Showing posts with label hindutva. Show all posts
Showing posts with label hindutva. Show all posts

Monday, June 13, 2022

Ramachandra Guha: Hindutva has strong links with fascism – but today’s leaders want to forget them

 Opinion

Italian historian Marzia Casolari rigorously explored how some Indians were influenced by the destructive European ideology.

Ramachandra Guha

Jun 05, 2022 · 06:30 am



 

 

 

 

 

 

 

German Chancellor Adolf Hitler riding in a car with Italian dictator Benito Mussolini in Munich in 1937. | SNEP / AFP

Last month, a teacher of political science in Uttar Pradesh’s Sharda University posed this examination question to his students: “Do you find any similarities between Fascism/ Nazism and Hindu right-wing (Hindutva)? Elaborate with the argument.” The teacher was suspended by the university authorities, on the grounds that the very posing of the question was “totally averse” to the “great national identity” of our country and “may have the potential for fomenting social discord”.

This column seeks to answer the question the teacher in Sharda University was forbidden from asking his students. I use, as my main sources, the writings of the Italian historian, Marzia Casolari, in particular an essay she published in the Economic and Political Weekly in 2000 titled “Hindutva’s Foreign Tie-up in the 1930s”, and a book she published 20 years later, titled In the Shadow of the Swastika: The Relationships Between Indian Radical Nationalism, Italian Fascism and Nazism

Casolari’s work is based on a prodigious amount of research conducted in archives in Italy, India, and the United Kingdom and draws on primary materials in several languages as well. She demonstrates that in the 1920s and 1930s, the Marathi press covered the rise of fascism in Italy with great interest, and mostly admiringly, thinking that a similar ideology in India could likewise transform a backward agrarian country into a rising industrial power and bring order and regimentation to a disputatious society.

Spirit of militarism

These glowing articles on Benito Mussolini and fascism, several of which Casolari quotes, may very well have been read by KB Hedgewar and MS Golwalkar (the pre-eminent leaders of the Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh) and by VD Savarkar and BS Moonje (the pre-eminent leaders of the Hindu Mahasabha) – all four of whom had Marathi as their mother tongue. Thus, as Casolari writes, “By the late 1920s, the fascist regime and Mussolini had many supporters in Maharashtra. The aspects of Fascism, which appealed most to the Hindu nationalists, were, of course, the supposed shift of Italian society from chaos to order, and its militarisation. This patently anti-democratic system was considered a positive alternative to democracy, seen as a typical British institution.”

A key figure in Casolari’s researches is Dr BS Moonje, a major ideologue of the Hindu right-wing. Moonje visited Italy in 1931 and met many supporters of the fascist regime. He was deeply impressed by Benito Mussolini and his ideology, and by his seeking to infuse the spirit of militarism among the youth.

At his request, Moonje was granted a meeting with Mussolini himself. When the Duce asked the fawning Indian visitor what he thought about the fascist youth organisations, Moonje replied: “Your Excellency, I am very much impressed. Every aspiring and growing nation needs such organisations. India needs them most for her military regeneration.”



 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Of his conversation with the fascist dictator of Italy, Moonje remarked: “So ended my memorable interview with Signor Mussolini, one of the great men of the European world. He is a tall man with broad face and double chin and broad chest. His face shows him to be a man of strong will and powerful personality. I have noted that Italians love him.”

Moonje was awed by Mussolini’s personality and swept away by his ideology, with its glorification of perpetual war and its contempt for peace and reconciliation. He quoted with approval statements of the Italian dictator such as this one: “War alone brings up to its highest tension all human energy and puts the stamp of nobility upon the peoples who have the courage to meet it.”

And this one too: “Fascism believes neither in the possibility nor the utility of perpetual peace. It thus repudiates the doctrine of Pacifism which is born of renunciation of the struggle and [is] an act of cowardice in the face of sacrifice.”

Moonje was a mentor to the future founder of the RSS, KB Hedgewar. As a young student in Nagpur, Hedgewar stayed in Moonje’s house, and it was Moonje who sent Hedgewar to study medicine in Calcutta. After his trip to Italy, Moonje and Hedgewar worked hard to bring the Hindu Mahasabha and the RSS into closer collaboration. Casolari informs us that in January 1934, Hedgewar chaired a conference on fascism and Mussolini, with Moonje making one of the main speeches.

