldn’t
be increasing our foreign debt. He wouldn’t have pulled out the nails and
teeth of India’s autonomous institutions and made them dull.
Let’s now take a look at the dance of blind money9 in Modi’s regime.
Before the pandemic broke out, in mid-March 2020, the wealth of Gautam
Adani, a Gujarati, was Rs 66,696 crores. In mid-March 2022, as life was
returning to normal after the pandemic, it had jumped to Rs 6,90,840 crores.
Over the next six months, it went up to Rs 12,16,985 crores.10 Adani was
listed as the second richest individual in the world in September 2022.11
Similarly, the wealth of Mukesh Ambani, also from Gujarat, has gone up
exponentially. In just over two years, by September 2022, it had gone up to
Rs 7.2 lakh crores.12 Of course, other Indian billionaires are thriving, too.
How is the income of an average Indian calculated? The wealth of these
billionaires is combined with the earnings of those in straitened
circumstances, and then divided by the total number of Indians. What does
an average income then mean for the poor? The sky-high wealth of the rich
is a figure that Indians only hear about. A higher average income doesn’t
translate into food for the hungry. India’s rank in the hunger index is also
rising, in tandem with the wealth of the billionaires. This is what it is, the
blind gamble of blind money.
How many things do we talk about? Because of this grim inequality and
imbalance, India is plunging and fluttering wildly like a kite with a snapped
string. Still, it looks like this government exists only to provide
concessions, tax cuts and loan waivers to the rich.13 It is writing off loans
worth thousands of crores, putting aside even the expectation that the
money will return some day, so that it can lend again to the same rich
people.14 The number of the poor people is doubling. For whom does this
government exist? The situation today is that the people are despairing,
holding their heads in their hands. It’s strength sapped, India is sighing.
5
Where does it end?
C ome what may, and regardless of how badly citizens suffer, and even if
it means the country is broken into fragments, the BJP is chanting the
mantra of patriotism to bring in new laws and amend the ones already in
place. The intention is to slip into them the Chaturvarna system and
Manudharmashastra, to destroy the Indian Constitution, propagate
intolerance towards Islam and Christianity, and practise Aryan
supremacism. These tendencies are easily spotted. The Karnataka
Protection of Right to Freedom of Religion Ordinance of 2022 looks like
just another law. If you lay bare its insides, you find that it is intended to
destroy the Indian Constitution and establish the Manudharmashastra in its
place.1 All of us speak about freedom the way the Constitution envisions it.
But the RSS looks at freedom differently. According to RSS’s guruji,
Golwalkar, ‘[the] protection and propagation of our national life-values i.e.,
our dharma and samskriti have always been held in our historical tradition
as the raison d’etre of swatantrata’.2
For the BJP, a child of the RSS, the words of guru Golwalkar are its
Constitution. When he says ‘dharma’, let us keep in mind, Golwalkar refers
to the petty sect that propagates the Chaturvarna order, and not to the
innumerable, heterogeneous Hindu sects at large. If that petty Hindutva sect
gets to stand in for Hinduism, should we see this situation as moral
(dharma) or immoral (adharma)? We must ask this question. At least from
now on, we must tell the world over and over again that what the RSS calls
Hinduism is nothing other than the Chaturvarna sect. If Golwalkar’s
Chaturvarna order were to be established as the moral order (dharma), then
what is to become of the right to personal liberty, the freedom of expression
and the freedom of religion provided under the Indian Constitution? Also,
should the most populous groups within the Chaturvarna order of the past,
once called the Shudras, become servants all over again? We have to
confront these questions with utmost seriousness.
In Bunch of Thoughts, Golwalkar says the federal system propounded in
the Constitution should be buried. The BJP, the RSS’s descendant, has
buried the federal system with a single stroke—by introducing the goods
and services tax (GST). On the surface, the GST looks like an act of
financial reform. But its impact? The states in our federation have
surrendered all their powers to the centre. They place all their wealth at the
feet of the centre, and then beg for their share. The BJP has offered
Golwalkar its guru dakshina by burying federalism, by stifling the federal
system that constitutes a critical part of the Constitution. Now, the ‘republic
of states’ has become weak, and a ‘strong centre’ has taken its place.
