I/II.
https://theprint.in/2017/12/26/anantkumar-hegde-has-only-repeated-what-hindutva-founders-said-about-the-constitution/

The cat is finally out of the bag: Hindutva leaders’ utter disdain for the
Indian Constitution
SHASHI THAROOR 26 December, 2017

Anantkumar Hegde | Twitter

No one should be surprised at Union minister of state Anantkumar Hegde’s
remark on Sunday that “the BJP had come to power to change the
Constitution” and that it would “do so in the near future”.

Hegde, a blunt-speaking politician who has a long record of preferring
valour to discretion, has let the proverbial cat out of the bag in which it
had been uncomfortably concealed. The Hindutvavadis’ critique of the
Constitution is a fundamental one: their idea of its flaws lies in their
core belief in the idea of a Hindu Rashtra, as opposed to the civic
nationalism enshrined in the Constitution of India.

The RSS sarsangchalak and ideologue M.S. Golwalkar articulated this
critique almost as soon as the Constitution was adopted. India’s
independence from colonial rule in 1947, Golwalkar argued, did not
constitute real freedom because the new leaders held on to the ‘perverted
concept of nationalism’ that located all who lived on India’s territory as
equal constituents of the nation. ’The concept of territorial nationalism,’
he wrote, ‘has verily emasculated our nation and what more can we expect of
a body deprived of its vital energy? …And so it is that we see today the
germs of corruption, disintegration and dissipation eating into the vitals
of our nation for having given up the natural living nationalism in the
pursuit of an unnatural, unscientific and lifeless hybrid concept of
territorial nationalism.’

Golwalkar’s Bunch Of Thoughts argues that territorial nationalism is a
barbarism, since a nation is ‘not a mere bundle of political and economic
rights’ but an embodiment of national culture —in India, ‘ancient and
sublime’ Hinduism. It sneers at democracy, which Golwalkar sees as alien to
Hindu culture, and lavishes praise on the Code of Manu, whom Golwalkar
salutes as ‘the first, the greatest, and the wisest lawgiver of mankind’.

Deen Dayal Upadhyaya, undoubtedly the principal ideologue of the Hindutva
movement who is honoured and exalted daily by the BJP government today,
identified the fundamental flaw:  India had written a Constitution
imitative of the West, divorced from any real connection to our mode of
life and from authentically Indian ideas about the relationship between the
individual and society.

Upadhyaya felt the Constitution should embody a Hindu political philosophy
befitting an ancient nation like Bharat, that reducing the Indian national
idea to a territory and the people on it was fallacious. It was this sort
of thinking, he argued sternly, that had led the nationalist movement, from
the Khilafat agitation onwards, to turn towards a policy of appeasement of
the Muslim community, a policy in turn sought to be justified by the need
to forge a united front against the British. The RSS’s founder leader, Dr.
K.B. Hedgewar (whose Marathi biography Upadhyaya translated) had pointed to
the ‘ideological confusion’ this approach created. Muslim communalism, in
his and Upadhyaya’s view, had become more prominent and aggressive, while
Congress leaders bent over backwards more and more to accommodate them.

In building his case for a Hindu Rashtra, Upadhyaya specifically disavowed
the existing Constitution of India. As Upadhyaya put it in Rashtra Jeevan
Ki Disha: ‘We became free in 1947. The English quit India. We felt what was
considered to be the greatest obstacle in the path of our effort of nation
building was removed and were all of a sudden faced with the problem as to
what the significance of this hard-earned independence was.’

Indian leaders tried to resolve this problem in the drafting of a
Constitution. But in Upadhyaya’s view, their failure to conceive properly
of the nation led them into error. ‘We aped the foreigners to such an
extent that we failed to see that our inherent national ideals and
traditions should be reflected in our Constitution. We satisfied ourselves
with making a patchwork of theories and principles enunciated by foreign
countries…. The result was that our national culture and traditions were
never reflected in these ideologies borrowed from elsewhere and so they
utterly failed to touch the chords of our national being.’

Having rejected its premise, Upadhyaya was scathing about the
Constitution’s drafting and adoption: a nation, he argued, ‘is not like a
club which can be started or dissolved. A nation is not created by some
crores of people passing a resolution and defining a common code of
behaviour binding on all its members. A certain mass of people emerges with
an inherent motivation. It is,” he added with a Hindu analogy, “like the
soul adopting the medium of the body.’

