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Hindu nationalism

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Nationalism based on Hindu religion
This article is about various Hindu nationalist mobilisations in the last two centuries. For present day Hindu nationalism, seeHindutva.

Bhagwa Dhwaj, or the saffron flag, is widely used as the symbol of Hindu nationalism.
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Nationalism

Hindu nationalism has been collectively referred to as the expression of political thought, based on the native social and cultural traditions of theIndian subcontinent. "Hindu nationalism" is a simplistic translation ofHindū Rāṣṭravāda. It is better described as "Hindu polity".[1]

The native thought streams became highly relevant in Indian history when they helped form a distinctive identity about the Indian polity[2] and provided a basis for questioning colonialism.[3] These also inspiredIndian nationalists during theindependence movement based on armed struggle,[4] coercive politics,[5] and non-violent protests.[6] They also influenced social reform movements and economic thinking in India.[5]

Today,Hindutva (meaning 'Hinduness') is a dominant form of Hindunationalist politics in India. As a political ideology, the term Hindutva was articulated byVinayak Damodar Savarkar in 1923.[7] The Hindutva movement has been described as a variant of "right-wing extremism"[8] and as "almostfascist in the classical sense", adhering to a concept of homogenised majority andcultural hegemony.[9] Some analysts dispute the "fascist" label, and suggest Hindutva is an extreme form of "conservatism" or "ethnic absolutism".[10] Some have also described Hindutva as aseparatist ideology.[11][12] Hindutva is championed by the rulingBharatiya Janata Party (BJP), the Hindutvaparamilitary organisationRashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh (RSS), theSanatan Sanstha,[7] theVishva Hindu Parishad (VHP), and other organisations in an ecosystem called theSangh Parivar.[13]

Evolution of ideological terminology and influences

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In the first half of the 20th century, factions ofIndian National Congress continued to be identified with "Hindu politics" and ideas of a Hindu nation.[14][page needed]The word "Hindu", throughout history, had been used as an inclusive description that lacked a definition and was used to refer to the native traditions and people of India. It was only in the late 18th century that the word "Hindu" came to be used extensively with religious connotation, while still being used as asynecdoche describing the indigenous traditions. Hindu nationalist ideologies and political languages were very diverse both linguistically and socially. Since Hinduism does not represent an identifiable religious group, terms such as 'Hindu nationalism', and 'Hindu', are considered problematic in the case of religious and nationalism discourse. As Hindus were identifiable as a homogeneous community, some individual Congress leaders were able to induce a symbolism with "Hindu" meaning inside the general stance ofsecular nationalism.[14][15]

The diversity of Indian cultural groups and moderate positions of Hindu nationalism have sometimes made it regarded ascultural nationalism rather than a religious one.[16]

Shivaji and his conquests are said to have served basis for Hindu nationalism.[17][18][19] Hindutva creatorVinayak Damodar Savarkar writes that Shivaji had 'electrified' minds of the Hindus all over India by defeating the forces of the Mughals.[20]

Nepali Hindu nationalism and practices

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Hinduisation policy of the Gorkhali monarch

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MaharajadhirajaPrithvi Narayan Shah (1723–1775),King of Nepal, propagated the ideals of the Hindu text Dharmashastra as the ruling ideology.

MaharajadhirajaPrithvi Narayan Shah proclaimed the newly unifiedKingdom of Nepal asAsalHindustan ("Real Land of Hindus") because North India was ruled by theIslamicMughal rulers. The proclamation was made to enforce the Hindu social codeDharmaśāstra over his reign and refer to his country as being inhabitable forHindus. He also referred to the rest of Northern India asMughlan (Country ofMughals) and called the region infiltrated by Muslim foreigners.[21] After theGorkhali conquest of theKathmandu valley, King Prithvi Narayan Shah expelled ChristianCapuchin missionaries fromPatan and renamed Nepal asAsaliHindustan (the real land ofHindus).[22][full citation needed] TheTagadharis enjoyed a privileged status in the Nepalese capital and they were also given greater access to the authorities after these events.[23][24] Subsequently, Hinduisation became the main policy of theKingdom of Nepal.[22][full citation needed] Prof.Harka Gurung speculates that the presence of IslamicMughal rule and ChristianBritish rule in India compelled the foundation of Hindu Nationalism in theKingdom of Nepal, to build a haven for Hindus there.[22][full citation needed]

Ideals of the Bharadari government

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The policies of the old Bharadari governments of the Gorkha Kingdom were derived from ancientHindu texts such as theDharmashastra[25] The King was considered an incarnation of LordVishnu and was the chief authority over legislative, judiciary and executive functions.[25] The judiciary functions were decided based on the principles of Hindu Dharma codes of conduct.[25] The king had full rights to expel any person who offended the country and also to pardon the offenders and grant their return to the country.[25] The government in practicality was not anabsolute monarchy due to the dominance ofNepalese political clans such as thePande family and theThapa family, making theShah monarch a puppet ruler.[25] These basic Hindu templates provide the evidence that Nepal was administered as aHindu state.

