Hindutva 'applicable' to 1.3 billion people: Bhagwat 

IANS Photo

IANS Photo

New Delhi, October 25 (IANS): Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh Sarsanghchalak Mohan Bhagwat on Sunday claimed that 'Hindutva' as an "expression of our identity" was applicable to 1.3 billion people living in the country.

"Hindutva is a word expressing our identity along with the continuity of spirituality-based traditions and an entire wealth of value system in the land of Bharat. Therefore, this word is applicable to all the 1.3 billion people," Bhagwat said in his Vijaya Dashami speech at the RSS's single largest annual event.

He said that 'Hindu' word is a common denominator that honours and encompasses innumerable distinct identities, adding that it "is not the name of some sect or denomination, not provincial conceptualisation, neither a single caste's lineage nor privilege of speakers of a specific language".

"When the Sangh says Hindustan is a Hindu Rashtra, it does not have any political or power-centered concept in its mind. Hindutva is the essence of this nation's 'swa' (self-hood). We are plainly acknowledging the selfhood of the country as Hindu," Bhagwat said.

The RSS chief said that the Hindu culture had expressed itself in diverse forms, but some groups were trying to spread hatred and aggression in certain sections of society by creating a sense of insecurity among them on the pretext that the country's diversity would be finished if they identified themselves as "Hindu" .

"Acknowledgement of the fact that the emotional spirit of India, its acceptance of and support for multiple belief systems and faiths, is a byproduct of the Hindu culture, traditions and Hindu thought is necessary," Bhagwat asserted.

During his speech, Bhagwat also dubbed China as "expansionist" and said that India needed to be militarily better prepared against the neighbouring nation.

He urged the government to forge an alliance against China with its immediate neighbours like Nepal, Sri Lanka and others.

"Indian defence forces, government and the people remained unfazed and responded sharply to China's boisterous efforts to invade our territories," he said.

He was referring to the India-China border tensions that saw violent flare-up earlier in the Galwan Valley.

Dubs CAA protests 'organised violence'

Asserting that the Citizenship (Amendment) Act was not against any particular religious minority, Mohan Bhagwat hit out at "opportunists" who unleashed "organised violence" on the pretext of CAA opposition.

Speaking at RSS's Vijaya Dashami event, he also made references to abrogation of Article 370 in Jammu and Kashmir and the Supreme Court's Ram Mandir verdict.

"The CAA does not oppose any particular religious community. But those who wanted to oppose this new law misled our Muslim brothers by propagating a false notion that it was aimed at restricting the Muslim population," Bhagwat said.

"Using the CAA, Opportunists unleashed organised violence in the name of protests. Even before something could be thought out, coronavirus pandemic crept in. In this background, the efforts by rioters and opportunists to reignite the conflict still continue."

He was referring to anti-CAA protests across the country, including in Shaheen Bagh here, and subsequent Delhi riots in February 2020.

The RSS chief acknowledged the restraint shown by people at large in the aftermath of the Ram Mandir verdict last year as well as the August 5 decision to abrogate Article 370.

He said that while healthy political competition was always welcome, if it morphed into hatred, bitterness and animosity, it weakened the social fabric.