Upadhyaya asks three questions: were the people who framed the Constitution
endowed with qualities of selflessness, an intense desire for public
service and a deep knowledge of the rules of Dharma as the rishis were? Or
did they formulate this Smriti of a free India under the influence of the
unsteady circumstances prevailing at the time? Did these people possess
originality of thought or did they have a tendency to primarily imitate
others?

Upadhyaya’s implicit answers to these questions were in the negative: the
constitution-makers were not figures imbued with selflessness and dharma,
they were overly under the thrall of the turbulent politics of that era,
and their minds had been colonised by Western ideas. The founding fathers
of the Republic of India were largely Anglophile Indians schooled in
Western systems of thought; their work revealed no Indianness, no
Bharatiyata.

The Constitution, therefore, was to him a flawed document, one incapable of
guiding India towards the path of Raj Dharma. In fact, it condemned Hindus
to slavery: ‘Self-rule and independence are considered to be synonyms. A
deeper thinking will bring home to us the fact that even in a free country,
the nation can remain in slavery.’ The Hindu nation had been enslaved by
inappropriate Westernisation.

The Constitution’s core conception of the nation, in his view, was
fundamentally not Indian at all: ‘in the constitution, as it is now, it is
the sentiments of the English that have found better expression than those
of the Indians,’ observed Upadhyaya. ‘Thus, our constitution, like an
English child born in India, has become Anglo-Indian in character, instead
of purely Indian.’

The absence of the Hindu Rashtra idea in the Constitution was unacceptable
for him. This makes all the more curious the enthusiastic zeal with which
his devotees today, from Prime Minister Modi on down, swear by it and
celebrate every milestone in its adoption. If Upadhyaya had not been
cremated, he would be rolling over in his grave.

Anantkumar Hegde has at least ended the hypocrisy and showed us the
Hindutvavadis’ real intent. This can now permit an honest debate about the
Constitution and its true value to pluralist India. He should be thanked.

II.
http://www.thehindu.com/news/national/karnataka/hegde-kicks-up-a-fresh-row-with-remarks-on-secularism/article22271584.ece

Union Minister Anantkumar Hegde kicks up row with remarks on secularism

SPECIAL CORRESPONDENT KOPPAL,  DECEMBER 24, 2017 22:26 IST

UPDATED: DECEMBER 26, 2017 13:12 IST

Union Minister Anantkumar Hegde

Chief Minister Siddaramaiah takes serious exception to the comments, saying
they do not befit Mr. Hegde’s position as Union Minister.
Union Minister of State for Employment and Skill Development Anantkumar
Hegde on Sunday kicked up a storm by describing “secular people” as those
who do not have an identity of their parental blood.

Asking people to identity themselves with their religion and caste rather
than being secular, he said the Constitution too would change in accordance
with such thinking. “We are here to change the Constitution,” he said at a
function organised by the Brahmana Yuva Parishat and women’s organisation
at Kukkanur in Yelburga taluk of Koppal district.

“Those claiming to be secular and progressive do not have an identity of
their parents and their blood. One will get self-respect through such
identity,” he said. “I will be happy if someone identifies as Muslim,
Christian, Brahmin, Lingayat or Hindu. But trouble will arise if they say
they are secular.”

'Constitution needs to be changed from time to time'
The Minister pointed out that the Constitution has undergone changes from
time to time. “The Constitution needs to be changed from time to time and
we have come for that,” he said.

Referring to those criticising religious customs and traditions by
referring to the ‘Manu Smriti’, he said the text had become outdated and at
present, ‘Ambedkar Smriti’ was being talked about. “Progressive thinkers do
not know about history, tradition and culture. Those who themselves have
erred are trying to blame others for their mistakes,” he said.

His remarks have been opposed by progressive thinkers and groups in
different parts of the State. Members of the Students’ Federation of India
staged a protest in Koppal, condemning the comments.

Chief Minister Siddaramaiah took serious exception to the remarks, saying
they do not befit Mr. Hegde’s position as Union Minister.

Mr. Siddaramaiah told reporters that Mr. Hegde lacked culture and
parliamentary language. “He should not hold even the post of panchayat
member,” he said.

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Peace Is Doable

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