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The Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh, commonly known as RSS, is among the most influential socio-cultural organizations in modern India. Founded in 1925 in Nagpur, the organization has played a major role in shaping debates around nationalism, culture, religion, education, politics, and identity in India. Despite its significance, the RSS remains one of the most debated and contested institutions in Indian public life.
Supporters of the RSS describe it as a patriotic cultural movement devoted to national unity, discipline, social service, and civilization revival. Critics, however, argue that its ideological framework contributes to religious polarization and majoritarian nationalism. Over the decades, the organization has attracted admiration, suspicion, scholarly attention, state scrutiny, and political controversy.
This book attempts neither a defense nor a condemnation of the RSS. Instead, it seeks to present a historically grounded and analytically balanced examination of the organization, its ideology, evolution, structure, leadership, political influence, social activities, and controversies.
The study draws from:
• RSS publications and speeches,
• archival materials,
• academic scholarship,
• biographies,
• government reports,
• political analyses,
• interviews,
• newspaper archives,
• Comparative studies of nationalism.
The book also attempts to place the RSS within the broader historical context of colonialism, nationalism, identity politics, and postcolonial state formation in India. The challenge in writing about the RSS lies in the deeply polarized narratives surrounding it. For some, it represents the cultural soul of India; for others, it represents a challenge to India’s secular constitutional framework. A scholarly examination therefore requires careful attention to evidence, multiple viewpoints, and historical context.
This work aims to contribute to a deeper understanding of one of the most consequential organizations in contemporary Indian history.
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