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How MODI'S India Is Assassinating Gandhi’s legacy

isupportaap

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On Jan. 30, 1948, my grandfather Mohandas Karamchand Gandhi, the great Indian leader and champion of nonviolence, fell to an assassin’s bullets. Indian society has recently faced a sustained assault by people of the same ideological ilk as the man who fired those fatal shots.

India’s drift away from Gandhi’s ideals of nonviolence and respect for religious pluralism has been steady over the last few decades. However, events since the national election that made Narendra Modi in charge of the country last May have shown that what is now taking place is a brazen assassination of the Mahatma’s legacy.

Matters have come to a point where Gandhi’s assassin, Nathuram Godse, has been praised by a member of India’s Parliament belonging to the ruling Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP). A Hindu extremist organization has plans to celebrate the assassination and install the assassin’s statue in various parts of the country.

Prime Minister Modi––who since assuming office has both been accorded a warm welcome by President Obama and played host to him in India––was long banned from entering the United States. This was because of a horrific pogrom in 2002 that happened in the state of Gujarat (Gandhi’s home province) while he was in charge.

Clearly, his electoral victory has emboldened supremacist groups across the country. This is because Modi and the ruling party’s ideological roots lie in the Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh (RSS), a vast ultranationalist outfit that positions itself as a service organization but seeks to dismantle India’s secular polity in order to impose a Hindu state on India’s religiously and ethnically diverse populace. (My grandfather’s killer also belonged to this group.) The writings of the organization’s ideologues, their sustained majoritarian and anti-minority rhetoric, and the policy positions of the outfit’s political wing (the party currently governing India) have made this amply clear. Moreover, the entity and its offshoots have been implicated in mass violence against minorities over the years.

The group has spawned a closely knit mesh of organizations. This grassroots network has always been against my grandfather’s philosophy.

Modi’s views on minorities, secularism, and pluralism have been largely shaped by the RSS, whose ideology he has openly endorsed. Modi has proudly stated: “I got the inspiration to live for the nation from the RSS. . . I owe it all to the RSS.” Since Modi’s party has come to power, it has engaged in cynical posturing: praising Gandhi in public, while simultaneously seeking to demolish everything he stood for.

It is not surprising that minorities in India now feel a rapidly shrinking space for religious freedom. Hate campaigns against minorities include bizarre theories of Muslim youth luring Hindu girls as a form of “love jihad.” A number of churches have been attacked in and around the country’s capital. There have been group conversions under duress of minorities to Hinduism, an affront to India’s secular Constitution. It is a measure of the sheer audacity of Hindu sectarian outfits that they are actively seeking funds to convert Muslims and Christians to Hinduism. And there have been incendiary statements by ruling party officials. A cabinet member, for instance, used expletives to refer to minorities.

Mahatma Gandhi once said the quality of democracy should be judged from the way minorities are treated. On the 67th anniversary of his assassination, I shudder to think of what lies ahead for India’s minorities. The land the Mahatma fought so hard to free from British colonialists is now hostage to a divisive and hateful ideology.
 
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India is a country of highly strongly opinionated people.

If something is getting assassinated, means its the people doing the killing on their own. No one can make them do anything.

Not even Indira could. And Modi ji has a way to go before he reaches her stature.
 
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I am totally Against this Over Hyped So called Father of Nation. I vote for Subhash Chandra Bose to the Father of Nation .
Gandhi is over rated, Subhash Chandra Bose should be the father of the Nation as the British were rattled by Azad Hind fauj and the Mutiny of Indian Navy in Bombay after WW2.
Subash Chandra Bose did all the heavy lifting and fighting, while Gandhi sat there spinning charkha singing songs.
and in the end he was raised up by Nehru to become "Father of the Nation".The same Nehru according to archives asked Stalin to keep Subash Chandra Bose as POW in USSR until his death.
 
