Bhagwat to release book on Gandhi being the ‘biggest Hindu patriot’

RSS chief Mohan Bhagwat will release a book hailing Mahatma Gandhi as the “biggest Hindu patriot” on 1 January. Union ministers Prahlad Patel and V. Muraleedharan will also be present during the release ceremony of the book, Making of a Hindu Patriot, written by J.K. Bajaj and M.D. Srinivas, at Rajghat here. Bhagwat had also […]

by Correspondent - January 1, 2021, 6:03 pm

RSS chief Mohan Bhagwat will release a book hailing Mahatma Gandhi as the “biggest Hindu patriot” on 1 January. Union ministers Prahlad Patel and V. Muraleedharan will also be present during the release ceremony of the book, Making of a Hindu Patriot, written by J.K. Bajaj and M.D. Srinivas, at Rajghat here.

Bhagwat had also released a book in February this year, appealing to build Gandhi’s dream of India. Bhagwat had said, “Gandhiji had many times described himself as a staunch ‘Sanatani Hindu’. He was never ashamed of being a Hindu himself.”

Bajaj is the founding director of the Centre for Policy Studies and a member of the Indian Council of Social Science Research, and is also a member of the commission constituted by the central government to subclass the OBCs. Srinivas is the founder president of the Centre for Policy Studies.

Talking to news agency IANS, Bajaj said, “Gandhiji was a born Hindu, but he became a strong Hindu in the days of his experience in South Africa. What is it like to be a Hindu? He learned this during his struggle in South Africa. Gandhiji openly used to say—‘My patriotism is increasing and this patriotism originates from my religion’.”

Bajaj said that Gandhi refused when Christian and Muslim friends tried to convert him while living in South Africa. During this time he started an in-depth study about Sanatan Dharma which further strengthened his Hindu identity.

The book gives the background of Gandhi’s Hind Swaraj. There are many interesting details ranging from the development of Gandhi’s personality and the campaigns he undertook during his stay in South Africa. The book also narrates the story of how Gandhi’s developed ‘Satyagraha’ at the historic meeting on 11 September 1906 at the Empire Theatre in Johannesburg. The chapter titled ‘The South African Jail Diary’ also tells the story of the torture in prison endured by Gandhi and his supporters.

The book also describes the correspondence between the great Russian writer and philosopher Leo Tolstoy and Mahatma Gandhi. The book states that it was Tolstoy who first gave Mahatma Gandhi the title of ‘Hindu Patriot’.

The book claims Tolstoy was a fan of all aspects of Gandhi except his ‘Hindu patriotism’. It also has information about two meetings held in July 1914 during Gandhi’s arrival from South Africa in which he received the title of ‘Patriot Mahatma’.