Hindu civil code and legal regulations

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Jung Bahadur Kunwar Rana commissioned the first civil codeMuluki Ain in 1854 AD based on traditional Hindu law and prioritisedTagadhari castes before Matwalis and Dalits.

The Nepalicivil code,Muluki Ain, was commissioned byJung Bahadur Rana after his European tour and enacted in 1854. It was rooted in traditionalHindu Law and codified social practices for several centuries in Nepal.[26] The law also comprisedPrāyaścitta (avoidance and removal of sin) andĀcāra (the customary law of different communities). It was an attempt to include the entire Hindu as well as the non-Hindu population of Nepal of that time into a single hierarchic civic code from the perspective of theKhas rulers.[27][28] The Nepalesejati arrangement in terms ofHindu Varnashrama takes the Tagadhari to be the highest in the hierarchy.[29] The ethnolinguistic group of people ofTamang,Sherpa andTharu origin were tagged under the titleMatwali ("Liquor Drinkers"), while those ofKhas,Newari andTerai origin were termedTagadhari ("Wearers of the Sacred Thread").[29] The Tagadhari castes could not be enslaved following any criminal punishment unless they had been expelled from the caste.[30] The main broad caste categories in Nepal areTagadharis (sacred thread bearers),Matwalis (liquor drinkers) andDalits (or untouchables).[31][32][33]

Modern age and the Hindu Renaissance in the 19th century

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Main articles:Hindu reform movements andBengal Renaissance

ManyHindu reform movements originated in the nineteenth century. These movements led to fresh interpretations of the ancient scriptures of Upanishads andVedanta and also emphasised on social reform.[5] The marked feature of these movements was that they countered the notion of the superiority ofWestern culture during the colonial era. This led to the upsurge of patriotic ideas that formed the cultural and ideological basis for theindependence movement in Colonial India.[3]

Brahmo Samaj

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TheBrahmo Samaj was started by a Bengali scholar,Ram Mohan Roy in 1828. Ram Mohan Roy endeavoured to create from the ancientUpanishadic texts, a vision of rationalist 'modern' India. Socially, he criticised the ongoing superstitions,[34] and believed in a monotheistic Vedic religion. His major emphasis was social reform. He fought againstCaste discrimination and advocatedequal rights for women.[35] Although the Brahmos found favourable responses from theBritish government and Westernised Indians, they were largely isolated from the larger Hindu society due to their intellectual Vedantic and Unitarian views. However their efforts to systematise Hindu spirituality based on rational and logical interpretation of the ancient Indian texts would be carried forward by other movements in Bengal and across India.[3]

Arya Samaj

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Maharishi Dayananda Saraswati, founder of theArya Samaj, on a 1962 stamp of India

Arya Samaj is considered one of the overarching Hindu renaissance movements of the late nineteenth century.Swami Dayananda, the founder of Arya Samaj, rejected idolatry, caste restriction and untouchability, child marriage and advocated equal status and opportunities for women. He opposed "Brahmanism" (which he believed had led to the corruption of the knowledge of Vedas) as much as he opposed Christianity and Islam.[5] Although Arya Samaj was often considered as a social movement, many revolutionaries and political leaders of theIndian Independence movement likeRamprasad Bismil,[36]Bhagat Singh,Shyamji Krishnavarma,Bhai Paramanand andLala Lajpat Rai were inspired by it.[37]

Swami Vivekananda

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Swami Vivekananda on the Platform of theParliament of the World's Religions

Another 19th-century Hindu reformer wasSwami Vivekananda. Vivekananda as a student was educated in contemporaryWestern thought.[3] He joined Brahmo Samaj briefly before meetingRamakrishna, who was a priest in the temple of the goddessKali in Calcutta and who was to become his guru.[3] Under the influence ofOrientalism,Perennialism andUniversalism, Vivekananda re-interpretedAdvaita Vedanta, presenting it as the essence of Hindu spirituality, and the development of human's religiosity.[38] This project started withRam Mohan Roy of Brahmo Samaj, who collaborated with theUnitarian Church, and propagated a strict monotheism.[38] This reinterpretation producedneo-Vedanta, in which Advaita Vedanta was combined with disciplines such asyoga and the concept of social service[38] to attain perfection from the ascetic traditions in what Vivekananda called the "practical Vedanta". The practical side essentially included participation in social reform.[3]

He made Hindu spirituality, intellectually available to the Westernised audience. His famous speech in theParliament of the World's Religions at Chicago on 11 September 1893, followed a huge reception of his thought in the West and made him a well-known figure in the West and subsequently in India too.[3] His influence can still be recognised in popular Westernspirituality, such asnondualism,New Age and the veneration ofRamana Maharshi.

A major element of Vivekananda's message was nationalism. He saw his effort very much in terms of a revitalisation of the Hindu nation, which carried Hindu spirituality and which could counter Western materialism. The notions of the superiority ofWestern culture against theculture of India, were to be questioned based on Hindu spirituality. It also became a main inspiration for Hindu nationalism today.[3] "Vivekananda is like Gita for the RSS" was the lifelong pet sentence of one of the most revered leaders of theRashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh (RSS),Babasaheb Apte. Some historians have observed that this helped the nascent Independence movement with a distinct national identity and kept it from being the simple derivative function of European nationalism.[2]

Shaping of Hindu polity and nationalism in the 20th century

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Sri Aurobindo

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Sri Aurobindo was an Indian philosopher,yogi,guru, poet, and nationalist.

