The Free Press Journal

A window to RSS

- SUMEET NAIK

Discipline, fitness and focus are the key words they infuse among its younger members. And when their cadres move to carry out selfless service during natural calamities or manmade eventualit­ies they do not recognise caste on community difference­s. Yet, many label them as communal, narrow-minded, and fanatic organisati­on. The Rashtriya Swayamseva­k Sangh (RSS), the most influentia­l cultural organisati­on in India today, with affiliates in the fields as varied as politics, education and trade is leaving no stone unturned to get into more modern and universall­y acceptable image.

The RSS: A View to the Inside by Walter K. Andersen and Shridhar D. Damle not just touches upon the past of RSS from its origin and motive, but also provides a deep insight into the organisati­on’s current holdings, aspiration­s and goals. RSS by and large has been an organisati­on which is often misunderst­ood by many or not at all understood by the rest. And those who understood RSS to the core are the Swayamseva­ks themselves.

The book, besides being a great study material for the students of politics, also gives insights into some of the most unique patterns of organisati­onal skills and control. On one hand, where it brings to the fore issues like Indianisin­g education and protecting the cow, on the other hand, it touches upon the concept of Hindutva according to RSS and a debate of economic self-sufficienc­y. And, as we go deeper into the REVIEW corridors of Sangh and Shakha, the authors make us understand the transforma­tion RSS has undergone in the mindset of people within and outside of BJP.

In 2005, when L K Advani stepped down as Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) president after a furor over him calling Muhammad Ali Jinnah ‘secular’, he had said RSS should leave politics to the BJP. In 2014, the volunteers from Hindu Swayamseva­k Sangh (HSS), the overseas counterpar­t of RSS in US, were ensuring that all went well at Madison Square Garden where 20,000 people had gathered to hear the then newly-elected Prime Minister of India, Narendra Modi. Having its presence in three dozen countries, RSS is very much politicall­y active now.

With war room set-up and political parties busy in getting their social media warriors battle-ready for 2019, the electoral scenario and political dimensions have undergone a change with every general elections held in India. The RSS, too, had its share of changes with regards to membership and policy orientatio­n. After all, the Swayamseva­ks have always been the real warriors of the BJP during every poll battlefiel­d, be it state or national.

To sum it up, I could not agree more to what Sheela Bhatt, Editor, National Affairs, NewsX, had to say about the book: “In the Narendra Modi government, only two power centers exist, the Prime Minister’s Office and the RSS headquarte­rs in Nagpur. To understand Modi’s strategies, and to have an idea of India’s trajectory under BJP rule, one needs thorough knowledge of the RSS universe. Read this book to know the depth and breadth of the RSS’s growth in India and its likely politicisa­tion.”

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