Throughline - Savarkar And India
Episode Date: March 12, 2020In the past few weeks Delhi has become the latest place in India convulsed with religious violence as Hindu mobs burned Muslim neighborhoods, mosques and killed over 40 people. The violence comes in t...he wake of a new citizenship law that excludes undocumented Muslims, but it also follows years of incendiary rhetoric and policies from the ascendant right-wing Hindu nationalist party, the BJP, and India's Prime Minister, Narendra Modi. As the political philosophy of Hindu nationalism gains ground in India we look back at one of its architects - Vinayak Savarkar.Learn more about sponsor message choices: podcastchoices.com/adchoicesNPR Privacy Policy
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It's constructing a mythology and presenting it as a history.
It is, in that sense, an explicit act of symbolic and indeed literal violence
to turn the immense heterogeneity of Indian society into a single strand.
And that element of both symbolic violence and literal violence is very pronounced.
So it is absolutely at odds with what are demographic realities, but also this very
complex, multi-layered history. I mean, India has hundreds of languages and hundreds of castes and
hundreds of cultures. And so the Hindu nationalists say, what's the only thing that a Hindu from Kerala in the south
has in common with a Hindu from Kashmir in the north, right?
They don't speak the same language.
They don't even have the same ways of worshipping.
The only thing that they have in common is their faith.
And so Hindu nationalists have sought to unite India's majority Hindus
under this identity of a monolithic Hindu faith.
Fear, as tensions remain high in Delhi.
The unrest has been centered around Muslim-majority neighborhoods. They're in remain high in Delhi. The unrest has been centred around Muslim-majority neighbourhoods.
They're in the north-east of Delhi.
Travel began between the Hindu majority and Muslim minority
over the controversial citizens' law
brought in by the nationalist government under Prime Minister Modi.
A new law providing citizenship for undocumented migrants
as long as they're not Muslim.
We are feeling unsafe.
There is no rule of law in the country right now, as you can see.
The prime minister says the citizenship law helps people from other countries
who've been persecuted for their faith,
but protesters say both him and the law threaten the foundations of a secular India.
How long will it take communities, both Muslim and Hindu, to heal?
And how can they ever fully restore trust?
You're listening to ThruLine from NPR.
Where we go back in time
to understand the present.
Over the past several weeks,
violence has erupted in the streets of Delhi, India.
The fighting started over a new law called the Citizen Amendment Act.
The law provides a pathway to citizenship for undocumented people from Pakistan, Bangladesh, and Afghanistan.
But not if you're Muslim.
And as Manu Goswami, an Indian historian at New York University, said at the top,
this is happening in one of the most heterogeneous places on earth.
The citizenship law was passed in December under Prime Minister Narendra Modi and the Bharatiya Janata Party, or BJP, India's right-wing Hindu nationalist political party.
Critics of Modi and his party see the law as the latest in a series of moves
to discriminate against India's Muslim population.
Protests escalated quickly during our recent elections, when some BJP officials encouraged supporters to retaliate against those protesting the citizenship law. from campaigning for three days in Delhi's upcoming local elections after saying protesters should be shot
and likening demonstrators to rapists and murderers.
Riots broke out.
Over 40 people were killed.
Mosques, homes and schools were burned.
Many say the government and the police did little to stop the violence.
This all led us back to an earlier episode we did
that looked at the implications of Modi's re-election
and dug into the roots of Hindu nationalism,
which has gained power under his rule.
Hola, this is Marianela from Manzanillo, Mexico,
and you're listening to ThruLine from NPR.
I love your podcast and I found the episode about the public friend especially interesting, shining some light on the history of gender nonconformity.
So thank you for educating me and many others.
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Back in May of 2019, when Narendra Modi was re-elected as prime minister,
we called NPR's India correspondent, Lauren Frayer, to walk us through what it meant for India.
So it means 2014 wasn't a fluke, that the Indian people again have overwhelmingly chosen
a prime minister and a party that represent a different set of values for India
than the ones that traditionally dominated Indian politics since independence.
So the BJP and Modi, they want to bring the country's majority Hindu faith
into politics and public life in a way that hasn't been done in the past.
The day after the votes were counted and we learned that Modi would be re-elected,
he gave this speech in which he described secularism as an old fad in Indian politics.
And he said, it's no longer relevant.
This isn't an old fad that other parties used to campaign on,
and we're beyond that now.
I mean, the Indian constitution still says this is a secular republic.