Sri Aurobindo was a nationalist and one of the first to embrace the idea of complete political independence for India. He was inspired by the writings of Swami Vivekananda and the novels ofBankim Chandra Chattopadhyay.[39] He "based his claim for freedom for India on the inherent right to freedom, not on any charge of misgovernment or oppression". He believed that the primary requisite for national progress, national reform, is the free habit of free and healthy national thought and action and that it was impossible in a state of servitude.[40] He was part of theAnushilan Samiti, a revolutionary group working towards the goal of Indian independence[41] In his brief political career spanning only four years, he led a delegation from Bengal to theIndian National Congress session of 1907[40] and contributed to the revolutionary newspaperBande Mataram.

In his famousUttarpara Speech, he outlined the essence and the goal of India's nationalist movement thus:

I say no longer that nationalism is a creed, a religion, a faith; I say that it is the Sanatan Dharma which for us is nationalism. This Hindu nation was born with the Sanatan Dharma, with it, it moves and with it, it grows. When the Sanatan Dharma declines, then the nation declines, and if the Sanatan Dharma were capable of perishing, with the Sanatan Dharma it would perish.

In the same speech, he also gave a comprehensive perspective of Hinduism, which is at variance with the geocentric view developed by the later day Hindu nationalist ideologues such as Veer Savarkar and Deendayal Upadhyay:

But what is the Hindu religion? What is this religion which we call Sanatan, eternal? It is the Hindu religion only because the Hindu nation has kept it, after all, in this Peninsula it grew up in the seclusion of the sea and the Himalayas, because in this sacred and ancient land it was given as a charge to the Aryan race to preserve through the ages.But it is not circumscribed by the confines of a single country, it does not belong peculiarly and forever to a bounded part of the world. That which we call the Hindu religion is the eternal religion, because it is the universal religion which embraces all others. If a religion is not universal, it cannot be eternal. A narrow religion, a sectarian religion, an exclusive religion can live only for a limited time and a limited purpose. This is the one religion that can triumph over materialism by including and anticipating the discoveries of science and the speculations of philosophy.

In 1910, he withdrew from political life and spent his remaining life doing spiritual exercises and writing.[39] But his works kept inspiring revolutionaries and struggles for independence, including the famousChittagong Uprising.[42] Both Swami Vivekananda and Sri Aurobindo are credited with having founded the basis for a vision of freedom and glory for India in the spirituality and heritage of Hinduism.

Independence movement

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In 1924,Mahatma Gandhi wrote:

This [Christian] proselytization will mean no peace in the world. Conversions are harmful to India. If I had the power and could legislate I should certainly stop all proselytizing ... It pains me to have to say that the Christian missionaries as a body, with honorable exceptions, have actively supported a system which has impoverished, enervated and demoralized a people considered to be among the gentlest and most civilized on earth.[43][44]

The influence of the Hindu renaissance movements was such that by the turn of the 20th century, there was a confluence of ideas of Hindu cultural nationalism with the ideas ofIndian nationalism.[5] Both could be spoken synonymously even by tendencies that were seemingly opposed to sectarian communalism and Hindu majoritism.[5] The Hindu renaissance movements held considerable influence over the revolutionary movements against British rule and formed the philosophical basis for the struggles and political movements that originated in the first decade of the twentieth century.

Revolutionary movements

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Anushilan Samiti and Jugantar

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Anushilan Samiti was one of the prominent revolutionary movements in India in the early part of the twentieth century. It was started as a cultural society in 1902, by Aurobindo and the followers of Bankim Chandra to propagate the teachings of theBhagavad Gita. But soon the Samiti had its goal to overthrow British colonial rule in India[4] Various branches of the Samiti sprung across India in the guise of suburban fitness clubs but secretly imparted arms training to its members with the implicit aim of using them against the British colonial administration.[45]

On 30 April 1908 atMuzaffarpur, two revolutionaries,Khudiram Bose and Prafulla Chaki, threw bombs at a British convoy aimed at British officer Kingsford. Both were arrested trying to flee. Aurobindo was also arrested on 2 May 1908 and sent toAlipore Jail. The report sent fromAndrew Fraser, the then Lt Governor of Bengal to Lord Minto in England declared that although Sri Aurobindo came to Calcutta in 1906 as a Professor at the National College, "he has ever since been the principal advisor of the revolutionary party. It is of utmost importance to arrest his potential for mischief, for he is the prime mover and can easily set tools, one to replace another". But charges against Aurobindo were never proved and he was acquitted. Many members of the group faced charges and were transported and imprisoned for life. Others went into hiding.[46]

