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Worshipping False Gods
| MAN IN THE MIRROR |
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| This website has been conceived, edited and laidout by Anil Nair |
(Updated
on January 1. To read more such polemical debates check the inside pages and the navigational bar under the masthead.
This website is updated every Saturday)
By Anil Nair
Let's
face it. There is a serious attempt by the Congress and the Left parties to appropriate national leaders according to their
political philosophy and leanings. If Mani Shankar Aiyar has been incessant about Savarkar's letter for clemency, the Left
has been extolling the contribution of Bhagat Singh and Raj Guru while trying to denigrate Vinayak Damodar Savarkar. This
is not only irritating but also a countenance of the fact that freedom struggle should be seen only through the blinkered
eyes of the Congress and the Left. The Left can scarcely step on the pedestal and talk about Savarkar's betrayal when its
own history, as columnist M.V. Kamath has pointed out in several articles in this journal, is tainted by perfidy and cravenness
towards the British.
In the interviews with Savarkar's son Vishwas and the Kashmiri film maker Ved Rahi, who made
a brilliant film on the life of the great patriot, the debate whirled around the philosophy of Gandhi in comparison to that
of Savarkar, and how each had its own place in history. When the attempt is made to distort the events that have taken place
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''I decline to consider it a sin for a man not to drink or
eat with any and everybody''
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and whose recording in various books has been challenged by the sheer
weight of minatory argument there is the need to bring forth facts to establish those original truths that are being erased
with impunity. One such is the question of caste system in Hindu society and how much did the leaders of the Congress try
in their individual capacity to reform a disparate religion. Today, our Congressmen might have a truck with the Left and the
various socialists groups who flaunt the 'progressive agenda', little knowing that the past is at best only indicative of
their philosophy, and which cannot be harvested for all situations that arise out of today's contradictory noises being made
in various states on the issue of Savarkar's legacy.
Gandhi supported the caste system.
How many of our Congressmen will know that Mahatma Gandhi was only against untouchability. The Mahatma was never against the
caste system that pervaded the Hindu society and which gave rise to the scourge of discrimination and unfair practices in
day-to-day life since ancient times. Writing about caste system in his newspaper Young India (Wednesday, December
8, 1920) the Mahatma said, ''I believe that caste has saved Hinduism from disintegration... I consider the four divisions
alone to be fundamental, natural and essential... I am certainly against any attempt at destroying the fundamentals''.
The
Mahatma had good reasons, or so it seems, to defend the caste system. ''The caste system is not based on inequality, there
is no question of inferiority. There appears to be no valid reason for ending the system because of its abuse'', he wrote
in his acclaimed newspaper. The Mahatma was convinced that the caste system lends itself easily to reformation.
That
is not all, the Mahatma's writings can be astonishing: ''I can see very great use in considering a Brahmin to be always a
Brahmin throughout his life... Interdrinking, interdining, intermarrying, I hold, are not essential for the promotion of the
spirit of democracy. I do not contemplate under a most democratic constitution a universality of manners and customs about eating and drinking and marrying''. Then he drops the bombshell: ''I decline to consider
it a sin for a man not to drink or eat with any and everybody''.
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| MAHATMA VERSUS SAVARKAR |

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| Savarkar's views hardly mattered in the face of Mahatma's charisma |
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''Caste system was a healthy practice''.
According to the Mahatma, the prohibition does not interfere with cordiality of relations, probably it promotes healthiness
of relationships. ''In Vaishnava households I have known mothers not dining in the common kitchen, nor drinking from the same
pot, without their becoming exclusive, arrogant or less loving. These are disciplinary restraints which are not in themselves
bad. Carried to ridiculous extreme they become harmful, and if the motive is one of arrogation of superiority, the restraint
becomes indulgence, therefore hurtful'', he argued in Young India. How many of our Congressmen today will know these
niceties of caste system as propounded by the Mahatma, whom they deifying as the father of the nation and mother of all things
secular.
Now juxtapose this with the writings of Savarkar regarding the caste system, we will realize who is being
muddied and tarnished today for his progressive views on Hindutva.
The caste system was so entrenched in
rural India that wherever Savarkar went he was ridiculed and at times even ignored for his ideas of abjuring the discriminatory
value of life. His opposition to Chaturvarna Vyavastha was based on his concept of nationalism equated with Hindutva.
He was clear about giving up rites and customs which do not stand the test of time, and he wanted Hindus to forget Manusmriti.
He created a temple in Ratnagiri called 'patit pawan' where everyone can enter to pay obeisance and during the inauguration
of the temple the Shankaracharya was garlanded by a 'bangi'. Savarkar was never lost for words; during the inauguration
he
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''I believe that caste has saved Hinduism from disintegration...
I consider the four divisions alone to be fundamental, natural and essential... I am certainly against any attempt at destroying
the fundamentals''.
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told the assembled crowd that, ''you bring up dogs, give milk
to snakes, hold the cat to your bosom which survive on rats, but you will not touch these people who also pray to lord Ram
and Krishna. You are sinners and a time will come when you will not be in a position to be condoned for your deeds!''
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(Updated on January 1. To read more such polemical
debates check the inside pages and the navigational bar under the masthead. This website is updated every Saturday)
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