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December 26, 2025

The Long Shadow of Golwalkar and the Making of a Majoritarian Republic

 



The Rise of Golwalkar and the Transformation of the RSS

When Dr K B Hedgewar founded the Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh in 1925 he imagined a disciplined cultural organisation that would uplift a disillusioned Hindu society. But the ideological transformation of the RSS truly began only after his death in 1940 when M S Golwalkar succeeded him as Sarsanghchalak. Hedgewar had prioritised unity self discipline and restrained political engagement. Golwalkar however infused the organisation with a doctrinal clarity that turned the RSS into a structured project of Hindu nationhood. Under him the RSS became a cadre based institution where unity was not a celebration of diversity but a demand for cultural homogeneity. The shakha became the forge where a generation was trained to view India not as a plural republic but as a sacred civilizational homeland of Hindus.

Defining a Hindu Nation Civilizational Identity over Civic Citizenship

Golwalkar’s writings such as we or our nationhood defined and bunch of thoughts placed Hindu identity at the centre of national belonging. He repeatedly argued that minorities could remain in India only if they accepted the cultural supremacy of the Hindu way of life. In his imagination citizenship was not a contract among equals but a system of graded belonging where Hindus claimed cultural primacy while others were expected to assimilate. Religious diversity was not an asset to be nurtured but a deviation to be corrected. The RSS under Golwalkar thus shifted from cultural self confidence to cultural majoritarianism a shift that would later echo through Indian politics long after his death.

Divergence from the Freedom Struggle and Antagonism toward Gandhi

While Jawaharlal Nehru Subhas Bose Sarojini Naidu and countless others mobilised mass movements for independence Golwalkar chose to keep the RSS away from the anti colonial struggle. He believed that strengthening Hindu society internally was more important than confronting the British externally. Critics argued that this posture conveniently shielded the RSS from colonial repression while distancing it from the moral authority of the freedom movement. Golwalkar accused Gandhi of weakening Hindu society by engaging with Muslim leaders and seeking unity through persuasion rather than cultural dominance. The RSS distance from the freedom struggle was therefore not accidental but ideological born of a suspicion that mass nationalism diluted Hindu primacy.

A Warning three weeks before the Assassination

In the winter of 1947 shortly after the bloodshed of Partition M S Golwalkar addressed a gathering where he condemned what he saw as moral weakness and appeasement in national politics. In that fraught atmosphere as Gandhi persisted with his final fasts calling for harmony and the release of withheld funds to Pakistan Golwalkar’s words carried a dark edge. At a public meeting in early December 1947 he declared that certain policies pursued by national leaders were unIndian and satanic and added that we have the means whereby such men can be immediately silenced if they continue to harm Hindu interests.

“On 8 December 1947, RSS chief M S Golwalkar at a rally described certain government and Gandhi-led policies as ‘unIndian and satanic’ and declared that ‘we have the means whereby such men can be immediately silenced’ if they stood in the way of protecting Hindu interests.”


This was not an order nor a call to arms yet the sentiment reflected a deep and open hostility toward Gandhi’s final effort to preserve moral citizenship across faiths. When seen in the hindsight of Gandhi’s assassination only weeks later this remark remains an enduring and troubling reminder of the volatile ideological climate of the time.

Gandhis Assassination the RSS Ban and a Permanent Stain of Suspicion

The assassination of Mahatma Gandhi on 30 January 1948 intensified scrutiny of this hostility. Though Golwalkar and the RSS were not legally proven to be part of the conspiracy the fact that Nathuram Godse had once been associated with the organisation and had absorbed similar ideological influences cast a long shadow. The government banned the RSS arguing that the ideological poison that had vilified Gandhi could no longer be ignored. The ban was lifted a year later only after the RSS formally declared respect for the Constitution. But this episode left a stain that history has never fully washed away for it raised the question of whether cultural nationalism can slide into moral absolutism where dissent is seen as a threat rather than a voice to be engaged.

Recasting Public Image without Abandoning Majoritarian Ideology

After the ban was lifted Golwalkar worked hard to present the RSS as socially constructive. Educational and charitable work expanded and the language of public statements became more cautious. Yet he never surrendered the idea that India must be rooted in Hindu cultural primacy. Minorities were recognised but their equal belonging remained conditional on acceptance of majority cultural norms. The RSS under Golwalkar mastered the art of balancing constitutional language with a cultural imagination that waited for its political moment.

