The forgotten promise of 1949

VIDYA SUBRAHMANIAM

http://www.thehindu.com/opinion/lead/the-forgotten-promise-of-1949/article5211026.ece

The RSS wrote a non-political role for itself as part of an undertaking it
gave Sardar Patel. The overt political role it has assumed in 2013 is a
breach of that agreement and its own constitution

The Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh’s constitution explicitly states that it
will stay clear of politics. The constitution itself was written, in 1949,
because Sardar Vallabhbhai Patel would have it no other way.

The events of 2013 have comprehensively erased that part of India’s
history. The RSS has taken full control of the Bharatiya Janata Party. It
has overridden internal opposition to name the party’s prime ministerial
candidate. No act can be politically more overt than this.

*A mentor*

The RSS has always been to the BJP, earlier the Jan Sangh, a mentor the
latter could not disobey — because the Jan Sangh was seeded by the RSS
whose top pracharaks (propagandists) formed the new party’s intellectual
and political capital. In its constitution, the RSS abjures a political
role for itself but permits individual swayamsevaks to join any political
party.

The RSS has used this caveat to place its representatives in the JS/BJP.
>From Lal Krishna Advani to Narendra Modi, every BJP leader of consequence
has been from the Sangh’s deep bosom and each has had to mandatorily follow
a curriculum involving pilgrimages to the Sangh offices in Delhi and Nagpur
and deferring to the patriarch’s wisdom.

The unstated part of the BJP-RSS relationship was that the Sangh chief,
Sarsanghchalak in RSS parlance, himself would not show his hand. The
behind-the-scenes role for the minder was necessitated both by the 1949
undertaking to Patel and to overcome the strong political opposition to
Hindutva. The governments of 1977-1979 and 1998-2004 became possible only
because the RSS agreed to keep out of sight.

The events of 2013 are remarkable for the reason that the BJP’s need for
allies has not translated into the Sangh taking a backseat. Instead, today
more than ever before, the mentor is in a frontal, commanding role.

A look at recent history will show that the Sangh’s takeover bid started in
real earnest in 2005, following Mr. Advani’s visit to Pakistan and his
apocalyptical praise of Mohammad Ali Jinnah delivered straight from the
latter’s mausoleum in Karachi. So livid was the Sangh at the transgression
that it ordered Mr. Advani removed from the presidentship of the BJP. And
though Mr. Advani did become the BJP’s prime ministerial candidate in 2009,
his unique place in the Sangh was lost forever. The marginalisation of the
ideologue started at that point and has ended today in his complete
isolation.

The epic clash of 2005, and Mr. Advani’s barely controlled anger at his
public sacking by the minder, are best captured in Mr. Advani’s own words.
Addressing the concluding session of the party’s September 2005 Chennai
national executive, Mr. Advani said an “impression had gained ground” that
his party could take “no decision” without the consent of the RSS : “This
perception, we hold, will do no good either to the Party or to the RSS. The
RSS must be concerned that such a perception will dwarf its greater mission
of man making and nation-building. Both the RSS and the BJP must
consciously exert to dispel this impression.”

Lesser players had clashed with the Sangh earlier, and paid the price too,
but Mr. Advani was beloved of the Sangh, and among the early pracharaks
sent to the Jan Sangh. The BJP veteran was blunt when he called the RSS a
busybody; in truth, it had always been so. What was unprecedented was the
Sangh divesting a leader of Mr. Advani’s stature and vintage of his
presidency.

Seven years on, the Sangh has issued another decree — this time to give a
leader a double promotion executed in two stages. Narendra Modi’s June 2013
elevation to the BJP’s campaign committee chief, since relinquished by him,
was followed in September 2013 by his appointment as the party’s prime
ministerial candidate. In 2005, the RSS’s role was inferred, with the
evidence coming from Mr. Advani. In 2013, the fig leaf has been cast away.

Mr. Advani, who had resigned from key party posts protesting Mr. Modi’s
June 2013 elevation to campaign panel chief, climbed down on the Sangh’s
orders — a fact acknowledged in writing by BJP chief Rajnath Singh. This
was a first in RSS-BJP history. Mr. Singh’s June 11, 2013 statement to the
media said, “Shri Mohan Bhagwat (current Sarsanghchalak) spoke to Shri
Advani and asked him to respect the BJP Parliamentary Board (PB) decision
and continue to guide the party in national interest.” The BJP’s PB did
indeed make a request to Mr. Advani but from Mr. Bhagwat it was a command.
The words were gentle but the message was not.