Likewise, the conspiracy to make Hindi the link language, as a first step
towards making Sanskrit the link language, is already peeping out at us.
These are the first steps of a hidden, anti-diversity agenda, enforcing ideas
of one nation, one language and one leader, of the superiority of one race
and the like.
It is the same story in education too. The RSS first reaches out to strangle
education and history. Such is its hatred that the BJP government plans to
remove references like this from the Class 6 social studies textbook: ‘Tipu
Sultan waged many wars against the Britishers. He negotiated with the
French to dethrone the British rule in India.’3 Similarly, it has dropped
references to Tipu’s initiatives in sericulture, his establishment of a mint,
his land reforms, his practice of giving easy loans to farmers, and so on.
Likewise, a lesson in the social science textbook of Class 6 titled ‘The rise
of new religions’, which discussed the emergence of Jaina dharma and
Bouddha dharma in ancient India, was unpalatable to the BJP, which moved
it to a Class 8 lesson under a new title, ‘Jaina and Bouddha matagalu
(sects)’, mischaracterising the Jaina and Bouddha religions as ‘sects’.
Native Indian religions, such as the Bouddha, Jaina, Sikh and Lingayat
dharmas, are hard for this minority Chaturvarna Hindutva sect to accept.
The RSS is constantly trying to annihilate authentic religions that reject the
Chaturvarna system.
This is not new. In 1998, when the BJP-led National Democratic Alliance
came to power, its human resources minister, Dr Murli Manohar Joshi,
introduced ‘Paurohitya’ (priest craft) and ‘Karmakand’ (rituals) in the
curriculum.4 In his time, astrology came to be taught at the universities.5 A
lesson spoke about how to beget a male child by performing the
putrakameshti yajna ritual. The BJP fills children’s heads with mindless
thoughts and superstitions. Whenever it is in power, it tries to enforce
Golwalkar’s injunction about children’s education—children who take part
in RSS activities need only obey.
Recently, they dropped several topics from the CBSE syllabus
—‘democracy and diversity’, ‘the impact of globalisation on agriculture’
and two poems by Faiz Ahmed Faiz in the ‘Religion, Communalism and
Politics—Communalism, Secular State’ section.6 The RSS has given birth
to a team whose job is to have lessons removed. It is called ‘Shiksha
Sanskriti Utthan Nyas’. This body has been pressuring the NCERT to drop
lines referring to the killing of 2,000 Muslims during the 2002 Gujarat riots
and to former prime minister Manmohan Singh showing grace by seeking
forgiveness for the 1984 anti-Sikh riots. That is how they operate. If they
can make events witnessed by us vanish, imagine what they can do with a
past that we haven’t even seen.
At this rate, our textbooks might come to say that Hedgewar, the founder
of the RSS who turned away from the freedom movement, and Savarkar,
who apologised to the British and is now glorified with the title of ‘Veer’,
got us our independence. For that matter, a myth may be created that
Nathuram Godse, who killed Gandhi, was a ‘defender of Hindu dharma’.
Who knows what yarns the RSS and its affiliates will spin next!
How many things can I talk about? It would suffice to examine the RSS’s
obsession with Aryan supremacy. They are bringing into circulation the
term ‘vanavasis’ (forest dwellers) in place of ‘adivasis’ (indigenous
dwellers) and ‘moola nivasis’ (original dwellers). Those who have a history
of grabbing everything from the indigenous people are now trying to snatch
away their very identity. The reason is simple. As long as terms like
‘original dwellers’ are around, the ‘Aryans’ will continue to feel like
outsiders in India. A recent DNA study conducted in Rakhigarhi, Haryana,
based on remains found in the Indus Valley civilisation site, has found that
the people of the Indus civilisation had no Aryan or Vedic blood in their
lineage.7 Shaken by this finding, the RSS has begun calling it the
‘Saraswati civilisation’ instead of the ‘Indus Valley civilisation’. But what
is the harm in saying that the Aryans came from beyond our borders? India
embraces all children born on its soil as its own. Moreover, in India,
Dravidian, Aryan, Islamic, Christian and other bloods are inseparably
mixed and can’t be told apart. Why can’t the RSS just live in the present in
peace? It looks like the RSS is suffering from a pathological obsession with
Aryan supremacism.