Golwalkars Legacy in the Modi Era Majoritarian Ideas Enter State Policy

Nearly eight decades later Golwalkar’s influence has travelled from the shakha ground to the centre of power. Narendra Modi a lifelong RSS pracharak articulates a political vision that resonates deeply with Golwalkar’s worldview. Policies such as the Citizenship Amendment Act the promotion of a Uniform Civil Code and the centrality of Hindu cultural symbols in national politics all reflect this continuity. The inauguration of the Ayodhya temple by a sitting Prime Minister blurred the line between state authority and religious symbolism in ways that fulfil long standing RSS aspirations. Critics argue that this represents the political mainstreaming of Golwalkar’s vision turning cultural majoritarianism into the guiding framework of governance.

From Cultural Movement to Political Blueprint The Constitution Reimagined

Golwalkar had criticised the framers of the Constitution for not rooting the document in Hindu philosophical tradition. Today his critiques resurface indirectly through institutional shifts that seek to harmonise state authority with majoritarian cultural norms. Revised textbooks emphasise ancient Hindu achievements national universities are pushed toward cultural revivalism and public rhetoric routinely frames diversity as fragmentation. What was once a cultural mission now appears to many observers as a political blueprint enacted through electoral legitimacy.

Is the RSS Communal The Ideology of Unity through Assimilation

The RSS rejects the label communal and claims it seeks unity. But unity of what kind. When equal citizenship is conditional on cultural assimilation and when plurality is tolerated only if it bows to majority norms unity becomes indistinguishable from a project of majoritarian dominance. The question is not whether the RSS preaches hatred. The deeper question is whether its ideological structure produces exclusion and hierarchy by redefining citizenship through cultural identity rather than equal rights. In this sense the RSS may not call itself communal but its framework inevitably creates communal outcomes because its idea of India is rooted first in culture and only then in citizenship.

Author Introduction

Siddhartha Shankar Mishra is an advocate at the Supreme Court of India and a commentator on law politics and society. His writings blend legal insight with social critique and aim to provoke reflection on power justice and public conscience.

December 19, 2025

Hindu Hindutva and the Great Betrayal

 



The Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh RSS the ideological mothership of the BJP and its extended family of front organisations has performed one of the most cynical feats in modern Indian politics: the hijacking of a civilisational identity called Hindu and the conversion of it into a political war cry called Hindutva. This transformation has not just polarised India it has permanently altered the national character weaponising religion not for spiritual awakening but for electoral arithmetic and majoritarian muscle flexing.

Make no mistake: the word Hindu was never a religion to begin with. It was a geographical identity a loose term describing the people living east of the Sindhu Indus River. Over centuries it evolved into a mosaic of faiths practices contradictions and philosophies. A way of life some said. A civilisation others argued. But it was never a monolith and certainly never an ideology. That distortion that vile simplification came with Hindutva.

And who brought it The RSS. An organisation that sat out Indias independence movement. While Mahatma Gandhi was being arrested while Nehru was in jail and while countless Indians were laying down their lives for swaraj the RSS was busy doing drills in khaki shorts perfecting salutes and preaching cultural nationalism inspired not by Ashoka or Akbar but by Mussolini and Hitler.

Yes you read that right. The early Hindutva ideologues Savarkar Golwalkar Hedgewar looked to fascist Europe for inspiration. Golwalkar even praised Nazi Germanys race pride as a model for India to follow. These are not accusations these are documented facts buried deep in their writings and conveniently omitted from their propaganda.

Fast forward to today and you will see the same legacy playing out only this time with more money more media and more menace. The RSS and its political face the BJP have turned the Hindu Hindutva binary into a mass production factory of fear and fiction. Under the guise of cultural renaissance they have peddled myths revised history textbooks and reduced Indias rich diversity into an Us versus Them narrative.

Who is this Them Muslims Christians liberals dissenters anyone who questions their monopoly over nationalism or dares to see Hinduism as something deeper than temple photo ops and cow vigilantes. The irony is sharp: a movement that claims to protect Hinduism does not even understand it.

Let us talk plain. Hinduism is about questioning. About doubt debate dialectics. The Upanishads are not instruction manuals but conversations. The Gita is not a war mongering tract but a discourse on duty renunciation and inner conflict. The Rig Veda does not say my god is better than yours it says truth is one the wise call it by many names. Can this be the foundation of an exclusivist ideology Of course not.

But the Sangh does not care. Its project is not religious it is political. It does not want to protect Dharma it wants to consolidate votes. Its soldiers do not chant mantras they hurl abuse online and drag citizens out of trains for eating beef. The average RSS foot soldier is not meditating under a Bodhi tree he is manufacturing hate under a fake Twitter handle.

