http://scroll.in/article/714090/Resurrecting-Godse:-what-Gopal-had-to-say-about-his-brother-Nathuram

BOOK EXCERPT
Resurrecting Godse: what Gopal had to say about his brother Nathuram

An excerpt from a dossier, compiled by Teesta Setalvad, of historical
and critical documents that aim to contextualise the politics,
motivations and circumstances behind the assassination of Mahatma
Gandhi.

Arvind Rajagopal
Today ยท 08:00 am

On 21 November, BJP president LK Advani issued a statement denying
that his party had anything to do with the recent attempts to glorify
Nathuram. "Nathuram Godse was a bitter critic of the Rashtriya
Swayamsevak Sangh", he said. "His charge was that the RSS had made
Hindus impotent. We have had nothing to do with Godse. The Congress is
in the habit of reviving this allegation against us when it finds
nothing else." (The Times of India, 22 November 1993).

***In fact, Nathuram Godse was a life-long member of the RSS,
attaining the position of baudhik karyavah (intellectual worker). ***

His statement at the murder trial (originally published in 1977, in a
volume entitled May It Please Your Honour) says, "I am one of those
volunteers who joined the Sangha in its initial stage' (p. 142). He
says he left it to do more directly political work in the Hindu
Mahasabha (he does not say when). But his brother Gopal Godse suggests
that he never really left the RSS, and that the statement at his trial
was meant to alleviate the pressure on the Sangh, which was banned
following Gandhiji's murder. A leader of the Hindu Mahasabha, Shyama
Prasad Mookherjee, went on to found the Jana Sangh, forerunner of the
BJP.

***Mere membership does not, of course, mean responsibility: the BJP
does not necessarily have to answer for the actions of each person
ever associated with the Sangh Parivar. ***

But in this case, the chickens have come home to roost. Gopal Godse
reacts to Advani's statement angrily and calls it the response of a
coward. The politics of swayamsevaks like the Godses does not differ
too greatly from that of the RSS and the BJP today. The BJP's campaign
slogan in the recent elections, "Hum ne jo kaha, so kiye" (What we
said, we did), boasting of an event that consumed thousands of lives,
denotes an implacability of resolve at least equal to Nathuram's.

Meeting Gopal Godse himself is helpful in uncovering any affinities
that might exist between his politics and that of the Sangh Parivar.
He lives in the heart of old Pune, in Sadashiv Peth, in a new
apartment building called Vinayak. His flat shares a landing with a
bank, and, in that busy space, it is startling to see the names in
Devanagari script in prominent red on the door: "Shri Gopal Godse.
Sow. Sunita Godse."

***He opens the door. Gandhiji's murderer, you think, but there he is,
a tall, slightly bent man in pyjamas and an old yellow sleeveless
sweater. ***

You scan his appearance for signs of what might make him different.
But, as in most scandals, one experiences the shock of banality on
meeting its perpetrator. He looks, for all purposes, like any other
Chitpavan Brahmin one sees in Sadashiv Peth - a frail old man, albeit
with hooded eyes. He remains proud of his Chitpavan heritage. He
smiles slightly and lowers his gaze - the half-conscious reaction,
perhaps, to a lifetime of notoriety.

A large glass case dominates the drawing room decorations. It con-
tains a small silver urn surrounded by photographs. In the urn are the
ashes of Nathuram Godse and Narayan Apte. The pictures are of them and
of V.D. Savarkar. Just below the case is a porcelain plate with
Savarkar's portrait. His motto, 'Hinduise all politics and militarise
Hindudom', encircles the picture. Although 'honourably acquitted' of
conspiring to kill Gandhi, Savarkar was nevertheless a close associate
of Nathuram Godse. Gopal Godse's daughter, Asilata, has married Ashok
Savarkar, son of Savarkar's younger brother Narayan. Both families are
still close to the Hindu Mahasabha (the party Nathuram belonged to and
Savarkar was president of for several years); Gopal Godse was until
recently its general secretary.

***He is eager to talk. 'Greedy to spread his message', as he puts it
- to justify his brother's act, and to propagate the concept of Hindu
Rashtra which, he feels, is the only answer to the country's political
problems. ***

He is polite and courteous; though his views may be offensive in the
extreme, he tries not to let his manners impede the reception of his
ideas. It is hard for most people to conceive of Gandhiji's killers as
other than demented or demonic. This is obviously a matter very much
on his own mind. He is constrained to refute the myth that Nathuram
was a madman or a fanatic. 'You may disagree with his views, but you
must first consider his arguments', Gopal says.

