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Sangh Parivar

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Collection of Hindutva organisations

For other uses, seeSangha (disambiguation).
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TheSangh Parivar (translation: "Family of theRSS" or the "RSS family"[1][2][3]) is anumbrella term for the collection ofHindutva organisations formed by, and affiliated to, theRashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh (RSS), aright-wingHindutvaparamilitary organisation. These include the political partyBharatiya Janata Party (BJP), religious organisationVishva Hindu Parishad (VHP), students unionAkhil Bharatiya Vidyarthi Parishad (ABVP), among several others. In total, the Sangh Parivar has over 50 organisations.

The Sangh Parivar represents theHindutva ideology and movement in India.[4] Members of the Sangh Parivar or the supporters of its ideology are often referred to as "Sanghis".[5]

History

In the 1960s, the volunteers of the RSS joined the different social and political movements in India, including theBhoodan, a land reform movement led by prominentGandhianVinobha Bhave[6] and theSarvodaya led by another GandhianJayaprakash Narayan.[7] RSS also supported the formation of a trade union, theBharatiya Mazdoor Sangh and a student's organisationAkhil Bharatiya Vidyarthi Parishad and many other organisations likeSeva Bharati, Lok Bharati and Deendayal Research Institute among others.

These organisations started and supported by the RSS volunteers came to be known collectively as the Sangh Parivar.[8] Next few decades have seen a steady growth in the influence of the Sangh Parivar in the social and political space of India.

Ideology

Economics

While theBJP governments have been progressively seen to be industry friendly,[9] the opinions and the views of the Sangh Parivar constituents like Bharatiya Mazdoor Sangh (BMS) find consonance with the known leftist stands on labour rights.[10] The Sangh Parivar, as a whole, even the BJP in its earlier days, has advocated 'Swadeshi' (Self Reliance). Sangh Parivar leaders have been very vocal in their criticism of globalisation especially its impact on the poor and native people. They have been suspicious of the role of international agencies such as theWorld Bank and theInternational Monetary Fund.[11] Sangh constituents have advocated and promoted decentralised village centric economic growth with emphasis on ecological protection.[12]

Reception

The Sangh Parivar has been described with monikers spanning the spectrum from "patriotic Hindus"[13] and "Hindu nationalist".[4] Some have also labeled them "Hindu chauvinist".[14] While its constituent organisations present themselves as embedded in the traditional ethos of Hinduism, their ideological opponents have characterised them as the representatives of authoritarian,xenophobic and majoritarian religious nationalism in India,[15] These organisations have been accused being involved withSaffron terror.[16][17] Flemish Indologist and Hindutva supporterKoenraad Elst has challenged the critics, in his 2001 bookThe Saffron Swastika, he wrote "So far, the polemical arrows have all been shot from one side, replies from the other side being extremely rare or never more than piecemeal."[18]

Social impact

The activities of the Sangh Parivar have had considerable social and religious impact.[19] And considerable influence over country's educational, social and defense policies.[20]

Social reform

In 1979, the religious wing of the Sangh Parivar, theVishwa Hindu Parishad got the Hindu saints and religious leaders to reaffirm that untouchability and caste discrimination had no religious sanction in the Hindu scriptures and texts.[21] The Vishwa Hindu Parishad is also spearheading efforts to ordain Dalits as priests in temples across India, positions that were earlier usually occupied only by people of "upper castes".[22] In 1983, RSS founded a Dalit organisation calledSamajik Samrasta Manch.[23]

The VHP founded a number of educational institutes such asBharat Sevashram,Hindu Milan Mandir,Ekal Vidalayas and schools in tribal locations.[23]

Social and political empowerment

The service programs, over the years, have led to the empowerment of the economically and socially underprivileged sections of the society, mostly the tribal, who have long remained politically under-represented.Babulal Marandi belonging to the tribal community, who was the organising secretary ofVishwa Hindu Parishad, became the first Chief Minister of the state ofJharkhand.[24] Other such leaders of Sangh Parivar who belong to the tribal community includeKaria Munda,Jual Oram; both ministers in the Union Government led byAtal Bihari Vajpayee.

The emergence of the Sangh Parivar in Indian politics has also brought many representatives of thebackward classes, who had been victims of social neglect and casteism, to comparatively prominent positions in the government and administration. At the same time, the Sangh has refused to allow said backward classes a share in the national wealth.[25]

In many villages acrossIndia,Dharma Raksha Samitis (Duty/Religion Protection Committees) promote religious discourse and form an arena forbhajan performance. The Sangh sponsors calendars of Hindu deities and provides instruction on sanctioned methods of conductingGanesh Chaturthi andNavaratri.[26]

Politics

The Bharatiya Janata Party, which represents the Sangh Parivar in national politics, has formed three governments in India, most recently being in power from May 2014 under the leadership ofPrime ministerNarendra Modi, re-elected in May2019 and again re-elected in 2024.