But, I mean, in a way, this debate has been frozen in time for 70 years.
Gandhi, Mohandas Gandhi, the freedom leader, was assassinated by a Hindu nationalist within months of India's founding. And that kind
of shut down all debate. It kind of made it a taboo to criticize Gandhi, certainly, but even
to criticize his politics, criticize his vision of a secular pluralistic democracy.
And they think that the way that the state was founded was not the way they wanted it to be founded.
I mean, in the lead up to the partition of India into two states, India and Pakistan, the Muslims got their state, Pakistan, right?
The Hindus didn't get their state.
They did not get a Hindu state.
They got a secular pluralistic state.
And they were upset about that. And basically, it wasn't until Modi was elected in 2014 and again now that the taboo has been lifted.
And this debate over whether India should be a secular country is suddenly out in the open. And Jawaharlal Nehru, India's first
prime minister, has really been demonized by the BJP and by Hindu nationalists. Hindu nationalists
accuse him of appeasing minorities and appeasing Muslims. And Gandhi is starting to be criticized
as well. And that was unheard of a generation ago.
And you mentioned a couple of times that in the course of rewriting or reimagining the history,
a lot of the antagonism is directed at Muslims in the country. And that seems to be the primary
minority group that has been targeted by the BJP today. Can you tell us a little bit about why specifically that demographic
is being targeted? So Muslims are the largest religious minority. India is about 80 percent
Hindu, maybe 79 point something. And Muslims are about 14, 15 percent of the population.
But in India, with 1.3 billion people, that's like a huge number of
people. It's like between 180 and 200 million people. It's one of the world's largest Muslim
population. So I mean, that's a bigger proportion of India than African Americans are in the US.
So how do you unite? I mean, I was talking earlier about how do you unite a Hindu
from Kerala with a Hindu from Kashmir? So one of the easiest ways is to unite them around a common
enemy. Seventy plus years ago, it was colonialism. Nationalists encouraged Hindus to define themselves
in opposition to a foreign power. The new other in Hindu nationalist politics is Muslims. And that's what Modi's
party and rhetoric has focused on. By the way, the reason why this makes good politics is this
diversity, right? If you can unite all Hindus as one voting block, 80% of the population,
you've just wrapped up every election. What was some of the rhetoric that Modi specifically used in his last campaign
to kind of try to unite that Hindu population as a voting bloc?
So Modi won in 2014 on economic promises, a lot of which weren't fulfilled.
And so in this election, his campaign really pivoted toward this rhetoric
rather than the economy.
So, for example, his party has promised to build a Hindu temple
in one of the most incendiary spots in all of India.
And it's where Hindu extremists tore down a mosque
and killed hundreds of Muslims in 1992.
And the situation there is still, like, very raw.
And it's become this, like, rallying cry for Modi's hardline Hindu base.
And it has potential to spark incredible violence.
I mean, the riots that followed the destruction of that mosque in 1992 spread across South Asia and the Middle East.
And thousands of people, mostly Muslims, were killed.
So it's really incendiary rhetoric.
There are also these cow vigilante groups that have sprung up, and these are lay people who take it upon themselves to investigate and sometimes attack people who are suspected of dealing in beef on the black market.
And the people who deal in beef have traditionally been Muslims, Christians and other minorities who that was their tradition.
And so there have been these mob lynchings of Muslims and other minorities.
Does Modi himself condone, you know, either tacitly or implicitly this kind of violence?
He's a very, very good politician.
There are other BJP figures.
Amit Shah has much more vitriolic things he's said about Muslims.
He called undocumented Muslim migrants from Bangladesh termites.
I mean, that's chilling. That's language that we heard in the Rwandan genocide, right?
But Modi doesn't say that. Modi stays silent.
He doesn't correct Amit Shah when he says things like that.
When we come back, the founding father of Hindu nationalism, Vinayak Damodar Sawakar.
Hi, this is Roberto from SoCal, and you're listening to Throughline from NPR.
Okay, so now that Lauren helped us understand how Hindu nationalism is playing out today,
we jumped into the history of how Hindu nationalism was born.
I'm Adam Roberts. I'm an economist correspondent. I spent five years in Delhi as the South Asia correspondent.
This is Adam Roberts, and he guided us through the life of a man
we came across when we were looking into this history.
A man who many people, including Narendra Modi,
credit for developing the modern vision of Hindu nationalism.
His name was Vinayak Damodar Savarkar.
Savarkar was born in 1883 in a small town in western India.