In 1910, when, Aurobindo withdrew from political life and decided to live a life of renounciate,[39] theAnushilan Samiti declined. One of the revolutionaries,Bagha Jatin, who managed to escape the trial started a group which would be calledJugantar. Jugantar continued with its armed struggle against the colonial government, but the arrests of its key members and subsequent trials weakened its influence. Many of its members were imprisoned for life in the notorious Andaman Cellular jail.[46]

India House

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A revolutionary movement was started byShyamji Krishnavarma, a Sanskritist and an Arya Samajist, in London, under the name ofIndia House in 1905. The brain behind this movement was said to beVinayak Damodar Savarkar. Krishnaverma also published a monthly "Indian Sociologist", where the idea of an armed struggle against the British colonial government was openly espoused.[47] The movement had become well known for its activities in the Indian expatriates in London. When Gandhi visited London in 1909, he shared a platform with the revolutionaries where both the parties politely agreed to disagree, on the question of adopting a violent struggle and whetherRamayana justified such violence. Gandhi, while admiring the "patriotism" of the young revolutionaries, had "dissented vociferously" from their "violent blueprints" for social change. In turn, the revolutionaries disliked his adherence toconstitutionalism and his close contacts with moderate leaders of the Indian National Congress. Moreover, they considered his method of "passive resistance" effeminate and humiliating.[48]

The India House was soon to face closure following the assassination ofWilliam Hutt Curzon Wyllie by the revolutionaryMadan Lal Dhingra, who was close toIndia House.Savarkar also faced charges and was transported.Shyamji Krishna Varma fled to Paris.[47] India House gave formative support to ideas that were later formulated by Savarkar in his book named 'Hindutva'. Hindutva was to gain relevance in the run-up to the Indian Independence and form the core ideology of the political partyHindu Mahasabha, of which Savarkar became president in 1937. It also formed the key ideology, under the euphemistic relabellingRashtriyatva (nationalism), for theRashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh founded in 1925,[49] and of theBharatiya Jana Sangh (the present-day rulingBharatiya Janata Party) under another euphemistic relabellingBharatiyata (Indianness).[50]

Indian National Congress

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Lal-Bal-Pal

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A rare photograph ofLala Lajpat Rai ofPunjab,Bal Gangadhar Tilak ofMaharashtra, andBipin Chandra Pal ofBengal. The triumvirate was popularly known asLal Bal Pal, who changed the political discourse of the Indian independence movement.

"Lal-Bal-Pal" is the phrase that is used to refer to the three nationalist leaders Lala Lajpat Rai,Bal Gangadhar Tilak andBipin Chandra Pal who held sway over the Indian Nationalist movement and the independence struggle in the early parts of twentieth century.

Lala Lajpat Rai belonged to the northern province of Punjab. He was influenced greatly by the Arya Samaj and was part of the Hindu reform movement.[5] He joined theIndian National Congress in 1888 and became a prominent figure in the Indian Independence Movement.[51] He started numerous educational institutions. The National College atLahore started by him became the centre for revolutionary ideas and was the college where revolutionaries likeBhagat Singh studied.[52] While leading a procession against theSimon Commission, he was fatally injured in thelathi charge. His death led revolutionaries likeChandrashekar Azad and Bhagat Singh to assassinate the British police officerJ. P. Saunders, who they believed was responsible for the death of Lala Lajpat Rai.[51]

Bal Gangadhar Tilak was a nationalist leader from the Central Indian province of Maharashtra. He has been widely acclaimed the "Father of Indian unrest" who used the press and Hindu occasions likeGanesh Chaturthi and symbols like the Cow to create unrest against the British administration in India.[53] Tilak joined the Indian National Congress in 1890. Under the influence of such leaders, the political discourse of the Congress moved from the polite accusation that colonial rule was "un-British" to the forthright claim of Tilak that "Swaraj is my birthright and I will have it".[54]

Bipin Chandra Pal of Bengal was another prominent figure of the Indian nationalist movement, who is considered a modern Hindu reformer, who stood for Hindu cultural nationalism and was opposed to sectarian communalism and Hindu majoritism.[5] He joined theIndian National Congress in 1886 and was also one of the key members of the revolutionaryIndia House.[55]

Gandhi and Rāmarājya

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Mahatma Gandhi never called himself a Hindu nationalist, but preached HinduDharma and concept of "Rama Rajya".

ThoughMahatma Gandhi never called himself a "Hindu nationalist"; he believed in and propagated concepts likeDharma and introduced the concept of the "Rāma Rājya" (Rule ofLord Rāma) as part of his social and political philosophy.[56] Gandhi said "By political independence I do not mean an imitation to theBritish House of Commons, or thesoviet rule of Russia or theFascist rule of Italy or theNazi rule of Germany. They have systems suited to their genius. We must have ours suited to ours. What that can be is more than I can tell. I have described it as Ramarajya i.e., sovereignty of the people based on pure moral authority."[57]

Gandhi emphasised that "Rāma Rājya" to him meant peace and justice, adding that "the ancient ideal of Ramarajya is undoubtedly one of true democracy in which the meanest citizen could be sure of swift justice without an elaborate and costly procedure".[58] He also emphasised that it meant respect for all religions: "My Hinduism teaches me to respect all religions. In this lies the secret of Ramarajya".[59]

