9. The Sangh as Dinasaur
9. The Sangh as dinosaur
�������� The anti-intellectualism of the Sangh
Parivar is a sufficiently serious problem to warrant a closer discussion.� The situation on the ground is that RSS men
seldom sit down to do any thinking, but are always on the move.� As a US-based Hindutva activist told me:
"When I make a phone call to an RSS office-bearer in India, he will most
often not be in the Delhi office, not in Nagpur or another town, but somewhere
on the way."� And the wife of a BJP
stalwart told me: "Being on the way from one place to another is a status
symbol among RSS men."� With all
this physical locomotion, little time and occasion is left for concentrated
mental work.
�������� The Sangh has a basic commit�ment to
India and to Hindu culture, but beyond that, its ideological position is hazy
and undeveloped, and therefore mal�leable in the hands of ideologically more
articulate forces.� It has been more
influenced by dominant polit�ical currents and intel�lectual fashions, often
emanating from its declared enemies, than one would expect from an
"extremist" movement.� Like in
the Congress and Janata parties, quarrels within the BJP are never about
ideology.� As ex-insider Balraj Madhok
writes in a comment on the Gujarat quarrels: "Personal differences rather
than ideolog�ical factors lie at the root of the rifts within the Sangh
Parivar."
�������� To an extent, the BJP has its lack of
ideological sophis�tication in common with all non-Communist parties, most of
all with Congress.� A few recycled old
slogans, a picture of its long-dead leaders, some material presents for the
voter (ad hoc food subsidies, writing off farmers' loans), and there you have a
complete Congress election campaign.�
Mutatis mutandis, the same is true for most parties.� The simple slogans on the outside are not
the summary of a profound and complica�ted programme too esoteric to trouble
the voters with (as in the case of the Communists).� The surface is all there is to it, at least as far as ideology is
concerned.�
�������� This ideological hollowness is merely the
ap�plication to politics of a more general superficiality afflicting India's
public discourse.� An example is the
politics of Sikh identity: given the Vaishnava contents of Sikh scripture and
the unmis�takable Hindu self-identification by Sikh leaders from Guru Nanak
through Guru Tegh Bahadur and Maharaja Ranjit Singh down to Master Tara Singh
(a co-founder of the VHP), the "separate iden�tity" in which radical
neo-Sikhs have invested so much, includ�ing political separatism and a long
decade of bloodshed, amounts to nothing more than beards, turbans and steel
bangles,-- pure externality, an insult to the human intellect.
�������� Sri Aurobin�do, the Freedom Fighter and
philoso�pher, already said it: "I believe that the main cause of India's
weakness is not subjection, nor poverty, nor a lack of spirituality or Dharma,
but a diminution of thought-power, the spread of ignorance in the motherland of
Knowledge.� Everywhere I see an
inability or unwilingness to think -- incapacity of thought or 'thought
phobia'."� The
great ailment of India today is the decline in think�ing power.� The crudeness of contemporary political
thought in India, once the cradle of great pioneers in abstract and social
sciences, is a sad sight, especially considering that in other fields, such as
business and the exact sciences, Indians are already recovering their ancient
great�ness and showing their acumen again.��
�������� To this general atmosphere of
intellectual sloppiness, the RSS has contributed its own wilful
anti-intellectual prejudice.� The
perception from which Dr. Keshav Baliram Hedgewar (RSS supremo 1925-40) started
his RSS project was that Hindu society essentially had everything, even the
best of everything, certainly also in intellectual culture, and that the only
thing it lacked was or�ganization.�
It is debatable whether lack of organization was a factor in the
historical defeat of Hindu princes by Muslim invaders and British colonizers,
but for the interbellum period, this analysis possibly had its merits.� And so, the RSS put all its eggs in the
single basket labelled Hindu sangathan/"o�rganization" (hence
its weekly's name Or�ganise�r).�
�������� Hedgewar's successor Madhav Sadashiv
Golwalkar (1940-73) despised intellectual pursuits, and when he saw RSS people
reading books or newspapers, he would ask them if they had "nothing useful
to do for the Sangh?"� When I
mention this to RSS activists, they protest that there are many doctors,
engineers and scien�tists in the RSS, and some of them recount as their
personal experience that Golwalkar had encouraged them in their studies.� Alright then, let me rephrase my position as
follows.