So, to take this further, who are the Sri Rama Sene and Bajrang Dal boys
creating disturbances in the name of hijab, halal trading ban and azaan?
Aren’t they mostly the youth force of the communities at the bottom of
society? Wouldn’t the country have thrived if they had been given jobs
according to their abilities? The BJP, a child of the RSS, wants none of this.
For the RSS and BJP, the former Shudras must be foot soldiers, they must
remain helpless, they must remain servants as laid down in the Chaturvarna
order: this is what is quietly coming to pass here. Isn’t this the plight of
contract workers? When the farmers’ ties with their land are weakened,
won’t it bring back the servant order made up of landless Shudras? When
new positions remain vacant and backlogs in government departments are
left unfilled, and jobs are handed over to the private sector where no job
reservation exists, aren’t the RSS and BJP pushing back communities that
benefit from reservation to being Shudra servants? We see the same pattern
when the central government cuts down jobs and curtails the rights of
workers. Statistics from the Centre for Monitoring Indian Economy show
that about two crore women disappeared from the workforce between 2017
and 2022.8 Is this natural, accidental, or a result of the RSS strategy to keep
women confined to their homes? Such questions and doubts arise.
While all this is going on, they are also privatising education and
weakening the public education system. As a result, the education of rural
children, especially girls, is on the wane. And thus, new kinds of
discriminatory systems9 are now found even in children’s education. In
effect, all of this will likely take us to a situation, like the one seen in the
past Chaturvarna order, where Shudras are considered unfit for education.
These are the sorts of things that are underway. This is what we know so
far. But the situation makes us wonder: what more could lie in store?
What is to be done? How should it be done? What are the answers we
might find? Thieves have entered the village. What do we do? How do we
stop them? Before anything else is done, the entire locality must become
wide alert. Young men must take turns standing guard over every mohalla at
night. Women must keep chilli powder handy for self-defence. This is the
kind of caution we all need to have now.
The thieves may come in any disguise. They may say they are restoring
temples and shrines. They may spread false news. They may encourage
bhajan singing. They may even give communities idols, flags, money, and
get them to drink and dance joyfully in the name of bhakti. They may bait
and capture an entire community, using sentiments dear to its heart. To
escape it, we must first recognise this conspiracy. This calls for everyone to
be aware. The wise and the discerning must talk about right and wrong at
least now. Words of love, tolerance and justice must be heard from within
society.
6
In the light of all this, the secret of the anti-
conversion law…
YOGENDRA YADAV
I first heard about Devanura Mahadeva three decades ago from my friend,
the late D.R. Nagaraj. My friendship and political fellowship with
Devanura is less than a decade old. Ours is an odd kind of friendship,
struggling to bridge the vast physical and linguistic distance between us
with some English, more intuition and a lot of trust. The political
partnership between Karnataka Sarvodaya (an extraordinary coming
together of Dalit and farmer movements), led by him, and Swaraj India,
initially headed by me, is hardly an example of electoral success. Yet, I
cherish this relationship and think of him before taking any major decision.
It was natural for me to celebrate the instant and well-deserved success of
his booklet RSS: Aala Mattu Agala. The reason was not just my personal
connect with the author. Over the last few years, Karnataka has been seen,
and presented, as a laboratory of the Hindutva brand of politics of hate. This
has shocked and pained me, for I have seen and known Karnataka to be an
intellectual and cultural resource for the kind of politics our country needs.
For me, this is the land of the Vachanakaras, of the poems of Kuvempu and
of the vibrant socialist literary tradition. The appearance and reception of
Devanura Mahadeva’s booklet assures me that Kannada literary culture has
not lost its political vigour, that Karnataka may have imported a political
virus from north India, but it does not need to import the antidote.
As this English version goes to press, Devanura’s booklet has already
sold over 1,07,000 copies in Kannada. Its translations have already
appeared in Telugu (and has apparently sold over 1.3 lakh copies), Tamil
and Marathi (two versions). Unauthorised English translations have been
doing the rounds on WhatsApp for a few weeks. The wait for this authentic
English edition—both accurate and lucid, with the addition of meticulous
footnotes—was clearly worth it. The Hindi translation is ready, and several
other language translations are in the pipeline. It is after a long time that a
Kannada publication, that too non-fiction, has been noticed by the Delhi-
based ‘national’ media, including the Hindi newspapers.
