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Was Veer
Savarkar a Nazi? by Koenraad Elst
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Was Veer Savarkar a Nazi? by Koenraad Elst
In secularist publications, it is often alleged that Vinayak
Damodar Savarkar, also known as (Swatantrya) Veer, "hero (of
independence)", was a Nazi. Let us examine the two main
aspects of this allegation: his view on race, and his actual
record in World War 2.
Savarkar on race
It is undeniable that Hindu Maha Sabha ideologue Savarkar spoke of
reviving the "race spirit" of the Hindus. So did
Golwalkar. Sri Aurobindo even used the term "Aryan
race", which to him meant exactly the same thing as
"Hindu nation",-- and Sri Aurobindo was one of the most
outspoken enemies of Hitler in India, supporting all-out
involvement in the British war effort. But their reading of the
term "race" was radically different from Hitler's. Not
that it was in any way exceptional: Savarkar's interpretation of
the term was the standard usage in the English-speaking world,
while Hitler's usage was innovative.
It is not sufficiently realized today that before Auschwitz gave a
bad name to the term "race", forcing it back into the
strictest use as a biological term, it used to have a broader and
hazier meaning, roughly as a synonym of "nation", but
sometimes ranging from "species" to
"family",-- exactly like the Sanskrit word jati. In
actual usage, "race" implied an element of identitarian
continuity, but not necessarily biological continuity. As late as
1947, British sources spoke of Hindus and Muslims not as
contending religions but as "the two races of India",
though they knew fully well that these were not separate
biological races, most Indian Muslims being the progeny of
converts from Hinduism.
After 1945, the English language gradually lost the usage of the
term "race" for the concept of "nation"; the
Hindu nationalists followed suit. This was only natural: they had
never cared for "race" in the biological sense so dear
to the Nazis. The very concept of race, having been narrowed down
to its biological meaning, has simply disappeared from their
horizon. It is plainly untrue that Hindu ideologues at any time
have shared Hitler's racism.
The point is made in the most straightforward terms by Savarkar
himself: "After all there is throughout this world so far as
man is concerned but a single race -- the human race, kept alive
by one common blood, the human blood. All other talk is at best
provisional, a makeshift and only relatively true. Nature is
constantly trying to overthrow the artificial barriers you raise
between race and race. To try to prevent the commingling of blood
is to build on sand. Sexual attraction has proved more powerful
than all the commands of all the prophets put together. Even as it
is, not even the aborigines of the Andamans are without some
sprinkling of the so-called Aryan blood in their veins and
vice-versa. Truly speaking all that one can claim is that one has
the blood of all mankind in one's veins. The fundamental unity of
man from pole to pole is true, all else only relatively so."
(Hindutva, p.90) This is the diametrically opposite of any
"pure race" theory.
Most secularists pretend not to know this unambiguous position of
Savarkar's (in many cases, they really don't know, for
Hindu-baiting is usually done without reference to primary
sources). Likewise, Savarkar's plea for caste intermarriage to
promote the oneness of Hindu society is usually ignored in order
to keep up the pretence that he was a reactionary on caste, an
"upper-caste racist" (as Gyan Pandey puts it), and what
not. There are no limits to secularist dishonesty, and so we are
glad to find at least one voice in their crowd which does
acknowledge these positions of Savarkar's.
An Indo-Australian philosophy professor, Purushottam Bilimoria
("Hindu perception of Muslims in India: from Savarkar's
ascendancy genealogy to the Bhavishya Hindujativad",
International Conference on New Perspectives on Vedic &
Ancient Indian Civilization, LA 7-9 August 1998), has given a
hostile but undeniably original and thoughtful interpretation of
Savarkar's views. He comments on Savarkar's Hindutva: "Two
things stand out oddly in this proclamation:
(i). the difficulty of linking the modern Hindu with the erstwhile
Aryan stock -- so a theory of descendance does not hold firm;
(ii). if all people (other than the tribal and indigenous peoples)
are immigrants to the provinces of the subcontinent, then how can
they claim to be the authentic inheritors of the mantle of the
civil nation?"
