(From Archives) Veer Savarkar : Brave By Half[image: savarkar_parliament]
In 1920 Indian National Congress was asking for his unconditional release,
but due to reasons best known to him Savarkar preferred to give a written
undertaking to get released from jail
Peoples Voice on March 25, 2016 - 10:35 am in Politics
<http://peoplesvoice.in/category/politics/>


This article was written when Savarkar’s potrait was unveiled in the
Parliament. The article was republished in the context of the latest
controversy involving Manishankar Aiyar and the Sangh Parivar
Circulating this yet again as the similar controversy has cropped up with
the tweet contrasting Bhagat Singh, who preferred to be hanged rather than
apologizing to the British and Savarkar, who apologized to get released.
Incidentally some of his followers claim that he preferred to get released
so that he get work for freedom of the country. As is well known after is
release from Andamans, where he was jailed, he never participated in anti
British movement.

Ram Puniyani
25 November, 2001

The film on Savarkar is due to be released shortly. The film even before
its release has created lot of ripples of excitement. It may be probably
the first major venture eulogizing the pioneer of Hindutva ideology. One is
aware that any objective discussion on Savarkar is filled with lot of
emotional outbursts as he has been iconized amongst sections of population
as the brave freedom fighter. He also gets the prefix of ‘Swatantra Veer‘
(Brave warrior for Freedom), which is only half true.

One needs to look at the trajectory of his life to understand this
transition from anti-British revolutionary to the ideologue of Hindutva.
Savarkar’s life underwent major transition during his confinement in
Andamans. He was a changed man after the period of his jail life. *He was a
committed anti-British revolutionary prior to his deportment to Andamans
but later he never associated with any thing even remotely sounding as
anti-British.*

[image: Modi savarkar]
<http://peoplesvoice.in/wp-content/uploads/2016/03/Modi-savarkar.jpg>

He had gone to study law in London and for his anti-British stance he was
denied the barrister-ship. In England Savarkar formed ‘Free Indian Society‘
committed to overthrowing British rule in India. That time he rejected the
British proposal to give the undertaking not to participate in politics.
His group had learnt the art of bomb making from a Russian revolutionary in
Paris. One member of the group killed a top-ranking official in India
office (London) and was sentenced to death. For involvement in this and for
another charges on him in Indian courts, Savarkar was arrested, sentenced
and was to undergo life imprisonment. He was deported from England. The
ship carrying him stopped at Marseilles, where he jumped into the sea and
swam to the shore to claim asylum on French soil. He was captured back and
was transported to Andamans for life imprisonment.

The conditions in Andaman jail were very painful and he was tortured
severely. It seems that conditions of jail life broke his spirits.
Incidentally from *1920 Indian National Congress was asking for his
unconditional release*, but due to reasons best known to him Savarkar
preferred to give a written undertaking to get released from the jail – “I
hereby acknowledge that I had a fair trial and just sentence. I heartily
abhor methods of violence resorted to in days gone by and I feel myself
duty bound to uphold law and constitution (British, added) to the best of
my powers and am willing to make the ‘reform’ a success in so far as I may
be allowed to do so in future” (from facsimile of Savarkar’s letter to
British authorities, Frontline, April 7, 1995. Pg. 94). The reforms he is
referring to here are the Montague Chelmsford proposals of 1919, which did
not satisfy the nationalist movement’s demands.

In response to this, as a trade off, the British Government released him
under the condition that he will stay in Ratnagiri district in Bombay
province and will seek permission of the government to leave the district.
Also that he will not engage in any public or private political activities
without the consent of the government. The period of conditions lasted till
1937, when the Congress ministry was sworn in. Subsequent to this he
assumed the office of the President of Hindu Mahasabha. This aspect of his
total surrender is totally hidden by the Hindutva forces, they confer on
him the epithet of ‘Veer (brave) Savarkar’.

