
RSS chief Mohan Bhagwat has claimed that Pranab Mukherjee, while he was President, had appreciated the Ghar Wapsi programme and told him that had it not been for the Sangh’s work on reconversion, a section of Adivasis would have turned “anti-national”.
Bhagwat said this at an event in Indore Monday to present the ‘National Devi Ahilya Award’ to VHP leader Champat Rai, who is also the general secretary of Shri Ram Janmabhoomi Teerth Kshetra Trust.
Elaborating, Bhagwat said this was so because conversion takes one away for their roots.
“Conversion andar se aata hai to koi baat nahi. Hamari dharana hai ki sab tareeke (of prayers) sahi hain. Ek hi jagah pahunchayenge. Sabko apna tareeka chunne ka haq hai. Lekin agar lok laalach, zabardasti se hota hai, to uska uddeshya adhyatmik unnati nahi hota, jadon se katkar apna prabhav badhana hota hai (If conversion comes through an internal calling, it is fine. We believe all forms of prayers are right. But if conversion is achieved through allurement or through force then its real aim is not spiritual enlightenment but increasing influence through uprooting),” he said.
Notably, in 2018, Mukherjee’s participation in an RSS event in Nagpur had got considerable attention.
Bhagwat’s statement is in line with the Sangh’s longstanding campaign against conversion of tribals. It assumes significance at a time when the Opposition has made caste census and tribal rights its political pitch for the elections.
Bhagwat’s statement is significant since such views have not been associated with Mukherjee when he was in the Congress although some local party leaders in tribal belts had been in favour of delisting converted tribals in the past.
When asked by The Indian Express about Bhagwat’s remarks, Mukherjee’s daughter Sharmishtha Mukherjee declined to comment.
Conversion of tribals into Christianity has been among the key issues of the Sangh Parivar, which has agitated against it for decades through organisations such as the Vanvasi Kalyan Ashram. Several outfits linked with the Sangh have been running a campaign in tribal-dominated regions to deprive converted tribals of reservation benefits for the past couple of years.
Sources in the Sangh said Bhagwat made his Indore speech in context of realising India’s “swa (self)” and how it flowed from Lord Ram, Krishna and Shiva. He also quoted Mukherjee as having said that the world should not teach India secularism as secularism was part of India’s 5,000 years of civilisational history. Bhagwat said this civilisational history was nothing but one that flowed from Lord Ram, Krishna and Shiva.
Bhagwat’s statement is in line with the Sangh’s longstanding campaign against conversion of tribals. It assumes significance at a time when the Opposition has made caste census and tribal rights its political pitch for the elections.