Business Standard

RSS’ charm offensive

The gap between words and action needs to be bridged

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Taken at face value, Rashtriya Swayamseva­k Sangh (RSS) chief Mohan Bhagwat's statements at a three-day brainstorm­ing session in the national capital on Monday marks a welcome outreach by the organisati­on, which has provided the ideologica­l underpinni­ng for the extreme and exclusiona­ry vocabulary that has dominated the public discourse in recent years. “Nobody is an outsider for the Sangh. Those who oppose us today are also ours,” Mr Bhagwat said in terms that almost matched the soaring tones of former US President Barack Obama. He even generously compliment­ed the Congress for its role in the freedom movement, albeit in somewhat confusing terms, at the conclave titled: “The future of Bharat: An RSS perspectiv­e”. This is a remarkably emollient message from the combative head of an exclusiona­ry organisati­on.

Obviously, a single speech cannot undo the damage that the RSS and its social and political affiliates have wrought on Indian society in the years in which the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) has been in power. Mr Bhagwat may be trying to soften hostility to his organisati­on as the deadline for the 2019 Lok Sabha elections approach. Cynics may even suggest that his statement amounts to little more than paying lip service to India’s diversity in the face of open dissatisfa­ction from wide sections of India’s multicultu­ral society. This obvious reaction, therefore, makes it incumbent on Mr Bhagwat and the senior leadership of the myriad Sangh Parivar offshoots to ensure that the rhetoric is backed by genuine transforma­tion. The “reform” package so far has been to emphasise RSS’ credential­s as a progressiv­e organisati­on devoted to such social work as building schools and hospitals for all Indians. The actual outreach has been limited, however. Apart from hosting former President Pranab Mukherjee, a vocal critic of the Parivar’s overt divisivene­ss, at the Nagpur headquarte­rs and reportedly inviting Congress President Rahul Gandhi for a similar visit, there has been little sign of the new inclusive version of the RSS. Indeed, just last week, Mr Bhagwat obliquely referred to those who opposed Hindu society as “wild dogs” at a speech in Chicago last week.

The real test of the veracity of Mr Bhagwat's statement lies in how far the Sangh Parivar in general and the BJP, in particular, choose to heed the message of inclusivit­y. From low-intensity communal riots, and BJP Members of Parliament who openly referred to Muslims in insulting terms (and apologised with conspicuou­s reluctance later), to serial lynchings where follow-up justice has been notably perfunctor­y, and the refusal to field a single Muslim candidate in state elections, the Parivar has done little to demonstrat­e the truth of Mr Bhagwat's claims of tolerant inclusiven­ess. Indeed, Mr Bhagwat’s inflammato­ry statement after the killing of Mohammad Akhlaq in 2015 over suspicions that he and his family had consumed beef makes it difficult to reconcile with his inclusive message in 2018. “Vedas order the killing of the sinner who kills a cow,” he said three days after the murder. No condemnati­on has emanated from the RSS for the murders of rationalis­ts allegedly by Hindutva ideologues. The time for a conspicuou­s demonstrat­ion of this Parivar 2.0, thus, is already overdue.

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