Why did British government release him? How is it that after his release
the track of his politics totally changed and he came to adorn the mantle
of ideologue Hindu Rashtra? How is it that later he never undertook any
anti British agitation? How is it that he never joined and supported the
major movements of those times like Quit India movement? How is it that
instead of being the part of freedom struggle, he chose to help the British
in recruiting Indians for their army? One can have ones’ own inferences but
his compromise with British hides lot of messages about the nature of his
politics from then on.

He did emerge as the undisputed leader of Hindu Mahasabha. In most of the
times, post-1937, his politics was the polar opposite of National movement
led by Gandhi and ‘no support to Congress move’ was his basic dictum. This
can be best exemplified in the 1942 Quit India movement, when Gandhi gave
the call for the people to leave the government jobs. Instead Savarkar
issued the edict – “I issue this definite instruction to all Hindu
Sanghathanists in general holding any post or position of vantage in the
government services, should stick to them and continue to perform their
regular duties”. (Quoted in A G Noorani Frontline, Dec. 1, 1995). Also
working committee had passed a resolution on August 31, 1942 asking all
Mahasabhaites to remain at their jobs.

Savarkar does have the ‘honor’ of brewing Brahminical Hinduism with
nationalism, and he was the first exponent of the doctrine of
Hindutva. Savarkar’s
initial anti-British struggles were very impressive but after assuming the
role of the proponent of Hindutva his major energies were channelised in
strengthening the politics of hate, formation of communal Hindu Mahasabha
and helping RSS from distance. Savarkar’s work `Hindutva: Who is Hindu’
(1923) became and remains the basic text defining this political concept.
With the simultaneous rise of Muslim communalism, in due course most of the
Hindu consolidations took place by showing the fear of Muslims. This
nationalism consolidated itself on the ground of the ‘threatening other’,
but this threatening other was not the British imperialist colonizers whose
rule the country was suffering but was the `Muslim’.

As an aside we should note here that Savarkar’s anti-British struggles and
anti-British activities totally ceased after his release by the British,
and from then on all his guns were to be targeted against the Muslims.
Savarkar argued (later on this became the ideological base of most of the
Hindutva organizations) – “the Aryans who settled in India at the dawn of
history already formed a nation, now embodied in the Hindus…. Hindus are
bound together not only by the tie of the love they bear to a common
fatherland and by the common blood that courses through their veins and
keeps our hearts throbbing and our affection warm but also by the tie of
the common homage we pay to our great civilization, our Hindu culture.”
(Hindutva, Page 108) Thus Hindutva according to him rests on three pillars:
geographical unity, racial features and common culture. He further went on
to elaborate the criterion for who is Hindu?

According to him all those who regard this land as their fatherland and
holy-land are the only ones who are Hindu and thereby the people to whom
this land belongs. This led to the automatic interpretation that the
Christians and the Muslims, whose holy places are in Jerusalem and Mecca
are not on par with the `Hindus’ who ‘own’ this country. Initiating the
theorizing of the `doubting of patriotism of Muslim’s’, Savarkar states –
“but besides culture the tie of common holy-land has at times proved
stronger than the claims of a motherland. Look at Mohammedans: Mecca to
them is a sterner reality than Delhi or Agra.”

Savarkar’s politics was rival to Gandhian politics. Gandhi – the
representative of Indian Nationalism was branded by Savarkar as conciliator
and appeaser of Muslims. Savarkar propounded that struggle for supremacy
would begin after British left and that the Christians and Muslims were the
real enemies who could be defeated only by “Hindutva”. He maintained that
this land belonged to Hindus and so by implication Muslims with Hold Land
in Mecca and Christians with Holy land in Jerusalem cannot have equal
status to `Hindus’.

It is also worth remembering, that murderer of Gandhi, Godse was his ardent
follower. Savarkar himself was the co-accused in Gandhi murder, but was let
off as Godse took the whole responsibility of this murder totally on his
own self. While the film and the present projection of Savarkar is going
on, one has also to assess his role in second half of his life. An honest
assessment of our past will show us the different versions of Nationalism
and their political stance. The present hysteria of paying blind obeisance
to Vinayak Damodar Savarkar should not come in the way of objectively
assessing his changed role in later part of his life.

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