Guest guest Posted July 11, 2004 Report Share Posted July 11, 2004 New son of the Sangh? Between us| Pankaj Vohra July 11 http://www.hindustantimes.com/news/5922_880400,0015002200000017.htm "Golwalkar, the second RSS chief, had advocated the need to change every individual through ideological impact in order to change society. Those who succeeded him, notably Balasaheb Deoras and Rajju Bhaiya, laid emphasis on the transformation of society through political means." A high-powered meeting of the RSS and some of its allied organisations in Raipur over the weekend has sparked off speculation over whether the VHP's proposal to align with a new political party, which would be totally committed to the Hindutva cause, will be accepted. The VHP has been demanding a new political party to replace the BJP and some of its leaders have already indicated to senior RSS office-bearers that they would find it difficult to interact with the BJP in its present form. The RSS, too, has serious reservations about the increased politicisation of the BJP till the Mandal level. Despite assurances from top BJP leaders that the party would return to its ideological constituency, the RSS is attempting to determine whether it will be able to do so. The aim behind the meeting was to see how things stand for the future in the context of BJP leaders who may have contributed significantly in the past but seem to have run out of steam now. At another level, the debate within the RSS is whether the party should return to the Golwalkar school of thought or continue with the Balasaheb Deoras-Rajju Bhaiya philosophy. Golwalkar, the second RSS chief, had advocated the need to change every individual through ideological impact in order to change society. Those who succeeded him, notably Balasaheb Deoras and Rajju Bhaiya, laid emphasis on the transformation of society through political means. Their line was that the BJP should pursue power and, thereafter, use it to change society. However, the present RSS functionaries feel that despite the BJP being in power for six years, not much was achieved in this area. So much so that the BJP got a drubbing during the recent Lok Sabha polls and is now in the opposition. The top RSS leadership, including its chief K.S. Sudarshan, has indicated that of the two streams of thought, Golwalkar's philosophy seems to have survived while the other has failed to meet its objective. Therefore, the Sangh has to decide once and for all whether the BJP, in its current state, can carry forward the Golwalkar agenda, especially since it is split right till the lowest level by factionalism and does not enjoy the confidence of grassroots RSS volunteers who feel let down by its deviation from the Hindutva ideology. The RSS is also worried that it was becoming increasingly difficult to get younger people associated with the outfit, more so because its political wing, the BJP, had been dithering on the question of basic ideology and not done anything to promote it. The anger against the BJP is also pronounced since, in order to promote it, the RSS had minimised the role of the Akhil Bharatiya Vidyarthi Parishad (ABVP), its student wing, the VHP and even the Bharatiya Mazdoor Sangh whose leader Dattopant Thengadi is a strong critic of former Prime Minister Atal Bihari Vajpayee. The three organisations were told to play down their activities so that the BJP could have the freedom to implement the tasks assigned to it. However, with the BJP becoming a coterie-driven outfit and its senior leaders engaging more in power politics than promoting ideology, the Sangh's message could not reach the grassroots. Both Vajpayee and L.K. Advani are being held responsible for this by a section of the Sangh. Their repeated assurances of upholding the RSS agenda seems to be finding few takers among top RSS functionaries, who are of the view that even if the RSS has to sacrifice many governments in order to promote its ideological moorings, it is ready to do so. The explanation given by BJP leaders that they had never given up on the party's core issues but were compelled by demands of real politik to put them on the backburner has not convinced too many people in the RSS. At Nagpur some days ago, the troika of Sudarshan, H.V. Seshadri and Mohan Bhagwat had stressed the need to focus on ideological issues. In this context, a resolution passed at the Mumbai meeting of the national executive endorsing former HRD Minister Murli Manohar Joshi's policy on education and culture assumes significance. But the BJP leaders, who were to promote several issues during their week-long agitational programme from July 6 onwards, are content with making occasional passing references to the `detoxification' of education launched by HRD Minister Arjun Singh, essentially because of power politics with the BJP where Joshi is an `outsider'. On their part, both Vajpayee and Advani realise that the rediscovery of the virtues of Golwalkar's philosophy by senior RSS functionaries could spell trouble for them. A challenge to their political supremacy for the first time since Deen Dayal Upadhyay died under mysterious circumstances in February 1968 is from the Sangh itself — not the Congress or others. Therefore, the `moderate and secular' Vajpayee and `iron man' Advani have been going out of their way to appease the Sangh. Vajpayee even talked of how Jana Sangh founder Shyama Prasad Mukherjee, whose 103rd birth anniversary was observed last week, was killed. However, he did not clarify why he did not institute a commission of inquiry if this was his belief. The Raipur meet is significant and crucial in more ways than one because it will determine even the future of the RSS, seen by its opponents as a closed and fascist outfit. It will also determine the future of the BJP as to whether it should go on the path of the Congress in terms of power politics or return to its original saffron agenda of the Jana Sangh days. At stake is Sudarshan's own leadership as also the future of Vajpayee and Advani and the BJP itself. Though unlikely, if the RSS gives its nod to a new political party, then a new chapter may be opened in Indian politics. It will be the victory of ideology over realpolitik. Between us. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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