What accounts for this extraordinary success? I turned to my friend
Chandan Gowda, a sociologist deeply invested in the cultural history of
Karnataka, especially the socialist tradition that Devanura comes from. The
timing matters, he said, what with the intensely charged communal
atmosphere in the state. From hijab to love jihad to azaan, Karnataka is at
the centre of every controversy, every new experiment, involving the
communal politics of ‘Hindutva’.
Very few writers, even the progressive critics of the BJP, are willing to
take the RSS head on. There is a spiral of silence. That is why this
forthright engagement with the roots of the politics of hate has grabbed
attention.
More than the context, the book works because of its author: an
iconic Kannada literary figure, a towering public intellectual and a revered
political activist in Karnataka. Shy and self-effacing to a fault, always a
little out of sorts, a bit dishevelled. His is not the carefully designed
carelessness of a bohemian poet. It is just that his life has a different rhythm
and radically different set of priorities than you would imagine of a
celebrity.
Everyone who knows Kannada knows that Devanura Mahadeva does not
write or speak much, but when he does, truth speaks through him. His entire
literary output is just about 200 pages. His essays are short, his speeches
even shorter, usually written, and he just reads them out without any affect.
But Kannadigas hang on to every word he utters. For they know that his
words are not for sale. He had turned down the coveted Nripatunga Award
in 2010 and refused nomination to the Rajya Sabha way back in the 1990s.
He also returned his Padma Shri and Sahitya Akademi awards in 2015. You
cannot bend Devanura Mahadeva. You cannot sweet-talk him. Even his
critics do not point fingers at him. Integrity defines his life, his actions, his
words.
Yes, he is Dalit. But calling Devanura Mahadeva a Dalit intellectual does
not describe him. It tells us something about his origins, the social milieu
that he writes about and the cultural resources he draws upon. ‘Dalit’ or
‘literature’ or its conjunction does not capture the political, ethical and
indeed spiritual quest that Mahadeva’s words embody. Unlike many Dalit
activists, he refuses to play the angry Dalit and limit his horizons to one
section of humanity. In doing so, he refuses to accept the age-old division of
intellectual labour that has continued seamlessly in our times. The outcastes
—modern Dalits and OBCs—can at best aspire to be their own advocates,
in charge of a slice of truth. Brahmins are meant to be non-partisan arbiters
of truth, transcending their accident of birth, extending their empathy to
everyone, including the Shudras. Mahadeva defies these roles and
empathises with everyone, including the upper-caste characters in his
fiction. His politics embraces all of humanity and beyond, including
nature. He aims at nothing less than truth in its entirety.
This is why his inquiry into the depth (aala) and the breadth (agala) of the
RSS makes waves. When the omnipresent Narendra Modi and the
omnipotent election machine of the BJP draws all attention everywhere,
Devanura Mahadeva fixes his gaze at the real source and centre of power,
the RSS. At a time when the obsequious media and commentariat are ever
willing to suspend disbelief, and eager to invent the soft, liberal gloss the
RSS needs, Devanura dares to speak the unvarnished truth. Most critics
limit themselves to asking questions that the RSS anticipates, indeed wants:
Does the RSS exercise influence on this government? Is the RSS anti-
Muslim? Devanura’s inquiry invites us to ask a harder and deeper question:
Is the RSS anti-national?
On the face of it, this is an odd question. Nationalism, Indianness and
Hindutva are very much the calling cards of the RSS. If anything, its critics
accuse it of being ultra-nationalist. Thus, to question its nationalist
credentials is counter intuitive, if not outrageous. Yet, given the salience of
the RSS in our national public life today, this question needs to be debated
in all seriousness. It is not a central question in this booklet, yet even a
cursory reading pushes you in this direction. The question is about the
theory and practice of the RSS as an organisation and its relationship to the
Indian nation, its past, present and future.