He came of age under British colonial rule,
when the political debate among anti-colonialists was whether to resist with force,
or, as Mohandas Gandhi would argue, with non-violence.
From an early age, Savarkar's choice was clear. He wanted to assert his character, his bravery,
as this figure who stood up to Muslims and who was able to assert his muscular strength as a Hindu.
And later in life, he'd get this term, Veer Savarkar. He'd be called Brave Savarkar.
And he was always looking for incidents throughout his life
that he could turn to to show how brave he was.
And the earliest that I at least came across
was this anecdote of talking about being a child in the village
where they so bravely had gone to smash up the local mosque.
And it's the sort of thing you'll see in India today.
You see it repeatedly throughout Indian history that these clashes on the ground between local communities of Hindus and Muslims
can start off as a small bit of violence and then very quickly spread like a wildfire
and cause enormous damage and great loss of life. As young men, while both were studying law in London, Savarkar and Gandhi met.
The story goes that that was a meeting in 1906 in Highgate in North London,
a nice bit of London, where the two men, the two students, were both studying and getting by.
And Savarkar was apparently cooking a meal at his home.
I understand that he was frying prawns,
and Gandhi came by and they met each other,
and Savarka, being a generous host, said,
would you like to share my meal with me?
And Gandhi, who could be a bit prissy, said no,
he wasn't going to touch the meal that Savarka had made
because he didn't eat meat.
He'd become a very strict vegetarian.
And Savarka apparently replied saying,
well, you're an idiot.
You're a fool.
If you don't eat protein, how are you ever going to be strong enough, muscular enough to fight off the British?
And whether or not that story is true, it really sets the scene beautifully for the divergent views that Gandhi and Savarkar took about how to fight off the British. Gandhi was someone who said, let's stick to our principles,
let's be pacifist, let's be intelligent about negotiating all the time. Savarkar was always
saying, let's be muscular, let's fight, let's look for ways to kill our enemies. And the two men were
rivals, bitter rivals throughout their lives. And so Savarkar, you know, he started to develop these nationalist ideas,
and what does he decide to do?
Savarkar gets involved with some more extreme resistance fighters,
you might call them, people who were ready to pick up a gun
and kill for the campaign to have Indian freedom.
And there's an allegation, and the British certainly thought it was true,
that Savarkar was part of a conspiracy to kill a British official
who was walking through London one summer evening
and an assassin ran up to him and pulled a pistol, I think it was, and shot him dead.
And rather than put him in jail in Britain,
the idea was that he would be sent back to India.
What happened, though, and this is where Savarkar really got his celebrated start in life,
was that while he was being transported by the British, put on a ship in Marseille harbour to be taken across to India,
he dived out of a porthole.
He opened the porthole window and leapt out into the harbour.
What? the porthole window and leapt out into the harbor. And if you look at sort of hagiographies and
cartoons and drawings about Savarka's life, this is often the image that is on the front cover of
the book or whatever. And it's a picture of him diving headfirst out of a porthole down into the
dirty waters of Marseilles Harbor to escape the British. Well, he managed to get off the ship, but he didn't get very far.
He got ashore and was promptly arrested. Then when he got back to India, he was then sent to this
most storied prison out on the Andaman Islands. This is deep into the Bay of Bengal. These are tiny little islands, and the
prison is a brick building, remarkably severe. It's called Cellular Jail, but it's surrounded by
lush jungle, and it's a tropical climate. It's a remarkable place, and for many Indians, it was a
great terror to be sent to the Andaman Islands because they feared disease, torture, and obviously being locked away for many years.
Famously, he wrote on the walls of the cell.
So while he was kept in prison, he was very keen to write.
He wanted to write about Hindu nationalism.
And for much of the time, he would scrawl on the walls of the cell because he didn't
have access to pen and paper all the time.
So he used the very walls of the prison to write down his manifesto.
That manifesto was later called Hindutva, who is a Hindu.
Savarkar was sentenced to two life sentences in prison, but was released after about a dozen years. In exchange for early release, he struck a deal with the British that he'd stop participating
in nationalist politics.
And so through this bit of negotiation, he's able to get out.
And when he gets out, what does he do?
Well, he pretty quickly breaks his word.
Maybe the British shouldn't have been too surprised.
He has decided that the way for India to get its independence is to be far more assertive, far more demanding,
both against the British, who of course are running the place,
but also against Muslims, who are an important,
very significant minority part of India's population.
They still are, but they were even bigger back then.
