“No Constitutional Approval Needed” — The Sentence That Exposed the Mask
When Mohan Bhagwat, the Sarsanghchalak (Chief) of the Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh (RSS) says, India is a Hindu nation and does not need constitutional approval for it.
It is a declaration.
And declarations are never innocent.
It came from the very top of the RSS — an organisation that has never contested elections, yet dictates the political temperature of the country.
That’s not culture speaking.
That’s power speaking.
RSS: The Organisation That Never Wrote the Constitution — But Wants to Rewrite It
Let’s get something straight.
The RSS had no role in:
- Drafting the Indian Constitution
- The freedom movement’s mass struggles
- The pluralistic vision that shaped modern India
Yet today, it speaks as if the Constitution is optional — a footnote beneath “civilisational truth.”
That should scare every Indian, not just minorities.
Because when a constitution becomes optional, citizenship becomes conditional.
The Historical Truth They Don’t Like to Talk About
RSS history isn’t a mystery. It’s just conveniently ignored.
- The RSS believed India was fundamentally a Hindu Rashtra, not a secular democracy.
- It openly opposed the idea of plural nationalism.
- It admired European ethno-nationalist models of the 1930s — models that history later buried in shame.
After Independence, when India chose secularism, RSS didn’t disappear.
It waited.
Like a long game of chess.
BJP: The Political Arm With a Government Badge
Let’s drop the polite fiction.
The BJP is not “inspired by” the RSS.
It is born from it.
- Most senior BJP leaders are former RSS pracharaks.
- Policy, ideology, messaging — all echo Sangh thinking.
- When the RSS speaks, BJP doesn’t contradict. It translates.
One plays the “cultural” role.
The other signs government orders.
Same script. Different costumes.
Why This Statement Is Not Harmless “Cultural Talk”
Calling India a “Hindu nation” without constitutional approval is not symbolism.
It means:
- The Constitution is secondary
- Majority identity overrides legal equality
- Citizenship starts depending on religious belonging
Once you normalise this language:
- Laws don’t need amendment — interpretation will do
- Courts don’t need change — pressure will do
- Rights don’t need removal — fear will do
This is how democracies hollow out without a single coup.
What This Means for Non-Hindus (Read Carefully)
For Muslims:
It signals that you are tolerated, not equal.
Your loyalty is always under suspicion.
Your citizenship is always up for debate.
You are Indian — but with an asterisk.
For Christians:
It implies your faith is foreign, even if your ancestors lived here for centuries.
You are Indian — until identity politics says otherwise.
For Sikhs, Buddhists, Jains:
You are folded into Hindu identity when convenient — erased when inconvenient.
This isn’t unity.
This is absorption.
The Real Trick: Redefining “Hindu”
Here’s the clever part.
“Hindu” is deliberately kept vague:
- Sometimes it means faith
- Sometimes culture
- Sometimes geography
- Sometimes obedience
This flexibility allows one thing:
Anyone can be excluded whenever needed.
Today it’s minorities.
Tomorrow it could be dissenters.
Next day, anyone who asks questions.
Public Silence, Private Applause
Notice something else.
When such statements are made:
- BJP leaders don’t condemn them
- Government institutions don’t challenge them
- Silence becomes endorsement
And silence, in politics, is never neutral.
This Is Not About Hinduism
Let’s be clear.
This has nothing to do with Hindu philosophy — which is plural, questioning, decentralised, and deeply tolerant.
This is about power, not faith.
Control, not culture.
Uniformity, not unity.
Using religion as a political weapon is the greatest insult to religion itself.
The Final Question Every Indian Must Ask
If the Constitution doesn’t matter,
If equality is negotiable,
If identity overrides law,
Then what exactly protects you tomorrow?
Because once democracy becomes conditional,
no one stays safe for long — not even those cheering today.
History has taught us this lesson repeatedly
When ideology declares itself above law,
The nation doesn’t become stronger.
It becomes quieter.
More fearful.
More obedient.
And that silence?
That’s the sound of a republic being slowly dismantled — without announcing it.
This is not alarmism.
This is pattern recognition.