The author begins this booklet with a short chapter of quotations from
some of the founding fathers and ideologues of the RSS. These quotes bring
out some indisputable facets of its founding ideology: belief in the purity
and supremacy of the Aryan race, which is as false as it is obnoxious; Nazi-
like ideas of brute suppression of minorities so as to establish a majoritarian
rule; a support for the Chaturvarna caste order that aims at bringing back
Brahminic supremacy; and a total rejection of the founding principles of the
Indian Constitution.
The booklet does not delve into the history of the RSS. But given these
beliefs, it is not surprising that, right from its inception in 1925, the RSS
was not in any way active during the national movement. In fact, its
associates like the Hindu Mahasabha actively opposed the national
movement. It is also a well-documented fact that V.D. Savarkar, whose
ideology inspired the RSS founders and who remains its icon, was released
from Cellular Jail after he wrote several mercy petitions pledging loyalty to
the British empire. After his release, he lived off a stipend from the British
government and remained faithful to the conditions they imposed on him.
While the RSS kept away from the Quit India movement, some Hindu
Mahasabha leaders collaborated with the British during this biggest anti-
colonial uprising. Well before the Muslim League proposed it, Hindu
nationalists advocated the two-nation theory. And it is no secret that
Nathuram Godse was once an RSS member, and very much a part of its
extended family when he murdered Mahatma Gandhi. Bluntly put, the RSS
made zero, if not negative, contribution to the national struggle.
Of course, that is not sufficient to dub it anti-national today.
The role of the RSS in the post-Independence era is more relevant to such
an assessment. Did it contribute to the project of nation-building? Sadly, the
answer is again in the negative. The RSS was among the few organisations
that refused to honour some of the key symbols of the Indian republic: the
national flag, the national anthem and, of course, the Constitution of India.
It speaks volumes that the head of the RSS had to clarify, nearly eight
decades after the promulgation of the Constitution, that his organisation
believes in it—something explicitly contradicted by his predecessor. The
RSS does not quite subscribe to any of the key tenets of the Indian
Constitution: socialism, secularism, federalism and democracy.
In practice, far from being a part of the solution, the RSS was always a
part of the problem that India faced in its difficult journey of nation-
building. The legacy of Partition and the challenge of bringing together
immense diversities posed an unprecedented challenge to the nascent Indian
nation. During this delicate phase, the RSS was at best an irresponsible
denominational pressure group for Hinduisation of the Indian state,
opposing any and every concession to minorities and advocating a hawkish
foreign policy. At worst, the RSS became a fulcrum of organised subversion
of the Constitutional order, as in the demolition of the Babri Masjid in
1992. If Constitutional patriotism is the heart of national political life, the
RSS has repeatedly stood in opposition to the project of nation-building.
More than anything else, it is the theory and practice of its nationalism
that shows the RSS to be a European import, out of sync with Indian
nationalism. It subscribes to the now outdated European model of nation-
state which assumed that the cultural boundaries of a nation must match its
political boundaries. In Europe, one race, one religion, one language and
one culture were considered the defining features of a nation. In India, it
meant Hindu–Hindi–Hindustan, the slogan coined by Savarkar. India’s
home-grown nationalism challenged this European model with its futile and
bloody quest for matching cultural and political boundaries. Instead, Indian
nationalism was about creating political unity by acknowledging, respecting
and accommodating deep diversity of culture, religion and language.
Today, as a rapidly diversifying world seeks to learn from the Indian
model, the RSS clings to an alien, borrowed and fractious understanding of
nationalism. Worse, its attempt to create what may be called majority
separatism is clearly the biggest obstacle for Indian nationalism. Is it not
odd that an organisation that claims to work for national integration has had
little time and energy for an amicable resolution of some of the issues that
challenge our national unity? These include intractable inter-state water
disputes, intra-state tensions between regions, language issues, and
differences with racial and ethnic dimensions. The RSS version of
nationalism comes into play only when there is a religious angle to any
given issue.
