Appendix D Sewa Bharati: Hindu
Consolidation at Any Cost
Sewa Bharati, like Sewa International
described in the previous Appendix, is a Sangh organization involved
in the work of consolidating Hindu communities. As described in the
previous Appendix, Sewa Bharati’s efforts also use
development/service as a cover to consolidate communities at the
margin of mainstream Hinduism into a politicized field of Hindutva
and also to intimidate and convert Muslim and Christian minorities
to “Hinduism.”
D. 1 Sewa Bharati and Sewa
International
Accordingly, this Appendix will remain
brief with the sole intent of establishing the similarity of the
work. Probably the most coherent way of understanding the links
between Sewa Bharati and Sewa International is to think of them as
complimentary to each other in terms of geographical spread and
replicating each other’s projects in substantial terms.
Historically, Sewa Bharati is an older institution set up with the
objective of using the structure of service/development to spread
Hindutva. As the diasporic connection became more important within
RSS’s internal organization, Sewa International was started with an
initial intent of coordinating foreign funds to Sewa operations
within India and also to undertake necessary Sewa activity within
diasporic communities. However, this distinction has not been
strictly held in place with Sewa International also operating
directly in India.
D. 2 Sewa Bharati as a Sangh
Organization
The RSS recognizes Sewa Bharati as one
of its key organizations.[114] Sewa Bharati functions as an umbrella
organization for many different projects and has many branches all
over the country. Its range of operations extends from urban slums
to tribal areas, purportedly for welfare/development functions.
However, as in the case of Sewa International, this claim is easily
proven to be false. In the book, ‘RSS: A Vision in
Action’[115] , H.V.Sheshadri, a former general secretary
of the RSS, recounts many examples of Sewa Bharati involved in
conducting Hindu religious functions in slums, teaching and
conducting Hindu rites and rituals (such as the home, havan and
kirtan), building temples and organizing visits to Hindu pilgrim
sites. A brief example should suffice:
Neiraich is a village near Agra with a
population of 3 to 4 thousand. For many years, the place had not
partaken of any religious programmes like home, haven, katha or
kirtan. With the entry of the Seva Bharati, the villagers came
forward to conduct haven followed by the Ramayana [the televised
version of a Hindu epic] screened on the VCR. And now the village
life has become enlivened with religious fervour and community
life.
So also, Sewa International's website [116] speaks extensively about Sewa Bharati, and
its religious inclination rather than a developmental inclination.
The page on Social Harmony describes Sewa Bharati volunteers
organizing Ram Lila, Holi, Makar Sankranti and Ugadi (all Hindu
festivals) celebrations in different localities. The page on
‘Ennobling Social Conduct’ further describes Sewa Bharati volunteers
engaging the community in singing religious songs (bhajans),
celebrating Krishna Janmashtami (a Hindu festival), or offering
Hindu prayers.
D.3 Hindu Consolidation Revisited
A visit
of the Supreme Leader of RSS to a function organized by the Sewa
Bharati is described as follows [117]:
The pradhan [chief] from Deenapurgaon
said, ‘Because of Sewa-karya [the work of Sewa Bharati], in our
locality the fanaticism of the Muslims has subsided’. ... The
elder from Samatadham Basti said with folded hands, ‘[If] Sewa
Bharati had not reached our Basti, many of our people would have
been converted to Christianity, as there were none of guide us.’
He continued, ‘After Sewa-karya started, a temple has come into
being. Daily pooja [prayer service] takes place in the temple with
Arati. Because of this, the feeling of Hindutwa in our households
has been awakened. All this is the contribution of Sewa
Bharati.
Yet again, the mode of working is very clear. Muslim and
Christian communities are the ones from which difference is to be
drawn, and the “Hindu” population of an area so differentiated, is
then initiated into a series of activities that consolidate them
into active agents of Hindutva. As usual there is little of no
evidence of developmental work.