While Gandhi had clarified that "by Ram Rajya I do not mean Hindu Raj. I mean by Ram Rajya, Divine Raj, the kingdom of God," his concept of "Rama Rajya" became a major concept in Hindu nationalism.[60][61]

Madan Mohan Malviya

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Madan Mohan Malviya, an educationist and a politician with theIndian National Congress was also a vociferous proponent of the philosophy ofBhagavad Gita (Bhagavad Gītā). He was the president of theIndian National Congress in the year 1909 and 1918.[6] He was seen as a 'moderate' in the Congress and was also considered very close to Gandhi. He popularised the Sanskrit phrase "Satyameva Jayate" (Truth alone triumphs), from theMundaka Upanishad, which today is the national motto of the Republic of India.[62] He founded theBenaras Hindu University in 1919 and became its first Vice-Chancellor.[63]

Keshav Baliram Hedgewar

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Keshav Baliram Hedgewar, the foundingSarsanghachalak (or "Supreme Executive"[64]) of theRashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh

Another leader of prime importance in the ascent of Hindu nationalism wasKeshav Baliram Hedgewar ofNagpur. Hedgewar as a medical student in Calcutta had been part of the revolutionary activities of the Hindu Mahasabha, Anushilan Samiti and Jugantar.[65] He was charged with sedition in 1921 by the British Administration and served a year in prison. He was briefly a member of the Indian National Congress.[65] In 1925, he left the Congress to form theRashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh (RSS) with the help of Hindu Mahasabha LeaderB. S. Moonje, Bapuji Soni, Gatate Ji etc., which would become the focal point of Hindu movements in Independent India.[66] The Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh started by him became one of the most prominent Hindu organisation with its influence ranging in the social and political spheres of India.

In 1930, when Mahatma Gandhi startedSatyagraha movement against the British Government, Hedgewar participated in the movement in his capacity and did not let the RSS join the freedom movement officially.[67] The RSS portrayed itself as a social movement rather than a political party, and did not play a central role in any of theIndian independence movement.[68][69] However, the RSS emphatically rejected the Congress policy of cooperation with the Muslims.[68] Subsequently, in 1934, the Congress banned its members from joining RSS, Hindu Mahasabha or Muslim League.[69]

After the death of Hedgewar in 1940,M. S. Golwalkar became head of the organisation. RSS continued to avoid participation in anti-British activities, as Golwalkar did not want to give the British colonial administration any excuse to ban the RSS.[70]: 60  After the Muslim League passed theLahore Resolution demanding a separate Pakistan, the RSS campaigned for a Hindu nation, but stayed away from the independence struggle. When the British colonial government banned military drills and the use of uniforms in non-official organisations, Golwalkar terminated the RSS military department.[70]: 60  RSS had played no role in theQuit India Movement[71] nor thenaval revolt.[66][72]

Post-independence

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See also:Partition of India

After theassassination of Mahatma Gandhi byNathuram Godse, the Sangh Parivar was plunged into distress when the RSS was accused of involvement in his murder. Along with the conspirators and the assassin,Vinayak Damodar Savarkar was also arrested. The court acquitted Savarkar, and the RSS was found be to completely unlinked with the conspirators.[73] TheHindu Mahasabha, of which Godse was a member, lost membership and popularity. The effects of public outrage had a permanent effect on the Hindu Mahasabha.

Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh

[edit]
Main article:Sangh Parivar

The Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh, which was started in 1925, had grown by the end of British rule in India.[73] In January 1948,Mahatma Gandhi was assassinated byNathuram Godse, a former member of the RSS.[74][75] Following the assassination, many prominent leaders of the RSS were arrested, and the RSS as an organisation was banned on 4 February 1948 by the then Home Minister Patel. During the court proceedings in relation to the assassination Godse began claiming that he had left the organisation in 1946.[76] The then Indian Deputy Prime Minister and Home Minister, Vallabhbhai Patel had remarked that the "RSS men expressed joy and distributed sweets after Gandhi's death".[77]

The charged RSS leaders were acquitted of the conspiracy charge by theSupreme Court of India. Following his release in August 1948, Golwalkar wrote to Prime Minister Jawaharlal Nehru to lift the ban on RSS. After Nehru replied that the matter was the responsibility of the Home Minister, Golwalkar consulted Vallabhai Patel regarding the same. Patel then demanded an absolute pre-condition that the RSS adopt a formal written constitution[78] and make it public, where Patel expected RSS to pledge its loyalty to theConstitution of India, accept the Tricolor as theNational Flag of India, define the power of the head of the organisation, make the organisation democratic by holding internal elections, authorisation of their parents before enrolling the pre-adolescents into the movement, and to renounce violence and secrecy.[79][80][70]: 28 

Golwalkar launched an agitation against this demand during which he was imprisoned again. Later, a constitution was drafted for RSS, which, however, initially did not meet any of Patel's demands. After a failed attempt to agitate again, eventually the RSS's constitution was amended according to Patel's wishes except the procedure for selecting the head of the organisation and the enrolment of pre-adolescents. However, the organisation's internal democracy which was written into its constitution, remained a 'dead letter'.[81]