And so he joined this group called the Hindu Mahasabha,
which is, if you're thinking about the roots of Hindu nationalism in India,
this is an incredibly important organization.
And from the Hindu Mahasabha, later there breaks off this group
called the RSS, which is more of a paramilitary volunteer organization, which today is by far the
most influential Hindu nationalist group in India. So for many years, he becomes the head of this
Hindu nationalist group, which is campaigning to kick the British out of India. So it's a very hardline political
group. He's in favor of violence. He's in favor of being much more confrontational
than the Congress movement of Mohandas Gandhi. That's because Gandhi and the Indian National
Congress Party that he led advocated for an end to British rule and a new Indian-led government that was socially
democratic, multicultural, and secular. But Savarkar didn't want to do that. He ridiculed
that. He said that Gandhi was a fool for wanting to work with Muslims because the Muslims were a
threat just as much as the British. The Muslims, he said, were a threat to Hindus, and you had to
be ready to fight them both. I mean, by extension, because of Gandhi's sort of calls to unite people across India,
including Hindus and Muslims, did Savarkar see Gandhi himself as a threat?
Yeah, so if you look back throughout their lives, Gandhi proved to be the far more successful
politician than Savarkar. So I think some of what Savarkar saw in Gandhi was jealousy.
He himself had wished to have the prominence, the political success,
the veneration that Gandhi was so skillful at generating for himself.
By the early 1920s, Gandhi had run his campaigns in South Africa,
come back to India, and constructed the Congress movement
into this most
powerful mass body that had millions of followers who were beginning to threaten British control of
the continent. I regard myself as a soldier, though a soldier of peace.
And Savarkar looked on with envy and wanted to be more like Gandhi, I think,
and felt that Gandhi was both a more skilled strategist
but also more feeble, more willing to give way to their opponents.
And so repeatedly, if you look at letters that Savarkar wrote,
he repeatedly comes up with taunts and criticisms of Gandhi.
I'll just dig out a couple of things that he said.
He called Gandhi a crazy lunatic
who happens to babble about compassion and forgiveness.
He says that notwithstanding Gandhi's sublime and broad heart,
Gandhi has a very narrow and immature head.
He called Gandhi mealy-mouthed.
I mean, he really didn't like Gandhi's approach to pacifism,
to working often with the British instead of against the British.
And, of course, he didn't like the way that Gandhi worked with Muslims.
And so throughout the 1920s and 1930s,
there was a bitter competition between Savarkar
and the Hindu nationalist movement that he was building up on the one side
versus Gandhi and the Congress movement,
which was much more moderate but also highly principled,
on the other side.
And the more successful Gandhi became,
the more furious Savarkar became.
And that anger would only continue to build.
When we come back, the assassination of Mohandas Gandhi. Hi, this is Tessa Adams from Fort Mill, South Carolina,
and you are listening to ThruLine from NPR.
I love your guy's show.
I tell everybody that I know about it.
It is amazing, and I can't wait for the next episode to drop.
Thank you.
Bye-bye.
The Hatma Gandhi is dead. When vast throngs crowded Delhi's burner house,
urging him to break his last fast, a few imagined an assassin would strike near this spot 11 days later. On August 15, 1947, India gained independence from Britain.
And less than a year later, Mohandas Gandhi was assassinated.
The Stafford Cripps called him the world's greatest spiritual leader.
At the time, it was alleged that Savarkar played a part in the assassination.
Yeah, I think it's more than just an alleged role. I think Savarkar
did play some part in the assassination of Gandhi. Now, we can tease out exactly how significant a
part he played. But the people who carried out the assassination of Gandhi, the main figure who
is known to history is Godse. Now, he was a member of the movement that Savarkar led,
the Hindu Mahasabha. He was an editor of a newspaper within that movement. And he came up
from the west of India to Delhi, and he visited Savarkar not long before the assassination.
And although he was arrested and put on trial and then acquitted, it isn't hard to believe that Savarkar encouraged them to carry out the assassination
and that he may have even provided some means to them.
Wow. So what happens to Savarkar? What legacy does he leave?
Well, after the murder of Gandhi, because of its connection to the assassins,
the RSS is banned and the likes of Savarkar are disgraced and they are considered to be far beyond the pale by the vast majority of Indians.
And Gandhi, for the next 40, 50, 60 years, rises as this figure in India who is the embodiment of
all that is wonderful about India, the fact that it's a secular, liberal place where all religions are tolerated,
and although, of course, there are still clashes between people,
the constitution of India is this wonderful, forward-thinking,
respectful constitution that says everyone has the freedom of belief.
