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Speaking at the RSS’s annual Vijayadashami rally here which was broadcast online and attended 50 swayamsevaks (volunteers) due to the COVID-19 guidelines, Bhagwat said when the Sangh says Hindustan is “Hindu Rashtra”, it does not have any political or power-centered concept in its mind.
“Hindutva is the essence of this Rashtras Swa(self-hood). We are plainly acknowledging the self-hood of the country as Hindu because all our socio-cultural practices are directed by its principles with their spirit percolating in the personal, familial, professional and social life of each one of us,” he said.
The RSS chief said the term Hindutva has been ‘distorted’ by appending a ritualistic connotation to it. The Sangh does not use it to refer to this misconception.
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“Therefore, the Sangh believes it is the word applicable to all 1.3 billion people who call themselves the sons and daughters of Bharatvarsh, whose every day life is striving towards an alignment with its moral and ethical code and who are proud of the heritage of their ancestors who successfully traversed the same spiritual landscape since time immemorial,” Bhagwat said.
He said being oblivious to the true meaning of this term weakens the thread that integrates us with this country and society.
“It is for this reason that this term is the first target of castigation by those who instigate inter-group conflicts, who are bent on splitting our country and society,” he said.
By presenting as separate our diversities which are traditionally accepted, respected and are a part of larger scope of Hindu philosophy in reality, they try to convert them into a source of alienation or separatism, Bhagwat said.
“Hindu is not the name of some sect or denomination, it is not a provincial conceptualisation, it is neither a single castes lineage nor the privilege of the speakers of a specific language.
“There may be some who have an objection in accepting this term. We do not object their using other words if the content in their mind is the same,” he said.
However, in the interest of the countrys integrity and security, the Sangh has over the years humbly assimilated the colloquial and global interpretations of the term Hindu, Bhagwat said.
He further said being Hindu does not require giving up one’s faith, language, land or any other identity marker. It only mandates an abandonment of the quest for supremacy.
“One has only to be alert and keep away from the selfish and hateful forces who confuse and instigate people by showing them false dreams of supremacy, encourage radicalism and foster separatism,” he said.