The Rediff Special
RSS cadres have already revealed a deep revulsion for the
new criminal and caste-based trends in politics
A hint of collective leadership had crept in with the death of
Hedgewar himself and the ending of the principle of ekchalak
anuvartita (following one leader) with him. Devendra Swaroop
Aggarwal, for instance, has three letters from Golwalkar in which
he articulated his opposition to an RSS movement against the first
Communist government of E M S Namboodiripad in Kerala because it
had been elected under the Constitution. "But when a majority
within the RSS insisted, he gave in," says Swaroop.
But equally, he resisted pressure from the rank and file in Punjab
to join politics in the immediate aftermath of Partition. This
was for him a bigger issue than any movement against EMS. He had
always been opposed to politics saying it was divisive. So, when
many senior RSS persons left the organisation, and even Balasaheb
Deoras and Bhaurao Deoras went out of the RSS for four years,
Golwalkar was unmoved. Any movement like Ayodhya, therefore, with
the potential of wrecking the long-term aims of the RSS, would
have invited his censure.
"He fought on big issues and gave in on minor matters,"
says an RSS functionary. "This way he built up his position
without formally abandoning the principles of collective leadership.
There was no question of feeling constrained by it." And
he had a classical way of consensus-building. "While Balasaheb
Deoras would call all the people concerned with decision-making
together and say, 'Haan bhai, tum logon ka kya sujhaav hein,'
Golwalkar summoned people individually," says Bhide. This
gave him a certain leverage with the others.
Then, being chosen by Hedgewar himself over such older RSS colleagues
as Appaji Joshi and Babasaheb Apte gave Golwalkar more ballast.
Besided, he was ideas-driven, ascetic, unpeturbable, and, above
all, a prodigious traveller, rooming across the country without
a break for more than 30 years. "He was in touch with the
junior-most RSS worker," said a senior office-bearer. "He
sat with us wherever we were. Balasaheb Deoras couldn't keep up
his pace because of his illness. Now the same thing is happening
with Rajjubhaiyya. He is very ill. The organisation has grown
far too big. Naturally, some of the decisions which are now taken
are not correct."
This is as far as an RSS functionary will go in finding fault
with a serving sarsangchalak. And what is the criticism
about? "Rajjubhaiyya objected to the BJP's choice of criminal
candidates for the UP assembly election," the office-bearer
said. "We all know the winning pressure that forces parties
to give tickets to such persons. The BJP also has to win elections.
But Rajjubhaiyya remains unconvinced."
It is specious to think that any RSS chief would take a different
view. RSS cadres have already revealed a deep revulsion for the
new criminal and caste-based trends in politics. In UP and elsewhere,
they have not only kept off election campaigns of unsatisfactory
BJP candidates but actively campaigned against those of them with
questionable backgrounds. And in Gujarat, local VHP leaders decided
on their own to oppose Shankarsinh Vaghela to defeat him in the
last Lok Sabha election. Increasingly, then, there is a backlash
from cadres unhappy with the ways of the BJP, and the RSS can
do little about it.
This was bound to happen. When Golwalkar agreed to give RSS support,
and a large tranche of its pracharaks, to Shyama Prasad
Mukherjee to start the Jan Sangh, he did so against his own better
judgment. When Mukherjee died, Golwalkar manoeuvered Deendayal
Upadhyaya into a position of authority in the Jan Sangh to prevent
its takeover by politicians who could have diluted the Sangh ideology.
After Upadhyaya's assassination, Golwalkar was worried about the
Jan Sangh, and expressed himself in those terms just before he
died in 1973.
Golwalkar always feared a Congressisation of the Jan Sangh. Devendra
Swaroop remembers him saying that Congressmen started out "honest"
and "nationalistic" but that power had corrupted them,
and that such a thing could happen to persons in the Jan Sangh
also. "He always said of politics, 'Gajjar ki pongi hai,
bajayenge, nahin to kha jayenge'," remembers Swaroop.
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