And so the likes of Zavar are sidelined for decades.
They're pushed to one side.
And Savarkar goes on to die in the 1960s.
And he dies in a most mysterious way.
He decides to commit something called Atma Pan,
which is when a person has decided he's old enough,
he's done enough in his life, he's just going to die.
He decided to refuse any more food and he would slowly fade away.
And it took him 20 days.
And this way of ending his life adds to the myth, I think, about Savarka.
It gives him something for others to really respect
that he was able to end his own life
in this peaceful but not comfortable way.
How did Savarkar's name start to reappear in Indian politics?
So the more that Gandhi is built up,
the more that Savarkar's own reputation falls.
But then we have this political shift in India,
which is going on
still today, which is the decline of the Congress Party as the dominant political force in India,
and the rise of two other forces. On the one hand, the rise of regional political parties
who are more and more important than any national party. And secondly, the rise of the Hindu
nationalist movement, and the rise of a party called the BJP.
And so people are looking for heroes. People are looking for someone else to turn to from India's
past. We're going to reach back into the past for characters who promoted Hindu nationalism
and who were very aggressive towards Pakistan. And so every time there was a war with Pakistan, of course, there was an excuse to whip out the nationalism. But the BJP could turn that into Hindu nationalism and then turn to the likes of Savarkar to say, this is how we should define ourselves. as the current prime minister, Narendra Modi. I believe you interviewed him on several occasions.
Yeah.
And I'm wondering, do you get the sense that Savarkar has influenced him?
I do.
I think Narendra Modi, before he became a politician, even as a child, he was hugely
influenced by the Hindu nationalists.
He became a member of the RSS. He devoted his whole life early on
to being not just a member, but an active leader within the RSS. He became a sort of monk within
the movement. And I understood this to be his way of escaping a very rural, small town life in
Gujarat and a way for him to escape to the big city and to make something of his life.
Now, Modi was an absolutely devout Hindu nationalist. And the faster he rose up through
the ranks of the RSS, the more outspoken as a Hindu nationalist he became. And I think that
Savarkar, also from the west of India, was something of a model for him. And you can look back throughout Modi's own political history
to many examples of times that Modi has cited Savarkar as a great hero
to be an inspiration for India today.
There's a painting in Parliament of Savarkar,
and Narendra Modi, most years in May, on Savarkar's birthday,
will go to light a candle for Savarkar.
He was very happy to endorse the launch of a website devoted to Savarkar
and to accuse others of spreading terrible propaganda
about how wicked Savarkar was.
And so the more he builds up
the likes for Savarkar to be a hero for Indians to celebrate, the more he can play down figures
such as Gandhi, who talked about, as we've said, unity between Hindus and Muslims and the importance
of passivism and so on. And so Modi likes to turn to Savarkar, but also other figures such as Patel,
who was a very strong early independence leader as well,
and to say that these more confrontational figures are the models for India to follow
because he wants India to be made great again.
And Modi's critics, what would they say?
The great success of India in the last 70, 80 years is how united it has been and how stable it has been.
Whereas Pakistan next door,
which is really dominated by one majoritarian idea
that you have to be Muslim really to be a Pakistani.
Pakistan is in much greater trouble,
much less stable, much worse off,
because it is not tolerant.
And the danger of Modi and the Hindu nationalists is they actually end up repeating the mistakes that the Pakistanis have made. So the
danger of going the Savarkar route is you make all the same mistakes that those other countries made,
and you throw away the great success that India has achieved in the last 70 years or so.
That's Adam Roberts.
He's a correspondent for The Economist. That's it for this week's show
I'm Randha Devata
I'm Ramtin Arablui
and you've been listening to ThruLine from NPR
The show was produced by me
and me and Jamie York
Lawrence Wu
Lane Kaplan-Levinson
Lou Olkowski
Nigery Eaton Original music was produced by Ramtin and his band Drop Electric and Jamie York. Lawrence Wu. Lane Kaplan-Levinson. Lou Olkowski.
Nigeri Eaton.
Original music was produced by Ramteen and his band, Drop Electric,
which includes
Anya Mizani.
Naveed Marvi.
Sho Fujiwara.
Thanks also to Janae West.
Anya Grunman.
Lauren Frayer.
Scott Newman.
And Sarah Knight.
And a special thanks to Austin Horn
and Kevin Volkl.
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