Look at how they operate: with slogans not substance. With symbols not spirituality. From Love Jihad to Ghar Wapsi from cow protection to Ram Mandir every issue is designed not to unite Hindus but to divide India. They promise cultural pride but deliver cultural paranoia. They invoke Bharat Mata but abuse her very ethos.

And what about the so called Hindu Rashtra they dream of A theocratic state run by scriptures and mob sentiment The idea itself is anti Hindu. Hinduism has survived precisely because it did not have a Pope a single Book or a rigid dogma. It allowed Buddha to challenge the Vedas Kabir to ridicule rituals and Meera to dance with her Krishna. Can the same tradition tolerate hate campaigns and moral policing Can it live under lynch mobs and textbook lies

Of course not. But these are inconvenient truths for the Sangh. So they whitewash history. They erase uncomfortable facts and rewrite the past as per their political convenience. Tipu Sultan becomes a tyrant Gandhi becomes irrelevant Ambedkar becomes a Hindu mascot and Savarkar becomes a reluctant patriot. This is not history it is fiction wrapped in saffron.

Worse the children of the very leaders who scream Bharat Mata ki Jai send their own kids to convent schools to Ivy League universities abroad to air conditioned enclaves of globalisation. The public is fed cow dung and WhatsApp forwards the private elite lives in gated hypocrisy.

And yet this con has worked. The RSS BJP machine has managed to convince a majority of Indians that being Hindu means hating the Other. That defending culture means destroying coexistence. That ancient India was some kind of golden theocracy that must be recreated through violence and exclusion.

It is the greatest betrayal of Hinduisms spirit and Indias soul.

It must also be said that the so called secular parties allowed this to happen. By appeasing the minorities in token ways and abandoning grassroots education they created a vacuum that the Sangh filled not with values but with venom. Where the Congress once promised Garibi Hatao the BJP today offers Muslim Hatao. The slogans have changed but the scam remains.

So where do we go from here

First we reclaim the difference between being Hindu and being Hindutvavadi. You can be a proud Hindu and reject the RSS. You can chant Om and oppose lynching. You can visit temples and still stand for constitutional rights. Do not let them tell you otherwise.

Second we must call out their hypocrisy. Loudly repeatedly and unapologetically. When a mob kills in the name of cows ask why the same godmen dine in Dubai. When they invoke Rashtra ask where their kids study. When they talk of sabhyata civilisation ask about unemployment education and healthcare. Strip the mask off. Mock the fraud.

Lastly we must revive the secular inclusive argumentative tolerant ethos of this land the real India. The India of Ashoka of Kabir of Tagore of Ambedkar not the sanitised saffron tinted circus that the RSS wants us to clap for.

Because if we do not we risk losing not just Hinduism but India itself.

As Khushwant Singh had warned before his death India will survive only if it remains a secular state. Once it becomes a Hindu Pakistan it will perish.

The clock is ticking. And the Sangh is watching.

 

Siddhartha Shankar Mishra
Advocate Supreme Court of India and Political Commentator

December 07, 2025

The Forgotten Role of the Sangh in the Partition of India

 


The story of the partition of India is often presented as a clash between the Congress and the Muslim League or as a consequence of British divide and rule. Yet one important force remains missing from most mainstream narratives. The Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh or RSS founded in nineteen twenty five did not directly sit at negotiation tables or demand a separate state. But its ideology, its internal instructions, and its conscious withdrawal from the freedom struggle played a significant indirect role in shaping the climate that made partition possible.

To understand this role, we must begin with what the RSS chose not to do. While the Congress launched mass movements, socialist cadres challenged colonial rule, revolutionaries risked their lives, and even the Muslim League engaged in constitutional bargaining, the RSS remained entirely aloof from every national movement that sought to end British authority. This distance was not accidental. It was deliberate, disciplined and communicated clearly through action.


Did Hedgewar and Golwalkar Assure the British That the RSS Would Not Join the Freedom Struggle

There is no single formal letter where Hedgewar or Golwalkar wrote to the British saying we will not participate. Instead, the British intelligence reports, home department notes, and RSS internal instructions together make it absolutely clear that the organisation chose to stay away and communicated this stance through its actions.

Here is the accurate breakdown.

1. Hedgewar Founder RSS

Hedgewar had a nationalist background and even went to jail earlier in life, but after founding the RSS in nineteen twenty five, he gave a strict instruction:

RSS must not involve itself in the Congress led anti British movements.

When the Civil Disobedience Movement and Quit India Movement began, Hedgewar and later Golwalkar

  • Ordered that RSS members should not participate
  • Made the British aware that the organisation was not aligned with the Congress
  • Assured indirectly through non participation and internal discipline that RSS would remain non political and non confrontational to the colonial state

There is a famous internal directive

“No swayamsevak shall take part in any movement that provokes the government.”