The first point rightly acknowledges that Savarkar, not being a
historian, accepted the Aryan invasion theory promoted by
prestigious seats of Western learning; and that he saw modern
Hindus as a biological and cultural mixture of Aryan invaders and
indigenous non-Aryans. He shared this view with Indian authors
across the political spectrum, e.g. with Jawaharlal Nehru. Like
Nehru, he saw no reason why people of diverse biological origins
would be unable to form a united nation; the difference being that
Nehru saw this unification as a project just started ("India,
a nation in the making"), while Savarkar believed that this
unification had come about in the distant past already. At any
rate, this is an excellent non-racist position, contrasting
sharply with the then-common view that upper castes were Aryan
invaders, a nation separate on biological grounds from the lower
castes who were native. Savarkar's was an eminently reasonable
interpretation of the Aryan invasion theory, viz. that in spite of
divergent biological origins, people who live together end up
mixing both culturally and biologically, and that this was not a
problematic phenomenon as the Nazi race-purifiers thought, but a
natural process and one which had happened to generate the Hindu
nation.
In the second point, Bilimoria loses sight of the first, and
lapses into the racist and non-Savarkarite view of distinct
biological identities of the "tribal and indigenous
peoples" and the rest, presumably the upper castes. Savarkar
did not think that Hindus or anyone for that matter would lose
their entitledness to membership of the nation just because some
(or even all) of their ancestors had immigrated four thousand
years ago. Only the anti-Brahmin Dravidian racists and
tribal-hunting Christian missionaries could have come up with such
a ludicrous idea. Like so many Hindutva spokesmen, Savarkar often
gave the example of the assimilation of the Shaka and Huna
invaders into the Hindu nation; foreign geographical provenance
was not his problem. The view which Bilimoria ascribes to Savarkar
here is just a straw man, unrelated to Savarkar's actual position.
Bilimoria claims to have found a "tacit commitment to a
racialization doctrine which underpins the further moves Savarkar
and the religious-political movements that grow out of this
ideology (which have come to power in recent days in India)".
The term "tacit" gives the game away: plenty of Hindutva-watching
"analysis" consists in nothing but divining hidden
motives and "tacit commitments" unrelated to the actual
programmes and manifestoes which exist in cold print but remain
unread by the supposed experts.
Nevertheless, let us read on: to Bilimoria, the Hindu nationalism
ideology focused not on the inherited race, which is a mixed
affair, but on "a future race-to-be, the spiritual blood once
purified, rather than the racial lineage we can trace our blood
directly to, which has all but been sullied and become impure
through intermixing and mingling of disparate cultures. Now a race
carved out along these lines can mean that others who do not fall
within these descriptors have to be left out, and we can only
speak of them as bearers of their own downward conditions, their
victimhood, their otherness. This has been one reason why
communalism has reached perilous dimensions in India, why the
Hindu Right campaign for Uniform Civil Codes, and why there is
global expression of fear and rivalry between the two groups
across the 'garami hawa' borderzone."
It is rank nonsense that the BJP position on a Common Civil Code
(which is simply the implementation of the principle of equality
before the law deemed essential to the very idea of a secular
state) is based on a "racialization" doctrine: no BJP or
related document even thinks of the Hindu-Muslim problem in terms
of race, and if it did, its choice for a legal unification of
Hindu and Muslim communities would obviously go against their
"racial" separateness. And no Hindu wants to keep the
Muslims out, the way racists want to keep members of other races
out, on the contrary: every Hindu activists hopes that the Indian
Muslims will return to the Hindu fold.
However, Bilimoria has a point when he implies that Savarkar's
policy of caste intermarriage would further the process of
biological homogenization of the Hindu nation. But so what? Should
he have opposed caste mixing instead? Then he would have been
decried as a reactionary "upper-caste racist" and what
not. But now that he takes the opposite position, it is still not
good: now he is a "future-Hindu-racist", a kind of mad
scientist brewing a new race in his lab, the caste-mixed
Hindu-race-to-be. This is just another case of secularist justice:
Hindu are damned if they do, damned if they don't.
Savarkar and Nazi collaboration
Nicholas Goodrick-Clarke has written a book on the strange case of
a French-Greek lady who converted to Hinduism and later went on to
work for the neo-Nazi cause, Maximiani Portas a.k.a. Savitri Devi.
The book is generally of high scholarly quality and full of
interesting detail, but when it comes to Indian politics, the
author is woefully misinformed by his less than impartisan
sources. He squarely places himself outside the scholarly
community and inside the Indian Marxist propaganda machine by
asserting the following howler: "After the German invasion of
Prague in March 1939, Indian opinion on Germany polarized sharply
into two camps: those who would be loyal to Britain in the event
of a war between Britain and Germany and those who would not. The
Hindu Mahasabha adopted a particularly strong pro-German position,
assuming a close congruence between the Aryan cult of Nazism and
Hindu nationalism." (Hitler's Priestess, New York University
Press 1998, p.66)
To say that, faced with the choice of being loyal to Britain in
her war with Germany, the Hindu Mahasabha took "a
particularly strong pro-German position", is the diametrical
opposite of the truth. It is quite simply a lie. I am not saying
that it is Goodrick-Clarke's lie, he may naively have copied it
from partisan sources, of which there is no dearth in Indian
academe nor in the Indian Studies departments in the West. But if
he had done his research well, he could not have failed to come
across one of the central facts of World War 2 in India: that the
Hindu Mahasabha actively campaigned to recruit Hindu young men
into the British war effort. Congress activists used to scold HMS
president V.D. Savarkar as a "recruiting officer", for
it was Congress which refused to stand by the British, at least
until 1944.