It is not that they care for Hinduism either. RSS ideologues have little
knowledge of, or interest in, the multiplicity of Hindu traditions, the vast
universe of Hindu mythologies or the diverse religious practices of the
Hindus. In fact, the Hinduism that the RSS seeks to impose is a truncated,
sanitised and homogenised version, a parody of orthodox Islam and
orthodox Christianity, that runs against the basic spirit of Hinduism, and
indeed the spirit of humanism that informs all religions. The principal focus
of the RSS has been to foment Hindu–Muslim differences, division and
hatred.
All this leads us to an unavoidable conclusion. Secessionists challenge
the territorial integrity of India; it is called treason. Left-wing extremists
challenge the writ of the Indian state; they are charged with sedition. The
RSS challenges the basic tenets of the Constitution of India, the very idea of
India, the swadharma of the Republic of India. It works to activate the
principal faultline, the Hindu–Muslim divide, that threatens the unity and
integrity of the country. If this is not anti-national, then what is anti-
national? Why should this organisation not be charged with sedition and
treason? If the Popular Front of India (PFI) can be banned, why not the
RSS, the organisation that was banned by Sardar Patel as a ‘force of hate
and violence’ following Mahatma Gandhi’s assassination?
But that is not how Devanura Mahadeva wants to tackle the challenge of
the RSS. He does not call for a legal ban. The theory and practice of what is
called ‘Hindutva’ these days represents a cultural–political malady that
needs a deeper cure than that. It originates in the inferiority complex of a
modern Hindu, made worse by the Westernised, deracinated form of our
secularism. What the RSS needs is an exposure to Indian culture and its
multiple traditions, greater appreciation of culturally more confident
Indians, like Tagore and Gandhi, and a deeper understanding of Hinduism
itself. In one word, the RSS needs to be Indianised. Since such introspection
is unlikely to take place soon, the RSS needs native medicine from
outsiders like Devanura Mahadeva to disinfect its stale and poisonous set of
ideas.
This is what Aala Mattu Agala achieves. Although much of the booklet is
about exposing the truth of the politics of hatred—the myth of Aryan
origins, the hidden agenda of caste dominance, the attack on Constitutional
freedoms, institutions and federalism, and the economic policy that works
for crony capitalists—Mahadeva weaves his message through stories. He
draws upon the ‘Naale Baa’ (Come Tomorrow) ritual, where people
inscribe these words to ward off the witch that might knock on your door
imitating the voice of a kin. (The closest I can think of in Hindi is the adage
‘Aaj nagad, kal udhaar’ inscribed on shop counters to ward off credit-
seekers.) Howling demons are around, out to destroy our civilisation, and
they have hidden their prana in a bird seven seas away (similar to the story
about a king whose life resided in a parrot), the book warns us. We must
inscribe ‘naale baa’ on the front door of our homes, just as our ancestors
did.
Devanura Mahadeva’s truth is not that of an evidence-
driven historian’s or a data-cruncher’s. His critique of the RSS is not a
replay of the secular ideological polemics. Rajendra Chenni, a student of
English and Kannada literature, and an old associate of the author’s,
reminded me that Devanura weaves his truth through fables and folklores,
through myths and metaphors, breaking open the prison of ‘realism’ that
had trapped much of Dalit literature. He provides a new language, rich in its
depth and breadth, to the culturally anaemic politics of Indian secularism.
His book breaks down the divide between creative and political writing, just
as his novel Kusumabale had breached the divide between prose and verse.
Unlike much of politically committed literature, Devanura does not use his
creative genius for political rhetoric, or to embellish the truth through
flowery exaggeration. He takes to creative political writing as a path to
discovery of the truth. He does not use the language of political theory or
high Constitutionalism to combat the politics of hate. He speaks to people
in their language, their metaphors and through their cultural memories. This
is what secular politics needs to do today.
If this booklet has a spiritual message, it is this: ‘Divisiveness is a demon
and unity is God.’ And its central political message is: ‘forward-looking
groups, organisations and parties should rise above being little streams; they
should flow collectively as one river’. I hope the English edition of this
booklet, and its editions in other Indian languages, will carry both these
messages to every Indian and to everyone who cares for India.
Foreword
1. Rakshit S. Ponnathpur, ‘Devanuru Mahadeva’s new Kannada book is a bestseller and the Sangh
is fuming’, The News Minute, 19 July 2022, https://www.thenewsminute.com/article/devanuru-
mahadeva-s-new-kannada-book-bestseller-and-sangh-fuming-165974.