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Gandhi is over rated, Subhash Chandra Bose should be the father of the Nation as the British were rattled by Azad Hind fauj and the Mutiny of Indian Navy in Bombay after WW2.
Subash Chandra Bose did all the heavy lifting and fighting, while Gandhi sat there spinning charkha singing songs.
and in the end he was raised up by Nehru to become "Father of the Nation".The same Nehru according to archives asked Stalin to keep Subash Chandra Bose as POW in USSR until his death.
Blood Politics
 
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On Jan. 30, 1948, my grandfather Mohandas Karamchand Gandhi, the great Indian leader and champion of nonviolence, fell to an assassin’s bullets. Indian society has recently faced a sustained assault by people of the same ideological ilk as the man who fired those fatal shots.

India’s drift away from Gandhi’s ideals of nonviolence and respect for religious pluralism has been steady over the last few decades. However, events since the national election that made Narendra Modi in charge of the country last May have shown that what is now taking place is a brazen assassination of the Mahatma’s legacy.

Matters have come to a point where Gandhi’s assassin, Nathuram Godse, has been praised by a member of India’s Parliament belonging to the ruling Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP). A Hindu extremist organization has plans to celebrate the assassination and install the assassin’s statue in various parts of the country.

Prime Minister Modi––who since assuming office has both been accorded a warm welcome by President Obama and played host to him in India––was long banned from entering the United States. This was because of a horrific pogrom in 2002 that happened in the state of Gujarat (Gandhi’s home province) while he was in charge.

Clearly, his electoral victory has emboldened supremacist groups across the country. This is because Modi and the ruling party’s ideological roots lie in the Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh (RSS), a vast ultranationalist outfit that positions itself as a service organization but seeks to dismantle India’s secular polity in order to impose a Hindu state on India’s religiously and ethnically diverse populace. (My grandfather’s killer also belonged to this group.) The writings of the organization’s ideologues, their sustained majoritarian and anti-minority rhetoric, and the policy positions of the outfit’s political wing (the party currently governing India) have made this amply clear. Moreover, the entity and its offshoots have been implicated in mass violence against minorities over the years.

The group has spawned a closely knit mesh of organizations. This grassroots network has always been against my grandfather’s philosophy.

Modi’s views on minorities, secularism, and pluralism have been largely shaped by the RSS, whose ideology he has openly endorsed. Modi has proudly stated: “I got the inspiration to live for the nation from the RSS. . . I owe it all to the RSS.” Since Modi’s party has come to power, it has engaged in cynical posturing: praising Gandhi in public, while simultaneously seeking to demolish everything he stood for.

It is not surprising that minorities in India now feel a rapidly shrinking space for religious freedom. Hate campaigns against minorities include bizarre theories of Muslim youth luring Hindu girls as a form of “love jihad.” A number of churches have been attacked in and around the country’s capital. There have been group conversions under duress of minorities to Hinduism, an affront to India’s secular Constitution. It is a measure of the sheer audacity of Hindu sectarian outfits that they are actively seeking funds to convert Muslims and Christians to Hinduism. And there have been incendiary statements by ruling party officials. A cabinet member, for instance, used expletives to refer to minorities.

Mahatma Gandhi once said the quality of democracy should be judged from the way minorities are treated. On the 67th anniversary of his assassination, I shudder to think of what lies ahead for India’s minorities. The land the Mahatma fought so hard to free from British colonialists is now hostage to a divisive and hateful ideology.
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Modi’s views on minorities, secularism, and pluralism have been largely shaped by the RSS, whose ideology he has openly endorsed. Modi has proudly stated: “I got the inspiration to live for the nation from the RSS. . . I owe it all to the RSS.” Since Modi’s party has come to power, it has engaged in cynical posturing: praising Gandhi in public, while simultaneously seeking to demolish everything he stood for.
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the problem most see is above para..
yes modi is controversial. .he may or may not have RSS ideology fully integrated.. as individual he is entitiles to have it
but but but
as PM his ideology is one Constituion of india..
nothing come close to it .. perosnal or organisational ideogy over ruled if it clash with cruz of preamble of india and consittion of india ..
till now he showed being responsible PM .. though his few party guys goign hay wire ... but not him or govt...
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Gandhi is imp legacy for india.. so others too..
let him follow savarkar or subah or tilak or azad
till its under umbrella of consitiion of india and legal and for national inrresrt no problem do it..
--
our previous govt did all wrong thing under grab of socialisam.. gandhiism.... and what not which price paid by nation ..
--
so better open eye and what matter for country as per the COI is it that diffuclt ?