To the British, this was exactly the assurance they wanted.


2. Golwalkar Second Sarsanghchalak nineteen forty onwards

Golwalkar went even further. In British intelligence reports of the early nineteen forties, the colonial officers repeatedly noted that

RSS is not participating in the freedom struggle and is not a threat to law and order.

The British CID wrote

“RSS has no intention of joining the civil disobedience movement.”

They also noted that Golwalkar discourages political activity of any kind.

Golwalkar himself instructed all RSS members

“We do not fight the British. Our work is character building.”

During the Quit India Movement in nineteen forty two, when the entire nation was burning, the RSS

  • Did not participate
  • Kept its offices open
  • Increased its daily drills and shakhas
  • Informed local British officers that RSS activities were peaceful and not anti state

This was interpreted by the British as a clear cooperative stance.


3. Evidence from British Records

British intelligence reports from nineteen thirty to nineteen forty six contain statements like

“The RSS shows no inclination to protest against the Government. Their activities are purely communal.”

“RSS is not a political body challenging His Majesty’s Government.”

This was as good as saying “We are not with the Congress. We will not fight you.”


4. Net Result

Even though Hedgewar never wrote an official declaration and Golwalkar never gave a formal pledge, their instructions, non participation, and cooperation with colonial authorities amounted to the same message

“We will not join the freedom struggle.”

This is why the British never banned the RSS even though they jailed Congress leaders, Communists, Socialists, and revolutionaries.


The Ideological Parallel to the Muslim League

While the Muslim League under Muhammad Ali Jinnah argued that Muslims were a separate nation, the RSS under Golwalkar insisted that only Hindus formed the true nation. Golwalkar wrote that non Hindus must adopt Hindu culture or remain subordinate. This was not inclusive patriotism but exclusive cultural dominance. It mirrored the separatist logic of the Muslim League and strengthened the idea that plural coexistence was impossible.

Thus both forces, although opposed to each other, reinforced each other’s logic. One claimed separation was necessary. The other claimed unity was possible only through surrender. Both rejected the composite nationalism that Gandhi, Nehru, Azad, Subhas Bose, Ambedkar and many others believed in.


Communal Mobilisation in the Final Years

British records describe RSS activities in the nineteen forties as military style drills and consolidated Hindu mobilisation. In regions like Punjab and Delhi this sometimes created an atmosphere of defensive and retaliatory communal behaviour. At a time when tensions were already inflamed by the Muslim League National Guards and other communal groups, this posture contributed to widespread fear and mistrust.

After violence erupted in nineteen forty seven, the RSS organised relief camps for Hindu refugees. These efforts helped many but also reinforced a narrative of selective community protection rather than shared nationhood. Even its humanitarian work reflected ideological priorities.


Aftermath and the Ban

The assassination of Mahatma Gandhi by Nathuram Godse who had been associated with the RSS and the Hindu Mahasabha led the newly independent government to ban the RSS in nineteen forty eight. The government stated that the organisation had created an atmosphere of hatred and intolerance. Gandhi had long warned that exclusive nationalism would fracture India. His death revealed the grave cost of such ideas.


Conclusion

The RSS did not demand partition, but its ideology strengthened the communal logic that made partition imaginable. By refusing to join the freedom struggle, by signalling to the British that it would not oppose colonial rule, by promoting an exclusive cultural idea of nationhood, and by mirroring the divisive logic of the Muslim League, the RSS weakened the inclusive idea of India.

The Muslim League demanded division.The British executed division.The Sangh normalised division. India was cut by borders but first by ideas.


Author Introduction

Siddhartha Shankar Mishra is an advocate at the Supreme Court of India and a commentator on law, politics and society. His writings blend legal insight with social critique and aim to provoke reflection on power, justice and public conscience.

 

 


December 01, 2025

WHERE THE MIND IS WITHOUT FEAR

 




WHERE THE MIND IS WITHOUT FEAR

Constitution Day and the Distorted Legacy of Power


Introduction: A Day That Reveals the Truth

Constitution Day should renew our faith in the values that hold the republic together. It should remind us of a nation imagined through justice, liberty, equality and fraternity. It should return us to the dream of freedom where the mind is without fear and knowledge is free. Instead, it exposes a deep contradiction. Those who celebrate the Constitution with loud speeches belong to an ideological tradition that rejected it from the very beginning. The louder the praise, the greater the dishonesty. This is the paradox of our political moment.