Chapter 3. It continues…
1. Valmiki Choudhary (ed.), Dr Rajendra Prasad: Correspondence and Select Documents: Vol. 9:
April to July 1948, Allied Publishers, New Delhi, 1987, p. 73.
2. Translator’s note: The population figures for Kodagu (Coorg) are available on the Census of
India website: https://www.census2011.co.in/data/religion/district/259-kodagu.html.
3. Justice H.N. Nagamohan Das (retd), ‘Islaamige mataantaravaadavaralli Brahmanare modalu
(The Brahmins were the first among those who converted to Islam)’, Andolana, 15 April 2022.
4. I owe this insight to Dr Shivakumar of Bharatiya Parivartana Sangha.
5. M.S. Golwalkar, Shri Guruji Samagar Darshan (the collected works of Golwalkar in Hindi),
Vol. 3, Bhartiya Vichar Sadhna, Nagpur, 1978, p. 32.
S.R. Ramakrishna
Bengaluru
October 2022
Giving Thanks
I carved this book out of the anguish of my very being, with no thought
that ‘I’ was writing it, or that it was ‘mine’ in any way. Once it was
published, the world of Kannada readers embraced it not as something that
‘I’ wrote but as its very own. It has celebrated the book. To me, this came as
a surprise.
When I was working on this little book in Kannada, my friends,
Shivasundar, Prasanna N. Gowda, B. Sripad Bhat and Prof. Kumaraswamy,
saw it as their own and enhanced its quality by supplying relevant details
and valuable advice. I have relied on Suresh Bhat Bakrabailu’s Kannada
translations of several citations originally found in English. Two other
friends who contributed immensely preferred to remain behind the scenes. I
am grateful to them all.
I cannot adequately convey the celebratory response from among
Kannada’s sister languages. I came to know of two separate translations of
this book in Marathi only well after their publication! Translations have
now appeared in Telugu and Tamil. Preparations are afoot to publish the
book in Hindi, Konkani and Tulu. It is going into Malayalam, Urdu and
Punjabi as well. I am grateful to everyone who is helping with publishing
these editions.
This English translation is now in your hands. My young writer-friend
Vivek Shanbhag introduced me to Westland Books and spoke to them with
the excitement of a writer talking about his own book. S.R. Ramakrishna,
with a taste for music, looks for comparable cadences and rhythms in
translation. He has translated this book with patience and perseverance
amid his hectic schedules, often spending sleepless nights to ensure that the
tone and tenor came out just right. I took part in the editing, and in every
step since the first draft was ready. My perceptive writer-friend Chandan
Gowda looked at the draft, closely matching every word, phrase and line
against the original, examining their cut, colour and clarity in the manner of
a diamond merchant. At Westland Books, Ajitha G.S., who comes from
God’s own country, judiciously weighed his suggestions, with translator
Ramakrishna also joining in in the work. This interaction opened up a
whole new world before my eyes. No word of gratitude is enough to thank
the three of them! I’m also grateful to Karthika, who is also from God’s
own country, and her colleagues at Westland Books who showed
tremendous enthusiasm and interest in publishing this book.
It is a matter of pride that the erudite historian and astute writer
Ramachandra Guha has added a foreword to this book. My young friend
Yogendra Yadav, an ‘andolana jeevi’ with the potential to take this country
forward, has written an afterword. When Westland asked the writer
Geetanjali Shree, still caught up in engagements after her Booker win, for a
review comment on my book, it was at short notice and they did not expect
her to find the time. But she did, and I send her my affectionate thanks.
What more could I have asked for? When this book has found a place in so
many hearts, what is left for me to say? I can only express gratitude.
Devanura Mahadeva
September 2022
‘Here is a searing narrative of the RSS’s growing stranglehold over our
lives. A lament and a warning, the narrative derives its power—its
truth—from the clarity of Devanura Mahadeva’s vision. And from the
transparency of his unadorned simple language, e.g., “Fanaticism
anywhere devours humanism.”
We must heed his advice to be wide alert. At least now. Lest his
becomes a cry in the wilderness.’
GEETANJALI SHREE