*The Communal Character of Anna Hazare’s Movement*

*By Bhanwar Meghwanshi*

*(Translated from Hindi by Yoginder Sikand)*

It has now been confirmed that the Anna Hazare-led so-called ‘second freedom
struggle’—as some sections of the media have mistakenly chosen to call
it—has close links with the RSS. From conceptualizing this media-propelled
movement to successfully organizing it, the RSS, it appears, played a key
role in it. This being the case, it is imperative to analyse the specific
communal character of this self-styled Gandhian movement against corruption.

No movement can be properly understood without taking into account the
forces behind it and their underlying objectives. Anna Hazare’s movement has
been analysed from several perspectives by both its critics as well as
supporters. Thus, it has been asked if the movement was truly a Gandhian
one. Was it really politically impartial? Was it democratic? Was it
orchestrated by the media? Was it funded by the corporate world? Was it an
NGO stunt? Was it all-India in its scope? On all these points there has been
heated debate. Yet, lamentably little has been said about whether or not
this movement was truly based on the Constitutional principle of secularism
and what, in particular, its position has been on the issue of Hindutva.

The men behind Anna Hazare’s movement bluntly deny that their movement has
any direct link with Hindutva forces. Some people have accepted this claim
at face-value. Yet, the reality seems quite the opposite. It would be amply
clear to a perceptive analyst that the movement was heavily based on the
support and assistance of the RSS. Members of the so-called ‘Team Anna’ may
or may not concede this but the RSS has itself officially acknowledged this
fact. After all, ‘India Against Corruption’ has no cadre of its own—all it
has are leaders. The massive crowds that poured out onto the streets to
participate in the movement could not have been mobilized simply by ‘Team
Anna’ and a handful of NGOs. Rather, this was, to very a large extent, the
handiwork of Hindutva organizations.

It is now evident that not only did the RSS mobilize crowds in support of
Anna Hazare’s movement but that it even prepared the movement’s very
roadmap. The decision to launch a campaign against corruption was taken by
the RSS at its All-India leaders meeting in Karnataka in March 2011, and it
was only after that, in April and then in August, that Anna Hazare sat on a
fast against corruption.

It has recently come to light that both the father and uncle of one of the
key men in ‘Team Anna’, the Marwari Arvind Kejriwal, have been
office-bearers of the RSS and allied groups in Haryana. Kejriwal is not
known to have openly condemned the Hindutva forces. On the contrary, he has
consistently been soft on them. His close relations with top BJP leader LK
Advani are well-known. And the manner in which he maintained close links
with top BJP leaders in the course of the recent agitation, including Arun
Jaitley, Sushma Swaraj and Nitin Gadkari, raise several questions about the
actual nature of the relationship between Kejriwal and the RSS. Is it that
Kejriwal, the RSS and the BJP were seeking to work together to bring the
present government down?

Whatever be the case, it is obvious from all this that there is no truth at
all in the assertion of key members of ‘Team Anna’ that their movement has
no direct link with Hindutva forces. The fact of the matter is that Anna
Hazare has for long been a favourite of the RSS. Interestingly, a top RSS
leader, the late HV Seshadri, even wrote a book on Anna Hazare’s so-called
‘model village of Ralegan Shiddi, which he hailed as supposedly heralding
the arrival of Ram Rajya! This was possibly the first book of its sort on
Anna Hazare’s activism. Another leading RSS activist, BM Datte, organized a
number of programmes in and around Pune in support of Hazare. According to
top RSS ideologue Govindacharya, a number of RSS activists have toured
Hazare’s village.

For his part, Anna Hazare has never spoken against the Hindutva ideology. He
is said to have had very close relations with the RSS till 1995, when he
targeted two ministers of the then BJP-Shiv Sena ministry in Maharashtra,
Mahadev Shivankar of the BJP and Shashikant Suthar of the Shiv Sena—for
corruption, after which his relations with the RSS were somewhat shaken.
But, despite this, the RSS consistently supported him for spending his life
based in a temple and for seeking to revive India’s ‘ancient’ culture
through village self-government. He has been praised as a great Indian
leader in the RSS’s Hindi periodical *Panchjanya*, even featuring on its
cover page.

When the BJP recently failed in its attempt to topple the government, it
suddenly remembered its favourite hero Anna Hazare, and, accordingly, so it
seems, Hindutva forces decided to achieve their objective by creating this
movement ostensibly against corruption. For this purpose, activists of the
RSS’s students’ wing, the Akhil Bharatiya Vidyarthi Parishad, floated an
outfit called ‘Youth Against Corruption’. At the same time, Arvind Kejriwal,
who was running an organization called Parivartan, got together with
flag-bearers of ‘soft Hindutva’, men like Baba Ramdev, Shri Shri Ravi
Shankar and other such religious leaders, and established a group that
called itself ‘India Against Corruption’. It seems that both these
organizations, with very similar-sounding names, were established in
accordance with the RSS’s plan of unleashing a countrywide agitation
ostensibly against corruption.

Accordingly, the RSS instructed its volunteers, a huge number of people
spread all across India, to wholeheartedly participate in this movement.
This explains why the overall ethos of Anna Hazare’s agitation at Jantar
Mantar was no different from that of the RSS *shahkha*s—the same image of
Akhand Bharat being displayed in the form of ‘Bharat Mata’! The only
difference was that she held the Indian tricolor in her hand instead of the
Hindutva *bhagwa-dhwaj*. RSS supremo Mohan Bhagwat’s call to the youth of
India to join the people’s movement against corruption and the presence of
top RSS leader Ram Madhav at Anna’s dais at Jantar Mantar raise the very
real possibility that the entire movement was engineered and directed in
accordance with the agenda of the RSS. When some people raised questions
about this, the men behind the movement became alert and felt it imperative
to be a little less indiscreet. And so, at Hazare’s dais at the Ram Leela
Grounds instead of well-known Hindutva leaders Ram Madhav and Uma Bharti,
another RSS activist, Kumar Vishwas, was present throughout the thirteen-day
fast, and even handled the task of managing the dais.