On 11 July 1949, the Government of India lifted the ban on the RSS by issuing a communique stating that the decision to lift the ban on the RSS had been taken in view of the RSS leader Golwalkar's undertaking to make the group's loyalty towards the Constitution of India and acceptance and respect towards the National Flag of India more explicit in the Constitution of the RSS, which was to be worked out in a democratically.[82][70]: 60 

After the ban was revoked RSS resumed its activities.[73] The 1960s saw the volunteers of the RSS join the different social and political movements. Movements that saw a large presence of volunteers included theBhoodan, a land reform movement led by prominent GandhianVinoba Bhave[83] and theSarvodaya led by another GandhianJayaprakash Narayan.[84] RSS supported trade union, theBharatiya Mazdoor Sangh and political partyBharatiya Jana Sangh also grew into considerable prominence by the end of the decade.

Another prominent development was the formation of theVishwa Hindu Parishad (VHP), an organisation of Hindu religious leaders, supported by the RSS, to unite the various Hindu religious denominations and to usher a social reform. The first VHP meeting in Mumbai was attended among others by all the Shankaracharyas, Jain leaders, Sikh leader MasterTara Singh Malhotra, theDalai Lama and contemporary Hindu leaders likeSwami Chinmayananda. From its initial years, the VHP led a concerted attack on the social evils of untouchability and casteism while launching social welfare programmes in the areas of education and health care, especially for the Scheduled Castes, backward classes, and the tribals.[85]

The organisations started and supported by the RSS volunteers came to be known collectively as theSangh Parivar. The next few decades saw a steady growth of the influence of the Sangh Parivar in the social and political space of India.[85]

Ayodhya dispute

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Main article:Ayodhya dispute

TheAyodhya dispute (Hindi:अयोध्या विवाद) is a political, historical and socio-religious debate inIndia, centred on a plot of land in the city ofAyodhya, located inAyodhya district,Uttar Pradesh. The main issues revolve around access to a site traditionally regarded as the birthplace of theHindu deityRama, the history and location of theBabri Mosque at the site, and whether a previous Hindu temple was demolished or modified to create the mosque.

Sexual and gender minorities

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Contrary to the lean of conservative parties in the western world, the BJP has been supported by sexual minorities such as women and transgenders[86][87] The party was influential in sponsoring a serious of agitations in support of women and protests against the rape and murder of a woman doctor, a movement that has been called "reclaim the night".[88][89]

Hindutva and Hindu Rashtra

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Main article:Hindutva
For other uses, seeHindu Rashtra.

Sarkar

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Main article:Benoy Kumar Sarkar

ProfessorBenoy Kumar Sarkar coined the term Hindu Rastra. In his book namedBuilding of Hindu Rastra (হিন্দু রাস্ট্রের গড়ন) presented the idea of structural of Hindu state and directives for the socio-economic and political system of the Hindu state. He is deemed the pioneer ideologue of Hindu Rashtra. Many people identify his philosophy as 'Sarkarism'.

His writings on this subject amounted to nearly 30,000 pages.[90] A complete list of his publications is contained in Bandyopadhyay's bookThe Political Ideas of Benoy Kumar Sarkar.[91]

  • 1914/1921The Positive Background of Hindu Sociology[92]
  • 1916The beginning of Hindu culture as world-power (A.D. 300-600)[93]
  • 1916Chinese Religion Through Hindu Eyes[94]
  • 1918Hindu achievements in exact science a study in the history of scientific development[95]

In 1919, he authored a study in theAmerican Political Science Review presenting a "Hindutheory of international relations" which drew on thinkers such as Kautilya, Manu and Shookra, and the text of the Mahabharata.[96][97] In 1921, he authored aPolitical Science Quarterly study presenting a "Hindu Theory of the State."[97] According to Barry Buzan and Amitav Acharya, Sarkar's works "may be the first major IR contributions by an Indian, and one of the first modern efforts to develop an indigenous Non-Western theory of IR."[97]

Savarkar

[edit]
Main article:Vinayak Damodar Savarkar
Veer Savarkar, formulator of theHindutva philosophy, on a 1970 stamp of India

Savarkar was one of the first in the twentieth century to attempt a definitive description of the term "Hindu" in terms of what he calledHindutva meaning Hinduness.[98] The coinage of the term "Hindutva" was an attempt by Savarkar who was non religious and a rationalist[according to whom?], to de-link it from any religious connotations that had become attached to it. He defined the word Hindu as: "He who considers India as both his Fatherland and Holyland". He thus defined Hindutva ("Hindu-ness") or Hindu as different from Hinduism.[98] This definition kept theAbrahamic religions (Judaism, Christianity and Islam) outside its ambit and considered onlynative religious denominations as Hindu.[99]

This distinction was emphasised on the basis of territorial loyalty rather than on religious practices. In this book which was written in the backdrop of theKhilafat Movement and the subsequentMalabar rebellion, Savarkar wrote "Their [Muslims' and Christians'] holy land is far off in Arabia or Palestine. Their mythology and Godmen, ideas and heroes are not the children of this soil. Consequently, their names and their outlook smack of foreign origin. Their love is divided".[98]

Savarkar had made it clear that Hindutva is not the same thing as Hinduism and it does not concern religion or rituals but the basis of India’s national character.[7]

Savarkar also defined the concept of Hindu Rashtra (transl. Hindu Polity).[100] The concept of Hindu Polity called for the protection of Hindu people and their culture and emphasised that political and economic systems should be based on native thought rather than on the concepts borrowed from the West.