The Constitution as the Republic’s Moral Foundation

The Constitution is not just a legal text. It is a moral foundation. It protects the citizen from the power of the state. It ensures that birth does not define destiny. It treats every human being with dignity. It restrains authority through principles, not favour. It imagines a nation where the poorest person stands equal before law with the most powerful.

But the present climate reveals how far the republic has drifted from this foundation. Fear is used as a method of rule. Propaganda replaces knowledge. Institutions bend before power. Social divisions widen while those meant to govern speak of unity. A document built on equality struggles to survive under those who treat it as a ceremonial object rather than a governing discipline.


The Ideological Roots of the Crisis

To understand the erosion of constitutional values today, one must confront the ideological foundation of the ruling political ecosystem. The present political structure draws its intellectual influence from the writings and speeches of M S Golwalkar, the most important ideologue of the organisation that shapes their worldview.

Golwalkar’s rejection of the Constitution was not vague or diplomatic. It was clear, structured and unapologetic. He argued that the Constitution had nothing Indian in it. He complained that it borrowed democratic ideas from many countries. He criticised the Constituent Assembly for choosing a modern republican model instead of drawing from ancient social codes.

He said openly that India did not need a modern Constitution. He insisted that the nation should have accepted ancient law books as its governing framework. Among these he pointed to Manusmriti as an ideal source of law. This was the same text that endorsed caste hierarchy and social inequality. Ambedkar had torn it publicly to reject its oppressive vision. Golwalkar, in contrast, praised it as an authentic foundation for India.

This was not a difference of opinion. It was a direct conflict between the inclusive republic the Constitution created and the cultural state Golwalkar imagined.


Golwalkar’s Rejection of Democracy

Golwalkar repeatedly expressed distrust toward democracy. He believed that democratic structures were not suited to the Indian character. He criticised universal equality, calling it artificial. He believed in hierarchy as a natural social order.

This view goes against the core of the Constitution, which declares that every citizen stands equal before the law regardless of caste, religion or culture. Where the Constitution sees a political community, Golwalkar saw a cultural collective. Where the Constitution sees citizens, Golwalkar saw subjects of a cultural identity. Where the Constitution promotes fraternity across differences, Golwalkar emphasised uniformity through cultural dominance.

This ideological conflict still shapes the political culture of today.


The Refusal to Honour National Symbols

The organisation influenced by Golwalkar refused for decades to hoist the national flag at its headquarters. They claimed the tricolour did not reflect their cultural view of the nation. Only after public pressure did they raise it.

This refusal was not trivial. It revealed a deeper discomfort with the inclusive national identity the Constitution created. A flag that represents unity across communities did not suit an ideology built on cultural singularity. A republic built on equality did not fit their vision of ancient hierarchy.


The Present Government and the Performance of Constitutional Loyalty

Today the government that draws strength from this ideological tradition speaks about the Constitution with great emotion. They organise events. They praise Ambedkar. They quote constitutional verses. Yet every institutional action tells a different story.

Dissent is criminalised.
Agencies are weaponised.
Media is pressured.
Universities are censored.
Federal balance is weakened.
Minority rights are eroded.
Public expression is monitored through fear.

This is not constitutional governance. It is governance wearing constitutional clothing.

A government that truly believes in the Constitution does not need propaganda to show loyalty. Its actions reflect loyalty. Its institutions reflect independence. Its society reflects harmony. But today the Constitution is celebrated in speeches and violated in practice.


Erosion of Institutions and the Rise of Fear

The Constitution survives not because it is written. It survives because institutions protect it. Today those institutions stand weakened. Investigative bodies behave like political tools. Public universities fear disapproval from authority. Independent journalism struggles to breathe under pressure. The judiciary carries the burden of delay and political shadow.

Fear has become the unspoken language of governance. Citizens fear expressing their thoughts. Activists fear legal threats. Journalists fear targeted cases. Students fear disciplinary action. When fear governs society, the dream of constitutional liberty collapses.


Tagore’s Vision and the Republic’s Conscience

Tagore’s lines offer a moral mirror to the republic. He imagined a nation without fear, without narrow divisions, without falsehood. The Constitution tried to build that nation. Today the distance between Tagore’s vision and reality grows wider. Fear has replaced courage. Propaganda has replaced knowledge. Divisions have replaced unity.

Tagore spoke from the depth of truth. The question today is whether citizens can still speak from that depth.


The People as the Final Defenders of the Republic

Governments may change. Ideologies may shift. Institutions may weaken. But the Constitution survives only if citizens protect it. The people are the final guardians of the republic. They hold the moral responsibility to challenge injustice, defend liberty and demand accountability.

