THE Sangh Parivar is forever blaming Indian Muslims for Partition, and accusing them of lack of patriotism. They demand that mosques display the national flag, to prove their nationalism, and that whoever wished to live in India, must sing Vande Mataram or say Bharat Mata ki Jai. But what is their own track record of respect for national unity and national symbols?
Dr Ambedkar correctly identified that Savarkar and Jinnah had the same position on the two-nation theory. In ‘Thoughts on Pakistan’, Ambedkar wrote, “…strange as it may seem, Mr. Savarkar and Mr. Jinnah instead of being opposed to each other on the two nations issue, are in complete agreement about it…Mr. Savarkar wants the Hindu nation to be the dominant nation and the Muslim nation to be the subservient nation under it.”
Savarkar proved himself as a firm advocate of the two-nation theory in his presidential address to the Hindu Mahasabha in December 1939, where he declared:
What About Vande Mataram? We challenge the RSS to show us a single document of the RSS prior to 15 August, 1947, in which the words ‘Vande Mataram’ are even mentioned. The fact is that as long as this song had any association with the Indian freedom struggle against the British, the RSS had no use for it. Post-independence, they value this song only for its communal associations and divisive potential, since the song was originally part of the novel Anandamath, which had antiMuslim overtones.
Today, the RSS and BJP carry the tricolour in their hand while carrying out violence. But what did the RSS say about the national tricolour, on the eve of India’s Independence?
(RSS mouthpiece Organiser on the eve of India's independence, August 14, 1947)
(Savarkar, reacting to the decision to adopt the tricolour flag as the Indian flag,
quoted in A G Noorani, 'A National Hero?', Frontline, Oct. 23 - Nov. 05, 2004)