Standardisation of Hinduism

In March of the same year, Moonje, Hedgewar and their colleagues had a long meeting where Moonje remarked: “I have thought out a scheme based on Hindu Dharm Shastra which provides for standardisation of Hinduism throughout India… But the point is that this ideal cannot be brought to effect unless we have our own swaraj with a Hindu as a dictator like Shivaji of old or Mussolini or Hitler of the present day in Italy or Germany. But this does not mean that we have to sit with folded hands until some such dictator arises in India. We should formulate a scientific scheme and carry on propaganda for it.”

Moonje drew a direct parallel between Italian fascism and the ideology of the RSS. Thus he wrote: “The idea of Fascism vividly brings out the conception of unity amongst peoples. India and particularly Hindu India need some such Institution for the military regeneration of the Hindus… Our Institution of Rashtriya Svayamsewak Sangh of Nagpur under Dr Hedgewar is of this kind, though quite independently conceived.”

Casolari observes that “the RSS method of recruitment was practically identical to that of the Balilla youth organisation in Italy. Shaka members, for instance, were grouped according to their age (6-7 to 10; 10 to 14; 14 to 28; 28 and older). This is amazingly similar to the age bands of the hierarchical organisation of the fascist youth organisations… The hierarchical ordering of RSS members, however, came after the organisation was founded and may well have been derived from Fascism.”



 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Casolari quotes a police officer’s note of 1933, which says of the RSS: “It is perhaps no exaggeration to assert that the Sangh hopes to be in future India what the ‘Fascisti’ are to Italy and the ‘Nazis’ to Germany.” The note further observes: “The Sangh is essentially an anti-Muslim organisation aiming at exclusively Hindu supremacy in the country.”

Casolari’s research also has some interesting insights into the worldview of Savarkar. She writes that “[in] about 1938, Nazi Germany became the main point of reference for the Hindu Mahasabha, under Savarkar’s presidency. Germany’s rabid policies regarding race were taken as the model to be adopted to solve the ‘Muslim problem’ in India.”

Among the remarks by Savarkar quoted by Casolari are these:

“Germany has every right to resort to Nazism and Italy to Fascism and events have justified that those isms and forms of Government were imperative and beneficial to them under the conditions that obtained there.”

“Nationality did not depend so much on a common geographical area as on unity of thought, religion, language and culture. For this reason the Germans and the Jews could not be regarded as a nation.”

“In Germany the movement of the Germans is the national movement but that of the Jews is a communal one.”

“A Nation is formed by a majority living therein. What did the Jews do in Germany? They being in minority were driven out of Germany.”

“[T]he Indian Muslims are on the whole more inclined to identify themselves and their interests with Muslims outside India than Hindus who live next door, like Jews in Germany.”



 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Savarkar is, of course, an iconic figure for the Hindutva regime in power in India today. Casolari’s book also contains a passing reference to another Hindutva icon, Syama Prasad Mookerjee. In the inter-war period, the Italian government sought energetically to cultivate Indian intellectuals and politicians who might be sympathetic to fascism.

Their work was furthered by Giuseppe Tucci, the most eminent Italian Orientalist of his generation and a supporter of fascism himself. Tucci corresponded regularly with Moonje and, in the 1930s, was also in contact with SP Mookerjee, the then vice-chancellor of Calcutta University, and in the fullness of time to become the founder of the Jana Sangh, the predecessor of the Bharatiya Janata Party. Writing to his mentor, the fascist philosopher, Giovanni Gentile, Tucci described Mookerjee as “our most important collaborator” in Calcutta.

Marzia Casolari is not the first scholar to explore the parallels between Hindutva and fascism. However, she has done so with more rigour and in greater detail than anyone else. Her research demonstrates that the teacher in Sharda University had asked his students a legitimate and important question. By not allowing them to answer it, and by suspending the teacher himself, the university administrators have demonstrated their fear of the truth. And perhaps, even more, fear of their political bosses, who would wish us to forget that the founders of Hindutva were greatly inspired by European fascism.

Ramachandra Guha’s new book, Rebels Against the Raj, is now in stores. His email address is ramachandraguha@yahoo.in.

This article first appeared in The Telegraph.

Source: scrollin

Saturday, May 07, 2022

Time to ‘Break Collective Silence and Speak Out Against Hate’, Say Hindu Orgs, Leaders

Religion

The statement, complied by the US-based Hindus for Human Rights, expresses dismay at Hindu leaders in India and abroad "openly embracing Hindutva" and giving calls for genocidal violence against Muslims.

Apr 28, 2022 | The Wire Staff 



 

 

 

 

 

 

The protestors condemned Hindutva. Photo: Alliance for Justice and Accountability

New Delhi: Various Hindu organisations and religious leaders have endorsed a statement that says the “time is long overdue” for Hindus around the world to break the “collective silence and speak out” against Hindutva-fuelled hate and violence against Muslims and other minorities in India.