On Jan. 30, 1948, my grandfather Mohandas Karamchand Gandhi, the great Indian leader and champion of nonviolence, fell to an assassin’s bullets. Indian society has recently faced a sustained assault by people of the same ideological ilk as the man who fired those fatal shots.

India’s drift away from Gandhi’s ideals of nonviolence and respect for religious pluralism has been steady over the last few decades. However, events since the national election that made Narendra Modi in charge of the country last May have shown that what is now taking place is a brazen assassination of the Mahatma’s legacy.

Matters have come to a point where Gandhi’s assassin, Nathuram Godse, has been praised by a member of India’s Parliament belonging to the ruling Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP). A Hindu extremist organization has plans to celebrate the assassination and install the assassin’s statue in various parts of the country.

Prime Minister Modi––who since assuming office has both been accorded a warm welcome by President Obama and played host to him in India––was long banned from entering the United States. This was because of a horrific pogrom in 2002 that happened in the state of Gujarat (Gandhi’s home province) while he was in charge.

Clearly, his electoral victory has emboldened supremacist groups across the country. This is because Modi and the ruling party’s ideological roots lie in the Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh (RSS), a vast ultranationalist outfit that positions itself as a service organization but seeks to dismantle India’s secular polity in order to impose a Hindu state on India’s religiously and ethnically diverse populace. (My grandfather’s killer also belonged to this group.) The writings of the organization’s ideologues, their sustained majoritarian and anti-minority rhetoric, and the policy positions of the outfit’s political wing (the party currently governing India) have made this amply clear. Moreover, the entity and its offshoots have been implicated in mass violence against minorities over the years.

The group has spawned a closely knit mesh of organizations. This grassroots network has always been against my grandfather’s philosophy.

Modi’s views on minorities, secularism, and pluralism have been largely shaped by the RSS, whose ideology he has openly endorsed. Modi has proudly stated: “I got the inspiration to live for the nation from the RSS. . . I owe it all to the RSS.” Since Modi’s party has come to power, it has engaged in cynical posturing: praising Gandhi in public, while simultaneously seeking to demolish everything he stood for.

It is not surprising that minorities in India now feel a rapidly shrinking space for religious freedom. Hate campaigns against minorities include bizarre theories of Muslim youth luring Hindu girls as a form of “love jihad.” A number of churches have been attacked in and around the country’s capital. There have been group conversions under duress of minorities to Hinduism, an affront to India’s secular Constitution. It is a measure of the sheer audacity of Hindu sectarian outfits that they are actively seeking funds to convert Muslims and Christians to Hinduism. And there have been incendiary statements by ruling party officials. A cabinet member, for instance, used expletives to refer to minorities.

Mahatma Gandhi once said the quality of democracy should be judged from the way minorities are treated. On the 67th anniversary of his assassination, I shudder to think of what lies ahead for India’s minorities. The land the Mahatma fought so hard to free from British colonialists is now hostage to a divisive and hateful ideology.
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Mahatma Gandhi once said the quality of democracy should be judged from the way minorities are treated
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true.. its imp..
but
its by govt not by some fraction of group
if govt take that stance then its valid point..
unfortuntle y gotvt also sahre blame of being leneint to these fraaction above certain leimit
 
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