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SANGH : UNIQUE AND EVERGREEN
A unique phenomenon
in the history of Bharat in the twentieth century
is the birth and unceasing growth of Rashtriya Swayamsevak
Sangh (RSS). The Sangh's sphere of influence has been
spreading far and wide, not only inside Bharat but
also abroad, like the radiance of a many-splendoured
diamond. Sangh -inspired institutions and movements
today form a strong presence in social, cultural,
educational, labour, developmental, political and
other fields of nationalist endeavour. Sangh-initiated
movements - be they social-reformist or anti-secessionist
- evoke ready response and approbation from the common
multitudes as well as from vast numbers of elite of
different shades. It has increasingly been recognised
that the Sangh is not a mere reaction to one or another
social or political aberration. It represents a corpus
of thought and action firmly rooted in genuine nationalism
and in the age-old tradition of this country. No other
movement or institution has attracted such vast numbers
of adherents, several thousands of them making social
work their life's mission, whose character and integrity
are not doubted even by their most virulent critics.
As a movement for national reconstruction totally
nurtured by the people, Sangh has no parallel in Bharat
or elsewhere. The growth of the Sangh - as a movement
for assertion of Bharat's national identity - acquires
added significance when we remember that the birth
of the Sangh was preceded by mental, cultural and
economic onslaught by alien rulers for long decades.
There could be only one explanation for the continuing
march of the Sangh from strength to strength: the
emotive response of the millions to the vision of
Bharat's national glory, based on the noblest values
constituting the cultural and spiritual legacy of
the land and collectively called 'Dharma', comprising
faith in the oneness of the human race, the underlying
unity of all religious traditions, the basic divinity
of the human being, complemen-tarity and inter-relatedness
of all forms of creation both animate and in-animate,
and the primacy of spiritual experience. That the
mission of the Sangh is in tune with a millennia-old
heritage itself carries an irresistible appeal. It
would have been logical for our post-1947 rulers to
re-structure the national life in keeping with our
culture. Sadly, that golden opportunity was lost.
Until Dharma also is recognised as a basis of survival
and progress, national integration and such other-
often-repeated goals will remain a far cry indeed.
Idealism and patriotism are tangible exterior manifestations
of Dharma.
Absence of idealism has been at the root of most problems
haunting our polity. Amidst such an environment, Sangh
is unique in according primacy to inculcation of patriotism
in all citizens and in all life's activities.
National reconstruction demands the fostering of a
national character, uncompromising devotion to the
Motherland, discipline, self-restraint, courage and
heroism. To create and nurture these noble impulses
is the most challenging task before the country -
what Swami Vivekananda succinctly called man-making.
It is to this historic mission that the Rashtriya
Swayamsevak Sangh has addressed itself.
SANGH : A DYNAMIC POWER-HOUSE
Great oaks from
little acorns grow. What started as a tiny stream
in an obscure corner of Nagpur in Maharashtra 68 years
ago has now swollen into a mighty river engulfing
the remotest villages of the country. That the number
of Sangh Shakhas has crossed 25,000 is one indicator
of the expanding reach of the Sangh.
It redounds to the foresight of Dr. Keshav Baliram
Hedgewar (1889 - 1940) that he anticipated the need
for strengthening the foundations of the Hindu society
and for preparing it for challenges on social, economic,
cultural, religious, philosophical and political planes.
A galaxy of savants such as Dayananda and Vivekananda,
Aurobindo and Tilak, had sown the seeds of the most
recent phase of national renaissance. What was needed
was a sufficiently strong instrumentality for carrying
that process onward.
This instrumentality was created and bequeathed to
the nation by Dr. Hedgewar in the form of Rashtriya
Swayamsevak Sangh which he, after years of deliberate
and patient preparation, founded at Nagpur on 27th
Septem- ber, Vijayadashami Day of 1925.
One of the hazards of organisation-building is allowing
one's vision to be clouded with immediate concerns,
resulting in dilution of perception of the ultimate
goal. Dr. Hedgewar's especial strength was that he
never allowed demands of the immediate present to
veer him away from the ultimate mission he set to
himself.
Keeping aflame the spirit of freedom and endeavouring
simul- taneously to strengthen the cultural roots
of the nation marked the twin features of the character
of the Sangh from the beginning; and that has to this
day remained its main plank. Every passing day has
confirmed the validity of this basic philosophy. Erosion
of the nation's integrity in the name of secularism,
economic and moral bankruptcy, incessant conversions
from the Hindu fold through money-power, ever-increasing
trends of secession, thought-patterns and education
dissonant with the native character of the people,
and State-sponsored denigration of anything that goes
by the name of Hindu or Hindutwa: these pervasive
tendencies provide ample proof of the soundness of
the philosophical foundation of the Sangh as conceived
by Dr. Hedgewar and its continued relevance for the
survival and health of the Hindu society and of the
nation as a whole. It is the Rashtriya Swayamsevak
Sangh alone which has consistently been sounding the
alarm against all these wrong tendencies in the body-politic
of Bharat.
Dr. Hedgewar said often, "Even if the British
leave, unless the Hindus are organised as a powerful
nation, where is the guarantee that we shall be able
to protect our freedom?" His words have proved
to be prophetic. Conjointly with Independence, parts
of Punjab, Bengal, Sindh and the frontier-areas were
sundered from Bharat; and, four and a half decades
after the nation's attaining freedom, Kashmir remains
a thorn in the flesh.
Continuous efforts have been there to make Assam a
Muslim- majority province. Likewise, no-holds-barred
efforts to proselytize by Christian missions continue
unabated. Even armed revolt has been engineered (e.g.,
in Nagaland) to carve out independent Christian provinces.
Such activities receive ready support and unlimited
funds from foreign countries and agencies keenly interested
in destabilizing Bharat for their own ends.
Sangh's alone has been the voice of genuine patriotic
concern amidst the cacophanous, politically inspired
shibboleths of undefined secularism, etc.
Even at the inception, the Sangh was viewed by its
founder not as a sectoral activity or movement, but
as a dynamic power-house energising every field of
national activity.
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