�������� Golwalkar, who had been trained as a
biologist, shared with many people from the exact sciences a dismis�sive
incomprehension for the humanities, the disciplines in which critical thinking
is practised.� Secondly, he shared with
many spiritual-minded people a skep�ticism of the power of the intellect as
compared to that of supposedly deeper layers of consciousness.� Thirdly, he shared with many activists a distrust
of sterile cerebration with its tendency to paralyze people's power to
act.� And fourthly, he shared with many
Hindus a disgust with the traitorous role of the Communists, intellec�tuals all
of them, in the British suppression of the 1942 Quit India movement and the
Partition of India.� Hence the
rhetorical question of many RSS people: "What good was ever done by
intellec�tuals?"
�������� RSS people often tell the story of the
Pandit who crosses the river and asks the boatman if he ever studied philosophy:
"No?� Then half your life is
wasted!"� But when the boat starts
to sink, it is the boatman's turn: "Pandi�tji, have you studied
swimming?� No?� Then all your life is wasted!"� And then they have a good laugh, satisfied at having proven how
useless intellectual effort is.� But
fact is: in the modern world, the equivalent of "swimming" in the
story, the skill necessary to disentangle yourself from the impasse and reach
the goal, is not the physical locomotion at which RSS officials are so
good.� Among the skills needed for
successful social and political action today, we should include the art of
collecting and analyzing information, and the art of formulating and
advertising viewpoints.� Not the
intellectuals, but the RSS itself acts like the pandit in the story who had
spurned mastering the art of swimming.
�������� In fairness, it must be conceded that
for all its anti-intellectual bias, through its dedicated investment in
grass-roots work involving enormous personal effort of several millions of
people, the Sangh Parivar has unmistakably succeeded in establishing an
impressive presence among the common people.�
Also, it must be said that some RSS leaders, par�ticularly its new sar-sangh-chalak,
Prof. Rajendra Singh (1994--, successor of Balasaheb Deoras 1973-94), have
understood the folly of this anti-intellec�tual prejudice, and now exhort their
workers to do some reading.� The newer
publications are also less shabby-looking and better written than the handful
of pamphlets which constitutes the whole of RSS literature produced in the
first seventy years.� In particular, the
Organiser has definitely gained in informative reliability and
intellectual depth under Seshadri Chari's editorship.� In the margin of Sangh, some local groups have started to process
information and disseminate ideas, such as the Vigil group in Chennai
and the Hindu Vivek Kendra in Mumbai.�
But the conse�quen�ces of this long-standing policy of mindless activism
are bound to run their course for some more years.
�������� The Sangh's wilful mindlessness reminds
me of a Chinese story about a man who equipped himself for a journey to the
south.� He bought the best chariot and
horses, hired the best charioteer, and went to the imperial highway which
crossed the empire in north-south direction.�
There, he gave directions to his charioteer, and off they went.� At a stop along the way, someone asked him
where he was going.� "To the
south", he said.� "But this
way you will never get there", said the stranger.� The man replied: "Come on, how can you
say I will not get there?� This is the
best road in the empire, why should it not take me there?"� But the stranger said: "You will not
get there, because you are taking the direction to the north."� The man insisted: "But these are the
finest horses, and this is a brandnew chariot, most certainly they will get me
there."� The stranger said:
"But they will not get you to the south if you take this
direction."� The traveller got
tired of all this nitpicking: "My charioteer is the best in the empire, so
how can you say that he will not get me to my destination?� Look, this is a sterile discussion, I must
be on my way."� And off he drove,
on the best road, with the best equipment, at full speed, yet he never reached
his destination.
�������� Indeed, when you ask RSS office-bearers
to evaluate their own performance, they will boast that they have such a neat
scheme of character-building, such a fine organization, so many well-trained
and dedicated cadres, such a wide range of activities and front groups.� Alright, but where is this impressive
organizational machinery going?� Do they
know enough about Hinduism to understand why it should be defended in the first
place?� The standard shakha teachings
about "patriotism" may fail to teach them much about the specific
qualities og Hinduism.� Do they know
enough about Hinduism's enemies to defeat or even simply to recognize
them?� Without a proper analysis, this
vast network of shakhas and front organizations is but an army of sleepwalkers.
�������� I propose to conclude with another metaphor,
which came up during a discussion I had with Dina Nath Mishra, a journalist
close to the RSS: "The RSS is a big dinosaur with a small
brain."� I don't think I
misrepresent Mishra's opinion when I say he agreed with this remark.� His practical conclusion was: the thing to
do is not to build up an alternative organization, but to "infuse some
brain into the dinosaur".