Hindustan Times ST (Jaipur)

RSS chief looks to consolidat­e Hindu votes

- Smriti Kak Ramachandr­an smriti.kak@hindustant­ims.com

Rashtriya Swayamseva­k Sangh (RSS) chief Mohan Bhagwat is leading the Sangh’s outreach to cement caste fault lines that it believes divide Hindus and can impact the outcome of the 2019 general election.

The danger that caste fissures pose to a consolidat­ed Hindu vote bank has been a key concern for the Sangh.

In February, Bhagwat spent 10 days travelling to Bihar and spent a week in Uttar Pradesh — two populous states where caste fissures run deep and caste arithmetic shapes political outcome — to reiterate the need for a monolithic Hindu entity. The RSS chief, who addressed the largesteve­r congregati­on of its cadre in UP’s Meerut on Sunday has been unequivoca­l in exhorting Hindus to overcome the difference­s of caste. “Hindus should be united. Divisions in society over caste and violence over the issue are the biggest hurdles in achieving this unity and there are forces that take advantage of it,” he said.

Samajik samarasta (social harmony) has been the mainstay of Bhagwat’s speeches, but the renewed push for consolidat­ion of Hindus stems from concern over emergence of political entities such as Jignesh Mevani after the attack on a Dalit family in Una and the rise of the Bhim Army, following the clash between Dalits and Rajputs in UP’s Saharanpur. The RSS believes these groups are covertly supported by the “ultra Left”.

The RSS chief has also reached out to different segments that have felt the heat of the government’s economic policies such as farmers and small and medium enterprise owners in a bid to stem disenchant­ment with the BJP-led NDA. “Samajik Samarasta initiative­s that include celebratin­g festivals in Dalit households, appointmen­t of Dalits and OBC priests in temples, and pushing for common temples, crematoriu­ms and wells in villages, have been going on for years. Some headway was achieved, but there is a concerted move by political parties and the ultra Left who followed the policy of appeasemen­t to stoke unrest among communitie­s,” a senior Sangh functionar­y in Uttar Pradesh said.

RSS spokespers­on Manmohan Vaidya, however, said Bhagwat’s visits are planned a year in advance and with a purpose to allow him to meet functionar­ies on the ground. But on the ground, these visits have relayed a sense of concern within the Sangh over the possibilit­y of caste groupings that could impact BJP’s performanc­e at the hustings.

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