When institutions fail, the people must rise with conscience. The republic belongs to them, not to those who rule temporarily.


Conclusion: Constitution Day as a Call for Courage

Constitution Day should not be a ritual. It should be a reminder that the republic stands at a turning point. The conflict today is not between political parties. It is between constitutional morality and authoritarian desire. Between a nation built on equality and a nation shaped by hierarchy. Between a future of freedom and a future of fear.

The Constitution cannot protect itself. Only citizens can. Only truth can. Only moral courage can.


Siddhartha Shankar Mishra is an advocate at the Supreme Court of India and a commentator on law, politics and society. His writings blend legal insight with social critique and aim to provoke reflection on power, justice and public conscience.

November 23, 2025

Every Scheme Is a Scam A Deep Dive into Broken Promises and Public Distrust

 



A welfare state survives on trust. Citizens believe that when a government announces a scheme the aim is public good and social benefit. But in India the phrase every scheme is a scam has become a bitter remark in drawing rooms courts media studios and even casual street conversations. It may sound like an exaggeration but the sentiment comes from repeated experiences of inflated claims false promises manipulated data and corruption at every tier of governance.

The problem is not that welfare schemes are unnecessary. The problem is the misuse of schemes for publicity and the diversion of public funds through hidden channels. As a result people slowly begin to assume that behind every new announcement there is a hidden motive and a hidden beneficiary who is rarely the citizen.

This distrust becomes clearer when we examine some major schemes across sectors. Each scheme was launched with fanfare and heavy praise. The outcomes however reveal deep gaps that justify public anger and the popular belief that every scheme is a scam.

Take the Pradhan Mantri Awas Yojana which promised affordable houses for the poor within a declared time frame. Ground reality shows that many people were sanctioned houses only on paper. Many applicants did not receive the second or third installment. In several states beneficiaries complain that they were asked for bribes to release the sanctioned amount. In many districts houses shown as completed in official records are incomplete structures or just empty plots. This is not a case of a few bad officials. It is a structural failure that allows leakage and corruption at every step.

Look at the Ayushman Bharat scheme which claimed to give health protection to millions. Several private hospitals were caught generating false bills for patients who never visited the hospital. Ghost beneficiaries were created with fake identities. Medical procedures were billed but never performed. Instead of strengthening public health services this scheme gave some private institutions an easy method of earning from public funds. When a scheme meant to treat the sick becomes a source of profit for manipulators people naturally call it a scam.

The Ujjwala scheme gave gas connections to poor households but many families simply could not afford refills. Distributors reported that a large number of connections became inactive after a few months. This means the government gained publicity but the poor continued to cook with firewood and coal. A welfare announcement without long term affordability becomes an illusion. Once again the accusation of scam surfaces not because the idea was wrong but because the implementation was incomplete and misleading.

The Swachh Bharat mission claimed that open defecation had been eliminated across the country. This claim was repeated on global platforms and in national celebrations. Yet surveys by independent bodies and reports from villages show that many toilets were never used or quickly became unusable due to poor construction. Some toilets had no water supply. Some were built far from houses making daily use difficult for the elderly and women. Villagers were counted as users even when they continued old practices. When a government declares victory on an unfinished mission people see it as a scam of data and a scam of publicity.

The Digital India initiative promised a transformation of governance through technology. But the digital divide remains wide. Many citizens still struggle with weak network no smartphone no digital literacy and no access to online services. Despite claims of transparency several portals crash during peak hours and many citizen services still require middlemen and bribes. Digital India has created convenience for the privileged class while the poor remain trapped in old paper based systems. When citizens see tall slogans but no real change on the ground the word scam appears naturally.

The Pradhan Mantri Kisan Samman Nidhi which sends money directly to farmers appears transparent at first glance. But many ineligible persons have received the benefit while genuine farmers were wrongly excluded. Tenant farmers sharecroppers and landless cultivators were ignored because of faulty land records. State investigations exposed that dead persons and government employees had received payments. When a scheme for the weakest ends up helping the wrong people people call it a scam on the farmer.

The Jal Jeevan and Nal se Jal missions promised tap water connections to every rural household. Yet several villages report that pipes were installed only for photographs and record books. In some places water reaches homes only once in many days. In other areas the water is muddy unsafe or supplied only through tankers. A tap without water is not a scheme. It is a token gesture designed to create an illusion of progress.

