Why Muslims join the Muslim wing of the RSS
Abstract
The Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh (RSS) – the paramilitary corps that
animates the contemporary Indian Hindu nationalist movement –
increasingly relies on its Muslim wing to bolster its denials of extremism.
The RSS claims hold that crowds of Muslims join its Muslim wing, the
Muslim Rashtriya Manch, through organic nationalist awakenings that
imply tacit acceptance of the RSS’ Hindu nationalist agenda. Based on a
year of interview-based research in North and West India with more than
80 Manch members, defectors, critics and leaders, I provide empirical
evidence that challenges the claim that the RSS is winning over Muslim
minds. Instead, I suggest that Muslims join for largely instrumental
reasons; for material reward and security, but also to rebuke traditional
Muslim centres of power and to draw close to the charismatic leadership
of Manch leader Indresh Kumar. While discussions of motivations are
famously fraught, I rely on interviews not to conclusively list membership
motivations, but to assess the claims made by the RSS. As Hindu
nationalists consolidate and intensify their activities after the 2019
general election, understanding how the RSS does or does not ‘win over’
India’s Muslim communities is necessary groundwork to address the
position of minorities in a Hindu nationalist future.
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Contemporary South Asia
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2099-12-31
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