If one is inclined towards fascism, and one has the good fortune
to live at the very moment of fascism's apogee, it seems logical
that one would seize the opportunity and join hands with fascism
while the time is right. Conversely, if one has the opportunity to
join hands with fascism but refrains from doing so, this is a
strong indication that one is not that "fascist" after
all. Many Hindu leaders and thinkers were sufficiently aware of
the world situation in the second quarter of the twentieth
century; what was their position vis-a-vis the Axis powers?
For their own reasons, Hindu and Muslim masses were very
enthusiastic about Hitler. The Muslim League frequently compared
its own plan of Partition with the Partition which Germany imposed
on Czechoslovakia (the ethnic reunification of the Sudeten Germans
with the Reich Germans was in fact deemed logical and fair by most
observers, including Savarkar, though in contrast with the League
he did not support the imperialistic methods used by Germany).
Congress leftist Subhash Chandra Bose formed Indian battalions in
the German and later in the Japanese army. The Congress leadership
was utterly confused and took just about every possible position
in succession or even at the same time.
In these conditions, the foremost Hindu leader of the time,
Swatantryaveer Savarkar, refused to support the Axis and advocated
a massive enlistment of Hindus in the British army. The point is
proven even by the very nadir of the Hindu Mahasabha's history,
viz. the murder of Mahatma Gandhi by its activist Nathuram Godse:
of the seven conspirators, three had served in the British-Indian
Army during the war. Savarkar calculated that massive Hindu
enlistment in the war effort would provide a winning combination
in the war. And indeed, in the successful retreat from Dunkirk and
in the British victories in North Africa and Iraq, Indian troops
played a decisive role. It would earn the Hindus the gratitude of
the British, or at least their respect. And if not that, it would
instill the beginnings of fear in the minds of the British rulers:
it would offer military training and experience to the Hindus, on
a scale where the British could not hope to contain an eventual
rebellion in the ranks. After the war, even without having to
organize an army of their own, they would find themselves in a
position where the British could not refuse them their
independence.
It is in this context that in 1940, Savarkar launched his slogan:
"Hinduize all politics, militarize Hindudom." This
slogan is nowadays often quoted out of context to impute to
Savarkar a fascist-like fas-cination with "war for war's
sake". But it meant nothing of the kind. He wanted Hindus to
get military experience for a specific purpose, viz. that after
the war, England would find a vast number of combat-ready Indian
troops before her. More than a preparation for war, this
combat-readiness was the right preparation for a peaceful
showdown, in which the British would be made to understand that
fighting was useless, that the Indian march to independence had
become unstoppable.
This much has to be said in favour of Savarkar's strategy: it
worked. It is a matter of solid history that the new military
equation of 1945 was one of the decisive considerations in
Britain's decision to decolonize India. With the military
experience and capability now possessed by vast numbers of
Indians, a British reassertion of colonial authority would have
required an immeasurable investment of troops and money of which a
war-weary Britain was no longer capable.
It is not unreasonable to suggest that Savarkar's collaboration
with the British against the Axis was opportunistic. He was not in
favour of any foreign power, be it Britain, the US, the Soviet
Union, Japan or Germany. He simply chose the course of action that
seemed the most useful for the Hindu nation. But the point is: he
could have opted for collaboration with the Axis, he could have
calculated that a Hindu-Japanese combine would be unbeatable, he
could even have given his ideological support to the Axis, but he
did not. The foremost Hindutva ideologue, president of what was
then the foremost political Hindu organization, supported the
Allied war effort against the Axis.
It must also be noted that Savarkar never went as far in his
cooperation with the British as the Communists who supported the
British (after they became a Soviet ally in 1941) by betraying
Congress "Quit India" activists to them. While the
Communists were Soviet loyalists who saw Indian opponents to the
war effort as simply their enemies, Savarkar was an Indian patriot
who differed with the Gandhian patriots (as with Bose) regarding
the means but agreed with them on the goal, viz. India's
independence, and therefore left them to their own designs without
interfering.