The statement, compiled by the US-based Hindus for Human Rights, was published in the Indian Express originally. Since then, several Hindu organisations and leaders have signed on to express solidarity.

The statement says there is increasing violence against Muslims in India, carried out in the name of Hinduism.

“As representatives of diverse Hindu traditions with deep histories, we are dismayed to see Hindu leaders in India and abroad openly embracing Hindutva—a century-old political ideology that sees citizens of other faiths as inherently foreign and not qualified to enjoy the full benefits of Indian citizenship,” it says.

Visuals of saffron-clad sadhus, sadhvis and swamis “calling for genocidal violence against millions of Indian Muslims” at the Haridwar ‘Dharma Sansad’ are a “chilling sight that we cannot ignore”, the organisations said.

Noting other developments like Muslim women being put up for “auction” on apps and the hijab ban in Karnataka, the statement says it is “long overdue for Hindus around the world to break our collective silence and speak out against this hate that violates the deepest teachings of our tradition”.

The statement also says whataboutery cannot be the solution – while violence against Hindus and other minorities in countries like Pakistan and Bangladesh may occur, “that does not, in any way, justify violence against Muslims and other minorities in India”, it says.

“Our answer is clear: the only way we can break the cycles of religious violence across South Asia is if we stand up for each other’s right to thrive and live with dignity,” the statement adds.

The signatories of the statement pledged to speak out against anti-Muslim words and actions; build and strengthen relationships with Muslim neighbours, leaders and institutions in our communities; keep their temples and homes open to all; and commit to Hindu teachings of religious freedom and social justice that challenge notions of religious nationalism, casteism, and hatred for people of other traditions.

The full statement and the list of signatories are republished below.

§

STANDING WITH OUR MUSLIM SIBLINGS

As Hindus, we are called to recognize that the Divine resides equally in all living beings. This recognition requires that we affirm the dignity of all beings and practice the virtues of non-injury (ahimsa) and compassion (karuna).

Sadly, as we write this letter, we are seeing increasing violence against our Muslim siblings in India, carried out in the name of our faith.

As representatives of diverse Hindu traditions with deep histories, we are dismayed to see Hindu leaders in India and abroad openly embracing Hindutva—a century-old political ideology that sees citizens of other faiths as inherently foreign and not qualified to enjoy the full benefits of Indian citizenship. The images and videos of saffron-clad sadhus, sadhvis, and swamis calling for genocidal violence against millions of Indian Muslims in December 2021 are a chilling sight that we cannot ignore. And since the so-called “Dharma Sansad” in Haridwar, we have seen Muslim women put up for “auction” on an app created by college students, and hijab-wearing Muslim girls being denied their right to equal education in Karnataka.

The time is long overdue for Hindus around the world to break our collective silence and speak out against this hate that violates the deepest teachings of our tradition.

Some may wonder: why are we speaking about Indian Muslims when we know Hindus are under attack in other countries? Our answer is clear: the only way we can break the cycles of religious violence across South Asia is if we stand up for each other’s right to thrive and live with dignity. Violence against Hindus and other minorities in countries like Pakistan and Bangladesh does not, in any way, justify violence against Muslims and other minorities in India.

By signing this letter, we pledge:

To speak out against anti-Muslim words and actions whenever they show up in our communities;

To build and strengthen relationships with Muslim neighbors, leaders and institutions in our communities;

To keep our temples and homes open to all, irrespective of religious background;

To commit to the teachings of religious freedom and social justice at the heart of our traditions that challenge notions of religious nationalism, casteism, and hatred for our brothers and sisters of other traditions.

Om Shanti, Shanti, Shanti.

Om Peace, Peace, Peace.

Organizations:

Aryasamaj Mandir (Amritpuri, New Delhi)
Bhaktiversity (Delhi)
Global Naitik Shiksha Kendra (Delhi/Mathura)
Hindu Temple Society of New Mexico (Albuquerque)
Institute of Living Universal Values, Ramakrishna Vedanta (Fort Collins, CO)
Jyoti Mandir (Orlando, FL)
Matri Sadan Ashram (Haridwar, India)
Mindful Meditation Yoga (Naperville, IL)
Prem Bhakti Mandir (Queens, NY)
Purple Pundit Project (New York, NY)
Ramakrishna Institute of Spirituality & Hinduism (RISHI) (Pretoria, South Africa)
Sarva Dharma Sadbhav Trust (Ayodhya)
Shaanti Bhavan Mandir (Queens, NY)
Shridevi Arts (New York)
Shiva Sai Mandir (Denver, CO)
Sifting to the Truth (Brooklyn, NY)
Spirit of Love (Azusa, California)
United Madrassi Association, Inc. (Jamaica, NY)

Individuals:

(Institutional affiliation is provided for identification purposes only and does not constitute institutional endorsement.)

