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More than 150,000 Hindu hardliners, all dressed in khaki shorts, white shirts and black hats, put on a massive show of strength at an elaborate rally here yesterday.
It was the largest-ever gathering of the Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh (RSS), a group seen as the ideological parent of Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s Bharatiya Janata Party, officials said.
Activists, all men, marched in unison with wooden staffs, chanted, sat in mass prayer and listened intently as RSS chief Mohan Bhagwat delivered a speech from a stage surrounded by walls designed to resemble a fort.
A marching band composed of 2,000 RSS volunteers also played while a giant saffron flag, the colour most associated with Hinduism, was hoisted on a post over 20m high at the 450-acre rally site.
The RSS styles itself as a cultural organisation devoted to protecting Hindu culture. But critics accuse it of being an anti-Muslim pseudo-fascist organisation with a history of fuelling religious tensions.
Analysts say its influence has never been greater following the election in May 2014 of Modi, a former RSS foot-soldier. Attendees, who ranged in age from 15 to 102, were in bullish mood.
“People in the RSS look up to Modi as an example of what we can become. He gives our organisation a great image,” Vinayak Deshpande, 32, said.
Another volunteer, who asked not to be named, said the RSS had witnessed a 20% increase in activists since Modi became prime minister. “With Modi as prime minister the RSS is on the right track,” he said.
The RSS, formed in 1925, is India’s biggest grassroots religious organisation and is believed to have around 5mn activists, known as “Swayamsevaks”.
It is notoriously secretive - volunteers do not formally register as members and communications are often done verbally. Yesterday’s event was rare for its size and for its open invitation to the media.
Shreerang Godbole, an RSS official, said it was the largest RSS camp ever held. Some 160,000 volunteers had registered to attend and practically all had turned up, organisers said.
The organisation has been banned three times in post-independence India, including after a former member assassinated Mahatma Gandhi in 1948 and following the 1992 demolition of a mosque in Ayodhya which led to deadly nationwide riots.
It favours a uniform civil code for India rather than personal laws for different religions, the protection of cows and the construction of a temple on the disputed Ayodhya site.
Modi helped the group out as a boy and as a young adult became a full-time volunteer for more than 15 years, taking the requisite vow of celibacy, before joining the BJP.
Thousands of RSS followers campaigned across India to help end 10 years of Congress rule and propel Modi to the premiership.
Almost two years into his term experts say the organisation enjoys unprecedented political clout.
Writing in The Indian Express, Shyamlal Yadav, an expert on the RSS, said the organisation “wields considerable power... sometimes dictating policies”.
Kumar Ketkar, a political analyst in Mumbai, agreed.
“Across the board RSS men are being appointed. For example they have significant influence in the human resources ministry, which includes education,” he said.
RSS advocates have welcomed a toughened beef ban in Maharashtra since Modi came to power, but are likely to have been disappointed by his focus on economic growth and his failure to take a stance on Ayodhya.
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