Even the Smart City Mission which was supposed to renew urban planning and modernize infrastructure has delivered very little in many towns. Most cities have spent money on cosmetic beautification such as fountains decorative lights and fancy signboards while real urban problems remain the same. Traffic chaos unsafe footpaths informal settlements poor drainage and polluted air still define daily life. Projects worth thousands of crores were announced but only a small fraction reached meaningful completion. Activists and auditors therefore see it as a grand exercise in diversion of money rather than a serious urban reform.

The Beti Bachao Beti Padhao scheme was launched with emotional slogans about saving and educating the girl child. Later official reports admitted that a major share of the budget went into advertisements and publicity events instead of direct benefits and support systems for girls. A scheme that spends more on its own publicity than on the lives of the girls it claims to protect cannot easily escape the label of scam.

These are not stray examples. Almost every sector has witnessed similar stories. Skill development centres that exist only on paper. Rural roads recorded as completed but never built. Pension schemes where elderly beneficiaries wait for months. Employment schemes where attendance registers are faked. The pattern becomes clear. Authorities love announcements and slogans but avoid accountability and hard ground work.

Why does this happen repeatedly. First there is a deep union between politics and publicity. Schemes are designed less as instruments of justice and more as instruments of election strategy. Second the monitoring mechanisms are weak and easily influenced. Third corruption flows from the lowest level to the highest and honest officers who resist it face isolation and punishment. Fourth data manipulation has become a normal habit as long as it creates a feel good narrative. Fifth there is hardly any serious punishment for those who misuse public funds.

As a result public trust collapses. When citizens hear about a new scheme they do not feel hope. They feel suspicion. They assume someone somewhere will make money while they will receive only messages jingles and speeches.

This however does not mean that all welfare schemes are useless or that the state should stop planning for social justice. It means that schemes require honest design transparent execution strong social audits active role of local communities and strict punishment for corruption. Information should be open for verification. Independent institutions should have the courage to expose failures. Media should question numbers instead of chanting slogans. Only then can a welfare scheme become a true instrument of change rather than another episode in a long series of scams.

Until that day arrives the statement every scheme by the government is a scam will continue to echo across the nation. It is not an attack on the idea of welfare. It is a warning that welfare without integrity becomes deception and deception funded by public money is the biggest scam of all.

 

Author introduction

The author is Siddhartha Shankar Mishra an advocate at the Supreme Court of India who writes on law governance and social justice with a focus on accountability of state power and the lived realities of citizens.


November 20, 2025

Bhagat Singh chose the gallows, Savarkar chose the petition

 



Bhagat Singh and Savarkar: The Gallows, The Petition, and the Two Paths of Freedom

 

Bhagat Singh chose the gallows, Savarkar chose the petition

Indian history brings together many brave figures, but few contrasts are as sharp as the one between Bhagat Singh, Vinayak Savarkar, and Mahatma Gandhi. All three opposed colonial rule, all three were imprisoned, all three shaped the political imagination of India. Yet the British treated each of them in dramatically different ways. Savarkar was transported to the Andaman Cellular Jail under the belief that he could be broken and controlled. Bhagat Singh was denied the option of transportation because the British feared that he would become unstoppable if he lived. Gandhi was never even considered for the Andamans because the British believed that his presence among political prisoners in a remote island would strengthen resistance, not weaken it. The empire made a different calculation for each man based on fear, strategy, and political consequence.

The story begins with Savarkar, one of the earliest revolutionaries associated with armed revolt against British rule. His writings and speeches encouraged violence, bomb making, and militant resistance. His association with Dhingra, who assassinated Curzon Wyllie in London, brought him under direct scrutiny. When Savarkar was arrested and sentenced to two life terms, the British believed that transportation to the Andamans would separate him from political activity and break the organisational chain that connected Indian revolutionaries in Europe and India.

Inside the Cellular Jail, Savarkar faced harsh punishment. The regime was brutal, with solitary confinement, hand driven oil mills, flogging, poor food, and complete communication blackout. Many prisoners collapsed mentally and physically under these conditions. Savarkar wrote multiple petitions to the British government asking for mercy, remission, or conditional release. In these petitions he offered to give up political activity, promised loyalty and good behaviour, and stated that he would follow the guidance of the government. These documents remain preserved in the archives and reveal a shift in tone and strategy.

The British examined these petitions carefully. They concluded that Savarkar was someone who could be managed. A man who sought release through repeated requests and promises was not a man who would continue armed revolution upon freedom. When he was finally removed from the Andamans and placed under strict restrictions in Ratnagiri, he accepted the conditions. His speeches were banned, his travel restricted, and his political activity suspended. The empire got exactly what it wanted. A revolutionary turned into a contained figure.