He rejects all existing political parties except the Hindu Mahasabha.
Every other party, he says, is guilty of pandering to the Muslims and
conse- quently endangering the nation. Similar criticisms of the BJP,
however, are made by several within the RSS itself. Godse's views
themselves have much in common with those of the BJP. India is nothing
if not Hindu - this is the theme he tirelessly stresses, in one
variation after another. Muslims do not have their original place of
worship within this country, and it is essential, in his view (derived
from Savarkar), that one's place of birth is also one's holy land.
Muslims can be loyal only to Pakistan; every Muslim in India is a
Pakistani agent, he says.

...Godse's ideas are in a continuum with Hindu right-wing thought today.

***If you turn to MS Golwalkar, the RSS leader, the confirmation of a
continuity with Godse's views is even more emphatic:***

When we say 'This is the Hindu Nation', there are some who immediately
come up with the question, 'What about the Muslims and Christians. .
.?' They are born in this land, no doubt. But are they true to their
salt? . . . Do they feel a duty to serve her? No! . . . They look to
some foreign lands as their holy places. . . . They have cut off their
ancestral moorings of this land (sic) and mentally merged themselves
with the aggressors. They still think that they have come here only to
conquer and establish their kingdoms. So we see that it is not merely
a case of change of faith, but a change even in national identity.
What else is it, if not treason, to join the camp of the enemy leaving
their mother-nation in the lurch? (Bunch of Thoughts, pp. 166-67)


Every Muslim, for Golwalkar as for Godse, is a foreign agent with
little to do but engage in anti-national activities, usually of a
violent kind:

The Muslims are busy hatching a dangerous plot, piling up arms and
mobi- lizing their men and probably biding their time to strike from
within when Pakistan decides upon an armed conflict with our country.
. . . Not that our leaders do not know it. The secret intelligence
reports reach them all right. But it seems they have in view only
elections. Elections means vote-catching, which means appeasing
certain sections. . . . And the Muslims are one such solid bloc.
Therein lies the root of all this appeasement and consequent
disastrous effects. (Bunch of Thoughts, pp. 239-40).


***Compare this with Gopal Godse:***

They make bomb blasts in Bombay in the name of the Koran. They will
continue because the Koran is very clear. They want to Islamize their
complete world. And the secularism is the most fertile ground for them
to do it. . . . Outside, what happens today, for Haj, a Muslim who is
a smuggler goes there. And a Pakistani minister goes there. They join
there together under the name of Islam. They dictate what is to be
done in India. . . . So all con- spiracies go on in the name of Islam.
And we allow it. (Personal interview)


The true Hindu patriot has two enemies: the Muslim and the 'secular'
(nowadays pseudo-secular) government. The Muslim's danger is well
known and unambivalent, whereas that of the secularists is much less
so. Parading itself as tolerant and pluralistic, the secular
government is actually calculating and selfish, and will lead the
nation to disaster. Only in Hindutva is such narrow selfishness
overcome, as individual identity merges with the nation. In these
ideas, Godse and the RSS "guru", Golwalkar, are unanimous.

***It must be conceded that the BJP and the RSS are more sensitive to
public opinion, to the practicality of actually getting something
done, as opposed to landing up behind bars or in the gallows after
having made a 'statement' of some kind. ***

Especially with the BJP, a party primarily seeking power, the ideas
its leaders express are often serviceable means to an end rather than
deep convictions. In this respect, the saying goes, BJP minus RSS
equals Congress (a witticism that says as much about the Congress as
about the BJP). It is the RSS which is the backbone of the Hindutva
party and which makes the BJP different from other parties.

The habit of seeing dangerous conspiracies everywhere, of calling for
rooting out a scourge that threatens the nation, is itself sign of a
paranoid mentality that in the US, for instance, was called
McCarthyism. Perhaps we should cease calling a paranoid and violent
politics by its own preferred name of 'Hindutva', and thereby deny it
any respectable cover. Advani's disavowal of Nathuram Godse's
connection with the RSS flies in the face of the well-documented
connections between them and the essential similarity of their ideas,
as suggested by Nathuram's published statements, as well as Gopal
Godse's own words. The Janata Dal slogan against the BJP in the recent
elec- tions summed it up: "Muh me Ram aur dil me Nathuram" (Ram on
their lips and Nathuram in their hearts).

(First published in Frontline, 28 January 1994.)

Excerpted with permission from Beyond Doubt: A Dossier on Gandhi's
Assassination, compiled and introduced by Teesta Setalvad, Tulika
Books.



-- 
Peace Is Doable

-- 
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups 
"Green Youth Movement" group.
To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email 
to [email protected].
To post to this group, send an email to [email protected].
Visit this group at http://groups.google.com/group/greenyouth.
For more options, visit https://groups.google.com/d/optout.

Reply via email to