mike50 2 days ago

Hindu Nationalist

  • MonkeyClub a day ago

    You're getting down voted, but I think your point was to clarify that it's not simply nationalist, but particularly Hindu nationalist.

    You are correct, of course: it is.

LAC-Tech a day ago

I always LOL when the midwit lefty Americans on this board trot out the whole "America's left wing is akshually center right by global standards" routine.

Meanwhile, here on planet earth, India (by far the worlds largest democracy) is run by out and out ethno-nationalists.

profsummergig 2 days ago

[flagged]

  • sandeepkd 2 days ago

    "Brahminical Hindus" is new concept I heard for the first time. From an academic perspective, I would more than likely challenge the word "hindu" being used as a religion name. Most religions are more defined/codified. At the end of the day its all a tool to manage power/people, boundaries or groups can be created with almost any data point. Your comment/observation just happens to define/declare one new type of boundary

    • SanjayMehta 2 days ago

      "Brahminical Hindus" is typical of a phrase concocted by poorly informed western professors like Dr. Audrey Truschke, PhD, to sell books.

  • hshdhdhj4444 2 days ago

    And what about their traditions makes their religion not Hindu but makes the “Brahmanical Hindu” traditions Hindu?

    The claim that there aren’t other religions is not true because a lot of lower caste folks have explicitly converted to Christianity and or Dalit Buddhism as promoted by Ambedkar who was the driving force behind rights for lower castes in India.

  • sbmthakur a day ago

    From what I know, religions except Christianity and Islam are generally grouped under Hinduism for most things(marriage law for instance) and by default you're considered a Hindu(you can't be officially an atheist).

abhiyerra 2 days ago

[flagged]

  • fakedang a day ago

    > that is because the RSS was formed to counter attacks on Hindus by Muslims in the 1920s.

    > Founded on 27 September 1925,[18] the initial impetus of the organisation was to provide character training and instil "Hindu discipline" in order to unite the Hindu community and establish a Hindu Rashtra (Hindu nation).

    > ....After reading Vinayak Damodar Savarkar's ideological pamphlet, Essentials of Hindutva, published in Nagpur in 1923, and meeting Savarkar in the Ratnagiri prison in 1925, Hedgewar was extremely influenced by him, and he founded the RSS with the objective of "strengthening" Hindu society.

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rashtriya_Swayamsevak_Sangh

    Please stop spreading baseless opinions as fact when you yourself know no better. And for matters involving communal issues, I would much rather trust a crowd-sourced knowledge base rather than the opinions of a half-assed biography.

    • abhiyerra a day ago

      I do have a degree in History with a focus on India and British Empire from Berkeley. So no I don’t think I am being baseless. Hindutva is complex, the 20s were a difficult time in India as all the revolutionaries from the different factions were trying to imagine a future independent India. The Islam/Hindu divide was a creation of the British for divide and rule. And while Gandhi imagined a nonviolent basically traditional hierarchical Hindu society, Hedgewar wanted an organization that removed the bonds of caste and creed so that Hindus can function as a single unified front.

      I do think Hedgewar won and Gandhi lost. Also please do understand all sources have biases including Wikipedia.

  • amriksohata a day ago

    You will find many different interpretations of Hindutva - look at Hindu websites not political websites.

rramadass a day ago

The last para of your comment is inflammatory, biased, agenda driven and totally irrelevant to the topic under discussion.

I note that you are posting under an anonymous id.

  • MonkeyClub a day ago

    Modibhakting much?

    I mean, it's one thing to parrot stuff like "inflammatory, biased, agenda driven and totally irrelevant", and another thing to state your point of contention.

    After all, is it "inflammatory" to underscore discrimination and call it out?

    And, yes, I am posting under an anonymous I'd - and so are you, as far as anyone is concerned. I came to the internet in the era of nicknames, not of full PII social networks, and I like it that way more.

    Would it make the RSS and the BJP less far right if I posted under a real name?

    • rramadass a day ago

      Caught your BS and triggered you, have i ?

      All that you have posted are totally irrelevant to the topic under discussion. The only possible reason for it is if you have a personal instigatory agenda so as to try and steer the discussion in another totally negative direction.

      As Slashdot named it, you are just a "Anonymous Coward" (i.e. Someone too cowardly to post their real name next to what they write) and a troll.

      • MonkeyClub a day ago

        > The only possible reason for it is if you have a personal instigatory agenda

        Here's another possible reason: I actively dislike totalitarianism.

        If you're able to make a substantiated comment beyond the trope of "totally irrelevant", I'd be happy to entertain your opinion.

        > As Slashdot named it, you are just a "Anonymous Coward" [...] and a troll.

        Again, resorting to name calling and equating anonymity with trolling doesn't promote your opinion, it doesn't even elucidate it, it just puts you up as someone who'd rather go for ad hominems rather than genuine dialogue.

        I mean, are you pro-Modi and BJP? Do you even have a reasoning for it that manages to elide all their shortcomings, or is it just fitting in with the crowd?