Where possible, the agenda goes further to conversion from Islam
or Christianity to Hinduism as in the case titled ‘Hindu Identity
Reclaimed’ in Western Uttar Pradesh [118]:
A Samskar Kendra [an activity of the Sewa
Bharati, meant to help children develop ‘character’] had been
opened in the Nagla Singi extension near Hathras in Braj. On the
first day, when the teacher asked the children's names, one
replied, 'Mahmood', another 'Rashid', and so on. The teacher was
surprised, since Nagla was predominantly a locality of the Hindus.
How could there be so many Muslim boys? It came out that a certain
Moulvi [a Muslim preacher] had been visiting the area from time to
time, and it is he who had named the children. Hindu priests had
hardly ever come to them. Even dead bodies were disposed of in the
Muslim fashion.
Such was the state of affairs in this
hamlet. The people belonged to the Ghumantu Banjara caste and
traditionally lived by cattle-rearing. They had no contact at all
with Hindu society. This had encouraged the Moulvi.
After
activities of Sewa Bharati started, things changed. Children got
new names. The life-style of the people too began changing.
Children began to take an interest in learning. They were
gradually introduced to tenets of
Hinduism.
The script is clear and similar to what we have already seen
in Appendix C vis a vis Sewa International. The community in
question is identified as Ghumantu Banjara caste of cattle-rearers.
Cattle- rearing is traditionally a backward caste occupation, with
some tribal populations on occasion also being involved in the same.
Whichever the case maybe, what should be clear is that backward
caste Hindus would share very few of the upper caste Hindu rituals
and practices, and would hold themselves as distinct from upper
caste Hindu formations. Even if the basic premise as described in
the story – a moulvi converting Ghumantu Banjaras to Islam is taken
as true – then, as Muslims the community would have been escaping,
at least nominally, distinctions of caste. The process of conversion
to Hinduism is thus effective at two levels: first, it clearly is an
effort to consolidate a Hindutva identity and second, it brings the
community back into the traditional caste order by virtue of which
the community is yet again, subject to a hierarchy.
D.4 Hindutva at Any Cost
Probably the most recent example of how Sewa Bharati works to
differentiate “Hindu” communities and sow the seeds of tension
between “Hindu” communities and other minorities is during the
Gujarat earthquake last year. Sewa Bharati, Gujarat, received a lot
of funds last year following the earthquake, from foreign donors as
well as the Indian government for rebuilding villages in Gujarat [119]. Sewa Bharati utilized these funds to
include a temple and a crematorium in each village that it rebuilt
and built no mosques, churches or graveyards [120]. Either all the villages that Sewa Bharati
chose to rebuild were predominantly Hindu villages (which begs the
question as to why it chose villages so selectively), or it built
only temples in villages that had significant non-Hindu populations.
The reason why this example is a critical one is simply to show how
fundamentally instrumental the Sangh is. Even the most disastrous of
human calamities are for Sangh operations like Sewa Bharati moments
for political/religious consolidation rather than humanitarian aid.
This example will be revisited in some detail in a later appendix
that details such discrimination on the part of the Sangh in
situations of extreme crisis.
In summary therefore, like Sewa International, Sewa Bharati is
fundamentally a part of core Sangh activity, and uses every instance
possible to consolidate a Hindu identity and involve itself in
conversion activity. Thus it is simply important to underscore the
fact that when funds from the US are received by Sewa Bharati, its
primary use is for ideological/religious propaganda work.
114. http://www.rss.org/Variousbranches.html
115. http://www.hindubooks.org/Vision/ch7.html
116. Social Harmony, http://www.sewainternational.org/social.html ;
Ennobling Social Conduct, http://www.sewainternational.org/ennobling.html
117. Inspiring
visit of P. P. Sarsanghchalakji, Delhi http://www.sewainternational.org/ennobling.html
118. Hindu
Identity Reclaimed Braj Prant (Western Uttar Pradesh), http://www.sewainternational.org/ennobling.html
119. An article
about Goa state funds being used by Sewa Bharati for rebuilding
Gujarat villages, Parrikar uses Goa funds to boost RSS image in
Gujarat, http://www.freenewsgoa.net/modules.php?op=modload&name=News&file=article&sid=42
120. http://www.sewainternational.org/rajrepo.htm
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