কট্রর হিন্দুত্ববাদী আর এস এস এর বর্ণবাদী নীতিই ভারতীয় সমাজে বিভক্তির জন্য দায়ী|| R S S and Hinduism|

কট্রর হিন্দুত্ববাদী আর এস এস এর বর্ণবাদী নীতিই ভারতীয় সমাজে বিভক্তির জন্য দায়ী|| R S S and Hinduism|

Accept Peace কট্রর হিন্দুত্ববাদী আর এস এস এর বর্ণবাদী নীতিই ভারতীয় সমাজে বিভক্তির জন্য দায়ী| R S S, Hinduism and divided Indian society|| #RSS #Racism #Muslim_Community #Divided_India #Accept_Peace Subscribe Link:    / @acceptpeace6231   Related Videos: 1:    • জাকির নায়েক হিংসার থাঁবা এবং রাজনীতির প্যা...   2:    • ভারত সরকার ইসলাম ধর্মাবলম্বীদের বিরুদ্ধে য...   Email contact: [email protected] Facebook Link:   / shintuali   Facebook Page: Akash Rose India's Hindu nationalists spread their wings far and wide. The Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh (RSS) is the ideological mentor to Prime Minister Narendra Modi's BJP party. It is increasingly playing an influential role both inside and outside government. ... "The RSS has always had a long-term plan. Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh is "National Volunteer Organisation" or "National Patriotic Organisation".RSS is an Indian right-wing , Hindu nationalist, paramilitary volunteer organisation. RSS is also considered as parent organisation of BJP. Modi is a member of the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP), and of the Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh (RSS), a Hindu nationalist volunteer organisation. The RSS, founded nearly 100 years ago, has profoundly shaped Indian society and politics — and Modi himself. As he runs for a second term, the RSS' influence is more apparent than ever — something that alarms members of India's religious minorities and those who believe in the country's secular basis, who accuse the RSS of chauvinism and fostering intolerance and hate. When Indians won their freedom from British rule in 1947, they established a pluralistic democracy based on secular principles, embracing their diversity. But the RSS' goal is to redefine India according to its majority Hindu faith. Led since 2009 by longtime stalwart Mohan Bhagwat, the RSS is India's most prominent proponent of Hindutva — Hindu-ness and the idea that India should be a "Hindu nation." About 80 percent of India's 1.4 billion people are Hindus, but there are also millions of Muslims, Christians, Sikhs, Buddhists and Jains. The constitution defines India as a secular country. (The word "secular" was actually a late addition to the document's preamble, in 1976, though many of the constitution's original articles embody secular values). The RSS and many of its members want to change that. The group's mission statement describes it as "firmly rooted in genuine nationalism" and decries an "erosion of the nation's integrity in the name of secularism" and "endless appeasement of the Muslim population." "The Hindus have been treated as second-order citizens by successive governments," it says. "Expressed in the simplest terms, the ideal of the [RSS] is to carry the nation to the pinnacle of glory, through organising the entire society and ensuring protection of Hindu Dharma." (Dharma is a Sanskrit word used to describe Hindu religion, its culture and its entire worldview and system of living.) That the RSS has been able to wield such great influence in India, with an ideology that's often at odds with the secularism enshrined in India's constitution, worries some of India's religious minorities — particularly Christians and Muslims, for whom RSS leaders have reserved their harshest views. By contrast, the RSS has described other religious minorities — Sikhs, Jains, Buddhists — as part of India, because their faiths originated there. More than 14 percent of Indians are Muslim. They're the largest religious minority, making up the fastest-growing major religion in India. For more than three centuries of the Mughal Empire, India had Muslim rulers who left a rich heritage of art, nomenclature and architecture, including India's most famous landmark, the Taj Mahal. But some RSS members don't recognize that. They call today's Indian Muslims "invaders" because their ancestors may have come from abroad. Some believe that deep down, India's Muslims are actually Hindus because their Hindu ancestors may, on the other hand, have been forced to convert to Islam. "They want to erase our Muslim history and identity," says Syed Ahmed Ansari, 47, a rickshaw driver in Mumbai with a bushy white beard, standing in the driveway of his mosque in a neighborhood dotted with mosques, temples and churches. "When Indians were struggling for freedom from colonial rule, we were united. We were all in it together," Ansari says. "Why should we focus now on what divides us?" Thank you very much Jazak Allah Khairoom.