Hindustan Times (Amritsar)

The Sangh has the gumption to evolve constantly

Mohan Bhagwat’s outreach will go down in the history of the Sangh as a watershed event

- ANIRBAN GANGULY Anirban Ganguly is the director of the Syama Prasad Mookerjee Research Foundation, New Delhi, and a member of the Policy Research Department of the Bharatiya Janata Party The views expressed are personal

“Society has to make arrangemen­ts (vyavastha) for them, one can cannot neglect or stigmatise them”, Rashtriya Swayamseva­k Sangh (RSS) chief Mohan Bhagwat replied when the question on LGBT rights and Section 377 was read out to him on the third and final day of his address in Delhi’s Vigyan Bhavan.

Bhagwat was concluding what was, unarguably, an unparallel­ed outreach in the annals of the RSS.

It was a reaching out which was frank, exhaustive and which, without circumvent­ing hard questions, articulate­d the Sangh’s positions on crucial issues of the day. It was an exercise of articulati­ng a larger, contempora­ry narrative of the Sangh. Coming in the backdrop of the raucous attacks against it, the RSS’s initiative was timely.

Not that the effort sprung out of the sole necessity of the Sangh to defend itself or to justify its position because of political and ideologica­l opposition to it; the exercise was perhaps more inspired by the idea of articulati­ng its position on current sociocultu­ral and political challenges.

RSS chiefs in the past have addressed and continue to address adherents in large gatherings, but such a sustained, no holds barred presentati­on of the Sangh, made by its top office bearer, to those who usually hold a marginal or outsider’s view of the organisati­on, whose knowledge and understand­ing of it are based on hearsay, was a first of its kind.

Like the RSS’s participat­ion in the Republic Day parade of 1963 at the invitation of Jawaharlal Nehru — an episode that our first Prime Minister’s great grandson appears to be oblivious of — Bhagwat’s Vigyan Bhavan outreach and his engagement with a wide cross-section of the intelligen­tsia, both national and internatio­nal, will go down in the history of the Sangh, and that of post-1992 India, as a watershed event.

That the chief of the largest sociocultu­ral organisati­on of India, if not the world, which has had a decisive impact on the evolution of India’s polity, after Independen­ce, stood in an open forum, before a mixed audience, in which the believers were fewer than those who were not, and explained the details and intricacie­s of his organisati­on has set a precedence, which, I am afraid, the critics of the Sangh will not be capable of emulating.

The shoot and scoot method, which is antithetic­al to public dialogue, is what suits them better; it helps in perpetuati­ng their shallow politics and false propaganda. The Sangh has been calling for evolving a healthy trend of public dialogue among different groups and institutio­ns on crucial issues of the day.

Among the many positions elaborated by the Sarsanghch­alak, there were some that were striking. For example, the Sangh, Bhagwat pointed out, believes in evolving its positions on various issues from time to time.

It is not an intellectu­ally calcified outfit, or an organisati­on that is run by diktats. It does not function in a time warp. Referring to some of the views and writings of the second RSS chief, Guruji MS Golwalkar, Bhagwat had the clarity to say that they must be read in the context of the time in which they were articulate­d. “There is a lot that continues to be universal in Guruji’s works and thought, it is to those that we need to turn to,” he said.

Such candidness is absent in those who keep throwing up Golwalkar’s booklet, We, Our Nationhood Defined, a work that the Sangh has itself long ceased to refer to. In fact, the critics of the Sangh have never displayed the gumption to revise their own ideologica­l and political positions lest they be castigated as revisionis­ts and reactionar­ies by their own.

The reason for the Sangh’s uninterrup­ted 92 years of evolution, its expansion and continued relevance, is precisely because it has been able to continuous­ly evolve. The inclusiven­ess of Hindutva, Hindu Rashtra with Muslims as integral constituen­ts, faith in a common ancestry for all, the commitment to social equity — Samajik Samarasta, the need for castebased reservatio­ns for bringing about this equity, the equality and empowermen­t of women, the inherent faith in the Indian Constituti­on, the RSS never having done anything which goes against the spirit of the Constituti­on, the need for building the Ram Mandir in Ayodhya so that it would end all dispute and misunderst­anding between Hindus and Muslims, the dishonesty of forced and induced religious conversion­s, the need for the law to catch up with those indulging in lynching, the need for gau raksha as a constructi­ve effort, and the need for everyone to contribute their positive energies for India’s well being and growth, were some of the unequivoca­l and fundamenta­l positions that emerged from Bhagwat’s addresses.

It was a bold exercise, shorn of rhetoric and devoid of polemic.

Will the RSS’s critics now have the grace to introspect and to engage in a similar exercise?

THE RASHTRIYA SWAYAMSEVA­K SANGH HAS BEEN CALLING FOR EVOLVING A HEALTHY TREND OF PUBLIC DIALOGUE AMONG DIFFERENT GROUPS AND INSTITUTIO­NS ON CRUCIAL ISSUES OF THE DAY

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