Abhi Janamanchi, Senior Minister – Unitarian and Hindu, Cedar Lane Unitarian Universalist Church (Bethesda, Maryland)
Akilesh Ayyar, Hindu Spiritual Teacher, Sifting to the Truth (Brooklyn, NY)
Aminta Kilawan-Narine, Board Member, Shri Trimurti Bhavan Mandir (Ozone Park, NY)
Anantanand Rambachan, Emeritus Professor of Religion, Vedantic Scholar, Saint Olaf College (Minnesota USA)
Anu Malhotra, Hindu priestess and President, Mindful Meditation Yoga (Naperville, IL)
Babu Baijoo, Raisethorpe Arya Samaj (Pietermaritzburg, South Africa)
Brahmachari Sudhanand, Matri Sadan Ashram (Haridwar, India)
Brahmacharini Shweta Chaitanya (Atlanta)
Chandrasegara, Pandit (Sydney, Australia)
Dr. Brahmachari Sharan, Director for Dharmic Life, Dharmic Life (Washington DC)
Karuna Mohan, Arya Samaj South Africa (Johannesburg)
Khyati Joshi, Professor, Hindu scholar and community member (New Jersey)
Krishna Vishnoi, Priest, Jyoti Mandir (Orlando, FL)
Medha, Bhaktiversity (Delhi)
Nafeeah Kim, Director, Shiva Sai Mandir (Denver, CO)
Nicholas Indar, Assistant Pujari, New Jersey Mariamman Kovil (New Jersey)
Pandit Manoj Jadubans, Spiritual Leader, Shaanti Bhavan Mandir (Queens, NY)
Pandit Naresh Poeran, Shree Maheshwar Dhaam/Stichting Aastha (Rotterdam, Netherlands)
Pandit NK Sharma, Founder President, Universal Association for Spiritual Awareness (Delhi)
Pandit Sameer R., Hindu Temple Society of New Mexico (Albuquerque)
Pandit Sanjai Doobay, Shri Trimurti Bhavan (Brooklyn, NY)
Pandita Kushmani Doobay, Hindu officiant, Shridevi Arts (New York)
Pandita Sapna Pandya, Hindu officiant (Washington DC)
Pradeep Reddy, Board of Trustees, Hindu Temple and Cultural Society (Carbondale, IL)
Pratima Dharm, Reverend, Pandita, Spirit of Love (Azusa, California)
Pravrajika Vrajaprana, Senior Sannyasini, Vedanta Society (Santa Barbara)
Prof. Pankaj Joshi, Ramakrishna Institute of Spirituality & Hinduism (RISHI) (Pretoria, South Africa)
Raja Gopal Bhattar, Consultant, Educator, Pandit – Bhattar Consulting Group, Sadhana Spiritual Council (Los Angeles)
Ram Saran Bhasin, President, Asamai Mandir (Kabul, Afghanistan)
Reshma Persaud, Senior Officer, Philanthropy, Shiv Shakti Peeth (Queens, NY)
Rev. Manish Mishra-Marzetti, Unitarian Universalist & Hindu, First Unitarian Universalist Congregation of Ann Arbor (Ann Arbor, Michigan)
Reverend Mahesh Upadhyaya, Unitarian Universalist and Hindu (Gujarat, India)
Sena Lund, President, Afghan-Hindu Association (New York)
Shashi Tandon, Hindu priestess (Chicago)
Shivam Bhatt, Hindu priest (California)
Sivea Key, Organizing Member, Institute of Living Universal Values, Ramakrishna Vedanta (Fort Collins, CO)
Sushma Dwivedi, Progressive, Inclusive Pundit, Purple Pundit Project (New York, NY)
Swami Narayan Das, Global Naitik Shiksha Kendra (Delhi/Mathura)
Swami Shivanand Saraswati, Founder, Matri Sadan Ashram (Haridwar, India)
Vijah Ramjattan, Acharya, United Madrassi Association, Inc. (Jamaica, NY)
Yugal Kishore Sharan Shastri, Sarva Dharma Sadbhav Trust (Ayodhya)

Source: The Wire