Mukherjee

[edit]
Main article:Syama Prasad Mukherjee
Syama Prasad Mukherjee, who founded the Hindu nationalistBharatiya Jana Sangh, on a 1978 stamp of India

Mookerjee was the founder of the NationalistBharatiya Jana Sangh party, the precursor of theBharatiya Janata Party. Mookerjee was firmly against Nehru's invitation to the Pakistani PM, and their joint pact to establish minority commissions and guarantee minority rights in both countries. He wanted to hold Pakistan directly responsible for the terrible influx of millions of Hindu refugees fromEast Pakistan, who had left the state fearing religious suppression and violence aided by the state.

After consultation with Golwalkar of RSS, Mookerjee founded Bharatiya Jana Sangh on 21 October 1951 at Delhi and he became the first President of it. The BJS was ideologically close to theRashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh and widely considered the political arm ofHindu Nationalism. It was opposed to appeasement of India's Muslims. The BJS also favored auniform civil code governing personal law matters for both Hindus and Muslims, wanted to ban cow slaughter and end the special status given to the Muslim-majority state ofJammu and Kashmir. The BJS founded theHindutva agenda which became the wider political expression of India's Hindu majority.

Mookerjee opposed theIndian National Congress's decision to grantKashmir a special status with its own flag and Prime Minister. According to Congress's decision, no one, including thePresident of India could enter intoKashmir without the permission of Kashmir'sPrime Minister. In opposition to this decision, he entered Kashmir on 11 May 1953. Thereafter, he was arrested and jailed in a dilapidated house.[101] Syama Prasad had suffered from dry pleurisy and coronary troubles, and was taken to hospital one and a half months after his arrest due to complications arising from the same.[citation needed] He was administered penicillin despite having informed the doctor-in-charge of his allergy to penicillin, and he died on 23 June 1953. Mookherjee's death later compelled Nehru to remove the Permit system, the post ofSadar-e-Riayasat and of Prime Minister of Jammu & Kashmir.[102]

Though Mukherjee was not associated with RSS, he is widely revered by members and supporters of the RSS and theVishwa Hindu Parishad.

Golwalkar

[edit]

M. S. Golwalkar, the second head of theRashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh (RSS), was to further this non-religious, territorial loyalty based definition of "Hindu" in his bookBunch of Thoughts. Hindutva and Hindu Rashtra would form the basis of Golwalkar's ideology and that of the RSS.

While emphasisingreligious pluralism, Golwalkar believed that Semitic monotheism and exclusivism were incompatible with and against the native Hindu culture. He wrote:

Those creeds (Islam and Christianity) have but one prophet, one scripture and one God, other than whom there is no path of salvation for the human soul. It requires no great intelligence to see the absurdity of such a proposition.

He added:

As far as the national tradition of this land is concerned, it never considers that with a change in the method of worship, an individual ceases to be the son of the soil and should be treated as an alien. Here, in this land, there can be no objection to God being called by any name whatever. Ingrained in this soil is love and respect for all faiths and religious beliefs. He cannot be a son of this soil at all who is intolerant of other faiths.[103]

He further would echo the views of Savarkar on territorial loyalty, but with a degree of inclusiveness, when he wrote "So, all that is expected of our Muslim and Christian co-citizens is the shedding of the notions of their being 'religious minorities' as also their foreign mental complexion and merging themselves in the common national stream of this soil."[103]

After the assassination of Mahatma Gandhi, Golwalkar and Hindu Mahasabha's senior leaders such as Shyama Prasad Mukharji founded a new political party as Jan Sangh,[104] many of Hindu Mahasabha members joined Jan Sangh.

Deendayal Upadhyaya

[edit]

Deendayal Upadhyaya, another RSS ideologue, presentedIntegral Humanism as the political philosophy of the erstwhile Bharatiya Jana Sangh in the form of four lectures delivered inBombay on 22–25 April 1965 as an attempt to offer a third way, rejecting both communism and capitalism as the means for socio-economic emancipation.

