https://newsclick.in/savarkar-apologised-british-6-times-fight-them-bjp-leaders-claim-triggers-jokes-kerala

'Savarkar Apologised to British 6 Times to Fight them': BJP Leader’s Claim
Triggers Jokes in Kerala
BJP Kerala spokesperson JR Padmakumar's claim has triggered an avalanche of
jokes in the Malayalam cyber space.
Newsclick Bureau  26 Oct 2017

Savarkar memes
The claim by JR Padmakumar, the BJP Kerala spokesperson, that Hindu
Mahasabha leader VD Savarkar had apologised not once, but six times to the
British so that he could participate in the Indian freedom struggle, has
triggered an avalanche of jokes from Kerala’s famed meme factories.

The argument was made by Padmakumar during the course of a news debate in
Manorama News channel on Tuesday. The comment can be seen in the clip below
(with English subtitles):



Padmakumar’s comments have resulted in an explosion of jokes in the
Malayalam cyber space. A small sample of translated memes can be seen below.

Savarkar meme - 03.jpg

Savarkar meme - 02 (split personality).jpg



Savarkar meme - 01.jpg

Since the RSS was not part of the freedom struggle, claiming that Savarkar
was a participant in the freedom struggle has been the only option for
Sangh Parivar spokesperson to claim some link with the Indian people’s
fight against British colonial rule. But Savarkar had petitioned the
British several times during his jail term at the Andamans and subsequently
after his release, seeking forgiveness and offering complete cooperation.

While Savarkar was lodged in the Cellular Jail in the Andaman and Nicobar
Islands, he had written in his mercy petition on 14 November 1913:

"If the government in their manifold beneficence and mercy release me, I
for one cannot but be the staunchest advocate of constitutional progress
and loyalty to the English government which is the foremost condition of
that progress... Moreover, my conversion to the constitutional line would
bring back all those misled young men in India and abroad who were once
looking up to me as their guide. I am ready to serve the government in any
capacity they like, for as my conversion is conscientious so I hope my
future conduct would be."

As Rajendra Prasad notes in a 2002 article , Savarkar wrote an article in
Mahratta of Pune on 1 March 1925, to which the government objected. He
subsequently sent an explanation, at the end of which he thanked the
government for having given him an opportunity to explain himself. He hoped
that in the future too they would be pleased to be as kindly disposed
towards him. The conditions of his release remained in force till 1937 when
the elected government revoked them. Savarkar became the president of the
Hindu Mahasabha immediately thereafter.

Savarkar advanced the argument that Hindus constitute a nation in his 1923
book Hindutva. He laid out the theory that Hindus and Muslims are separate
nations in his 1937 presidential addressed to the Hindu Mahasabha, and a
resolution to that effect was passed by the Mahasabha. This was three years
prior to the Muslim League's 1940 resolution demanding Pakistan on the
basis of the two-nation theory.

"India cannot be assumed today to be a unitarian and homogeneous nation,
but on the contrary, there are two nations, in the main, the Hindus and the
Muslims," he said in the address.

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