Aao, secular secular khelein
Apoorvanand: When the Devil Speaks the Gospel
The widespread reactions to Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh chief Mohan Bhagwat’s speech in Nagpur on June 2, welcoming it as a call for the de-escalation of aggression against Muslims, proves one thing beyond doubt: that the RSS is perceived as the fountainhead of hatred towards Muslims, which spurs violence against them by various Hindutva organisations.
Otherwise, what
explains the relief expressed in newspapers and on social media following
Bhagwat’s act of gently reproving his Swayamsevaks and other members of the
Sangh Parivar, that they need not find nor look for a shivling in
every masjid? His attempt to rein in his followers becomes credible only when
we believe that the ideological source of the communal strife in the country is
the RSS itself.
Hearing the responses
of some people to Bhagwat’s remarks, it was as if those people were visualising
a scenario where the sardar of a gang, slightly annoyed by the wayward ways of
his men, was asking them not to cross the given limit; his disquiet itself
becoming a source of solace. Is it not sufficient that it might discipline
those who are moving around claiming that mosques are not mosques but their
temples; that it might lead to a lessening of violence?
It is this thought that has prompted many to laud the RSS chief’s speech. They have a suspicion that he is the ideological supremo; the man in charge, so to say, and that his words can have a sobering effect on the foot soldiers of Hindutva whose activities foment violence on the ground. After all, the petitioners in the Gyanvapi mosque case are no ordinary devotees, whose Bhakti for their Lord has led them to the courts, seeking to turn the mosque into their mandir.
As a May 20 report by Scroll.in reveals, their leader is connected to a member of the Vishwa Hindu Parishad (VHP). Similarly, in other places too, one can find that the people agitating to turn mosques into temples are linked, in some manner, to an outfit of the RSS.
Some friends have gone ballistic in their praise of the RSS chief; they see his speech as a game-changer. As to how exactly it will change the scenario, they don’t know and can’t explain. Is it because he is calling for a moratorium on the campaign to lay claim to non-Hindu places of worship and convert them into temples? Or, is it because he says that the RSS is neither going to launch any movement nor participate in any campaign demanding the conversion of mosques into temples? He has asked his followers to have faith in the courts and expects all to abide by their decision.
Bhagwat claims that
the Ram Janmabhoomi movement was an exception; when the RSS for once, contrary
to its avowed nature, participated in the movement in deference to the
sentiments of the Hindus involved. How could it, an organisation of Hindus,
ignore their feelings? But that was a one-time exception. After achieving its
aim, claims the RSS chief, the organisation went back to its main work of Vyakti
Nirman (character building).
The RSS, according to Bhagwat, wants to remain focused on its mission of building of character. However, the word ‘vyakti’ does not refer to an individual, as we know the term. In the RSS’s lexicon, it has a specific connotation – that of a man who thinks and behaves like a mob. But more about that later. What is interesting this time is the somewhat guarded response of newspapers to Bhagwat’s speech. A June 4 editorial in a leading newspaper, namely the Indian Express, after welcoming the speech, strikes a note of caution and writes, “To be sure, past experience of the playing out of Hindu-Muslim disputes over places of worship and the RSS’s own shadowy politics in them serve as a health warning against over reading what Bhagwat said and what he meant.”
There is a reason for
such scepticism. In 2018, Bhagwat was hailed as a revolutionary of sorts who
had seemingly read down Golwalkar’s Bunch of Thoughts, in
which Muslims are called the enemies. But “that seeming breakthrough did not
translate into anything politically substantial,” says the editorial.
The enthusiasm that
follows each pronouncement of the RSS and the subsequent disappointment of our
well-meaning friends has become a predictable pattern. It is either their lack
of understanding of the way the RSS functions or their refusal to believe that
the RSS is essentially a fascist organisation.
It is also because we
think episodically. One day we are responding to the heinous act of lynching of
Muslims in the name of cow protection. Another day, we witness Hindu festivals
being used as a pretext to forcibly enter Muslim localities and wreak violence.
The attack on Christians and their churches is yet another episode, as is the
toxic idea of ‘love jihad’ which has led to vigilantism against marriages
between Muslim men and Hindu women.
‘Love Jihad’: How Sangh Parivar Spread a Dangerous, Imaginary Idea
We fail to see the
connecting thread that weaves these episodes together. The thread that connects
them is the ideology of the RSS which makes Hindus believe in Hindu – Hindi
equals Indian – exceptionalism. It promotes an idea that the Hindus are the
first ‘owners’ of this nation.
In his speech, Bhagwat
said, those who have come later or have adopted ways of worship practised
outside India have an additional responsibility to respect the Hindu way, which
is actually Manav Dharma (universal religion). The way he sees
it, it is larger than other religions as what it known as Hinduism is
actually Manav Dharma.
Bhagwat clearly stated
that it is “woh log” (the other side) who keep creating problems. Hindus
generally restrain themselves. This reinforces what the hooligans at every
successive Ground Zero say: I believe that your mosque belongs to me. By
disputing it, you are creating strife. I only make a statement of my faith
while you create a dispute.
And all this is
transparent. The RSS, by professing this idea of Hindu/Indian exceptionalism
and of Muslims descending from Hindu origins, mocks them and demands from them
the acceptance that their original culture is nothing but Hindu. As Bhagwat
says, – and he is right – the RSS is busy cultivating Hindu minds. It is this
act which is the most dangerous thing for other communities and the world at
large.
This mindset is cultivated
in the shakhas, Saraswati Shishu Mandirs, Durga Vahini, Bajrang
Dal, Akhil Bharatiya Vidyarthi Parishad, Sanskar Bharti and scores of such
organisations that come under the Sangh Parivar umbrella. This, as said before,
is a mindset all too ready to trigger or get involved in any act of violence in
pursuit of this Hindu/Indian exceptionalism.
It is this long
“rehearsal” – to use the frame proposed by Paul Brass, who studied the RSS with
more integrity than any other scholar – that takes place under the direction of
the RSS, leading to the acts of violence that we see episodically. Then they
are explained as a reaction to the obstinacy of the Muslims, or to imagined
injustices of the past, which requires these acts to right historical wrongs.
The RSS never adopts any resolution to initiate these acts of violence. It is the actors prepared by it – the vyaktis – who perform these acts. The RSS never takes credit for them either. For instance, has the RSS taken credit for the act of Nathuram Godse? And yet the mindset of Godse the assassin was created in the shakhas and bauddhiks of the RSS. Has the RSS taken credit for the numerous acts of violence against Muslims and Christians? Could such acts have been possible without the vykatis prepared by it?
It would be naive of
us to think that the man who ideologically presides over this factory of hate
would wish for peace. And yet…
https://thewire.in/communalism/when-the-devil-speaks-the-gospel
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