Contemporary descriptions

[edit]

The concept of "'Hindutva" continues to be espoused by organisations like the RSS and political parties like theBharatiya Janata Party (BJP). But the definition does not have the same rigidity with respect to the concept of "holy land" laid down by Savarkar, and stresses on inclusivism and patriotism. BJP leaderAtal Bihari Vajpayee, in 1998, articulated the concept of "holy land" in Hindutva as follows: "Mecca can continue to be holy for the Muslims but India should be holier than the holy for them. You can go to a mosque and offer namaz, you can keep theroza. We have no problem. But if you have to choose between Mecca or Islam and India you must choose India. All the Muslims should have this feeling: we will live and die only for this country."[105]

In a 1995 landmark judgment, theSupreme Court of India observed that "Ordinarily, Hindutva is understood as a way of life or a state of mind and is not to be equated with or understood as religiousHindu fundamentalism. A Hindu may embrace a non-Hindu religion without ceasing to be a Hindu and since the Hindu is disposed to think synthetically and to regard other forms of worship, strange gods and divergent doctrines as inadequate rather than wrong or objectionable, he tends to believe that the highest divine powers complement each other for the well-being of the world and mankind."[106]

Hindu Rashtra movements in Nepal

[edit]

In 2008, Nepal was declared asecular state after the Maoist led1996–2006 Nepalese Civil War and the following2006 Nepalese revolution led to the abolition ofmonarchy of Nepal. Before becoming asecular republic,Kingdom of Nepal was the world's only country to haveHinduism as itsstate religion.[107][108] Thereafter, theRastriya Prajatantra Party Nepal changed its constitution to support monarchy and the re-establishment of the Hindu state.[109] In December 2015, a pro-Hindu and a pro-monarchy protest was held atKathmandu.[110] The chairperson ofCPN-MaoistPrachanda, claimed that Muslims were oppressed by the state and assured the Muslim crowd of Muslim Mukti Morcha to give special rights to Muslims in order to appease the community and garner Muslim support as his party faced losses in theTerai region during the2008 Nepalese Constituent Assembly election.[111] However, during the 2015 "Hindu Rashtra" campaigning in Nepal by theRashtriya Prajatantra Party Nepal, theNepalese Muslim groups demanded Nepal to be a "Hindu Rashtra" (Hindu Nation) under which they claimed to "feel secure" compared to the secular constitution. Nepalese Muslim groups also opined that the increasing influences ofChristianity in Nepal that promote conversion against all other faiths is a reason they want Nepal to have a Hindu state identity under which all religions are protected.[112][113] Muslim leader Babu Khan Pathan who is the chairperson of the Muslim Rashtrawadi ManchNepalgunj supported the Hindu Rashtra campaign and claimed that 80 percent Muslim citizens ofBanke district supported the restoration of Hindu state. He gave the following clarification for the support of Hindu statehood in Nepal:

Turning the country secular is nothing but a design to break the longstanding unity among Muslims and Hindus. So there is no alternative to reinstating the country’s old Hindu State identity in order to allow fellow citizens to live with religious tolerance. We don't need a secular identity, but want to see the country called Hindu State as this ensures safety and peace for all. We are Nepali Muslims and proud of it, because we have our unique culture of being the Muslims of this land. Everything was going well until we were ambushed by political parties’ sudden decision to declare the country secular, which is deplorable as it is clear that they acted at the behest of foreign agents.[112][113]

While announcing the party manifesto for the2017 Nepalese general election, the pro HinduRashtriya Prajatantra Party Nepal chairpersonKamal Thapa stated that Hindu statehood is the only means of establishing national unity and stability. He stated that the secularisation of the state was done without the involvement of general public and thus, a referendum was due on the issue. Furthermore, chairperson Thapa argued that the conversion of Nepal into a secular republic was an organised attempt to weaken the national identity of Nepal and the religious conversions have seriously affected the indigenous andDalit communities.[114] TheRastriya Prajatantra Party Nepal has stated support for a Hindu state withreligious freedom and registered an amendment proposal for such on 19 March 2017.[115]

On 30 November 2020, a pro-Hindu and a pro-monarchy protest was held at Kathmandu. Similar protests were held on other major cities likePokhara andButwal.[116]

On 4 December 2020, mass protests were held atMaitighar that ended inNaya Baneshwor demanding the restoration of Hindu statehood withconstitutional monarchy.[117] The protestors carried the national flags and posters of the founding father of modern Nepal, KingPrithvi Narayan Shah, and chanted slogans supporting Hindu statehood. Protestors claimed the Hindu statehood is a means of national unity and well being of the people. This protest is considered one of the biggest pro-monarchy demonstrations.[118]

On 11 January 2021, mass protests were held atKathmandu demanding the restoration of Hindu statehood with monarchy. Police baton charged at the protestors around thePrime Minister's Office resulting in protestors responding with stones and sticks.[119] In August 2021, similar protests led by former Nepal Army General Rookmangud Katawal were also observed.[120]

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]

Citations

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Caribbean
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Asia
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South
Southeast
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&Central
South Caucasus
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Volga Region
Western
France
United Kingdom
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Italy
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Northern
Oceania
Pan-nationalism
Movements
Americas
& Oceania
Asia
Europe
Projects
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  • Note: Forms of nationalism based primarily onethnic groups are listed above. This does not imply that all nationalists with a given ethnicity subscribe to that form ofethnic nationalism.
General concepts
Buddhism and politics
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Party presidents
Current vice presidents
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Current chief ministers
Current
deputy chief ministers
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national spokespersons
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general secretaries
Current
national secretaries
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History
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and ideologies
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movements
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reformers
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activists
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Independence
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