Savarkar's deputy on fascism
That HMS support to the anti-Nazi war effort was not merely
tactical but to quite an extent also ideological, is shown by a
series of statements by Nirmal Chandra Chatterjee, president of
the Bengal Hindu Mahasabha and vice-president of the All-India
Hindu Mahasabha. He declared in February 1941: "Our
passionate adherence to democracy and freedom is based on the
spiritual recognition of the Divinity of man. We are not only not
communal but we are nationalists and democrats. The Anti-Fascist
Front must extend from the English Channel to the Bay of
Bengal." (Hindu Politics, Calcutta 1945, p.13)
He too had taken the habit of loosely labelling hostile forces as
"fascist", e.g. in his opposition to a 1939 Muslim
League proposal to communalize the municipal elections in
Calcutta: "We must resist these reactionary measures which
are founded on the principle of communal Fascism." (Hindu
Politics, p.21; note how back then words hadn't lost their meaning
yet, so that "communalism" was identified with Muslim
League politics, not with its opponents). He also compared them to
the Norwegian Nazi collaborator Quisling: "Political Misfits
are as dangerous as Quislings." (Hindu Politics, p.25) More
substantially, he called the threat of a Japanese conquest
"the direst calamity that can befall Bengal". (Hindu
Politics, p.25)
All this is hardly the language of a collaborator with the Axis
powers. For anyone still in doubt on the Hindu Mahasabha's
position, he declared in March 1942: "In the conflict of
Ideologies the Hindus have made their position perfectly clear. We
hate Nazism and Fascism. We are the enemies of Hitler and
Mussolini. We are longing and struggling for our own emancipation
and we want to repel any dictator who would try to reduce sections
of humanity to slavery to serve the whims of his own
megalomania." (Hindu Politics, p.26) And in December 1943:
"We are wholeheartedly anti-Fascist. Every anti-Imperialist
must be anti-Fascist." (Hindu Politics, p.68)
His problem with the British was not that they were defending
democracy worldwide, but that they were compromising with
anti-democratic tendencies within their own Indian domains,
particularly with the Muslim League's insatiable hunger for
communal privileges. When the Cripps mission was announced
(exploring an agreement with Congress to get India more actively
into the war effort in exchange for promises of more autonomy),
Chatterjee declared: "We shall suspend judgment unless we
know what exactly he has to offer and we only wish that artificial
minority problems will not be exploited to dilute democracy and to
injure Hindu interests." The Hindu Mahasabha was, after all,
in favour of undiluted democracy: "Our main plank is Veer
Savarkar's message which he preached at the Calcutta session:
'Equal rights for all citizens and protection of the culture and
religion of every minority'." (Hindu Politics, p.74)
Yet, the British accused the Freedom Movement, including the HMS
but also the Congress, of Nazi sympathies. Already in the 1930s,
they had sometimes equated no less a person than Mahatma Gandhi
with Hitler (a comparison which made Gandhian Congress activists
feel proud). That was the only way they could hope to lessen the
sympathy of the increasingly influential American public opinion
for the Indian anti-colonial struggle. Against this colonial
propaganda, Nirmal Chandra Chatterjee replied in November 1943:
"The Hindus in this supreme crisis of humanity never wanted
to shirk the responsibility to fight the Axis powers. Our leaders
took a realistic view of the political situation. Veer Savarkar's
clarion call to the Hindus had met with a ready response and the
Hindu boys had rushed forward and joined up in thousands. On every
front our boys have demonstrated their valour and discipline, and
the African Campaign, if faithfully recorded, will put the Indian
in the forefront of the noble heroes who decimated the Fascist
[hordes]." (Hindu Politics, p.55-56)
And in November 1944: "It is the subtle scheme of political
propaganda to describe the Hindu as pro-Fascist. It is a cruel
calumny which has been spread in America and other countries. The
Hindu Mahasabha stood for Savarkar's policy of militarization and
industrialization. We recognized that Fascism was a supreme menace
to what is good and noble in our civilization. Due to Veer
Savarkar's call thousands of young men joined the Army and Navy
and Air Force and shed their blood for resisting Nazi tyranny and
for real friendship with China and Russia. But as the Hindus had
the temerity to ask for National Independence and took the lead in
rejecting the Cripps offer, they were maligned and the subtle
forces of organized British propaganda were let loose to blackmail
the Hindus." (Hindu Politics, p.103) The current tendency to
accuse the Hindu movement for cultural decolonization of India of
"fascism" is nothing but a replay of an old colonial
tactic.
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