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Subject: [India Thinkers Net] Updates about RSS agents - July23, 2004



The Times of India
July 22, 2004, Op-Ed.

BEYOND IDEOLOGY: THE CASE AGAINST RSS GOVERNORS
Alok Rai

Thrown off-balance by Verdict 2004, the once
deputy prime minister of India is blustering with
threats of dire but unspecified consequences: The
Congress, he said, will have to pay a heavy price
for this! Well, the Congress can take care of
itself, but it behoves us as concerned citizens
to spend a little time with the matter that has
so exercised the hon'ble Mr Advani: The summary
dismissal of four RSS functionaries whom his
government had installed as provincial governors.

The sainted Mr Advani, projected as another
Sardar Patel from time to time, is seeking to
play Gandhi, positioning himself somewhere above
(and outside) Parliament from where he can
criticise the established legal order. But the
muttered threats diminish him cruelly into
something like a Hindu Jinnah.

Advani's affectations apart, the underlying issue
is not merely the technical one of whether the
president is legally right in dismissing the four
governors. It is the deeper moral question of
whether self-confessed RSS types should have been
- or should ever be - appointed to high offices
where they are in a position to pervert the
workings of the Constitution to which their
allegiance can only ever be tactical and
hypocritical. If not, then irrespective of Mr
Advani's posturings, the great wrong was that of
having appointed such people in the first place,
and we should be grateful for what the president
has done.

In the bad old days before the formation of the
NDA government, a lot of people who should have
known better, persuaded themselves that the
constraints of office would "normalise" the BJP.
In becoming a mainstream party, it would shed its
manic elements. There is a profound sense in
which the BJP has been "compromised" by its years
in office. There isn't much point in naming
names. Let us merely remember, just when Enron is
about to hit us with a Rs 26,000 crore bill, that
the statesman-like Mr V actually cleared the
second phase of the Enron project - having
rubbished it earlier - during the 13 days when he
was the prime minister in 1996, before
unsuccessfully seeking the initial vote of
confidence!

And yet, it is not the widespread corruption that
is the most worrying thing about these people.
Their demonstrated venality is what might even
delude us into accepting them as "normal",
muddled and corruptible - just like the rest of
us. The thing that puts them firmly beyond the
pale of constitutional politics is their
so-called "idealism", their carefully projected
air of sanctimonious virtue, their mealy-mouthed
saintliness.

The processes whereby the RSS manages to produce,
en masse, a certain kind of personality have not
received the academic attention they deserve. But
while the etiology and inner structure of this
kind of personality might be imperfectly
understood, we are familiar with its behaviours.
I refer not only to the bloodied foot-soldiers of
"Gujarat 2002", but rather to the perfumed
leaders who, with clean hands and clean
consciences, presided over this orgy of violence.
Not only the unmentionable Modi but also Mr
"Flip-flop" Vajpayee and Mr Advani. Two years
after those gruesome events, they still haven't
grasped the horror of what happened, and are
publicly concerned about whether the violence
lost or won elections for them, and consequently
whether or not it was something they should
apologise for, or boast about.

This question - How do they do it? - has a direct
bearing on the matter of the dismissed governors.
My own sense of it is that the RSS, after the
manner of similar organisations, creates in its
cadres an area of self where merely human
considerations no longer apply. It has been
supposed, simplistically, that the demonising of
the Muslim is an end in RSS ideology. My sense of
it is that the "demonised Muslim" is merely the
means whereby a trans-moral personality is
created. It is of the essence of this kind of
"engineered" personality that it is, in most
respects, normal, and sometimes even rather
refined. (The case of the concentration camp
commandant who returned to Wagner and Bach after
a hard day at the gas chambers is legendary.) The
area of self functions as a secure and privileged
enclave, beyond the reach of rational argument,
and the cries of human pain and suffering. The
merely human being, once possessed of
self-hypnotising, dogmatic certainties, and
absolved of moral responsibility, is rendered
into pure will, an instrument of history, or the
nation, or the Aryan ideal.

It seems merely an elementary precaution to
exclude such worthies from every office that
requires an explicit fidelity to the Constitution
of India. It cannot be argued that theirs is an
ideology just like any other - because if mere
ideological affiliation were a disqualification,
then Khurana and even Nawal Kishore Sharma should
have been excluded. But the RSS is not, as they
themselves routinely declare, a political party
with a particular ideology - it is a secret
society. And whatever little has filtered out
about the aims of this secret society, it aims at
nothing less than subverting the liberal and
secular Constitution of India. Can it now claim
the protection of a liberal order that it seeks,
day in and day out, to pervert and malign?
---------------------------------------------

The Times of India

JOSHI 'FORGETS' TO RETURN ICHR'S FREEDOM FILES

Akshaya Mukul
TIMES NEWS NETWORK[ THURSDAY, JULY 22, 2004 ]
NEW DELHI: Twelve confidential files related to
the prestigious "Towards Freedom" project of the
Indian Council of Historical Research taken by
former HRD minister Murli Manohar Joshi on March
9, 2000, have gone missing.

The files, No. 18-30/72-ICHR/Admn.I in three
parts, each containing 170, 210 and 131 pages,
were never retur-ned despite a reminder by
IC-HR's then member-secretary R C Agrawal to
Joshi's PS Al-ok Tandon on August 19, 2002. The
matter has been brought to the notice of new
dispensation in the HRD ministry and search for
the files is on.

The issue of the missing files resurfaced
recently when ICHR chairperson D N Tripathi, a
Joshi appoi-ntee, wanted to revive the "Towards
Freedom" project and asked for the files only to
be told these are missing for five long years.

Much to Joshi's chagrin, Tripathi has asked the
officiating member-secretary A K Ambasth to
recover the files. He says Joshi's office had no
business to keep files of an autonomous body for
so long and not return them despite a reminder.
"Unfortunately all this happened in the earlier
regime," Tripathi told TNN over phone from
Gorakhpur.

According to him, the files of autonomous bodies
are never kept by the administrative ministry. At
best, these co-uld be shown to the ministry.

ICHR records show Joshi aske-d for the files
wh-en there was a controversy about "Towards
Freedom" project. Two years later in 2002, the
project was back in news since a three-member
panel was set up to look into the volumes edited
by historians Sumit Sarkar and K N Panikkar.
Joshi promised Parliament to come up with a white
paper on the project.

ICHR's general council entrusted the job of
prep-aring the white paper to Devendra Swarup, an
RSS functionary, Joshi's favo-urite and one-time
history lecturer.







-------------------------------------------------
Courtesy:Harsh Kapoor/SACW
www.sacw.net







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