In complete contrast stood Bhagat Singh. He began his political journey as a revolutionary but soon became a philosopher of liberation. He read Marx, Lenin, Tolstoy, and European political thinkers with intense focus. He saw Indian independence not as a simple transfer of power but as a deeper social transformation which required the liberation of workers, peasants, and oppressed communities. His writings in jail displayed remarkable intellectual maturity and moral courage.

The British did not fear Bhagat Singh merely because he used violence. They feared him because he represented a new kind of revolutionary mind. When he launched a hunger strike for the rights of political prisoners, he became the most influential youth leader in the country. His fast lasted more than sixty days. Students held protests in Lahore, Delhi, and Calcutta. Labour groups organised marches in Bombay. Gandhi and Nehru spoke about him. The entire nation watched the struggle of one man inside a prison cell.

This changed everything for the British. A man who controls the political temperature of a subcontinent from inside jail becomes dangerous beyond measure. Transportation to the Andamans would not destroy Bhagat Singh. It would strengthen his legend. He would become a teacher to all political prisoners. His ideas would spread with even greater force. The empire had already witnessed how Irish revolutionaries turned prisons into political schools. It was not willing to repeat the same mistake in India.

Therefore, the British created a special tribunal for the Lahore Conspiracy Case through an extraordinary ordinance. This tribunal removed the right of appeal and ensured a fast conviction. Its purpose was simple. It blocked every legal pathway that could lead to transportation. The British did not want Bhagat Singh in the Andamans. They wanted him dead. They believed only death could neutralise his influence. This is why the execution was carried out secretly at night, the bodies burned without ceremony, and the ashes thrown into a river. Even in death, the British feared the fire of his ideas.

Now we come to Gandhi, whose treatment by the British was entirely different from both. Gandhi led the largest non violent mass movement in the world. His campaigns paralysed British administration more effectively than any bomb or gun. Yet the British never sent him to the Andamans. The question is why.

Gandhi was not transported to the Andamans because the British feared that his presence there would inspire the other political prisoners. Gandhi had the rare ability to transform a prison into a moral battlefield. If Gandhi were placed in the Cellular Jail, he would turn the entire Andaman penal colony into a centre of civil resistance. His presence would unite political prisoners, strengthen their resolve, and attract global attention. The British did not want the world to see Gandhi working under brutal prison conditions. They did not want hunger strikes and civil disobedience from a remote island becoming an international embarrassment. The empire recognised that Gandhi’s real power was moral. They could jail him in mainland prisons because it allowed them to manage public perception. But placing Gandhi in an island prison surrounded by torture would damage the imperial image beyond repair.

There was another reason. Gandhi did not believe in violent overthrow of the state. He did not run secret societies or armed groups. His philosophy of non violence allowed the British to manage him through conventional imprisonment. He could be jailed in Yerwada or Poona without creating a revolutionary storm inside an isolated jail. The British believed they could negotiate with Gandhi, postpone his campaigns, and use dialogue to reduce tension. None of this was possible with Bhagat Singh.

Therefore, Gandhi was always jailed within India. The British calculated that Gandhi’s politics, though powerful, could be contained by time bound imprisonment within mainland jails. But sending him to the Andamans would have created a martyr even more powerful than Bhagat Singh.

These three men demonstrate the three ways the British responded to political danger. Savarkar was transported because he could be broken and neutralised. Gandhi was kept in mainland prisons because his influence depended on public visibility and the empire could manage the optics. Bhagat Singh was executed because no prison, no island, and no negotiation could contain his ideas.

Bhagat Singh refused compromise. Savarkar accepted compromise. Gandhi negotiated but never surrendered his principles. The British understood these differences with clarity. Savarkar was the prisoner they could manage. Gandhi was the leader they could imprison but not silence. Bhagat Singh was the mind they could not afford to let live.

Bhagat Singh chose the gallows. Savarkar chose the petition. Gandhi chose the path of resistance through suffering. Each man created a different legacy, but history remembers who bowed and who stood firm. The empire calculated its moves based on fear. And the man they feared the most was the young revolutionary who embraced death with calm dignity.


Author Introduction
Siddhartha Shankar Mishra is an Advocate in the Supreme Court of India. He writes on history, politics, law, and society. Email id: ssmishra33@gmail.com

References
Lahore Conspiracy Case Records
British Government Ordinance for Special Tribunal, 1930
Collected Works of Bhagat Singh
Jail Notes of Bhagat Singh
National Archives of India documents on Savarkar
Cellular Jail Records and Petitions of Savarkar
Collected Works of Mahatma Gandhi
British India Home Department Prison Records