Political opponents of the BJP allege that the party's moderate face merely serves to cover the Sangh Parivar's "hidden agenda" of undilutedHindutva, detectable by the BJP's efforts to change the content of history textbooks andsyllabi as well as other aspects of the education system.[27]

Such criticism of the BJP arises from the fact that BJP had only 2 seats in the parliament in 1984 and after the Babri Masjid demolition in 1992 the party gained national recognition, and rose to power in 1998.[28][29][30][31][full citation needed][32][33]

Babri Mosque demolition

According to the report of theUPA institutedLiberhan Commission the Sangh Parivar organised thedestruction of the Babri Masjid.[34][35] The Commission said— "The blame or the credit for the entire temple construction movement at Ayodhya must necessarily be attributed to the Sangh Parivar".[36]

It also noted that the Sangh Parivar is an "extensive and widespread organic body", which encompasses organisations, which address and bring together just about every type of social, professional and other demographic grouping of individuals.

Each time, a new demographic group has emerged, the Sangh Parivar has hived off some of its RSS inner-core leadership to harness that group and bring it within the fold, enhancing the voter base of the Parivar.[37]

List of Sangh Parivar organisations

Major organisations that make up the Sangh Parivar

The Sangh Parivar includes the following organisations (with membership figures in brackets). They are also categorised.

Political
Occupational and Professional
Economic
Social Services
Exclusively Women
Religious
Regional based
Educational organisations
Socio-Ethnic
News & Communication
Think Tanks
Overseas
Children
Others

See also

References

  1. ^Jaffrelot 1996,p. 123.
  2. ^Andersen & Damle 1987, p. 115.
  3. ^Hansen, Thomas Blom (2014),"Controlled Emancipation: Women and Hindu Nationalism", in Bodil Folke Frederiksen; Fiona Wilson (eds.),Ethnicity, Gender and the Subversion of Nationalism, Routledge, p. 93,ISBN 978-1-135-20566-9,archived from the original on 7 February 2023, retrieved26 May 2019: "The RSS usually calls its network of organisation the RSS family (Sangh Parivar), consciously evoking connotations of warmth, security and emotional attachment beyond ideology and reasoning. The family metaphor is central and highly operational as an instrument of recruitment and cohesion for the movement, which offers a sort of surrogate family to the activists. The family metaphor also refers to the authoritarian and paternalist authority structure which operates within the movement."
  4. ^abSaha 2004, p. 274
  5. ^"Kangana Ranaut shares pics of Will Smith doing puja in India, says he's 'bidga hua Sanghi' like her".Hindustan Times. 29 March 2022.Archived from the original on 25 December 2022. Retrieved25 December 2022.
  6. ^Suresh Ramabhai, Vinoba and his mission, Published by Akhil Bharat Sarv Seva Sangh, 1954
  7. ^Martha Craven Nussbaum, The Clash Within: Democracy, Religious Violence, and India's Future, Published by Harvard University Press, 2007ISBN 0-674-02482-6,ISBN 978-0-674-02482-3
  8. ^Smith, David James, Hinduism and Modernity P189, Blackwell PublishingISBN 0-631-20862-3
  9. ^"New Delhi News : BJP assures industrialists of good deal".The Hindu. Chennai, India. 20 July 2008. Archived fromthe original on 4 August 2008. Retrieved4 September 2010.
  10. ^"Economics: A Bharatiya View Point". 2002. Archived fromthe original on 21 February 2003.
  11. ^Gupta, Sharad (14 November 2000)."BJP gears up to take on 'ideological ally'".The Indian Express. Archived fromthe original on 23 January 2003.
  12. ^"Content". Organiser. Archived fromthe original on 30 December 2008. Retrieved4 September 2010.
  13. ^VHP mail: BJP is like 'secular' CongThe Times of India – 1 July 2004
  14. ^Breckenridge, Pollock, Bhabha, Chakravarty 2002:56
  15. ^Bhatt 2001, p. 4
  16. ^GITTINGER, JULI (2011). "Saffron Terror: Splinter or Symptom?".Economic and Political Weekly.46 (37):22–25.ISSN 0012-9976.JSTOR 23047273.
  17. ^[1]Archived 30 March 2014 at theWayback MachineFrontline – 22 Oct – 4 November 2011
  18. ^Elst, Koenraad (2001),The Saffron Swastika, Voice of India, p. 9,ISBN 978-81-85990-69-9,archived from the original on 7 February 2023, retrieved29 November 2019
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  25. ^Ilaiah, Kancha (2004),Buffalo Nationalism: A Critique of Spiritual Fascism, Popular Prakashan, p. 14,ISBN 9788185604695,archived from the original on 7 February 2023, retrieved2 December 2017
  26. ^de la Cadena & Starn 2007, p. 284
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