The Rediff Special
'The major cause of the degradation in the quality of swayamsevaks
is the lives of the leaders which are
unable to inspire the new generation'
There are no obvious signs of
apocalypse just now. But the organisational
iron-frame of the RSS is showing up rusty patches. There is erosion
at the level of the pracharaks, the corps of volunteers
who forms the crucial link between the rank-and-file and the top
leadership.
"More and more of them are going about in cars,
for instance, even though the RSS does not work on cars and where
everything is built at no-cost basis," says a functionary.
This could be an exaggeration except that several pracharaks
confirm this, and finger-pointing is more open now than at any
time before.
"Being a pracharak is like being any other professional,"
says an RSS person. "It is slightly harder but no more. It
enjoys a good social status too, and the spin-offs of the BJP
being a pretender to national power are also there." Since
a full-time pracharak should be celibate, many in the RSS clock
in six to 12 years on the job now, and assured of there being
no serious impact on their prospects within the RSS, leave to
make a family.
"This is," insists Raj Kumar Bhatia,
an economics lecturer at the DAV College in south Delhi's Srinivas
Puri, once a pracharak, much before that a charismatic Delhi University
Students' Union leader, and tipped in his generation for one
of the top jobs in the RSS, "a basic human urge."
It is. The RSS accepts it too. There is considerable stress in
recent RSS writings on the family as a means to roll back the
'benign' western 'cultural invasion'. But
the relaxation of the old rigours has come at a time when the
quality of intake into the shakhas that contribute to the
legion of swayamsevaks has sharply deteriorated.
"All those who become swayamsevaks come from society,"
explains Yadav Rao, an old RSS hand and editor of Manthan,
a magazine of the Deendayal Research Institute. "And the
prevailing atmosphere in the country is bound to affect the whole
social structure. The picture in the university campuses is different
from that in our times. The set of students joining the Congress
also come to the RSS and the BJP. It is up to us to mould them."
"But it is my contention," he goes on, "that there
is definitely a degradation in the quality of the swayamsevaks.
The major cause of this is the lives of the leaders which are
unable to inspire the new generation. It is becoming a hazardous
task to mould them. And I say that there is a deterioration in
the quality of the other sangathans as well."
What manner of deterioration has taken place? Is it the Congressisation
of the BJP indicated by the rise of corruption, casteism and factionalism
(as in Madhya Pradesh, Gujarat and Rajasthan)? Or is it the 'deficiency'
of the Samskar Bharati, the RSS's cultural front organisation,
in countering western 'satellite cultural influences'
in any meaningful manner? Could it be the absence of a consensus
between the BJP and the Swadeshi Jagaran Manch on the issue of
swadeshi? Or would it mean the deep differences been the
VHP and the BJP on starting Ayodhya-like movements in both Kanshi
and Mathura?
Are individual sangathans blameworthy at all? Or is the RSS,
the progenitor of them all and their supposed ideological motorforce,
at fault? Is Rajinder Singh, as sarsanghchalak, to blame?
Or is the collective leadership of the RSS, comprising, besides
Singh, Seshadri, Sudershan, Madan Dass Devi (joint general secretary;
tipped to succeed Singh), the pranth pracharaks, heads
of some front organisations, and so on, to be held responsible?
Or is it that sangathans have grown so far apart, with
their separate objectives, constitutions, functionaries and work
cultures, that to expect them to fall into any line drawn by the
RSS would be taken askance? Is there, to carry this further, anything
like a concept of a sangh parivar anymore then?
Would these questions have arisen, at all, if the RSS leadership
style of the Forties, Fifties, Sixties, and Seventies were in
force today? Would Golwalkar, credited with giving the RSS its
solid foundations uninterruptedly in these decades, have stood
a Congressised BJP? Could the BJP be expected to be different
if Deendayal Upadhyaya (charged by Golwalkar to run the BJP's
precursor, the Jan Sangh, after the death of its founder, Shyama
Prasad Mukherjee) had not been assassinated 30 years ago?
And, would Dattopant Thengdi, the BMS and Kisan Sangh and Akhil
Bharatiya Vidhyarthi Parishad supremo, have acted, so far, any
differently from Rajinder Singh if he were the RSS sarsangchalak
instead of Singh? Would he, for instance, as the formulator of
swadeshi -- which the RSS has taken up, convictions apart,
because of the force of Thengdi's character -- have allowed the
BJP-Shiv Sena coalition government in Maharashtra to okay the
Enron deal?
Courtesy: Sunday magazine
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