RSS, SCHOOL TEXTS AND THE MURDER OF MAHATMA GANDHI
The Hindu Communal Project
ADITYA MUKHERJEE, MRIDULA MUKHERJEE and SUCHETA MAHAJAN, all at
Jawaharlal Nehru University, New Delhi

RSS, School Texts and the Murder of Mahatma Gandhi undertakes the
novel experiment of juxtaposing three apparently quite different
issues, the nature of the RSS school textbooks, the murder of the
Mahatma and the basic ideology of Savarkar and Golwalkar. While deeply
delving into all three aspects, it brings out the deep connection
between them. The book brings home to us in a dramatic manner the
great threat communalism poses to our society, thus making it a
must-read for the general educated reader, including politicians,
political workers, social activists and journalists.

2008 | 120 pages
Paper: Rs 195.00
(978-8-1782-9854-2)
Buy Now
http://www.sagepub.in/browse/book.asp?bookid=1275&Subject_Name=&mode=1

* * *

STRONG RELIGION, ZEALOUS MEDIA
Christian Fundamentalism and Communication in India
PRADIP NINAN THOMAS, University of Queensland

Religious fundamentalism is a key issue in today's world politics.
…Well written, solidly documented, and supported by Bourdieu's
theoretical insights, this book is highly recommended reading for all
those interested in one of our great contemporary challenges.

Cees J Hamelink
 2008 | 220 pages
Cloth: Rs 495.00
(978-8-1782-9834-4)

http://www.sagepub.in/browse/book.asp?bookid=1261&Subject_Name=&mode=1


* * *

http://www.indianexpress.com/story/326331.html

Indian Express, 23 June 2008

Quietly, hardline Hindu outfits build a network across
Maharashtra, Goa

Kavitha Iyer

MUMBAI, JUNE 22: Bal Thackeray may have called their bombs "damp
squibs" and their parent organisations may have quickly disowned
the five men arrested by Maharashtra police last week in
connection with the crude explosives planted at cultural venues
outside Mumbai, but a closer look at the groups and the people
behind them reveal an ominous, new network of Hindu hardliners in
western India.

The five men were members of the Sanatan Sanstha (SS) and the
Hindu Janajagruti Samiti (HJS), hitherto little-known groups
operating in the hinterland of Maharashtra and Goa. Two of them
are also members of another newly launched outfit called the
Dharmashakti Sena, pictures of whose inaugural rally in April show
young men dressed in military fatigues.

These groups, which work like wheels within wheels, have been
quietly mobilising Hindus on a cocktail of Ramrajya, Hindu dharma
and "dharmakranti" — religious revolution — in and around Mumbai
for a few years now, investigations by The Indian Express have found.

While the SS and the HJS are both registered in Goa as charitable
organisations, the Dharmashakti Sena was set up in 16 Maharashtra
towns and cities on Gudi Padwa day this April. Its stated aim:
establishing "Ramrajya" and to make Hindus "capable of action".

Publications linked to the three groups say the Dharmashakti Sena
offers free training in self-defence and the training involves
inculcating "mental courage". It also reminds readers of the
"armed battle of revolutionaries and saints", RSS leader
Golwalkar's work on "protecting Hindus" and his teaching that
"weapons should be countered with weapons".

Conversions of Hindus, genocide, what they say is the Congress
government's poor track record against Islamic terrorism,
"persecution at the hands of anti-Hindus", are recurrent themes,
alongside a call for Hindus and Hindu organisations to unite.

Unlike leaders of the RSS, VHP and Bajrang Dal, the men and women
behind these new outfits are low profile activists who have been
quietly chipping away at the mindset of Hindus in Maharashtra and
Goa. The founder of the SS, the oldest of the three groups, is Dr
Jayant Athavale, a clinical hypnotherapist who practised for two
decades and also set up the Indian Society of Clinical Hypnosis
and Research.

But the man, estimated to be about 60 years old, rarely emerges
from his "writing work" and is no longer active in the daily
activities of the group, activists said. "On account of the task
of writing books on spirituality as per the direction of Guru,
spiritual practice and illness, H H Dr Jayant Balaji Athavale has
kept himself away from the activities of Sanatan Sanstha and Hindu
Janajagruti Samiti for the last four years," SS Managing Trustee
Virendra Marathe told The Indian Express in an e-mail.

"His interaction with others is limited to the extent of conveying
his thoughts, if any. "Many of the seekers who are associated with
Sanatan Sanstha from the beginning have not seen him for many
years, while new seekers have not seen him at all," he added.

The clinical hypnosis research institute he set up, in Sion,
central Mumbai, is now a small centre of the Sanstha, where
occasional satsangs are held. "He travels to all the centres,"
said Abhay Vartak, the Mumbai spokesperson for the Sanstha. "Unse
milna mushkil hai (it's difficult to meet him)."

HJS and SS leaders are also cagey talking about Dharmashakti Sena
chief Vinay Panvalkar, thought to live in the Dadar area of
central Mumbai and who has travelled extensively across
Maharashtra after the outfit was launched. At a 'dharmajagruti
sabha' (religious awakening conference) in Pune in mid-May,
Panvalkar is quoted as saying, "Hindus are cornered from all
sides, but there is no retaliation from them." At a later meeting
in Thane, he says "The war in future will be a dharma-yudh and
Dharmashakti Sena will be the guiding force."

Police say some of the arrested activists are suspected to have
had trysts with bombs and violence in the past. Maharashtra's
Anti-Terrorism Squad chief Hemant Karkare said, "We will not
simply accept the statements of the accused that the blasts were
their own initiative. Various members of these organisations are
being questioned. If their role is found in the planning or the
execution of these incidents, we will certainly write to the
Centre and seek that they be banned." — (With inputs from Sagnik
Chowdhury)

Spreading the word, Melbourne to New Jersey

•Outfits do not have formal memberships; ashrams in Goa and Panvel
near Mumbai, among others, hold satsangs

• Active members offer time to spread the word; some travel and
are presently in Mauritius

•Funding is through donations. Groups also earn from sale of
literature, audio tapes, CDs

•Travel funded by members, stay sponsored by hosts

•Sanatan Sanstha has centres in New Jersey, Brisbane, Melbourne, Dubai

The leadership

•Dr Jayant Balaji Athavale, founder of Hindu Janajagruti Samiti

•Virendra Marathe, managing trustee of Sanatan Sanstha

•Vinay Panvalkar, chief of Dharmashakti Sena

•Dr Durgesh Samant, national spokesman of HJS

•Abhay Vartak, Mumbai spokesman of Sanatan Sanstha

•Shivaji Vatkar, Mumbai convenor of HJS

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