Can ‘Team Anna’ deny that the RSS had sent the same Kumar Vishwas to manage
the dais in the very same Ram Leela Grounds during the recent agitation led
by Baba Ramdev? The Hindutva hand behind the movement does not stop here,
though. Top VHP leader Ashok Singhal is on record as having thanked the
volunteers of the RSS for making Anna’s movement a success. He revealed that
members of the Dharamyatra Mahasangh, a unit of the VHP, ran food stalls at
the Ram Leela Grounds, where some 20, 000 people were fed every day.

In accordance with the RSS’s plans, vast numbers of people were mobilized to
come out on the streets to support Anna Hazare. Top RSS leader Bhaiyyaji
Joshi declared that RSS volunteers were fully active in Anna Hazare’s
movement. The BJP youth leader Tejinder Pal took up the task of *gherao*-ing
the residences of Congress MPs, while BJP MPs Anant Kumar, Gopinath Munde
and Varun Gandhi made their appearance at the Ram Leela Grounds. One day
before Anna went on his fast, MG Vaid, top RSS leader, issued a statement
indicating that the RSS had given its full support to his movement. And that
explains why and how RSS activists present at the Ram Leela Grounds as well
as in other parts of India where Hazare supporters had gathered kept raising
their favourite slogans of ‘Bharat Mata ki Jai’ and ‘Vande Mataram’, and in
that same style and with the same sort of fervor as they are wont to in
their *shakha*s. This is clear indication of the massive presence of RSS
activists in the movement.

That Hindutva forces strongly backed Anna’s movement and participated in it
in a big way across the country, even in remote parts, is clearly evident.
To cite just one instance, a social activist called Gopal Rathi, a member of
the Samajwadi Jan Parishad, wrote to Prashant Bhushan, a key member of the
so-called ‘Team Anna’, from a small town called Pipariya in Madhya Pradesh,
saying that in his town BJP activists had donned Anna-caps and launched a
motor-cycle rally to protest against Hazare’s arrest. On the occasion of
Janamashtami, VHP activists, he wrote, organized a recitation of the Sundar
Kand, a section of the Ramayana, in support of Hazare. Volunteers of other
Hindutva outfits, he write, such as the Akhil Bharatiya Vidyarthi Parishad,
the Bajrang Dal, the Durga Vahini, and the Bharatiya Kisan Sangh, also
organized a number of programmes to express their solidarity with Anna
Hazare.

But this sort of overwhelming support for Anna Hazare from Hindutva forces
was not limited just to this little-known town of Pipariya. The fact is that
the same story was repeated across the country, in virtually every village,
locality and city, where activists of the RSS and its associated outfits
proved to be the backbone of the agitation.

For me the important question is not why the RSS participated in Anna
Hazare’s movement. This was, after all, its own decision. As far as I am
concerned, the key question is this: How did folks raising Gandhian slogans
and who never tire hailing secularism become a part of an RSS-backed scheme?
This is a very important question that must be asked and must also be
answered. How did people like Medha Patkar, Swami Agnivesh, Prashant Bhushan
and Sandeep Pandey, and many other such activists, who have all along
opposed communalism and have themselves been targeted by communal forces,
fall prey to this RSS conspiracy and get involved in an RSS-backed movement?
Their stance has greatly troubled millions of Dalits, Adivasis and religious
minorities of this country, who have not hesitated to express their distaste
for Anna Hazare’s movement, not least because of its being so closely linked
to Hindutva forces. Is it that these activists simply failed to understand
the draconian nature of the Jan Lokpal that Anna Hazare and his Hindutva
backers are demanding? Is it that they have failed to understand the nature
of the forces at work behind the mob demonstrations that we recently
witnessed? Is it that the secularism that they kept talking about earlier
was a pretence? These are questions that they have to answer.

It goes to the credit of a number of leaders, activists, and intellectuals
from the Dalit and OBC communities to have pointed out not only how the Anna
Hazare-led movement and many of its demands militate heavily against the
oppressed castes but also how it is heavily communal, being closely allied
to the Hindutva agenda. The noted writer Mudra Rakshas, for one, plainly
declared, ‘The Jan Lokpal represents the agenda of the Indian Savarna
middle-class, which, while claiming to be modern, continues to cling to the
communalism of the RSS’. SK Panjam, editor of ‘*Dalit Today’*, believes that
Hazare’s Jan Lokpal is a new tool of Savarna Hindu revivalism. For his part,
Rajvir Yadav of the Arjak Sangh insists that it is an assault on the Indian
Constitution by the forces of Savarna Hindu chauvinism. Many other
ideologues from the oppressed castes opine that Anna Hazare’s movement has
been propped up as part of a conspiracy on the part of Hindutva forces to
stop the caste-based census and stall the passing of the proposed bill
against communal violence.

True to form, the dominant Indian media has deliberately ignored such
voices, thus revealing, as Anna Hazare’s movement also does, its Savarna
casteist and Hindu communal character.



*Bhanwar Megwanshi is a noted social activist from Bhilwara, Rajasthan. He
edits the Hindi monthly ‘Diamond India’, a journal that deals with
grassroots’ social issues. Having for many years been associated with the
RSS, he parted company with it and is now associated with the
Rajasthan-based Mazdoor-Kisan Shakti Sangathan (MKSS), working on issues
related to Dalits, Adivasis and nomadic castes. He can be contacted on
[email protected]/ 09829646720*

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