Thus, the takeover bid which started in 2005 was full and final with Mr.
Modi’s projection as Prime Minister in September 2013. In June 2013, Mr.
Advani wanted that Mr. Modi should not head the campaign panel. That has
happened today, proving that the first-stage elevation was a ploy aimed at
wearing down internal opposition to Mr. Modi.

*‘No politics’*

Cut to 1949 and the RSS’s undertaking to Patel to write a constitution,
which, among other things, would specify that the Sangh had “no politics”
and would remain “devoted purely to cultural work” (Article 4(b) of the RSS
constitution; D.R. Goyal, 1979). The written constitution was Patel’s
pre-condition for lifting the ban imposed on the RSS in the wake of Mahatma
Gandhi’s January 30, 1948 assassination.

Then Sarsanghchalak Madhav Sadashiv Golwalkar pleaded not guilty and Patel
himself was clear that the RSS was not involved in the assassination. He
said this in his February 27, 1948 letter to Prime Minister Jawaharlal
Nehru and reiterated it later too. However, Patel was strong in the belief
that the Sangh’s “violent” ways contributed to the climate in which
Gandhiji was killed. Golwalkar’s telegrams to Nehru and Patel expressing
shock at the murder did not mitigate the situation.

The government’s ban notification, dated February 4, 1948, did not
implicate the RSS in Gandhiji’s murder; it in fact made no mention of the
murder. The charge in the text was of violent subversion: “... in practice
members of the Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh have not adhered to their
professed ideals (fostering feelings of brotherhood, love and service among
Hindus). Undesirable and even dangerous activities have been carried on by
members of the Sangh … individual members of the Rashtriya Swayamsevak
Sangh have indulged in acts of violence involving arson, robbery, dacoity
and murder and have collected illicit arms and ammunition. They have been
found circulating leaflets exhorting people to resort to terrorist methods,
to collect firearms, to create disaffection against the government and
suborn the police and the military. These activities have been carried on
under a cloak of secrecy …”

On November 14, 1948, the Home Ministry held by Patel issued a press note
which said Golwalkar wanted the ban lifted without agreeing to the
government’s demand that the RSS reform itself. Further, the note quoted
information received from the provincial governments, which showed “that
the activities carried on in various forms and ways by the people
associated with the RSS tend to be anti-national and often subversive and
violent and that persistent attempts are being made by the RSS to revive an
atmosphere in the country which was productive of such disastrous
consequences in the past…”

*Two letters*

Prior to this, Patel wrote two significant letters. On July 18, 1948, he
wrote to Shyama Prasad Mookherjee, rejecting his defence of the RSS: “The
activities of the RSS constituted a clear threat to the existence of the
Government and State … as time has marched on, the RSS circles are becoming
more defiant and are indulging in their subversive activities … in an
increasing measure…”

The letter of September 11, 1948, was to Golwalkar himself. In this Patel
lauded the RSS for its service to Hindu society even as he outlined the
“objectionable part” which “arose when they, burning with revenge, began
attacking Mussalmaans …” Further, “As a final result of the (communal)
poison, the country had to suffer the sacrifice of the invaluable life of
Gandhiji …” Patel said people’s opposition to the RSS grew when “the RSS
men expressed joy and distributed sweets after Gandhiji’s death.”

So, the charge that led to the ban was not that the RSS was involved in
Gandhiji’s murder. The charge was of violence and subversion. (The Sangh
was later formally cleared of any connection in the murder). This is what
led to Patel’s pre-condition that the RSS write a constitution specifying,
among other things, its respect for the Indian flag (the Sangh swears by
the Bhagwa flag), its commitment both to function as an open and peaceful
organisation and to stay clear of politics. It was a prolonged battle.
Golwalkar resisted writing the constitution but Patel won out and the ban
was lifted on July 11, 1949.

The RSS has gone back on the promise to keep off politics


On 8 October 2013 08:48, Teesta Setalvad <[email protected]> wrote:

> *[image: http://mail.google.com/mail/u/0/images/cleardot.gif]**Sabrang
> Archives (1999)*
>
> *‘RSS has never backed Godse:* The Rashtriya Swayam Sevak Sangh
> consistently lashes out at some “vested political interests” for taking
> recourse to lie and calumny to malign “patriotic and nationalist”
> organisations.” Commenting on an advertisement highlighting a quote
> allegedly of RSS chief Rajendra Singh, general secretary H.V.Seshadri said,
> “The RSS has never supported the act of Nathuram Godse.” (1999). A similar
> discourse is audible today.
>
> The fascist agenda of the RSS has always justified the assassination of
> Mahatma Gandhi. Enclosed is the entire text of a letter written by none
> less than Sardar Vallabhai Patel, independent India’s first union home
> minister commenting on RSS activities following Mahatma Gandhi’s
> assassination. The entire text is invaluable. He says clearly, “The RSS men
> expressed joy and distributed sweets after Gandhiji’s death.”
>
> Information like this needs to be disseminated as widely as possible. So
> that it can be used in a variety of fora.
>
> Please use this and revert back to us with reactions on the
>
> Teesta Setalvad
>
> Sardar Vallabhai Patel, union home minister, to Guru Golwalkar, RSS chief
> in a letter written on September 11, 1948. The letter is quoted in full in
> Desraj Goel’s *Rahstriya Swayamsevak Sangh.*The entire Text :
>
>  Aurangzeb Road,
>
>
>                                                              New Delhi,
>
>  11th Sept. 1948
>
> *Brother Sri Golwalkar,*
>
> Received your letter dated 11th August. Jawaharlal has also sent me your
> letter of the same date.
>
> You are very well aware of my views on the RSS. I have expressed these
> thoughts at Jaipur in December last month at Lucknow in January. The people
> had welcomed those views. I had hoped that your people also would accept
> them. But they appear to have no effect on the RSS persons, nor was there
> any change in their programmes. There can be no doubt that the RSS did
> service to the Hindu Society. In the areas where there was the need for
> help and organisation, the young men of the RSS protected women and
> children and strove much for their sake. No person of understanding could
> have a word of objection regarding that. But the objectionable part arose
> when they, burning with revenge, began attacking Mussalmans. Organising
> Hindus and helping them is one thing but going in for revenge for its
> sufferings on innocent and helpless men, women and children is quite
> another thing.
>
> Apart from this, their opposition to the Congress, that too of such
> virulence, disregarding all considerations of personality, decency or
> decorum, created a kind of unrest among the people. *All their speeches
> were full communal poison. It was not necessary to spread poison and *
> enthuse* the Hindus and organise for their protection. As a final result
> of the poison, the country had to suffer the sacrifice of the valuable life
> of Gandhiji.* Even an iota of sympathy of the Government or of the people
> no more remained for the RSS. In fact the opposition grew. Opposition
> turned more severe, *when the RSS men expressed joy and distributed
> sweets after Gandhiji’s death.* Under these conditions it became
> inevitable for the Government to take action against the RSS.
>
> Since then, over six months have elapsed. *We have hoped that after this
> lapse of time,  with full and proper consideration the RSS persons would
> come to the right path. But from the reports that come to me, it is evident
> that attempts to put fresh life into their same old activities are afoot.
> *I once again ask you to give your thought to my Jaipur and Lucknow
> speeches and accept the path I had indicated for the RSS. I am quite
> certain that therein lies the good of the RSS and the country and moving in
> that path we can join hands in achieving the welfare of our country. Of
> course, you are aware that we are passing through delicate times. It is the
> duty of every one from the highest to the lowliest in this country to
> contribute his mite, in whatever way possible, to the service of the
> country. In this delicate hour there is no place for party conflicts and
> old quarrels. I thoroughly convinced that the RSS men can carry on their
> patriotic endeavor only by joining the Congress and not by keeping separate
> or by opposing. I am glad that you have been released. I hope that you will
> arrive at the proper decision after due consideration of what I have said
> above. With regard to restrictions imposed upon you I am in correspondence
> with the CP Government. I shall let you know after receiving their reply.
>
> *                                                               Yours *
>
> SD.) VALLABH BHAI PATEL
>
>
> (Rendered from the original in Hindi)*
>
> *Justice on Trial: Historic Document of Guruji-Government Correspondence,
> pp. 26-8;*
>
> *N.B. *This letter also, incidentally, clarifies the misunderstanding
> created that the Sardar had invited them to join the Congress; the
> invitation is for rethinking and change of heart and then giving it a
> concrete shape by merger into the Congress. The same thing JP tried to
> accomplish later and failed.
>
> *Another quote from Sardar Patel:*
>
> “As regards the RSS and the Hindu Mahasabha… our reports do confirm that,
> as a result of the activities of these two bodies, particularly the former
> (RSS) an atmosphere was created in the country in which such a ghastly
> tragedy became possible.”
>
> Sardar Vallabhai Patel, union home minister to Dr. Shyama Prasad
> Mukherjee, who later founded the Bharatiya Jana Sangh, in a letter  on July
> 18, 1948. *Sardar Patel Correspondence, *Volume 6, edited by Durga Das.
>
>
> --
> Teesta Setalvad
> 'Nirant', Juhu Tara Road,
> Juhu, Mumbai - 400 049
>
> http://teestasetalvad.blogspot.com/
> www.cjponline.org
> www.gujarat-riots.com
> www.sabrang.com
>
>


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Peace Is Doable

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